Dan Mader 🇨🇦

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Dan Mader 🇨🇦

Dan Mader 🇨🇦

@danjmader

Founding Partner, Loyalist Public Affairs. Conservative activist. I stand with 🇮🇱 and 🇺🇦.

Toronto شامل ہوئے Kasım 2009
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Chris Selley
Chris Selley@cselley·
Correct! Every Ontario progressive parent who opposes school choice has school choice via income (private school) or the time to engineer their kid into a specialized program (French immersion, e.g.), or is Catholic. 100% of them.
Matt Spoke@MattSpoke

We can tinker with the public education system all we want. Until there is real competitive pressure and parental choice, the outcomes of these changes will be marginal and short lived.

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Cestui Que Takes
Cestui Que Takes@CestuiQueTakes·
Today the Charter says that there is a right to bike lanes, no right to attend a Christian law school, and math tests are racist.
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Dominic Cardy 🇨🇦 🇺🇦 🇹🇼
This. Start with tax reforms that Pearson proposed back in the sixties, then shelved by Trudeau Sr. Canada is the only G7 country not to have had a radical reform of our economic strictures since 1945. It shows.
Charles Lammam@CharlesLammam

Canada’s red tape is holding back the economy. It’s time for a radical red tape reduction agenda - a low-fiscal-cost tool to jumpstart business dynamism, competition, and productivity. 7 sobering charts on the scale of the problem in @TheHubCanada: thehub.ca/2026/04/16/how…

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Chris Alexander 🇨🇦🌻
The allied response to Russian & Iranian aggression should be the same: full economic embargo; dismantlement of disinfo, propaganda & influence networks; & strikes with Ukraine & Israel against war-fighting, proxy & covert capabilities. Defeat Russia & Iran. Win the war.
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Prairie Catboy 🇨🇦
Prairie Catboy 🇨🇦@PrairieCatboy·
Friendly reminder: Antizionism isn't normal. No other country is brutally attacked and then sees an international swell of support for it to be wiped off the map.
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Jason Kenney 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇮🇱
Lots of weird takes on the Hungarian election result from both left and right here. Peter Magyar is a socially conservative immigration restrictionist who wants to cut taxes and double the defence budget. He criticized Orban for admitting too many guest workers, and wants to increase Hungary's already generous pro-natal incentives. On virtually every issue, his platform is well to the right of centre, by European standards. His foreign policy is to end Orban's alliance with Putin, remove the Hungarian veto on EU loans to Ukraine, normalize relations with the European Union while opposing more Euro integration, and strengthen relations with Eastern Europe's anti-Russian governments, e.g. Poland. His election was not a sudden shift to the left, but a rejection of Orban's corruption, the failure of his interventionist / statist economic policies, and the humiliation of his relationship with Putin.
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Jason Kenney 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇮🇱
Putin is a weak loser. He just lost his closest European ally. He lost his dictator friends in Venezuela and Syria. His allies in the Iranian theocracy are in tatters. His stooges lost elections in Moldova & Romania. He lost the support of Armenia, and it’s only a matter of time before the Georgian people throw off their corrupt pro Putin regime. He lost his effort to stop NATO expansion, pushing Finland & Sweden into the alliance. He has lost over 1.3 million Russians to battlefield casualties. And now he is losing his war against Ukraine, falling back in many areas & controlling less Ukrainian territory than he did 4 years ago.
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Jews Fight Back 🇺🇸🇮🇱
Jews Fight Back 🇺🇸🇮🇱@JewsFightBack·
🚨 75 years ago today, Iraq froze the assets of Jews forced to renounce citizenship just to escape. First they made them stateless. Then they robbed them blind. Israel did not create that refugee crisis. Israel was the refuge. Never forget.
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Taylor Scollon
Taylor Scollon@taylorscollon·
Toronto really does all it can to kill small businesses, including this great cafe on Carlaw - one of only two good ones in the area. Imagine the chaos if we let people sit down inside cafes.
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Leviathan
Leviathan@l3v1at4an·
IRGC loyalists in Toronto gather for a “Hands Off Iran” protest while simultaneously calling for missiles to strike Israel. Why are these people in Canada? How does one call for missile strikes while gathering for a “anti-war” protest?
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Ben Green
Ben Green@BenGreenJeru·
Brendan O’Neill absolutely nails it again. 🎯🎯🎯 Not mentioned and totally relevant too: Palestinian courts can impose death sentences for selling land to Israelis.
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Michelle Rempel Garner
Michelle Rempel Garner@MichelleRempel·
Conservatives are formally calling for the end of the so called "file review" system that rubber stamps asylum claims with minimal vetting and no in person interview. This process can lead to bogus claims being approved and security concerns. It must end.
Michelle Rempel Garner tweet mediaMichelle Rempel Garner tweet media
Globe Politics@globepolitics

Refugee tribunal ruled on more than 45,000 cases since 2019 without an in-person hearing theglobeandmail.com/politics/artic…

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Dan Mader 🇨🇦
Dan Mader 🇨🇦@danjmader·
Very interesting analysis
Amit Segal@AmitSegal

“If you had a time machine,” I ask the senior Israeli minister, “and you knew a month ago that this is what would happen, would you still vote in favor of war?” “First of all, yes,” he replies. “You have to understand, this was a cold and calculated gamble. The Iranians were planning to move their entire nuclear and missile industry underground, in a way that would have made it nearly impenetrable. In any case, we would have attacked this year—but with the Americans by our side, there was no dilemma.” “The main achievements of the war are the severe damage to ballistic missiles and their production. This time, after hitting the entire production chain, it will be much harder for them to recover.” “It’s also worth remembering,” the official added, “that for years, the nightmare scenario in Israel was a multi-front war with hundreds of casualties on the home front. Last year, in ‘Rising Lion,’ in 12 days of war against Iran alone, there were 30 fatalities. Now, in a war with three times as many fronts and three times as many enemies, there are 20. What is that if not proof that ‘Rising Lion’ was not in vain—and neither was ‘Roaring Lion’?” The mission to destroy Iran’s ballistic missiles was a game changer, but not in the way Israel expected. Last Friday afternoon, Israel struck a critical part of Iran’s ballistic missile industry—its two largest steel production plants—but to their surprise, found the strike affected far more than their military. Steel facilities sit in a gray area, somewhere between military targets—like missile factories or nuclear sites—and civilian targets, such as water desalination facilities. The Iranian industry is even grayer; there is no part of the economy that the regime has not penetrated. One of the factories was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2018, described as a critical source of funding for the Basij militia. Yet its targeting by Israel was to stop it from producing the metals used in ballistic missiles, not its cashflow. Iran is the largest steel producer in the Middle East and ranks among the top 10 globally. Those two factories alone account for billions of dollars in revenue and about three percent of Iranian GDP. The impact on the economy was a side effect Israel accepted. It now seems that the side effect may have been more powerful than the primary one. According to IDF intelligence, the regime’s political leadership now believes there is no way to repair the war damage; Iran simply lacks sufficient funds. It reportedly has broken the spirit of many in the regime. The assessment is that, given a prolonged economic recovery after the war that will inevitably consume the vast majority of state budgets, massive protests will erupt. It appears that Trump is reading the same intelligence, which may explain why the threats in his ultimatums have shifted from military targets to the gray area of civilian/military infrastructure, specifically Iran’s energy and oil facilities. Still, as the minister told me regarding regime change at the outset of the war, “there were more optimistic and less optimistic assessments, but no one could guarantee that while bombs were falling on Tehran, the masses would take to the streets. There is no doubt that the war has brought the regime closer to its end—but I cannot tell you whether that will happen before Trump finishes his term, or before Netanyahu finishes his.” To read the rest of today's newsletter click the link below. open.substack.com/pub/amitsegal/…

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Dan Mader 🇨🇦@danjmader·
If you want to close nuclear power plants, then you are showing that you don't actually think climate change is a big deal.
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Jonathan Kay
Jonathan Kay@jonkay·
It says a lot about the fringe genderwang politics that dominate most Canadian newsrooms that they’re playing this like it’s some kind of big shocker. I’m not sure there’s any other issue where journalists are more consistently and aggressively alienating their readers.
Edmonton Journal@edmontonjournal

Poilievre applauds J.K. Rowling's comment about Olympic ban of trans athletes from women's sports edmontonjournal.com/news/canada/po…

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Ben Woodfinden
Ben Woodfinden@BenWoodfinden·
People like this never argue with you in good faith, but i'm going to try and engage with him anyways in a good faith way: 1) The text of Sec 33 says a legislature "may expressly declare" an Act operates notwithstanding certain Charter provisions. It doesn't say "may declare only after a court has struck it down." The argument person is making is a post-facto and reactive reading that has no basis in the provision's language or the history of how we got it. It constitutionalizes judicial supremacy and dresses it up as if it were the original bargain. 2) Limiting Sec 33 to reactive use would functionally neuter it. Provinces would have to pass legislation, wait for a Charter challenge, lose, and only then invoke the override. A judicially imposed obstacle course designed to make the clause politically unusable. 3) Section 33 isn't a bug in the constitutional order, it's the only reason we even have the Charter. The 1982 settlement doesn't exist without it. Having the Court limit a power that was created precisely to prevent the court from becoming our political overlords isn't 'restoring constitutional integrity,' it's the Court amending the constitution by other means. If you want to change Sec 33, there's a process for that. It's called the amending formula."
Edward Hollett@edhollett

Rejecting pre-emptive use of the s33 would restore the constitutional integrity Ben apparently opposes. It's like his pre-emptive pearl clutching now.

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LB
LB@beyondreasdoubt·
I’ve never rated a note “helpful” faster in my life lmao
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