Deborah Woods

227.8K posts

Deborah Woods

Deborah Woods

@nocbc

A married dual citizen with most of my family living in the U.S.A. I care deeply for my America. Living in Canada because I married a Canadian NO DM'S

Strathmore, Alberta 가입일 Nisan 2011
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Gideon
Gideon@Salty_Royale·
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Karen 🇨🇦
Karen 🇨🇦@dkreative1·
Easier solution is for MPs who cross the floor to face an immediate byelection. That will be less costly and make MPs think twice before they scum to poaching by Mark Carney. We just gave Carney a minority government. Let him EARN a majority the way that democracy SHOULD work.
d@da272805

@dkreative1 We must demand an immediate election if it happens.

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Jeffrey Rath
Jeffrey Rath@JeffreyRWRath·
Just like the police and fire service providers coming out in droves to sign the petition. The movement crosses every demographic and every occupation.
Jon Alberta Patriot@JonFromAlberta

One of the most encouraging conversations I had in Red Deer was with the Alberta snowbirds from Yuma. These are Albertans who spend part of the winter in places like Arizona, and instead of checking out politically while they were away, they helped turn Yuma into one of the most unexpectedly inspiring little hubs of the independence movement. In this conversation, they explain that their Yuma team held six pop-up signing events, and at one of the bigger turnouts they saw roughly 350 people show up, with only a handful of canvassers trying to keep up. That is not a gimmick. That is real support showing up in the middle of another country because Albertans abroad still care deeply about what happens back home. That is why this matters. A lot of people saw the Yuma story as a funny social media moment. But it is actually much more than that. It is a sign that this movement has reached a level of mainstream visibility where ordinary Albertans are no longer waiting for permission, no longer hiding their support, and no longer treating independence as some fringe theory that only gets discussed in private. They are carrying it with them wherever they go. Arizona, Mexico, Hawaii, even farther afield. That tells you something important: this idea is alive in people now. It travels with them. It is becoming part of their identity. The Yuma team also makes another point that matters. They were not calling themselves heroes. They said they were just tough Albertans who were not going to put up with any more nonsense. That is exactly the spirit behind a lot of this movement. Not celebrity. Not performance. Not paid activism. Just regular Albertans deciding to do something real because they believe this can actually happen. And in the conversation I say exactly that: the reason so many people are out there, whether in Arizona heat or Alberta wind, is because we genuinely believe this can happen. That is a big part of why the Yuma story hit so hard online. It gave people a visible example of momentum. It showed that support is not confined to one town, one rally, or one demographic. It showed that even when Albertans are temporarily outside the province, they are still emotionally and politically invested enough to organize, collect signatures, and encourage others. That kind of behavior only happens when a movement starts to feel real. People do not go to that kind of effort for something they think is doomed. And yes, a few naysayers tried to mock it or imply there was something improper about collecting signatures outside Canada. But that criticism mostly reveals how weak and short-sighted the opposition is. An Albertan with Alberta identification is still an Albertan wherever he or she happens to be standing. There is nothing absurd about that. In fact, it would be absurd to suggest that Albertans somehow lose their political rights the moment they cross a border for a holiday. The mockery never really landed because it was rooted more in reflexive sneering than in serious thought. What the Yuma story really symbolizes is critical mass. When people start setting up pop-up canvassing events not just in Alberta but around the world, it means the movement is no longer surviving on theory alone. It means people feel momentum. It means they want to be part of it. It means they can picture success. And that encouragement matters, because political movements grow when ordinary people start seeing visible signs that victory is possible. That is why this was such an important little segment. It was not just about Yuma. It was about proof that Alberta independence is spreading, normalizing, and becoming something more and more people believe can actually be done.

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Rise Of Alberta
Rise Of Alberta@RiseOfAlberta·
Canada is becoming a third world country. But Alberta can still build a nation worth believing in. #AlbertaIndependence
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wealthmoose
wealthmoose@wealthmoose·
🚨BREAKING: While the US & Israel risk everything to stop Iran’s missile program, Mark Carney’s "Strategic Partner" is the one rebuilding it. 📉🌋 The Reality Check: 📍China is shipping solid-fuel precursors to Iran this week to bypass US-Israeli strikes. 📍Mark Carney just signed a "New Era" trade deal with China in January, dropping tariffs & cozying up for "market access." 📍The US is fighting a war; Canada is signing a sales agreement with the enemy’s supplier. We traded our security alliance for cheaper EVs and Canola exports. We didn't just "get here"—we paid $1,775 per seat at Liberal fundraisers to cheer for this "Economic Rocket Fuel." Is this "Realism" or a total collapse of Canadian foreign policy? 🤔 #cdnpoli #MarkCarney #Iran #China #US #Israel #Canada
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Melanie In Saskatchewan
Melanie In Saskatchewan@saskatchewan_in·
Anne-Marie Gaudet, is the spouse of François-Philippe Champagne She holds a senior executive role as Vice President, Environment at Alto and works within the organization responsible for advancing Canada’s proposed high-speed rail project (Quebec City to Toronto corridor) Under her: • Environmental strategy and compliance • Regulatory approvals and impact assessments • Sustainability frameworks tied to the rail project Gaudet is positioned inside an entity that is: • Federally backed • Dependent on government policy, approvals, and funding Her role is directly connected to a major national infrastructure initiative currently being shaped and financed at the federal level. So maybe when Liberals, their friends and families stop personally benefitting then conservatives might not be so upset. Because from where I sit, the Liberals want to expropriate land to serve a limited number of Canadians in a limited geographical location at the expense of all Canadians - most of whom will never use it, while the financing arm of Canada is married to the environmental arm of Alto, and pleases the almighty Green Jesus Mark Carney, the eco nut job directing this country.
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Dan McTeague
Dan McTeague@GasPriceWizard·
And killing energy projects by NetZero fiat has demolished the value of the Canadian dollar which once held the mantle of the “Petro Loonie” That alone means Liberal/NDP/Green/Bloc climate hysteria-turned policy, adds between 35 to 39 cents a litre
Andrew Scheer@AndrewScheer

Fuel prices in Canada are even higher here than in the U.S. Why? High Liberal taxes add 25 cents/litre. Conservatives are fighting to scrap federal fuel taxes to give Canadians relief at the pumps.

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America Army
America Army@AmericaStan_·
🚨 BREAKING: Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon is investigating Minnesota County Attorney Mary Moriarty over allegations of race-based sentencing. She is also being criticized for reportedly letting Somali rape suspect Abdihamat Mohamed avoid prison time. Should “woke” judges be removed and held accountable ? A. Yes B. No
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Rise Of Alberta
Rise Of Alberta@RiseOfAlberta·
YOU WILL drive gas-powered trucks YOU WILL own the guns Ottawa hates YOU WILL eat Alberta beef YOU WILL afford a home YOU WILL prosper YOU WILL live free YOU WILL defy the globalists YOU WILL support Alberta independence
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cbcwatcher
cbcwatcher@cbcwatcher·
Quick search on FP Champagne’s brother Guillaume is up to He and their father Gilles launched Cjet FBO at Trois-Rivières Airport — a premium fixed-base operator for private jets and helicopters. $8 million invested, shiny new hangar. Inaugurated November 6, 2024 As Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, François-Philippe Champagne directly announced major federal funding for the Becancour battery materials hub right down the road: - $322 million for the Ford/EcoPro cathode active materials plant ~$148 million for the GM-POSCO Ultium CAM plant -$163.8 million for Becancour port upgrades, specifically tied to the “Mauricie battery industry” Cjet is majority-owned by Financiere Fragimi Inc., with FP Champagne as the ultimate beneficiary through a discretionary family trust The family openly built it to cash in on executive travel from those battery projects Champagne’s office: “"Minister Champagne has no direct or indirect role in Financière Fragimi Inc. He is the ultimate beneficiary, but only through a blind trust as declared to the federal ethics commissioner," Blind trust me arse If you were a big battery company that just received hundreds of millions in taxpayer cash from a specific minister, and you needed aviation services nearby… wouldn’t you feel at least a little obliged to call the family business? As karma would have it, many of the region's EV battery plants have closed or paused production, but ultimately the survivors success is tied to expected government EV incentives... so too, in turn, does that of the Champagne family Cjet! It’s giving Ozarks energy (link to story in reply) @FP_Champagne @MarkJCarney
cbcwatcher tweet media
cbcwatcher@cbcwatcher

The life of Francois-Philippe Champage is like a Netflix series... his brother: "On November 26, 2008, the Integrated Regional Organized Crime Squad raided a residence owned by Guillaume Champagne in Grand-Mère during Project Carapace, one of the 70 investigations used as evidence in Operation SharQc. In the basement, police seized 34,000 methamphetamine pills, a pill press, 4,000 grams of hashish and cannabis, a prohibited weapon—a 9mm pistol—and $50,000. The 32-year-old man did not live in the house, but during a four-month investigation, police had observed him visiting the property at least six times. He faced 11 charges." /2

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Cory Morgan
Cory Morgan@CoryBMorgan·
Uh huh. It's failing in Manitoba and BC too. Have conservatives been privatizing care there as well?
mike Michaels@mmnont1

@CoryBMorgan Hospitals are a provincial thing. Maybe ask Conservative Premiers why they are privatizing healthcare.

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stayfreealberta
stayfreealberta@stayfreealberta·
Do you agree?
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