Canadians at least have an answer now to their perennial anguished question, "What does it take to put Canada on the front page of the New York Times?"
— David Frum (@davidfrum) June 8, 2023
— Corey Clayton (@CoreyClayton) June 8, 2023
"Do not go gentle into that good night. Blog, blog against the dying of the light"
Canadians at least have an answer now to their perennial anguished question, "What does it take to put Canada on the front page of the New York Times?"
— David Frum (@davidfrum) June 8, 2023
— Corey Clayton (@CoreyClayton) June 8, 2023
1/ 🚨We're proud to announce that our full Guide for Pride Defenders is published and available for download!🚨
— Canadian Anti-Hate Network (@antihateca) June 6, 2023
Pride defence is the act of going to any Pride event to protect the 2SLGBTQ+community from far-right activists who show up.https://t.co/FUt9ARd93G
Pride defence is the act of going to any Pride event to protect the 2SLGBTQ+community from far-right activists who show up.Pride Defenders are the brave people who show up to counter the far-right, using many different tactics. Some have used spectacle and created a party-like atmosphere with dancing and music to keep the far-right out, while others have blocked them from accessing events using their bodies.If you’re feeling overwhelmed, it’s better to take one action than freeze up because doing everything feels impossible. With that in mind, we’ve organized this guide into three parts—Before Pride, During Pride, and After Pride—and within each section, we’ve highlighted the one or two points we would suggest prioritizing. We recognize not everyone will be able to participate in the on-the-ground action on the day of the event, so we have taken care to include points that folks can participate in from home.While this guide specifically refers to Pride events and defences, the information can be used to prepare you for many kinds of defences or counters against the far-right.
The guide is just in time, because violence and right-wing rage appear to be increasing:And incredibly important read is
— Pride Was A Riot (@trannyfagdyke) June 6, 2023
The Guide for Pride Defenders from @antihateca
Both the 20 page full guide and the 2 page abridged handout are available to download for freehttps://t.co/wJAxH4jTYB https://t.co/uHJ7F1bqF2 pic.twitter.com/pHDMiihSIl
This is what RWNJ rage-farming leads to. Stop supporting it.
— Tapestry - Trying to Make Sense of the Insanity (@Tapestry236) June 7, 2023
We already saw the early stages of this at the York Region Catholic School Board meeting over flying the Pride flag right here.
Trump’s lawyers presented their concerns, to which Jack Smith responded by breathing on the glass door, writing “LOL” in his breath cloud, and exiting the room.
— Liddle’ Savage (@littledeekay) June 5, 2023
Here’s how this meeting went:
— Andrew Wortman 🟧 (@AmoneyResists) June 5, 2023
Smith: Your client is getting indicted.
*meeting adjourned* pic.twitter.com/VtLgllCdE4
Trump legal team’s meeting with DOJ ended 1 hour and 6 minutes ago. Lawyers got to an office space, debriefed their client. Seems it went very well. pic.twitter.com/8jBWMnOgzl
— Robert J. DeNault 🏳️🌈 (@robertjdenault) June 5, 2023
So I won the Best Dressed competition at the charity bingo for @SaskatoonPride. What a fun night! pic.twitter.com/DZdhmQX2MU
— Kyle Anderson (@DrKyle) June 4, 2023
June is #PrideMonth. Saskatchewan physicians recognize the importance of providing culturally competent care so that patients feel safe knowing there are medical options available to them. @SaskatoonPride @QueenCityPride @OUTSaskatoon pic.twitter.com/BAgG9d1ql4
— Sask Medical Assoc. (@SMA_docs) May 30, 2023
Today, SPS raised the Pride flag to celebrate Pride month! We honour diversity & we are open to all students. We strive to create safe, welcoming & joyful places that are caring & accepting of all. Today & every day, every student is known, valued & believed in. pic.twitter.com/Loysjzmj3d
— Saskatoon Public Schools (@StoonPubSchools) June 1, 2023
Love is love, a story is a story, and fun is just good, clean fun! Thank you to the Children’s Festival for a fabulous afternoon with this kiddo! 🌈@yxekidsfest @SaskatoonPride pic.twitter.com/dci6C9WkVL
— Britainy Zapshalla (@britrzap) June 4, 2023
He is on a terrible roll this week. First he eluded to him being a pedophile, then he said that student setting off a firework on the TTC was his fault. Now he is saying the PM is selling drugs. I can't take this man seriously.
— laura frost (@Ljafk) June 2, 2023
God Poilievre is a thug.
— Andrew Coyne 🇺🇦 (@acoyne) May 31, 2023
Oh good,@PierrePoilievre has revived the repulsive smear that Trudeau was or is a pedophile and sexually preyed on students in his capacity as a teacher.
— Alheli Picazo (@a_picazo) May 31, 2023
It's important to spell out exactly what is happening here, and shut these lies down. #cdnpoli https://t.co/xnNWJzNQSh
Thank you so much for all the love. RW/HW. ❤️💙💔💔💔 pic.twitter.com/JlIaCbly7Q
— Hannah Waddingham.💣 (@hanwaddingham) May 31, 2023
Brendan Hunt, Jason Sudeikis & co. delivered a damn endearing finale for #TedLasso. It’s never solely been Ted’s story, but rather about this family who found comfort in each other. Considering season 3’s messy structure, I’m happy they managed to wrap-up every arc pretty nicely. pic.twitter.com/vidCA9uZ1B
— Edgar Ortega (@edgorteg) May 31, 2023
Rally planned in response to Greater Saskatoon Catholic School leaked email | https://t.co/WL6g5VZMGW. https://t.co/KW1XD2qLAT
— Dennis Kendel (@DennisKendel) May 30, 2023
The "vandalism" didn't seem particularly vicious, really:Following the leak of a controversial email, Greater Saskatoon Catholic Schools' downtown office was hit with an apparent act of vandalism Monday morning. https://t.co/RE9gOqQnyZ
— CTV Saskatoon (@ctvsaskatoon) May 29, 2023
The front windows were splattered with fluorescent paint and butterfly, unicorn and flower stickers, and paper hearts. The sidewalk in front of the office had a rainbow and messages like "we all belong" and "it's queer here" scrawled with chalk.
The Trudeau government may be the Rodney Dangerfield of governments - they don't get no respect! - but they keep on keeping on. And people appreciate it, too:🧵The thing I like about this Liberal government is that, amidst all the sound and fury signifying nothing, they keep plodding along, each foot in front of the other, doing the work, not getting distracted from, um, governmenting.
— David Hamer 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇨🇦 (@DavidHamer_1951) May 26, 2023
… https://t.co/Td3FAk5bXZ
The National Post writes:National Post Headline
— G.T. Lem 林 家 聰 (@gtlem) May 25, 2023
"After eight years, Trudeau still proving stubbornly popular"
NP Must of had to grit their teeth to print a headline like that#cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/x4xu7DRCnp
Hmmm....I wonder what was going on in the winter of 2001? Oh, yeah...Canada went to war, which is a time when people always rally round the flag. The Post grudginly reminds us:Trudeau has a 40 per cent approval rating against 55 per cent who disapprove. The pollster noted in a recent analysis that this is slightly better than his predecessor Stephen Harper, who hit his own eight-year mark at an approval to disapproval rate of 36 to 58.And it’s way better than Brian Mulroney, whose political career was on the edge of collapse after eight years; he had a near-universal disapproval rating of 83 per cent.Trudeau is even polling better than his father. In 1976, on the eighth anniversary of Pierre Trudeau’s swearing-in, Angus Reid Institute numbers show that nearly twice as many Canadians disliked him as liked him; approval was 32 per cent against a disapproval rate of 57....In the winter of 2001, an incredible 54 per cent of Canadians approved of Chrétien’s job as prime minister, against 42 per cent who didn’t.
At the time, Chrétien was overseeing the entry of Canadian troops into Afghanistan in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. His government had also just finished bringing Canada back from the brink of sovereign debt collapse.
Prime Minister Net Approvals After Eight Years:
— Polling Canada (@CanadianPolling) May 22, 2023
Chretien ('01): +12%
J. Trudeau ('23): -15%
Harper ('14): -22%
P. Trudeau ('76): -25%
Mulroney ('92): -71%
Angus Reid / May 10, 2023 / n=1603 / Online
My mandate for my first report is to determine whether any further public process is required. My short answer is yes. I plan to hold a series of public hearings with Canadians (particularly from affected communities), government officials (including retired officials), knowledgeable experts, and other interested parties to discuss foreign interference, its effects on diaspora communities, and policy and governance improvements that could be made to improve the government’s response to it. I hope and believe that these public hearings will continue to shine a spotlight on the problem of foreign interference, provide public education about the threat of foreign interference, and provide a better foundation of information which I can use to make policy and governance recommendations for improvement. I also hope these hearings will accelerate government policy development to address foreign interference, stressing both the importance and urgency of action.These hearings will not focus on “who knew what and what did they do about it.” I have examined these issues, drawn conclusions, and provided as much information as possible to the public, as well as in a confidential annex to be viewed by the Prime Minister and members of Cabinet (as well as officials or Opposition Leaders with the requisite security clearance). I also recommend the Prime Minister refer my report, including the confidential annex, to the chairs of NSICOP and NSIRA so those bodies can review my conclusions and advise the Prime Minister, Parliament and the public if they disagree.I carefully considered whether an inquiry under the Inquiries Act could help enhance public trust in our electoral process, over and above the work I have done. When I was first appointed, my preliminary view was that I was very likely to recommend a Public Inquiry. But my conclusion is that, in light of the material and information that would lie at the heart of any inquiry, it could not be done in public. Rather, a “public inquiry” would necessarily be done in private and largely replicate the process I have undergone, and not advance the goals of transparency or trust any further than I have taken them and raise expectations that will ultimately be disappointed.
A thoughtful set of findings by David Johnston. He proposes public hearings on the policy and governance issues and a separate review by two national security bodies on the classified aspects of foreign interference. #cdnpoli https://t.co/SXLPpfoDuS
— IReza (@IshatReza) May 23, 2023
Kind of fun to see our media mavens rolling on the floor, holding their breath, turning blue in paroxysms of rage when respected Canadians like the Hon. Paul Rouleau or the Right Honourable David Johnston, whose salaries don’t depend on clicks, tell them they’re all wet. 🤭
— David Hamer 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇨🇦 (@DavidHamer_1951) May 24, 2023
My professional opinion is that the beltway consensus was that the Russian army was what we had assessed it to be: professional, properly resourced and equipped, and powerful.Another part of the beltway consensus was that despite Ukrainian resolve their was no way they would withstand having the bulk of that force thrown at them.These two beliefs, which we now know like much of the beltway’s deeply held convictions are just wrong, were exacerbated and enhanced by the fact that Russia won the information war around Ukraine back in 2014 and almost every policy discussion and almost all of the news reporting was being done within the informational shaping that Russia had successfully undertaken.This includes everything from views of Russia’s military to views of Ukraine and the Revolution of Dignity to taking Russia’s nuclear weapons and usage doctrine exactly as Russia wanted us to.
Good for him. This is the correct response. https://t.co/i7euZINuUu
— Michael Weiss (@michaeldweiss) May 21, 2023
once a month, this elite group of brave forbidden intellectuals gather to ask "why can't a white guy say it" https://t.co/Tk4yLREymC
— lauren (@NotABigJerk) May 17, 2023
The harsh cancel culture of a 3000 word puff piece
— Ryan Marino, MD (@RyanMarino) May 17, 2023
This is how important foreign interference is to Pierre Poilievre. pic.twitter.com/XBfCgOe8Gm
— Raoul Duke's Salt Shaker (@RodKahx) May 17, 2023
They do the same thing during election campaigns, when they are "too busy" to attend all-candidate meetings.
— Cathie from Canada 🇨🇦 😷🏳️🌈 (@CathieCanada) May 17, 2023
This will only change if the press calls out the cowardly "too busy" excuse, instead of just thinking its cute.
Now, of course, Poilievre's staff is desperately trying to walk back his juvenile response, blaming Johnson for whatever.It is just more proof that Pierre Poilievre is far out of his depth and that conservatives choosing him as a 'leader' was a huge mistake for them. It only causes us to remember why Poilievre should never be entrusted with anything more important than weekly trash collection.
— FranklyMyDear (@MrDash109) May 17, 2023
First up, Amazon delivery drivers!WELCOME
— Brittlestar (@brittlestar) May 12, 2023
TO THE WEEKEND pic.twitter.com/6kbG3hFBWF
amazon: your driver just passed the 172 mile marker on 95 north
— the hype (@TheHyyyype) May 12, 2023
me: stop
Cops everywhere, tense standoff, and our hero - the unshakeable Amazon delivery driver - struts in like they're delivering a pizza to a Netflix marathon 🍕pic.twitter.com/LhyHjfYuMw
— LeGate🤠 (@williamlegate) May 1, 2023