Bill Quon
180 posts


The RCMP is refusing to release the secret policing agreement it signed with China's Ministry of Public Security. Their reason? They need Beijing's permission.
This is the same agency linked to illegal police stations on Canadian soil, intimidation of diaspora communities, and transnational repression against people living in here.
The RCMP won't answer to politicians. It's time for them to answer to Canadians.
Allies has published an open letter to the Minister of Public Safety demanding the immediate and full public release of this agreement.
And we're asking you to add your name: go.theallies.ca/mou
Secrecy is not a safeguard. Transparency is.

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@mario4thenorth No wonder Canadians are leaving Canada, you can't even separate from Canada.
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Signal, the non-profit, encrypted-messaging app, just warned, it would rather leave Canada than comply with Bill C-22.
Here’s what Bill C-22 actually does:
✅ Forces tech companies to build surveillance backdoors into their systems
✅ Mandates that every cell phone in Canada be trackable
✅ Allows the Minister of Public Safety to issue SECRET orders to turn your Amazon Alexa into a listening device
✅ Requires metadata retention for up to one year: who you called, when, and where you were
No comparable Western nation has adopted surveillance powers this broad.
Meta called it conscripting private companies into “the government’s surveillance apparatus.”
The US wrote directly to the minister warning it compromises American citizens’ privacy.
A lawyer told committee: “As written, the minister could issue a secret order to turn your smart TV into a listening device.”
Imagine: this is the same government that froze bank accounts without a court order.
The same government that turned off committee cameras.
The same government with 638 unresolved wrongdoing complaints.
Now wants inside your phone.
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Bill Quon retweetledi

🚨 BOMBSHELL! CCP INFILTRATION DETONATION: California Mayor EXPOSED as Secret Chinese Agent After Pushing Pro-Beijing Propaganda and Noncitizen Voting Agenda | VIDEO May 12, 2026
🚨 America is facing a full-scale political firestorm after Arcadia Mayor Eileen Wang was exposed in a shocking Chinese spy scandal tied to CCP propaganda operations, foreign influence networks, and controversial efforts to reshape local U.S. politics from inside America itself.
🚨 A MAYOR INSIDE AMERICA — WORKING FOR BEIJING
👉 FULL STORY: amg-news.com/bombshell-ccp-…
📢 Join Telegram: t.me/AMGNEWS2022
🌐 Real stories. True journalism: amg-news.com
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@NHLPlayerSafety He should be suspended for the rest of the playoffs.
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Bill Quon retweetledi

For the record.
President Donald Trump’s posture on the Gordie Howe International Bridge is a textbook case of “Art of the Deal” rhetoric colliding with a complex reality. His core border slogan was blunt: the United States would build a wall on the southern border and Mexico would pay for it, so Americans would not foot the bill for infrastructure he framed as essential to their security. Now, in the bridge case, Canada has in effect done exactly that—picking up the tab for a multibillion‑dollar cross‑border project, including works on U.S. soil, while the United States (through Michigan) walks away as co‑owner of a vital trade corridor instead of the sole payer.
President Donald Trump on Monday threatened to prevent the opening of a bridge that will connect Michigan and Canada unless Ottawa negotiates with Washington on tariffs and the exclusion of American products, turning a jointly planned infrastructure project into leverage in a broader trade fight.
To be clear, the president is to be taken seriously in these threats, because they signal the tone and direction of the negotiations to come, even if the rhetoric is also part performance.
The irony is stark. When the promise was “Mexico will pay for the wall,” it was held up as proof of his deal‑making genius; when the reality is “Canada is paying for the bridge,” he brands it a bad deal—even though it’s the closest real‑world example of another country financing U.S.‑benefiting border infrastructure.
On top of that, U.S. and Canadian firms have shared in building the bridge through the Bridging North America consortium, with American companies like Fluor and AECOM working alongside Canadian companies such as Aecon and ACS/Dragados Canada, making the project deeply binational rather than “Canadian‑only.” Only Trump could turn what is effectively a multibillion‑dollar gift in shared infrastructure into a hostage crisis over milk and market access, framing a $4.5‑plus billion investment by Canada as a pressure point rather than the windfall it is for cross‑border trade.
Seen through that lens, the president’s attacks look less like a substantive critique of the arrangement and more like a negotiation tactic and political branding exercise, turning up the volume to extract concessions or score points, regardless of how favorable the underlying deal already is. Please, stop with the reflexive TDS‑style responses from either side of the aisle; focus on the concrete facts of funding, ownership, and who actually built the thing.
The United States and Canada are about to enter tough negotiations with real carve‑outs on trade, security, and border management that need calm, serious attention, not everyone embarrassing themselves by reacting to every presidential sound bite as if it were the whole story. Recognize the tactic, take the president seriously without being baited by the theatrics, keep your eye on the actual deal, and drive on.
ctvnews.ca/windsor/articl…
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Bill Quon retweetledi
Bill Quon retweetledi
Bill Quon retweetledi

American citizens need to get educated on Usa foreign policy, you are losing alliances with North and South American countries.
youtu.be/9oSqDx6mBg4?si…

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