Angry Goose

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Angry Goose

Angry Goose

@TheSqueakyGoose

I know more today than I did yesterday but less than I will know tomorrow.

Nova Scotia, Canada شامل ہوئے Şubat 2022
1.2K فالونگ736 فالوورز
Angry Goose
Angry Goose@TheSqueakyGoose·
@JeffEvely Well done … a courageous move that benefits everyone Thank you
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Jeff Evely
Jeff Evely@JeffEvely·
Jesse Thomas, of CTV News Atlantic, has been all over my "woods ban" Charter Challenge hearing. It's great to see this issue getting the attention it deserves. The freedoms we give up today are the ones our descendants will never know existed. The fair and balanced coverage has bee a breath of fresh air! Make it trend!
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Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms
🚨BREAKING NEWS In a major win for civil liberties, the Nova Scotia Supreme Court quashed the province’s 2025 “travel ban” on entering the woods, ruling that the government acted unreasonably and failed to properly consider Charter rights. More information to follow.
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Eric St-Pierre
Eric St-Pierre@EricRStPierre·
@JCCFCanada This is brilliant news. I hope folks realize that so called Conservative politicians are not going to save them. Authoritarianism has taken deep root in the Canadian psyche.
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Mr. Surveillance 🍁
Mr. Surveillance 🍁@surveilz·
@JCCFCanada This is great news but unfortunately people misunderstand how dictatorship Canada works. Government will keep appealing this until they can't at which point they'll get their wrists slapped and that will be the end of it. They'll be free to do it again. x.com/JCCFCanada/sta…
Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms@JCCFCanada

🚨BREAKING NEWS In a major win for civil liberties, the Nova Scotia Supreme Court quashed the province’s 2025 “travel ban” on entering the woods, ruling that the government acted unreasonably and failed to properly consider Charter rights. More information to follow.

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Tom Quiggin
Tom Quiggin@TomTSEC·
Interesting questions on the Ford private jet purchase. I doubt the answer will be made available to the public. 1. Who did they buy it from? 2. Did Ontario pay fair market price? 3. How many hours on the airframe? 4. How many landing cycles? 5. How many hours on the engines since last major overhaul? 6. Electronics upgrades since first flight? 7. How many civic airports in Ontario can actually handle this aircraft as most smaller airports cannot. 8. Why does the Premier of ON require a high-end private jet when a King Air or Pilatus could do the job?
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Matt Strauss
Matt Strauss@strauss_matt·
There are 40 million Canadians, and one selected to run a 90 BILLION DOLLAR project just happens to be the Finance Minister's wife. They are trolling us at this point. Banana republic behaviour.
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Dave W. Palmer, CD
Dave W. Palmer, CD@Blue22Dave·
ONE BRAVE ONTARIO JUDGE SAID THIS, AND IT SHOULD STOP EVERY CANADIAN IN THEIR TRACKS This came straight out of a Canadian courtroom, from an actual judge. Antonio Skarica, sitting on the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, just put the entire system on blast. He said the quiet part out loud. He called Canada’s justice system an “inflection point” and asked a question that should make every Canadian stop and think: Who are we prioritizing… the victim, or the offender? A Nigerian university student, identified in reporting as Osemeir, targeted a Canadian woman. He extorted her. He shared her intimate images. He left her living in what the judge described as “constant fear.” That’s not minor. That’s not a slap-on-the-wrist situation. That’s someone’s life being torn apart. Now here’s where it gets uncomfortable. The Crown, the prosecutors, were looking for a sentence of two years less a day. Why does that matter? Because under Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, once you hit a sentence of two years or more, it can trigger serious immigration consequences, including deportation and loss of appeal rights. So that one-day difference isn’t small. It’s everything. On the other side, the defense wasn’t even asking for jail time. They were pushing for a conditional discharge, which would have allowed him to stay in Canada. The judge saw exactly what was happening. He didn’t ignore it. He addressed it directly. He said, "If decisions are being influenced by immigration consequences, if sentences are being shaped not just by the crime, but by what might happen after, then we’re creating a system that’s no longer consistent." His words point to something bigger: A system where outcomes can start to look different depending on who’s standing in front of the court. And this isn’t just one judge speaking out. A judge in Quebec, Antoine Piché, raised the same issue, saying prosecutors are sometimes proposing lighter sentences or discharges for non-citizens specifically because of the risk of deportation. He warned that this creates what he called an “unnecessary two-tier system.” Two different tracks of justice. Not based on the crime, but based on the consequences tied to immigration status. Now before people start twisting this into something it’s not, this isn’t about ignoring rights, and it’s not about going after people because of where they’re from. This is about something much simpler. Consistency. If the same crime doesn’t lead to the same kind of outcome, people are going to notice. And when they notice, they start losing trust. Because for the victim, none of these legal layers matter. They care about one thing, did justice actually get done? And when even judges inside the system are publicly saying, “we’re at a breaking point,” that’s not something you brush off. That’s a warning. Not from me. From inside the system itself. So Wake Up Canada, we must all stand behind those who are showing us the truth in real time.
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Angry Goose
Angry Goose@TheSqueakyGoose·
@FoodProfessor @SDC40057817 Well said No disrespect to your area of expertise but I would point to the education system as creating the partisan bias in the today’s media When programming replaces educating … it is due to the institutions It’s safer to follow a narrative … to have a future career
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
It was my 27th time testifying in Ottawa yesterday, but my first before the House Affairs Committee. I explained what happened with La Presse, and how my 25-year collaboration with the paper was halted following personal comments I made about how public funding may be influencing editorial decisions across the country. I never once criticized La Presse itself—yet here we are. In Ottawa, several witnesses, including Peter Menzies, former editor of the Calgary Herald and Calgary Sun, expressed similar concerns. Something needs to change. The public is not being properly informed about critical issues affecting agriculture, food security, affordability, and more. No media would report on this today, for obvious reasons. Very few media outlets examined how counter-tariffs impacted food prices. It took the U.S. Ambassador to Canada—an American—to acknowledge that Canada was in breach of CUSMA, not our own media. Prime Minister Mark Carney eliminated those counter-tariffs shortly afterward. It also took three full days before anyone asked where the $14 billion would come from to fund the grocery benefit program. Media are not to blame—they are doing their best under tremendous pressure. Public funding for media is not inherently the problem. The issue is that funding private media has become partisan, and that, in my view, makes a significant difference. After 25 years, I can say something has changed—dramatically—and it is not good for our democracy.
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Angry Goose
Angry Goose@TheSqueakyGoose·
@brianlilley It was scrutiny of the global GFANZ cartel that sent the ringleader scurrying into being anointed to the top job in Canada to avoid possible arrest The suffering in Canada only increased…
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Grant Jackson
Grant Jackson@GrantJacksonMP·
BREAKING The Food Professor CONFIRMS the mainstream media edits peer-reviewed research to fit their narrative. Watch this👇
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Angry Goose
Angry Goose@TheSqueakyGoose·
@JeffreyRWRath Don’t forget the latest and newest sinkhole … Sudan There’s always the United Nations favourite charity … Haiti Always a financial need but never a solution
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Jeffrey Rath
Jeffrey Rath@JeffreyRWRath·
80-90% of Alberta tradespeople favor independence They look at their pay stub, red circle around federal income tax "I can't wait for independence" Meanwhile: $69B to Ukraine (black hole of corruption), $370M to Lebanon That's our money. stayfreealberta.com/how-and-where-… #Ableg
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Angry Goose
Angry Goose@TheSqueakyGoose·
@CTVNews How’s the hiring spree of RCMP and Border security going ? Any luck digging into their personal information ? Didn’t think so …
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Angry Goose
Angry Goose@TheSqueakyGoose·
@robertbenzie @Steve_R_Austin @TorontoStar For every hour of flight time … it takes 2700 gallons of fuel …. Gallons … not litres For $28.9 million … he could still fly private and the money will outlast his flying career Pigs at the trough
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Robert Benzie
Robert Benzie@robertbenzie·
NEW: The Ontario government has purchased a used $28.9 million private jet for the use of Premier Doug Ford, the @TorontoStar has learned. The 2016 Bombardier Challenger 650 was delivered this week. thestar.com/politics/provi…
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Benonwine
Benonwine@benonwine·
While you were looking at "lab-grown" meat, the chocolate industry pulled off the ultimate heist. Major companies are quietly funding lab-grown cocoa for 2027, but the truth is, they stopped giving you real chocolate years ago. In 27 countries, Cadbury's "Dairy Milk" isn't legally chocolate. Why? Because the Cocoa Butter—the very soul of chocolate—has been stripped out. How the Heist Works: Cocoa butter is expensive. To save money, companies replace it with a blend of six industrial oils. But oil doesn't taste like chocolate, so they add PGPR (polyglycerol polyricinoleate) to keep it from separating and petroleum-derived vanilla to mask the waxy taste. They do this in tiny steps—changing the recipe by 1% every few months—so your tongue never realizes the "real" taste is being erased. In 2026, you aren't eating a treat; you’re eating a cleverly flavored chemical slab. The Check: Look for "PGPR" on the label. If it’s there, it’s not chocolate. The Survival: Real chocolate has five ingredients or fewer.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Environmentalist logic, documented: Cow farts: climate catastrophe Private jet to climate conference: necessary travel Cow eating grass: unsustainable Almonds draining aquifers: plant-based progress Cow using rainfall: water consumption Soy monoculture requiring pesticides, herbicides, and fertiliser: environmentally conscious Cow on permanent pasture: destroying the earth Quinoa shipped 6,000 miles from the Bolivian altiplano: ethical choice Cow producing manure that grows the grass that feeds the cow: waste Plastic oat milk carton that cannot be recycled: sustainable packaging The framework is internally consistent. The cow is always wrong. Everything else gets a pass. For the record: UK cattle numbers are down 26% since 1974. Obesity is up. Diabetes is up. Topsoil loss is accelerating. Bee populations are declining. The cow left. The problems got worse.
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Carnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙
let me get this straight almond milk kills 4 billion bees a year, over 1.3 trillion gallons of water per year go to California almonds and it uses 10% of ALL of California's water.... yet eating steak and drinking cow's milk is unsustainable? wake the f up people.
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Electroverse
Electroverse@Electroversenet·
While the UN hails China's so-called "climate leadership," Beijing is busy building 800 new coal power plants (on top of the almost 3,300 already operating), locking in cheap and reliable power for decades to come. Europe did the opposite. Now it's collapsing. With coal and nuclear gone, Germany's industry is imploding. Steel output is down 25% since 2018. Energy prices are the highest in the world. Factories are fleeing the country. The green transition has gutted Europe's competitive core. What's left is an economy running on subsidies, fantasy and debt. A corrupt continent dismantled by its own bogus ideology, and one all too eagerly lapping up the lies told by China.
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
"Surveillance pricing in grocery stores needs to be scrutinized. Food is a necessity, and charging different prices based on who you are, where you live, your buying patterns, or even the colour of your skin goes against the values Canadians stand for."
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