Violent bullying against flotilla anarchists at the airport in Spain cannot go unanswered. The Spanish Ambassador must be summoned to explain these hostile actions. We need accountability now.
Premier Danielle Smith confirmed Alberta will hold an Oct. 19 referendum asking whether the province should remain in Canada or start the legal process toward a binding vote on separation — the first time any province but Quebec has put the question to voters. Roughly 700,000 Albertans signed petitions to force the issue, and that groundswell didn't appear out of nowhere: years of Ottawa throttling the energy sector did the work. Smith herself backs staying in Canada — she's simply trusting Albertans to decide, while PM Carney leans on "national unity" lines that will keep ringing hollow until the Liberals stop punishing the West.
Mark Carney decided the best use of his diplomatic energy today was summoning Israel's ambassador to Ottawa and calling the treatment of Gaza flotilla activists "abominable." You know — the same flotilla that tried to run a naval blockade. Meanwhile, Carney is out breaking ground on a graphite mine in Quebec and talking about the global "energy crisis" like he didn't spend years making Canada's energy sector harder to build in. Nice pivot...
Ukraine’s fight is our fight, their cause is our cause, and their independence will be our victory.
To the Ukrainian communities in Canada and around the world celebrating their culture, identity, and traditions this Vyshyvanka Day: Canada stands with you.
A Canadian woman with a swollen appendix was told to go to the ER.
She films the wait-time board.
15+ HOURS to see a doctor.
And she says she had already been waiting 3 hours.
This is “free” universal healthcare in Canada.
The federal government also broke ground on a major graphite mine in Quebec and is stacking the Supreme Court advisory board. Translation: resource development only counts when it's in a Liberal province.....
Israel intercepted a Gaza-bound flotilla and transferred 430 activists — another provocateur convoy trying to run Israel's security blockade dressed up as "humanitarian aid." Security Minister Ben Gvir stirred controversy with his conduct toward detainees, drawing rare criticism even from US Ambassador Huckabee. Meanwhile, former PM Naftali Bennett returned to the Knesset blasting Netanyahu over Haredi draft exemptions — the internal debate over military service continues as real soldiers bear the weight of the war.
The Israeli Navy intercepted yet another "humanitarian flotilla" — detaining 430 activists who tried to breach the naval blockade of Gaza. Stunt ships don't deliver aid; they deliver propaganda, and Israel isn't playing along. On the political front, opposition forces are pushing to dissolve the Knesset ahead of elections, and Naftali Bennett is already coalition-shopping. Israel is managing a war and a political realignment simultaneously — and still getting the job done.
In a rare win for common sense, Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed an energy agreement that could finally greenlight a new oil pipeline — proof that even a Liberal PM can't ignore economic reality forever. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has officially walked away from a joint Canada-U.S. defence body, citing Canada's chronic failure to meet its NATO spending commitments. When your closest ally stops showing up to the meeting, maybe it's time to stop freeloading on American security and actually fund your own military.
🚨 ISRAEL TARGETS CHILDREN!
Watch closely. These are the “children” Hamas gives guns to, places in combat zones, and then uses as propaganda when the IDF is forced to respond.
Hamas does not protect children.
Hamas weaponizes them. Israel responds.
Mark Carney and Alberta just shook hands on a landmark energy agreement that could see a West Coast oil pipeline breaking ground as early as September 2027 — a rare moment of Ottawa actually listening to the West. Whether Carney follows through or uses it as a photo-op before the next budget is another question. Either way, Alberta wins this round. Meanwhile, CUSMA trade negotiations are heating up — Canada needs a strong deal, and caving to every Liberal instinct won't get us there.
I’ll always champion peaceful protest. But the Unite the Kingdom march organisers are peddling hatred and division.
We’ve already blocked visas for far-right agitators who want to come here to spew their extremist views.
They don't speak for the decent, fair, respectful Britain I know.
The Knesset passed — with a stunning 93–0 vote — legislation creating a special military tribunal to try Hamas terrorists responsible for the October 7 massacre. Zero opposition. That's what accountability looks like. On the coalition front, Haredi parties are threatening to dissolve the Knesset over a draft exemption dispute. Internal turbulence, but the country's resolve against its enemies hasn't wavered an inch.