



WantPeace
56.2K posts

@JusticeAndPeace
Against denialism of any kind.






“Traitor” is a word meant to shame. In recent years, it has been thrown at Albertans who dare to question whether their province should continue accepting decisions made thousands of miles away, by people who neither live on this land nor carry its burdens. But for many Albertans, the desire for independence is not rooted in betrayal. It is rooted in preservation. Alberta was built by people who survived not because someone saved them, but because they saved themselves. Ranchers who endured winters that erased fences overnight. Roughnecks who worked through darkness and danger, knowing accountability rested on their own shoulders. Farmers who bet everything on a season that owed them nothing. Investors who risked their capital believing that stable, predictable governance would honor its role in providing certainty and fairness. The spirit that shaped Alberta was never dependence. It was responsibility, resilience, and the belief that prosperity is earned by those willing to build it. To these people, independence is not about turning their backs on anyone. It is about standing upright. It is about maintaining the freedom to make decisions aligned with their land, their economy, and their future. It is about removing the constraints of distant authorities whose priorities often diverge from the realities of Alberta’s people and industries. The label “traitor” assumes disloyalty. But loyalty to a place does not mean silent acceptance of decline. Sometimes loyalty means protecting what made that place strong in the first place. It means ensuring that the next generation inherits not just the land, but the freedom and opportunity that once defined it. #AlbertaIndependence #cdnpoli #abpoli

BREAKING: All young men between the ages of 17 and 45 are now no longer allowed to leave Germany for more than three months without permission.



















