ProbeMedia

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ProbeMedia

@Probe_Media_

Clear thinking for a confused world.

Katılım Ekim 2021
378 Takip Edilen469 Takipçiler
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Juno News
Juno News@junonewscom·
A Google exec warned Bill C-22 grants "essentially boundless" secret powers over private companies' electronic systems and devices that go beyond comparable laws abroad. She said firms can appeal orders, but must comply before courts rule.
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Macdonald-Laurier Institute
“It increasingly appears Canada has become reluctant to defend lawful military operations, confront foreign interference, protect democratic institutions, or speak openly about coercive behaviour for fear of China’s economic retaliation. The greatest danger is not necessarily open alignment with Beijing, but the gradual normalization of hesitation until Canada begins limiting its own sovereign behaviour before Chinese pressure tactics are even applied,” writes MLI Senior Fellow Joe Varner (@josephbvarner). Read here⬇️ macdonaldlaurier.ca/china-doesnt-e…
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Melissa 🇨🇦
Melissa 🇨🇦@MelissaLMRogers·
CARNEY tells Canadians that Canada has what the world wants, BUT, only 16 countries invested in Canadian startups in Q1 2026, down from 54 a year earlier 👀 38 FEWER Countries 🤯 Yet, CARNEY continues his world tour with much fewer results. This is bad 🇨🇦
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ProbeMedia
ProbeMedia@Probe_Media_·
“To hear the prime minister even contemplate the idea that ‘daddy Ottawa’ could tell Albertans how to think, if their question is clear, or even what a clear majority is, is completely inadmissible.” ~ Bloc House leader Christine Normandin apple.news/AOvEESF-eRluaQ…
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Canary In a Covid World
Canary In a Covid World@canary_covid·
After nearly two years of research and eight months of building this project alongside co-editors Professor Ian Clark and Tom Harris, we are ready to launch Canary in a Climate World: Climate Realism vs. the Net Zero Myth this Wednesday. What surprised us most throughout this journey was the extraordinary number of highly credentialed individuals quietly questioning key aspects of the prevailing climate and Net Zero narrative. Scientists. Physicists. Geologists. Engineers. Economists. Physicians. Professors. Policy experts. Investigative journalists. Contributors include Nobel Prize-winning physicist Dr. John F. Clauser, Greenpeace co-founder Dr. Patrick Moore, MIT atmospheric physicist Dr. Richard S. Lindzen, Princeton physicist Professor William Happer, Professor Henrik Svensmark, Professor Nir Shaviv, Professor Angus Dalgleish, Sir Christopher Chope, Lord Black of Crossharbour, and many other internationally recognized experts and Climate Canaries. Several contributors from the earlier Canary Covid volumes also return in this book, writing directly about the striking parallels they now see emerging between the Covid era and the climate narrative. Launching Wednesday on Amazon across hardcover, paperback, eBook, and audiobook platforms. The Canaries are speaking and this conversation is only just beginning. #Climate #NetZero #ClimateRealism #CanaryInAClimateWorld
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Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms
BREAKING NEWS: The Justice Centre announces that it has delivered a national petition signed by 42,344 Canadians from every province and territory calling on Members of Parliament to defeat Bill C-22, the federal government’s proposed surveillance legislation. Justice Centre board member and constitutional historian Dr. John Robson formally presented the petition in Ottawa, warning that Bill C-22 would significantly expand state surveillance powers while undermining the privacy protections essential to a free society. “Privacy is not a luxury in a free society,” said Dr. Robson. “Privacy protects freedom of thought, freedom of expression, freedom of association, and the ability of ordinary Canadians to live without constant monitoring by the state.” Read the full story here: jccf.ca/42344-canadian… The Justice Centre is Canada’s leading civil liberties organization fighting for Charter rights and freedoms in the courts of law and in the court of public opinion. Founded in 2010, the Justice Centre funds lawyers across Canada, relies entirely on voluntary donations to carry out its mission, and issues official tax receipts to donors. To donate, click on this link: jccf.kindful.com
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Martin Pelletier
Martin Pelletier@MPelletierCIO·
TD report on CANADA's BRAIN DRAIN is really interesting. Canada is quietly losing its top talent to the United States in what economists call a silent brain drain. While Canada does a strong job educating highly skilled workers in STEM, engineering, and entrepreneurship, it struggles to keep them due to higher taxes that kick in at much lower income levels, limited opportunities to scale companies, weaker commercialization of ideas, and much better pay and growth potential south of the border. -> Talent leaves mainly through temporary US work visas rather than permanent moves -> Outflows are heavily concentrated among the highest skilled, especially in tech and advanced degrees -> Onward migration is worst among immigrants and top university graduates -> Canada has a missing middle of medium sized firms, relying instead on many tiny businesses and a few large ones -> Personal tax rates often exceed 50 percent in major provinces and apply at much lower thresholds than in the US -> Complex corporate tax rules push entrepreneurs toward tax planning instead of growth All of this weakens productivity, innovation, and domestic returns on education, making Canada a feeder system for the US economy REPORT: economics.td.com/ca-silent-brai…
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Bruce Pardy
Bruce Pardy@PardyBruce·
Smith is trying to play Albertans like Carney is playing Smith. Smith can hold an independence referendum if she wants to. She doesn't want to. She's dangling the possibility of one in the future instead. Carney could approve a pipeline if he wants to. He doesn't want to. He's dangling the possibility of one in the future instead. On the present path, neither seems likely. The question is whether Alberta independence supporters will refuse to be fooled by Smith as Smith has been fooled by Carney.
Ron Voss@RonVoss5

@cnm5000 @JeffreyRWRath As noted by @PardyBruce “the fix is in”, even more so with the political games played today. brownstone.org/articles/the-f…

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ProbeMedia@Probe_Media_·
Law professor @PardyBruce in conversation with @BridgeCityNews. Canadians don’t truly own their land outright. Property is just a bundle of legal rights — and those rights last only as long as governments and courts decide to protect them. A growing clash between Indigenous title claims and private ownership is leaving everyday Canadians wondering: who actually controls the land under their feet? By creating different legal rights based on ancestry and identity, Canada abandoned equal treatment under the law — opening the door to endless conflict and division. The ancient idea that “your home is your castle” is being dismantled. ➡️ Watch Here: youtube.com/watch?v=R0kJP9…
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Sirhc
Sirhc@Wasted0888·
@erik_thorvalds @Alberta_UCP This is something that needs to be discussed moving forward. The UCP and FN's in the end, after we've had a successful referendum can withhold the count and decide if we are allowed to separate or not. Can we trust the UCP to do the right thing? x.com/i/status/20488…
Bruce Pardy@PardyBruce

Full text: The referendum goose could still be cooked (published in December following the enactment of Bill 14) For Alberta supporters of independence, the Alberta government has fixed a problem and created a new one. In an October column in the Western Standard, I urged the government to repeal section 2(4) of the Citizen Initiative Act (CIA). That section prohibited Albertans from proposing a referendum on independence. It tied up the Alberta Prosperity Project’s (APP) proposed question in the courts. On December 10, the Alberta legislature passed Bill 14, which repealed section 2(4). Credit to the UCP government where credit is due. Full steam ahead on collecting signatures for the proposed vote. It will be held, hopefully, in late 2026. But in the same bill, the government gave itself a new power. If the people vote “yes” in an independence referendum, the government can now decide not to implement the results. It doesn’t say so in those words. But that is what the new section means. Bear with me. Section 2(4) said that a referendum proposal “must not contravene sections 1 to 35.1 of the Constitution Act, 1982.” Sections 1 to 34 are the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Sections 35 and 35.1 relate to Aboriginal rights. A referendum question “contravenes” the Charter and Aboriginal rights when it proposes to do away with them. That’s what an independence referendum would do. To become independent means to leave your country and its constitution behind. Separation entails “clear repudiation of the existing constitutional order”. So said the Supreme Court of Canada in its 1998 Reference case decision about Quebec. The Charter applies to Canada and its provinces. An independent Alberta would not be a province. The Charter and section 35 would not apply. In effect, the CIA forbade an independence referendum. As some of us expected, Justice Colin Feasby of the Alberta King’s Bench confirmed that. He released his judgment on the APP question the day after the government introduced Bill 14. It said that the APP’s referendum proposal contravenes sections 1 to 35.1. “[I]ndependence would require the replacement of the Canadian constitution, including the identified sections, with a new Alberta constitution. ...[The CIA] “did not give citizens the power to initiate a referendum on the question of independence from Canada.” This was a made-in-Alberta obstacle. The federal government didn’t cause it. The federal Clarity Act didn’t create it. It was not because of the Supreme Court of Canada’s reference case about Quebec. The question was not whether Alberta can hold an independence referendum. It can. The issue was not whether holding an independence referendum is constitutional. It is. The Alberta court was not meddling in the process, as some have suggested. Justice Feasby was doing the job that the statute assigned. Alberta’s own law was the problem. Thanks to Bill 14, the CIA no longer forbids proposing a referendum on independence. But the problem has not gone away. Instead, the government has given it a different form. Bill 14 has moved it from the beginning to the end of the process. The final provision of Bill 14 amends the Referendum Act. That’s the statute under which a referendum would be held. Before Bill 14, under the Referendum Act a successful independence referendum would have been binding on the government. But not anymore. Bill 14 says the government is not required to implement the results of a referendum “if doing so would contravene sections 1 to 35.1 of the Constitution Act, 1982.” Those are the same words that caused the trouble in the repealed section 2(4) of the CIA. Independence “contravenes” sections 1 to 35.1. If Albertans vote to leave Canada, the Alberta government now has the power to refuse. I put this question to Alberta’s Minister of Justice Mickey Amery last week, during an interview hosted by Jason Lavigne. “You've reserved for the government the ability to be a gatekeeper at the end of the process,” I said, “the ability to say, we don't want to do it [pursue independence even with a “Yes” vote].” The Minister responded, “In theory that could happen.” Would the government dare? If 60 percent of Albertans voted for independence, refusing to move forward could be political suicide. But if the referendum was narrowly approved by 50 percent plus one, the story might be different. Premier Danielle Smith has consistently identified “a sovereign Alberta inside a united Canada”, as her mandate. A government committed to that outcome that might well repudiate a referendum win for independence. A “binding” referendum on independence, says the new law, is not binding at all. The government can reject independence even if the people vote for it. The independence goose might still be cooked, just with a different sauce. We won’t find out until after a successful referendum.

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ProbeMedia
ProbeMedia@Probe_Media_·
Ideology and friction in certain Western airports have made them effectively “hostile territory” for Israel’s El Al national airline, trumping market demand and diaspora needs. The example of Tehran reveals how far the situation in places like Toronto has deteriorated. Lawrence Solomon Uncensored: lawrencesolomonuncensored.substack.com/p/el-al-likeli… @LSolomonTweets
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Dr. Leslyn Lewis
Dr. Leslyn Lewis@LeslynLewis·
Canadians are not “misunderstanding” Bill C-22. They are understanding it very clearly. People are concerned because once governments force companies to create digital backdoors for “lawful access,” the door does not magically remain accessible only to the “good guys.” Encryption protects: * journalists * businesses * lawyers * political dissidents * victims of abuse * and ordinary citizens A vulnerability built for the state is still a vulnerability. Canadians want safe communities. But safety cannot come at the cost of building permanent surveillance infrastructure that future governments could abuse. Freedom once surrendered is rarely fully returned. #cdnpoli #Privacy #Freedom #BillC22 #DigitalRights
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Tuta
Tuta@TutaPrivacy·
🚨 Canada’s Bill C-22 is here & it’s the same surveillance bill from last year's failed C-2. 🚨 What does this mean? ❌ Your metadata would be stored by electronic service providers - for example messaging and email providers - for up to 12 months. ❌ The government would force these companies to build surveillance capabilities directly into their platforms. The government calls it “lawful access” but we know that forcing providers to enable access to encrypted data puts EVERYONE'S privacy & security at risk. 😡 Because we know that there is no backdoor for the good guys only! Help us fight for Canadian's privacy & say no to this surveillance bill. Send a letter to reject Bill C-22 here 👉 internetsociety.org/our-work/inter… #Canada #CanadaBill #Surveillance
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Paul Mitchell
Paul Mitchell@PaulMitchell_AB·
Canada is quickly turning into an authoritarian state with mass surveillance and censorship. Albertans need to realize the only viable path forward to freedom an prosperity is independence.
Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸@Tablesalt13

BREAKING: Police in Ontario are using On-Device Investigative Tools (ODITs) spyware which can remotely activate microphones, cameras and access encrypted messages The secrecy is so extreme that they are dropping cases rather than reveal details.

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Nat and The Guy
Nat and The Guy@NatandTheGuy·
"This independence movement in Alberta is... a moment in time, it doesn't come up very often in the life of civilization." - Bruce Pardy (@PardyBruce) sits down with us to examine his Constitutional proposal for a free and independent Alberta. Premieres at 11:15am (MT), May 14 on YouTube. WATCH HERE: youtube.com/watch?v=vrvpiA…
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ProbeMedia@Probe_Media_·
❗️Processing Justice Shaina Leonard’s decision — who better to break it down than @PardyBruce on today’s episode of @TheLavigneShow with Paula & Jay ... Quashing the Provincial Chief Electoral Officer’s Decision to Allow the Petition #AlbertaIndependence This is the second major judicial roadblock under the Citizen Initiative Act. The latest ruling is more revealing — not because of any grand conspiracy, but because it perfectly illustrates how institutions and officials instinctively default to preserving the status quo when Alberta independence is on the table. The decision also exposes deeper problems with the CIA itself. Bottom line, says Prof. Pardy: The CIA process was never necessary! The Premier and the provincial government already possess the clear legal authority to place an independence question on the ballot at any time, on their own initiative. They have simply chosen not to. Instead, they have directed citizens to jump through the hoops of a flawed statute that the government itself refuses to fix or bypass. That choice has now produced exactly the outcome critics warned about: two successive court defeats, months of delay, and another public demonstration that the system is stacked against even asking the question. This is a made-in-Alberta problem — twice over. Alberta’s path forward may turn less on court rulings than on whether its elected leaders decide they are willing to lead. Get up to speed 👇 youtube.com/watch?v=xvIYuT…
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