
Nikola
9.1K posts






















In Calgary last weekend, large crowds of Albertans showed up at City Hall for a clear message: Alberta is staying in Canada. The rally, organized by the Indigenous-led group Treaties Are Forever, Alberta is Canada, was led by Blackfoot organizer Nicole Johnston from Treaty 7. She pointed out that treaties with the Crown are locked into the Constitution and cannot be brushed aside by anyone dreaming of separation. These agreements create a solid legal roadblock that separatists keep tripping over, and Johnston noted the nasty spike in racism that has popped up since the separation talk started. It’s a reminder that this fringe movement is not only ignoring history but also dividing communities for no good reason. Premier Smith made it official: her government’s position is to remain steadfast in Canada while pushing for a few more provincial rights inside the federation. Naheed Nenshi piled on, calling out the waste of a possible referendum when nearly 440,000 Albertans—more than any petition in Canadian history—signed the Forever Canadian petition last summer. That massive show of support proves the vast majority of people see through the separatist noise. Canada’s constitutional rules, court injunctions already slowing down independence petitions, and the sheer weight of public opinion mean this movement has no room to grow. It stays stuck on the sidelines where it belongs. With the provincial referendum still months away in October, rallies like this one keep underlining the obvious: the separatist push is going absolutely nowhere. Treaties, massive petitions, and leaders from across the spectrum are quietly and firmly shutting the door in these traitorous actions. REAL Albertans are choosing to fix problems together inside Canada instead of chasing a totally dead-end solo act that has become a National punchline. Alberta is a part of Confederation. That will not change. 🇨🇦 #cdnpoli #abpoli






@CoryBMorgan Does it change anything in your life that francophones in canada have the right to have French instructions?




BREAKING: Christine Fréchette, Quebec’s newly appointed premier, is heading to Washington, D.C. to engage on trade. While Ottawa seems content pretending the U.S. doesn’t exist, several premiers are spending significant time south of the border strengthening ties with our largest trading partner.





