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We wrestle not against flesh and blood
But the el-ite operate on what they consider sacred bloodlines
The reason why the world seems so strange and unreasonable
Is because the members who are part of the el-ite bloodlines believe they descend directly from the pantheon of gods from ancient times
And their agenda, as has been for millennia, is to kill God
The occult and esoteric worldview that inform many of these el-ites are diametrically opposed to Yahweh, who was, and is, and is to come
They are opposed because through the work of Jesus on the cross, this God who claims to be Creator of the entire universe, provides not just eternal life for all mankind, but a role in the ruling kingdom of the Creator.
This power struggle is baked into a creation that have entities with free will running around
But God also designed it to include salvation, which had to be done through a sacrifice
Which is why it makes sense that the el-ites desire maintaining power and authority in this world via all kinds of blood sacrifices
They reject the only sacrifice that matters because it disempowers them
The Biblical worldview that tells us about sin and salvation make perfect sense when analyzing all the struggles we face in this world
From our personal, communal, to national, to worldwide problems, all of it makes sense when filtered through the lens of Scripture
Even the most strange, fringe, and fascinating aspects of our world can be understood through the theological and eschatological roadmap laid out by God in His Word!
This, nothing we see or hear in the news or out there in the world should alarm us.
Because there is nothing new under the sun!
Has anyone else found this to be true?
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Canada’s beef industry is under threat and most people have no idea it’s happening.
Right now, the federal government is negotiating a trade deal with Mercosur that could flood Canada with cheap imported beef.
Imports from these countries have already surged by 238% in just a few years, and Canada is already importing roughly 30% of the beef we consume.
At the same time, Canadian ranchers are being asked to operate under some of the highest standards in the world.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says imported beef meets “equivalent” standards.
But Canadians need to ask a simple question.
Equivalent to what?
Because equivalent is not equal.
If foreign beef is allowed into Canada, then true equivalency must mean identical standards:
•Same food safety rules
•Same animal health requirements
•Same inspection systems
•Same enforcement
Anything less is not fair trade.
And here is where things break down even further.
Canadian producers face policies that can wipe out entire herds when disease is detected.
Meanwhile, we are importing beef from countries operating under different systems and lower costs.
That makes no sense.
We need a smarter approach in Canada:
•Target infected animals, not entire herds
•Increase testing and monitoring
•Protect healthy livestock where it is safe to do so
•Align domestic rules with modern science and proportional response
Because right now, Canadian ranchers are being squeezed from both sides:
Higher standards at home
Lower standards from imports
This is not free trade.
This is an uneven playing field.
The Canadian Cattle Association has been clear:
There is “nothing to gain and much to lose” from this deal.
If we do not stand up now, we risk losing a critical part of our food security and rural economy.
Sign the petition and stand with Canadian ranchers:
cattle.ca/mercosur
Support local. Protect our farmers. Defend Canadian beef.
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Canadian media receives ongoing federal funding. For 2026-27, CBC/Radio-Canada is allocated ~$1.38 billion in parliamentary funding. Private outlets get additional support via the Canada Media Fund (~$230 million), Canada Periodical Fund extensions (~$12-38 million yearly), Journalism Labour Tax Credit (projected ~$65 million recently), Local Journalism Initiative, and related programs—totaling several hundred million annually across sources like Fraser Institute analyses and Main Estimates.
The topic is partisan as viewpoints differ on whether this sustains independent Canadian journalism amid industry challenges or raises questions about potential influence on coverage.
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