🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada

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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada

🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada

@MeanwhileInCa

Shining the spotlight of public scrutiny on Canada's prosperity challenges | Build baby, Build 🍁🛠👷‍♀️🏗

Katılım Temmuz 2023
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada
@wealthmoose Canada have an embarassment of resources that is being deliberatley held back. You forgot -Natural Gas -Forest/Lumber -Coastline -Fisheries -rare earths/cobalt -diamomds -aluminum -palladium -platinum -Hydroelectric power Lol...We couldn't defend it if any one wanted to invade
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CTV News
CTV News@CTVNews·
‘How many people have to die?’: Five deaths tied to wait times in Manitoba hospitals ctvnews.ca/health/article…
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Senator Victor Oh
Senator Victor Oh@SenatorVictorOh·
🌹🇨🇦🇨🇦🌹 Fellow Canadian @AliFeizi’s firsthand account from multiple independent trips to Xinjiang is powerful and overdue. As someone who has long advocated for evidence-based Canada-China engagement, I’m struck by his clear-eyed observations: a region where Uyghur culture is actively preserved — from the restored Old City of Kashgar to thriving bazaars and vibrant traditions — not erased. The so-called “concentration camps” he saw are vocational training centres helping people build skills. Ottawa’s rhetoric must match reality. Accusations this serious demand proof, not politics. Strong, pragmatic Canada-China ties also deliver real benefits for Canadian livelihoods: restored market access for our farmers (canola, peas, seafood, beef) supports thousands of jobs and family incomes across the Prairies and beyond; affordable Chinese EVs and supply chain investments help build a stronger Canadian auto sector and lower costs for families; while diversified trade with China’s massive market drives economic growth, stability, and new opportunities from coast to coast. Canadians deserve foreign policy grounded in facts, dialogue, and mutual respect that puts our prosperity first. Thank you, Pastor Feizi, for speaking truth from the ground. #Xinjiang #CanadaChina x.com/alifeizi/statu…
Ali Feizi 费爱理 Adili@AliFeizi

A Canadian’s Disappointment: What I Actually Saw on the Ground in Xinjiang vs. What Ottawa Claims As a Canadian, I have always taken pride in my country’s commitment to human rights, due diligence, and evidence-based foreign policy. We are a nation that prides itself on “peacekeeping,” not warmongering; on diplomacy, not hyperbole. That is why I find myself profoundly disappointed—not just as a Canadian, but as a citizen of a country that claims to value truth—when I listen to the Parliamentary Questions coming out of Ottawa regarding Xinjiang. The language used in is alarming. Terms like "concentration camps" are thrown around with a casual certainty that bears no resemblance to the reality I have witnessed with my own eyes. Having made three trips to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the last nine months, I have seen a reality that is diametrically opposed to the narrative being pushed by our Members of Parliament. I am not a journalist embedded with a government delegation; I am a Canadian who traveled independently. I went expecting to verify the headlines we see in Canadian media. Instead, what I found was a region vibrant with culture, actively preserved and proudly showcased. Here is what I observed on the ground, and why I believe Ottawa’s rhetoric is not only wrong but dangerously disconnected from the facts. The Cultural Reality I Witnessed During my three trips, I spent time in Kashgar, Urumqi, Tashkurgan and the surrounding areas. The narrative I was sold in Canada was one of cultural erasure. The reality I experienced was the exact opposite. 1. The Old City of Kashgar One of the most striking examples of cultural preservation is the Old City of Kashgar. Canadian politicians describe a region being "flattened" or "assimilated." Yet, I walked through the labyrinthine alleyways of this ancient Uygur city, which has been meticulously preserved as a historical site. The local government didn’t tear it down; they invested in upgrading the infrastructure, running water, natural gas lines, and earthquake proofing, while maintaining the traditional Uygur architecture, wooden pillars, and intricate brickwork. In the evenings, I watched in the alleyways while children ran through streets paved with traditional kuzi bricks. This wasn’t a ghost town; it was a living, breathing historical center. 2. The Grand Bazaar and Livelihoods The Id Kah Bazaar in Kashgar is not only open; it is thriving. I saw Uygur artisans selling hand-engraved copperware, traditional atlas silk, and locally grown dried fruits. Far from being forced into labor, I spoke with shop owners who explained that tourism encouraged by the government’s infrastructure investments had allowed them to expand their family businesses. If the goal were cultural genocide, as some Canadian MPs allege, why would the state invest billions into preserving the mihrabs in mosques, restoring the Id Kah Mosque (one of the largest in China), and promoting Uygur cuisine and music festivals? It simply doesn’t add up. 3. Videos from the Ground I am sharing some videos in my posts to show the reality. In one clip, you can see Uygur dance another a traditional wedding I went too. The Disconnect in Ottawa As a Canadian, this embarrasses me. We claim to be a nation that stands for truth and reconciliation. Yet, when given the opportunity to send independent observers or journalists to verify facts, our government often chooses to boycott or criticize the very invitation for transparency. If our Parliament is going to make accusations as severe as "genocide" and "concentration camps," the onus is on them to provide evidence. My three trips over the last nine months provided evidence of the opposite: a region where Uygur culture is not only preserved but celebrated, and where the so-called "camps" are actually vocational training centres, facilities I drove by I that looked into them focused on giving people skills in Mandarin and industrial skills. #Xinjiang

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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada retweetledi
Dan Mazier
Dan Mazier@DanMazierMP·
Former Parliamentary Budget Officer Jason Jacques revealed the Interim Federal Health Program will cost Canadians more than $1.5 billion a year by 2030. The Health Committee then ordered a further investigation into the program and Jason Jacques committed to delivering it. Shortly after, the Liberals refused to renew his contract and ousted him as PBO. Now the PBO office is suddenly offering a watered-down version covering only 3 of the 11 items the committee ordered. To make matters worse, they appear to be prioritizing Liberal policies that haven't even taken effect yet. Is this what the PBO now looks like under Liberal pressure? An out-of-control program with a $1.5 billion annual price tag deserves full scrutiny, not a watered-down analysis designed to protect the government.
Dan Mazier tweet mediaDan Mazier tweet media
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maes howe
maes howe@ManonRaven·
@TomTSEC 🤡 Indigenous ppl have been in Canada / New World for +15-30,000 years Hence ‘indigenous’ You ppl are so stupid
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Tom Quiggin
Tom Quiggin@TomTSEC·
The only major slave holders in Canada were the descendants of Mongolian immigrants who - for some reason - we now call "indigenous people" even though they come from Asia.
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Mario Zelaya
Mario Zelaya@mario4thenorth·
Without Alberta, Canada fails. Alberta without Canada, becomes one of the wealthiest nations on earth. If Carney wins, I am concerned that Alberta leaves.
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Sam Cooper
Sam Cooper@scoopercooper·
@Armita69930Liz Informed electorate is first, I understand that some mobilization of Canadians interested in my work is in fact underway, I will have more to say about that later. Don’t count on @csiscanada and @rcmpgrcpolice — you will need to join an organized group of citizens and put in work
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada retweetledi
Chief_Engineer
Chief_Engineer@ChiefEngineerCE·
So Iran is reportedly engaging in cyber warfare on the US now aimed at financial and credit reporting agencies and records. You folks realize that's all in India now ... Right? Meanwhile- that 'region' has had scandal after scandal of poor cyber security and data released. They can't even keep medical records in compliance. Does that make anyone feel better?
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Sciohn Fhanne (深梵)
Sciohn Fhanne (深梵)@sciohn_fhanne·
Our entire institutional psyche in Canada is oriented toward consensual process and deliberation at the expense of real execution and real outcomes. We'd rather spend years trying to offend no-one than launch the much-needed precision strikes that will propel this place into the 21st century. Your expropriation and land-acquisition model is ingenious. Too ingenious for the mainstream Canadian psyche, I'm afraid. It would absolutely work in a civilization that's much more future-forward, hungry, and energetic than ours.
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Nathan Labbe
Nathan Labbe@Cappy_Nate·
High Speed Rail Costs By Country (excl tunnels): 🇨🇳 $25m/km 🇸🇦 $30m/km 🇪🇸 $30m/km 🇫🇷 $35m/km 🇪🇺 $40m/km 🇰🇷 $40m/km 🇯🇵 $50m/km 🇨🇦 $160m/km At similar costs to every other country, this costs $25B. Not $90B.
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tobi lutke
tobi lutke@tobi·
@JohnNabuurs yep. Canada can be the richest country on planet earth any time it chooses. It's literally just choices.
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🍁👷‍♂️🏗 🛠 MeanwhileInCanada retweetledi
C3
C3@C_3C_3·
New York: 133K NGOs handle $450 billion per year. California: 225K NGOs handle $610 billion per year. Over $1 trillion per year is moved within the NY and CA NGO ecosystem. The fraud is staggering. America is not in $39 trillion in debt. America is in $39 trillion in fraud.
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Thomas Sowell Quotes
Thomas Sowell Quotes@ThomasSowell·
Jamie Dimon: "Immigration - What the hell are we doing? The bottom 20% of our population, their wages didn't go up for 20 years. They're dying 7 years younger… Their schools don't work… [Americans] should be getting sick of it."
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Canadian Bar Assoc.
Canadian Bar Assoc.@CBA_News·
CBA President Bianca Kratt, K.C., warns that recent media commentary questioning the impartiality of a sitting judge of the Ontario Superior Court risks undermining public confidence in the judiciary. 🔗 Read the full statement: bit.ly/4sQV4Pi
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Based Jessica
Based Jessica@RealJessica·
Argentina President Javier Milei: "The left can't applaud me because their hands are in other people's pockets."
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
The legendary David Attenborough pulls off what might be the greatest dolly zoom ever captured on film—set against the dramatic backdrop of Newfoundland, Canada.
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