Christina Blizzard がリツイート
Christina Blizzard
11K posts

Christina Blizzard
@chrizblizz
Mom. Nan. Journalist. Author. Cape Cod enthusiast. Bridge player
Toronto 参加日 Eylül 2010
685 フォロー中8.6K フォロワー
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

🇨🇦 Donald Trump has said he will not invade Canada after repeatedly threatening to turn the country into America’s “51st state”
The US president said he won't have time to 'deal with' the country.
🔗: telegraph.co.uk/royal-family/2…

English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

My friend and @TheTorontoSun legend/day oner @chrizblizz on the origins of the Toronto Sun in 1971 and the changes she's seen over more than five decades in journalism. A "History Matters" podcast by the Canadian Institute for Historical Education
overcast.fm/+ABSRj2Hra2I
English

telegraph.co.uk/gift/ddac02cd6…
Buckingham Palace proposed making Prince Harry G-G of Canada ...
English

RT @AFowlerPhoto: Forget the film. This is the real Wuthering Heights.
Top Withins bathed in romantic pink hue at sunrise on Valentine's Da…
English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

@thetimes Linking Michigan and Ottawa? That would be one heck of a long bridge. Try linking it to Windsor (Ontario, not the castle)
English

The president also threatened to halt construction of a bridge linking Michigan and Ottawa as he protested ‘boycotts’ of American products #Echobox=1770740750" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">thetimes.com/us/american-po…
English

The Canadian delusion of 'soft power' is dead, and good riddance telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/02/0…
English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

“I could never have survived it now!”
The King recalls memories of his 1975 trip to the Canadian Arctic - taking in dog sledding, embracing freezing temperatures, and learning about the local culture.
Earlier this year, adventurer @SteveBackshall retraced The King’s steps, looking at the impact of climate change 50 years on.
Steve Backshall’s Royal Arctic Challenge: available on @ITVX now.
English

Putin released an Israeli prisoner. He wants a church in return telegraph.co.uk/world-news/202…
English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

“When I turned around to say, why don’t they come and taste some - they’d all disappeared!”
During a trip to Frobisher elementary school in the Canadian Arctic in 1975, His Majesty was ambushed to try a unique indigenous delicacy – high in nutrients but an acquired taste!
Steve Backshall’s Royal Arctic Challenge: available on @ITVX now.
English

Hate to say I told you so, but I did christinablizzard.ca/2025/12/12/hat…
English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

Great honor of being able to take the kids of @GreatOrmondSt taxi christmas lights tour last night, truly humbling experience.
We had over 22cabs lined up in a procession, treating these amazing kids and families to the the full rock star experience.
Well done Lee for organising
English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

On April 9, 1917, Canadian soldiers launched an assault on Vimy Ridge in northern France — a position the French and British had tried, and failed, to capture.
For the first time, all four Canadian divisions fought together as a single Corps, more than 100,000 strong. Careful planning, innovative tactics, and relentless determination carried them forward. In just four days, they seized the ridge — a stunning victory that came at a terrible cost.
3,598 Canadians were killed
Over 7,000 were wounded
Vimy became more than a battle. It became a symbol of Canadian identity and sacrifice. Many historians argue that at Vimy, Canada stepped onto the world stage as a nation in its own right, distinct from Britain.
Today, the towering Vimy Memorial in France stands as a tribute to those who fought and to the 11,285 Canadians who died in France with no known grave.
The story of Vimy reminds us that remembrance is not only about victory — it is about the lives given, the unity forged, and the nation that emerged from sacrifice.
🌺 Lest we forget.
#VimyRidge #WWI #CanadianHistory #RemembranceDay




English

EDITORIAL: Shameful strikeout by royal dodgers torontosun.com/opinion/editor…
English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

In 1864, the government created the Government Constabulary for Frontier Service—Canada’s very first secret police force.
Its mission? To patrol the U.S.–Canada border during the turbulent years of the American Civil War and Fenian Raids, when fears of invasion and espionage ran high. These officers worked undercover, gathering intelligence and monitoring cross-border activity to protect the young colonies before Confederation.
Gilbert McMicken—a businessman and politician was one of the top men behind Canada’s earliest intelligence service. Working undercover, McMicken’s agents gathered intelligence and infiltrated Fenian groups. Their work helped foil invasions and keep the peace in the tense years before and after Confederation.
They are disbanded in July of 1870. Though the Constabulary was short-lived, McMicken’s efforts are seen as the foundation of Canada’s modern intelligence services, paving the way for the RCMP Security Service and today’s CSIS. History matters—even in the origins of Canada’s spy world.
#CanadianHistory #CIHE #DidYouKnow #FenianRaids #CSIS #RCMP #GilbertMcMicken

English
Christina Blizzard がリツイート

A Lancaster Bomber flies over Westminster Abbey following our annual Battle of Britain commemoration this morning
#BattleOfBritain #BattleOfBritainSunday #BattleOfBritain85
English




