Alberta-Leonidas

207.9K posts

Alberta-Leonidas

Alberta-Leonidas

@AlbertaLeonidas

Albertan looking for freedom from left in all its forms

Alberta Katılım Ocak 2020
73.5K Takip Edilen81.4K Takipçiler
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
I am a man I workout I eat meat I hunt I love women I am unvaxxed for cv19 I am outspoken I am pro fossil fuels Iam pro resource development those in power fear and loath men like men, be like me
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Jeffrey Rath
Jeffrey Rath@JeffreyRWRath·
🚨 BREAKING NEWS - The recent Justice Shaina Leonard in Alberta saying that Government of Alberta must “consult” with First Nations prior to the Chief Electoral Officer approving a petition on Independence means that if it isn’t overturned on appeal Alberta will become ungovernable. The Chiefs are now saying that even a question to have a question on independence requires consultation. In effect you can’t consult with Albertans by way of petition or have an Election in Alberta without first “consulting” with the Chiefs of Alberta. The decision flows from mere assertion of “a treaty relationship”, a lack of “consultation” which according to Justice Leonard gives rise to “irreparable harm”. Governments make millions of decisions every year without “consultation” with First Nations. Every one of these decisions is now subject to injunctions.
Jeffrey Rath tweet media
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
@thefringemin They hate us, want us dead but they cant replace us, tho they will try and the end result will be like south africa except cold enough to kill the replacements
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AB_Girl
AB_Girl@thefringemin·
I find it bizarre that all these forever Canada lefties are losing their minds over Alberta most of them don't even live in Alberta, now blowing up social media, saying you can't come to our province you come to our province we're gonna hurt your trucks( Yep lol that was a thing) but yet they want us to stay in Canada, can you say " I sniff sharpie pens with my helmet on"
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John Tomkinson
John Tomkinson@johnwtomkinson·
That’s an emotional and nostalgic response. The everyday lived experience of Albertans is that their costs continue to rise, their hard earned dollars continue to disappear, freedoms are limited or taken away, and social tensions continue rising. The only plan that exist for staying in Canada is to accept the status quo.
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Pascal Anglehart
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA·
@AlbertaLeonidas We definitely have to make that happen. I’ll be busy with the move for the next few weeks, but fuck yeah, brother!
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Pascal Anglehart
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA·
As some followers know, I’ve spent the last year liquidating my business and selling assets to move everything west. Tomorrow, I land in Alberta. Not for a visit. For good. I wasn’t born there, but that’s where I’ll make my last stand. I’ve burned my ships. I’m all in. Amen.
Pascal Anglehart tweet media
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
@ikwilson Maybe Farkas should be cutting taxes and regulations to attract new business That's his job not opines on things above his pay grade
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Keith Wilson
Keith Wilson@ikwilson·
His Worship Mayor Farkas is right to worry about jobs, investment, housing, public safety and social disorder. But he is wrong to blame Albertans for asking a democratic question about independence. The uncertainty facing Calgary is not caused by citizens debating their future. It is caused by a decade of failed Ottawa policy: capital flight, unaffordable housing, catch-and-release justice, uncontrolled immigration pressures, higher taxes, red tape and federal hostility to the resource economy that built this city. RBC says more than $1 trillion of investment left Canada between 2015 and 2024. Statistics Canada confirms GDP per capita has fallen in consecutive years. That is the real uncertainty. The Quebec analogy is also incomplete. The loss of Montreal head offices was tied to the extreme French language-law known as Bill 101 and the resulting flight of English speaking Quebecers. Calgarians do not need lectures about fear. They need leadership with open eyes. If Mayor Farkas truly wants to protect Calgarians’ jobs, safety and future prosperity, he should at least acknowledge that Ottawa’s policies are a central cause of the crisis—and that Albertans have every right to consider independence as the democratic path to a freer and more prosperous future. On this question, the mayor gets one vote, just like every other Albertan.
Jeromy (Pathfinder) Farkas@JeromyYYC

Voting on whether to have a vote is a ridiculous lack of provincial leadership. Calgary is a globally connected city. Separation uncertainty is costing us jobs. We have real work to do: building homes, improving public safety, fixing infrastructure, growing our economy, and making life better.

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Mae
Mae@emlinn15·
@AlbertaLeonidas @Itisabadword @KristinRaworth @ottbrocj Not only are we fighting the government, but Albertans that are either in denial that Canada is done or who think this is how things are and should be. They are the same people that think taxes are supposed to be. They only know mediocrity and fear prosperity
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Kristin Raworth 🇨🇦
Kristin Raworth 🇨🇦@KristinRaworth·
I love Alberta. I grew up here. Built my life here. Watched my siblings raise their children here. My family built businesses here. My parents taught at the University of Alberta and helped shape generations of students. My grandfather was awarded the Order of Canada for his contributions to this province and played a role in keeping the Edmonton Oilersfrom leaving Edmonton. I am as Albertan as they come. But I am every bit as proud to be Canadian. So when I see people trying to convince Albertans that our future lies in separation, I reject it completely. Alberta’s strength has never come from walking away. It has come from building, contributing, fighting to be heard, and helping shape this country into something better. I will spend every ounce of energy I have defending federalism, defending Canada, and keeping this beautiful province exactly where it belongs: in Canada.
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Dwayne Chomyn
Dwayne Chomyn@Citizen004·
"If as she said Premier @ABDanielleSmith supports the Remain option, why not just put that question to Albertans in a referendum, campaign for it and see the results before considering next steps?" @nspector4
Dwayne Chomyn tweet media
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
@RadioGenoa A noticer? Yes If u need to use a hard r go for it, the term had zero power over me
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RadioGenoa
RadioGenoa@RadioGenoa·
Are you racist?
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Pascal Anglehart
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA·
It's so frustrating to see people on other platforms starting to realize that we were right all along while they called us racist and extreme right for over a decade. But it's too late now.
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
@dubsndoo Keep fife fucko's talking, it only makes more independence freedom fighters
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Pascal Anglehart
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA·
Why do people act like treaties are sacred biblical texts writen by God himself? They are things written by men centuries ago, and they can be changed by men now. Enough with the scams.
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA

First Nations treaties are outdated relics of the past and should be abolished. It's 2026. It's been over 400 years. Join us as equals or disappear in the woods and be the 'stewards of the land' you're pretending to be. On your own, without our funding.

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MadMatt
MadMatt@Doubletapp187·
Does Alberta deserve 25% of the seats in the house of commons?
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Pascal Anglehart
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA·
You know what I hate most about Canada now? The fact that it's trapped in institutional immobility. It's literally impossible to change even the smallest thing without 4 years of debates, 16 independent boards, 2 years of union approval, 3 years of First Nations consultations, and 5 years dealing with green lobbies. By the time you jump through all the hoops, the project is no longer relevant. Vote for me. I'm Pascal Anglehart, and I'm running to become Canada's first dictator.
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
@echipiuk How about we stop social programs for non citizens and refugees we could afford referendums on every issue
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Eva Chipiuk, BSc, LLB, LLM
Another thing I find strange in this referendum discussion, in addition to the debate about whether people should even have a say, is the sudden concern about the cost of a referendum. Of all the things governments spend money on, hearing directly from citizens is not where I draw the line on the public purse. But if we are going to start questioning the cost or purpose of a referendum, then we should be prepared to apply that same scrutiny to all public spending. Where are the billions going? Why are people waiting more than 12 hours in emergency rooms to see a doctor? Why does it take weeks to issue a passport? Why do some of our roads look like they belong in a war-torn country? Because it certainly does not feel like public money is consistently being used for the public good. I am a huge proponent of transparency and accountability. And I mean serious transparency and accountability, where spending is visible to the public in real time, where decision-makers must answer for how public money is used, and where meaningful consequences, including criminal consequences, follow misconduct and corruption. So where exactly do people want to draw the line? On citizens having a voice? Or on transparency, accountability, and consequences for public officials and institutions when public trust is violated? To make a fuss about the cost of giving citizens an opportunity to express their views on an important issue? Come on. Let’s get serious. In a democratic society, citizens should not have to ask permission to make their voices heard. And using public funds to hear directly from the public should be viewed as one of the most legitimate uses of the public purse in the first place. At the end of the day, democracy is not supposed to be convenient for governments. It is supposed to be responsive to the people. If we start treating public participation as an unnecessary expense instead of a democratic necessity, then we are asking the wrong questions entirely. Citizens are not the problem to be managed; they are the very foundation of the system.
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Pascal Anglehart
Pascal Anglehart@DemosKratosCA·
Can anyone name one thing that has improved in Canada since the great Indian invasion? Just one.
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