ConRahm

543 posts

ConRahm

ConRahm

@Conjur9

6”1 and husky

Katılım Mayıs 2021
704 Takip Edilen26 Takipçiler
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
This conference is my favorite season of the year
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Russ Herold
Russ Herold@RussHerold12·
i encourage everyone to take the time and listen to Chris interview . He talks with facts and knowledge of what has transpired, that very few people have. Many of us have tried to say many of the same things for years but have been muffled , or our interviews edited .Truth is out
Frank💥Bullitt@frankbullitts

Former Edmonton Oiler & Team Canada player calls out CBC for twisting the narrative. Watch and share. Help @cjoseph23 make sure the truth about the Humboldt Broncos bus crash — the tragedy that killed his son and 15 others — is heard. #DefundTheCBC youtu.be/-hh7s2xueD4?si…

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Chris Joseph
Chris Joseph@cjoseph23·
youtu.be/zKjkFW84SXA?si… Almost 8 years of pain, lies, & misinformation from mainstream media. We’ve had enough.
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Mocha Bezirgan 🇨🇦
Mocha Bezirgan 🇨🇦@BezirganMocha·
EXCLUSIVE: Humboldt Father Speaks Out, Exposes Why Sidhu Still Avoids Deportation: “He Only Cares About Himself" (WARNING: The contents of this story may be extremely upsetting or distressing to some viewers.) On April 6, 2018, a double-trailer semi-truck driven by Jaskirat Singh Sidhu blew through a stop sign at a rural intersection in Saskatchewan, Canada, and collided with a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos players and staff, injuring 13 people and killing 16, most of them teenagers, including Chris Joseph’s son, Jaxon. After pleading guilty and serving roughly four years in prison, Sidhu has been on full parole since 2023. However, he has continued to dominate headlines, fighting tooth and nail not to be deported back to India. Jaxon’s father, Chris Joseph — a former NHL player and firefighter — says Sidhu is not the remorseful man the media portrays him to be, but a "selfish" one who affected his life “in the worst way possible,” and who continues to do so by seeking an exemption from the law after having destroyed 29 families. “The last time I ran my fingers through my son’s hair was in a morgue. He was cold, and he was beat up,” says Joseph, responding to the truck driver whose reckless driving resulted in the death of Joseph’s son Jaxon, along with 15 others, yet who continues to fight against deportation to India on the grounds that he does not want to be separated from his own son. While most Canadians agree with his deportation order, some columnists and politicians argue that he should be forgiven and not be separated from his family. “You tell me which child of yours you want to give up, and I will be the keyboard warrior hoping for forgiveness. It’s not about vindication — it’s about what’s right and what’s wrong, and the future of our country,” says Joseph, arguing that giving Sidhu an exemption from the law would set the wrong precedent for other unqualified drivers and signal that Canadian lives do not matter. “Everybody has told him he should be deported — the judge, the CBSA, the Immigration and Refugee Board, the Federal Court of Appeal — and he still keeps trying, because he is looking out for himself and he really doesn’t care about anybody else,” says Joseph, urging politicians not to interfere with the judicial process and to allow him to be deported as he is supposed to be. In this exclusive interview with @MediaBezirgan, Chris Joseph addresses those who advocate against Sidhu's deportation, discusses the corruption within the trucking industry, and explains why he no longer trusts the mainstream media when it comes to this story.
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Pierre Poilievre
Pierre Poilievre@PierrePoilievre·
Since Carney became Prime Minister, an astonishing $63 billion of investment has fled the country. That means poor wages, more poverty & greater dependency on the U.S.
Pierre Poilievre tweet media
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Danielle Smith
Danielle Smith@ABDanielleSmith·
No matter how the eastern media tries to twist it, Albertans want the same thing: to stand as equal partners in Canada, not second-class citizens. That’s worth fighting for, every single day.
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Gary Lamphier
Gary Lamphier@lamphieryeg·
Edmonton's absurd infill policies allow for 8-plexes like these monsters to be built alongside single family homes. Thanks to Edmonton Sun columnist Lorne Gunter for doing his best to expose this insanity:
Gary Lamphier tweet media
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Moose on the Loose
Moose on the Loose@dsimieritsch·
Canada has literally become a crap show
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Dan Knight
Dan Knight@DanKnightMMA·
So let me get this straight: Canada just handed $1 billion in taxpayer money, at below-market interest to build ferries in Communist China, a country that bans our beef, spies on our MPs, and jails its own citizens for speaking out... and the Liberal minister in charge can’t even say whether China is a dictatorship when asked by @AaronGunn? This isn’t just incompetence. It’s ideological surrender. While Canadian shipyards sit idle, steelworkers are laid off, and coastal communities are begging for investment, Gregor Robertson the Carney insider now playing Infrastructure Minister shrugs and says, “It’s not my job.” If you can’t call out a dictatorship, if you can't stand up for Canadian workers, and if you don’t know where a billion dollars is going, you have no business governing a lemonade stand, let alone a G7 country.
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G.M. Forbes
G.M. Forbes@gmforbes35·
Carney is setting up Indigenous Canadians to be the scapegoat for nothing getting done. The reality: Brookfield owns pipelines all over the world. But not in Canada. Cdn pipelines to tidewater gets our energy to the international market. Brookfield won't profit from that.
Marc Nixon@MarcNixon24

BREAKING: Canada will now require unanimous First Nations approval for all major projects. That’s like needing 338 MPs to agree on a bill. Never gonna happen. Carney didn’t greenlight reconciliation. He greenlit paralysis.

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Jason Gregor
Jason Gregor@JasonGregor·
Society’s willingness to excuse sexual abuse reaches new levels of disgusting all the time. It’s fucking deplorable what we allow, because not enough people stand up against it. Here’s another example.
julie k. brown@jkbjournalist

Victims testified under oath that Maxwell sexually abused them with Epstein. Victims testified under oath that she recruited them and schooled them on how to give sexualized massages to Epstein. Victims testified that she took their passports so that they became prisoners on the island. Maxwell was convicted of sex trafficking.

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🇺🇸 Kyle Bass 🇹🇼
🇺🇸 Kyle Bass 🇹🇼@Jkylebass·
The UK is losing 16,500 millionaires in 2025. Capital gains tax hikes—up 20% to 80% over prior rates—backfired spectacularly. Tax receipts fell 18% year-over-year. Europe, take note: you can’t tax your way to prosperity…you can only chase it away. #UK #TaxFlight #CapitalGains
🇺🇸 Kyle Bass 🇹🇼 tweet media
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Tom Marazzo, MBA,CD
Tom Marazzo, MBA,CD@TomMarazzo·
Please share, far and wide. How is it possible that in 2025, one of Canada’s five federally chartered banks can unilaterally decide to close your accounts—without warning, without explanation, and without any form of due process? Banking is not a luxury. It’s not a perk or an optional service. In our modern world, it is a fundamental requirement for survival. You cannot rent an apartment, get paid, pay your bills, or access government services without a functioning bank account. Being shut out of the banking system is a form of economic erasure. And yet, the very institutions that are licensed, regulated, insured, and backed by the Canadian government can cut you off at their discretion, citing vague internal “risk assessments” or “policy violations,” with no obligation to justify it to you or to anyone else. These banks enjoy the privileges of public trust and taxpayer-backed protection. They are not operating on a level playing field like other private businesses. They are part of a tightly regulated oligopoly with barriers to entry so high that Canadians effectively have no alternative. The Canadian banking system is not truly free-market; it is a protected class of institutions, and yet, they are not held to the standard of public responsibility that should come with that protection. We saw this issue explode into public awareness during the Freedom Convoy in 2022, when the federal government invoked the Emergencies Act to freeze personal bank accounts of protesters and supporters, many of whom had committed no crime, been charged with nothing, and were denied any legal recourse. This wasn’t about fraud or terrorism. It was about political punishment. The precedent was set. Now, Canadians are learning that it doesn’t take a national emergency for your financial access to be stripped. All it takes is for a bank to decide you’re a reputational risk. That could be based on your political views, your social media activity, your associations, or nothing at all. And there is no appeals process. This is not just a customer service issue. It is a civil rights issue. It is a warning sign that we are dangerously close to a system where access to the economy is conditional where your ability to exist financially depends on your compliance with unspoken ideological boundaries. It’s time to demand legislative change. Access to basic banking services must be recognized as a protected civil right. No Canadian should be excluded from the financial system without: •A clear explanation •A formal notice period •A right to appeal •Independent oversight of the decision You cannot have a free society when banks, operating under government license, can erase your economic life without cause or consequence. If the government regulates them, the government must also protect us from them. The right to participate in the economy must never be left to the whims of corporate policies written in secret. Because if it can happen to one person without resistance, it can, and eventually will, happen to many.
Eva Chipiuk, BSc, LLB, LLM@echipiuk

Well, I wasn’t expecting this, @RBC. Welcome to Canada, where tyranny has great customer service.

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SandraCobena
SandraCobena@SandraCobena_·
If Canadians are paying 42% of their income in taxes and the government is spending billions housing asylum seekers in hotels, then let’s be clear: Canadians are being taxed too much, and getting too little in return. It’s time to put Canadians first.
Michelle Rempel Garner@MichelleRempel

"The federal government says it has spent $1.1-billion to house asylum seekers in hotels since 2017, on top of $1.5-billion it has given provinces and cities to help pay for refugee claimants’ upkeep."

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Richard
Richard@ricwe123·
Israeli journalist Gideon Levy exposing the brutal truth about the mindset of the majority of Israeli society.....
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