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Canary in the Gold Mine
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Canary in the Gold Mine
@BONE207
Canary in the Moderna gold mine. Not a conspiracy theorist but part of the resistance to the globalist parasites fighting not for my future but my kid's.
Communist Canada Katılım Nisan 2015
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Canary in the Gold Mine retweetledi

Canary in the Gold Mine retweetledi

Alberta has the 3rd largest oil reserves in the World, not Canada.
The rest of Canada imports more oil from overseas, than they do from Alberta.
This is a made-in-Ontario problem.
Mario Zelaya@mario4thenorth
What in the Hormuz is this? We have the third largest oil reserves in the world. 😭
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@Krommsan They are admitting that they don't want to find the illegal guns because they might get shot. They are going after the easy ones...

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Canary in the Gold Mine retweetledi

Anita Anand @AnitaAnandOE with a career riddled by allegations of favoritism and questionable ethics, has consistently raised eyebrows through her actions in office. Her tenure as Minister of Public Services and Procurement, and later as Minister of National Defence, has been overshadowed by accusations of enabling lucrative deals for her husband, John Knowlton, who serves as a director at LifeLabs. This medical testing company suspiciously secured government contracts worth up to $111 million for COVID19 testing during the pandemic, a time when Anand held significant sway in cabinet. Reports indicate LifeLabs received $66.3 million on June 23, 2021, and another $1.9 million on August 20, 2021, yet Anand’s office conveniently claims she had no direct involvement, a statement that reeks of evasion and halftruths. The lack of transparency in her initial Conflict of Interest Act filings, which failed to disclose her husband’s role at LifeLabs, only deepens the perception of deceit
Further scrutiny reveals Anand’s handling of defence contracts as equally troubling, with her oversight marred by allegations of mismanagement and questionable decisions. The solesourced $92 million deal with Roshel for armoured vehicles sent to Ukraine sparked outrage when the company faced corruption allegations, and though Anand expressed concern, her response felt like a hollow gesture meant to deflect blame rather than address the rot within her department. She has also been criticized internationally, with figures like U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan accusing Canada of freeloading in NATO under her watch, pointing to her failure to bolster defence spending as a sign of incompetence and neglect. This paints a picture of a minister more preoccupied with maintaining appearances than delivering on promises, leaving Canada’s military and international reputation in a precarious state.
The stench of impropriety surrounding Anand extends beyond contracts to her broader conduct, which appears calculated to avoid accountability at every turn. Her office’s repeated denials of wrongdoing in the LifeLabs scandal, claiming compliance with ethics obligations, come across as a smokescreen to obscure the reality of her family’s financial gains. The fact that LifeLabs had minimal federal contracts before the pandemic, only to see a sudden influx of millions during her tenure, suggests a level of insider influence that cannot be ignored. Critics argue this pattern of behavior reflects a deeper disregard for ethical standards
Anand’s public persona as a competent leader crumbles under the weight of these controversies, revealing a politician whose actions consistently skirt the edge of acceptability. The absence of a formal ethics investigation into her dealings, despite widespread concern, only fuels suspicion that she’s being shielded by a system unwilling to confront its own flaws. Her failure to publicly recuse herself from discussions involving LifeLabs, unlike in other instances such as ferry service decisions, further erodes any claim to transparency, suggesting a selective approach to ethics that conveniently benefits her family. This isn’t just a matter of perception; it’s a glaring red flag that Anand’s priorities lie not with the Canadian public, but with preserving her own interests, even at the cost of integrity.
Anita Anand’s career is a cesspool of conflicts, questionable decisions, and a blatant disregard for the ethical boundaries expected of a public servant. From her husband’s company raking in millions through government contracts to her mishandling of defence deals and the broader erosion of trust in her leadership, Anand embodies the kind of selfserving politics that Canadians deserve to see exposed. Her actions paint a damning portrait of a minister who, far from serving the public good, appears to have leveraged her position for personal gain, leaving a trail of suspicion and disappointment in her wake.
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@BwithHim2day I don’t know a significant number that speak out like I do. But those of us that do, we are cyber bullied, stalked. Our jobs called. Attempts to scare us and get us fired.
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Canary in the Gold Mine retweetledi

They censored doctors, nurses, and paramedics like me because we were telling the truth.
They used their shills to make fun of ivermectin and censored or gang stalked anyone boasting about it, because it could save lives.
They would not have been able to experiment on you with a shot that we know is killing people if they had an effective treatment. That’s just a fact.
If you aren’t upset, highly upset, you’re either retarded, paid off, or already dead post covid shot.
God bless

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