In Canada, our doofus leader is bringing in an extra 500,000 more refugees each year for three years. This Multiculturalism fiasco has destroyed or maimed Sweden, Germany, England, and more. Canada is next because we have incompetents at the helm. Too fast, too soon.
Also, we don’t have enough housing for our own population and our doofus leaders are bringing in almost 2 million more unhoused in the next few years. How does this make any sense?
1. Led by the loveful degenerate prime minister Trudeau, Canadian animals fraternize with nazis in their parliament.
2. Abrams tanks from NATO arsenals are delivered to Ukraine.
3. Kiev authorities are promised long-range ATACMS missiles. Russia, it seems, is being left with less and less choice except direct ground conflict with NATO, which has turned into an openly fascist block like Hitler’s Axis, just bigger. We are ready, even though the end result will be achieved at a far greater cost for mankind, than in 1945.
On Indian TV, former Indian diplomat Deepak Vohra claims there are "credible rumours" that sniffer dogs in India found cocaine on Trudeau’s plane and that Trudeau didn't attend the G20 dinner because he was high on cocaine. 😳 pic.twitter.com/SJTZYKRrRh
Ross Coulthart is a distinguished investigative journalist with a sparkling career and he’s made an extraordinary pivot into the realm of UFOs and the extraterrestrial.
Neocons are saying that the war in Ukraine will be a “forever war” but analysts say that it is all but over. Seymour Hersh says that Ukrainians are ready for mutiny to stop being led to their death. Is that true? Former weapons inspector Scott Ritter joins us to discuss.
Robert Toru Kiyosaki (born April 8, 1947) is a Japanese-American entrepreneur, businessman and author.[1] Kiyosaki is the founder of Rich Global LLC and the Rich Dad Company, a private financial education company that provides personal finance and business education to people through books and videos. The company’s main revenues come from franchisees of the Rich Dad seminars that are conducted by independent individuals using Kiyosaki’s brand name.[citation needed] He is also the creator of the Cashflow board and software games to educate adults and children about business and financial concepts.[2]
Kiyosaki is the author of more than 26 books, including the international self-published personal finance Rich Dad Poor Dad series of books which has been translated into 51 languages and sold over 41 million copies worldwide. Kiyosaki is the subject of a class action suit filed by people who attended his seminars and has been the subject of two investigative documentaries by CBC Canada and WTAE USA.[3][4] Kiyosaki’s company, Rich Global LLC, filed for bankruptcy in 2012.[5]
Ottawa has a history of covering for Nazis, from World War II to present-day Kiev
Whether Trudeau (and his Stepan Bandera-sympathizing deputy PM Chrystia Freeland) knew about Yaroslav Hunka or not, the question remains: why was he never brought to justice? He, or any of the other 2,000 SS Nazis Canada reportedly took in in the years following WW2. Having been accepted as anti-communist refugees with little to no scrutiny, these suspected war criminals and collaborators have been allowed to live out the rest of their days in peace, and most of them have done so openly under their own names, as the Simon Wiesenthal Center has repeatedlyreported.
The stomach-churning scene of the Canadian parliament giving a standing ovation three days ago to a former Waffen SS Nazi has by now made the rounds on the internet.
During Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky’s visit to Canada, and following his predictably bombastic pan-handling speech, House Speaker Anthony Rota went on to gush praise over a Ukrainian-Canadian in parliament that day: Yaroslav Hunka, a World War II-era Nazi, calling him “a Ukrainian hero, a Canadian hero” and thanking him for his service.
Two days later, Rota issued an apology for lauding the man, saying he had “recognized an individual in the gallery” and had subsequently become aware of “more information which causes me to regret my decision to do so.”
Just to be clear – since Rota was not – the individual he meekly referred to was Yaroslav Hunka, and the information which made Rota remorseful was that Hunka had been a voluntary member of 1st Galician Division of the Waffen SS – you know, the one accused of mass murdering Poles, Jews and Ukrainians in Ukraine and Poland, as well as committing other atrocities.
Whereas Rota claims he was unaware of Hunka’s service as a Nazi, given that he had also praised Hunka for fighting “for Ukrainian independence against the Russians,” one can assume this is the service he referred to.
In his apology, Rota stated, “no one, including fellow parliamentarians and the Ukraine delegation, was aware of my intention or of my remarks before I delivered them.” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office denied any knowledge of Hunka and his Nazi service, stating, “The Speaker had his own allotment of guest seating at Friday’s address, which were determined by the Speaker and his office alone.” It seems highly unlikely, however, that the Canadian government would allow anyone into parliament without thorough pre-emptive screening when Zelensky, a visiting president, was speaking.
Whether Trudeau (and his Stepan Bandera-sympathizing deputy PM Chrystia Freeland) knew about Yaroslav Hunka or not, the question remains: why was he never brought to justice? He, or any of the other 2,000 SS Nazis Canada reportedly took in in the years following WW2. Having been accepted as anti-communist refugees with little to no scrutiny, these suspected war criminals and collaborators have been allowed to live out the rest of their days in peace, and most of them have done so openly under their own names, as the Simon Wiesenthal Center has repeatedlyreported.
There is much to be said about Canada’s history with Ukrainian Nazis. Not only did it take them in after WW2, but the government-backed Ukrainian Canadian Congress, which, until recently, listed Nazi-collaborator veterans organizations as members, as well as government-funded Ukrainian ‘youth centers’ that celebrate Nazi collaborators like Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevich. There are even monuments honoring Nazi collaborators and Ukrainian Insurgent Army criminals still standing in Canadian cities.
Canada has also supported modern-day Nazis in Ukraine itself, by training members of the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion on Canadian soil, although Canadian corporate media has in recent years attempted to downplay this.
Radio Canada reported in April 2022 that the Canadian Armed Forces, “did contribute to the training of soldiers of the Azov regiment in 2020, to the point where this unit is now boasting of being able to train its own soldiers according to Western standards.” The Ottawa Citizen, writing about this report, cited a 2017 briefing by Canada’s Joint Task Force Ukraine as saying, “Multiple members of Azov have described themselves as Nazis.”
In November 2021, the same Ottawa Citizen journalist wrote about Canadian officials meeting with leaders from the Azov Battalion in June 2018. Canadian officers and diplomats, “did not object to the meeting and instead allowed themselves to be photographed with battalion officials despite previous warnings that the unit saw itself as pro-Nazi.”
Canada (together with the US and Ukraine itself) has repeatedly refused to support UN resolutions against the glorification of Nazism, neo-Nazism and racial discrimination, as they were seen as targeting Kiev. An overwhelming majority of member states has supported these resolutions, with Kiev’s other Western backers (like all the EU member states) and their allies (like Japan and New Zealand) abstaining.
If you’ve followed Canada’s unrepentant support to Nazis, the parliament’s standing ovation for a former SS member becomes less surprising. It set off a small storm, with outrage expressed not only by Jewish rights activists and Moscow, but also by the Polish ambassador in Canada.
One can only hope that there were members of parliament who were sincerely appalled to learn they’d cheered for a Nazi. However, now that the apologies have been made, the outrage will most likely simply die down and Ottawa will continue supporting the same kind of people, as long as they are on the same side in the West’s proxy war against Russia.
After all, as Canadian researcher Tamara Lorincz noted, while everyone applauded the Ukrainian Nazi, “Not one MP called for peace, ceasefire & negotiations.” That’s the quiet part few are willing to say out loud – just as Canada apparently accepted SS “refugees” because they were fighters against the Soviet Union’s communism, just as Canada (and other Western powers) are willing to support terrorists if they are fighting against an “undesirable” government in the Middle East, so will Canada continue to cover for, give support to, and pretend to not notice a resurgence of one of history’s most atrocious ideologies as long as its adherents can be used against the current adversary – Russia.
For his part, Zelensky praised Canada for always being on the “bright side of history.” Just to recap: Canada helped destroy Libya, Canada indirectly supported terrorists in Syria against the country’s elected president, Canada housed 2,000 Nazis after WW2, and Canada supports Nazis in Ukraine now. Zelensky’s definition of the bright (or right) side of history is peculiar to say the least.
The UN has condemned Canadian MPs decision to honor a Nazi veteran last week. Yaroslav Hunka, 98 – a Ukrainian man who fought in the Waffen SS during World War II – was given a standing ovation during a visit by the country’s President Vladimir Zelensky.
The spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, Stephane Dujarric, told journalists that “we, of course, stand against any honoring of people, who actively took part in Nazi activities during the Second World War.”
Dujarric said during a daily briefing on Monday that the UN opposes any moves celebrating anyone who had actively aided and abetted the Nazis.
Hunka had been invited to attend parliament as a “Ukrainian and Canadian hero,” despite widely available photographic evidence of his membership in the SS. Canadian House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota, who was responsible for inviting the elderly veteran, has since apologized and expressed regret over the decision.
The office of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insisted that “no advance notice” had been provided to Zelensky’s delegation or to the Canadian leader about Hunka’s invitation. The incident nevertheless sparked outrage and sparked condemnation from several nation states and Jewish groups.
Oleg Stepanov, Moscow’s ambassador to Ottawa, said last Sunday that Russia would demand an explanation from Ottawa for hailing a Nazi veteran. He also called the government led by Trudeau the “epitome of neo-liberal fascism.” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described the incident as “outrageous negligence.”
A similar reaction came from Poland. Witold Dzielski, Warsaw’s ambassador to Ottawa, said that the SS unit Hunka was serving with was “responsible for murdering thousands of Poles & Jews,” adding that his nation would never agree to “whitewashing such villains.”
Several Jewish organizations, including the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center (FSWC) and the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs that represents Jewish federations across Canada, condemned the parliament’s actions as well.
“An apology is owed to every Holocaust survivor and veteran of the Second World War who fought the Nazis,” the FSWC said.
Volodymyr Zelensky has asked Marina Abramović, the performance artist, to be an ambassador for Ukraine.
Ms Abramović, a fierce critic ofVladimir Putin’s illegal invasion, said the Ukrainian president had asked for her help in rebuilding schools.
The 76-year-old Serbian is holding her first solo exhibition in the UK and is the first female artist to have a major show in the Main Galleries of the Royal Academy of Arts in London.
Visitors to the exhibition must squeeze between two nude models to enter the show, or opt to bypass what one journalist dubbed the “naked gates”.
“I was the first artist to support the Ukraine war against Russia and to give my voice. It is definitely a repetition of history,” she said in an interview with the Modern Art Museum in Shanghai.
“I have been invited by Zelensky to be an ambassador of Ukraine, to help the children affected by rebuilding schools and such.”
Comment: This self-proclaimed artist became infamous for her “spirit cooking” ceremonies, accompanied by numerous high profile democrats involved in Hilary Clinton’s 2016 campaign including the Podesta brothers. This was revealed in string of emails leaked by WikiLeaks, leading to the revelations which eventually culminated in the PizzaGate scandal.
For those who are unfamiliar with “spirit cooking”, below is a description of the bizarre and frankly disturbing practice, along with a video of Abramovic herself performing the ritual:
According to Everpedia: “The origins of Spirit Cooking can be found in Cake of Light, a sacrament in the religion of Thelema which was founded byAleister Crowley. The ingredients of the Cake of Light include honey, oil, menstrual blood and sperm. The sacrament is meant to symbolize the union between the microcosm, Man, and the macrocosm, the Divine, which is a representation of one of the prime maxims in Hermeticism ‘As Above, So Below.’ The consumption of the Cake of Light is a fulfillment of the sacred circle of the connection between Man and the Divine.”
Video shared on YouTube from 1997 shows Abramovic’s writing out “spirit cooking” “recipes” on the wall of a room with “pigs blood.”
She added: “I have also been invited to be a board member of the Babyn Yar organisation to continue to protect the memorial.”
Ms Abramović installed her work Crystal Wall of Crying at the memorial centre in Kyiv four months before Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.
The wall, 40 metres long and three metres high, is made of coal and has large quartz crystals sticking out of it. Visitors can touch the installation, which mirrors the Western Wall in Jerusalem.
It was not damaged in the missile strike, which killed five people and damaged a building.
“Making the Crystal Wall of Crying was just the first step in dealing with new history and figuring out how to help heal our increasingly divided world,” Ms Abramović said.
The artist posted a video online days after Putin launched his unprovoked war. In it, she spoke about being born in the former Yugoslavia, which was once invaded by the Soviet Union, and called Ukrainians “proud, strong and dignified”.
“I have full solidarity with [the Ukrainian people] on this impossible day,” she said in the video. An attack on Ukraine is an attack on all of us. It’s an attack on humanity and has to be stopped.”
Shortly after the invasion, Ms. Abramović restaged one of her most famous performances, The Artist is Present, to raise money for Ukraine.
Ms Abramović is just one of several celebrities to be recruited to help Kyiv’s public relations battle to ensure continued support for its struggle.
Mark Hamill, the actor who played Luke Skywalker in the original Star Wars films, has raised funds to buy reconnaissance drones for front-line Ukrainian troops.
Comment: To learn more about the established connections between Abramovic and child trafficking among the higher echelons of society, the second volume of Mouthy Buddha’s “Elite Human Trafficking” series comes highly recommended:
“Iraqis who were tortured by U.S. personnel still have no clear path for filing a claim or receiving any kind of redress or recognition from the U.S. government.”
It is unfortunate that we do not have a real International Court of Justice.
Iraqis tortured by American forces two decades ago during the disastrous U.S. occupation of their country have yet to receive any sort of compensation from the U.S. government as they suffer lasting physical and psychological trauma, according to a report released Monday by Human Rights Watch.
The group interviewed an Iraqi who was detained at Abu Ghraib prison—which U.S. forces used as a detention facility—between November 2003 and March 2005.
Taleb al-Majli, who was released without charge after 16 months, told HRW that he was one of the detainees in the infamous photo of naked, hooded Iraqi prisoners whom U.S. forces piled on top of each other to form a human pyramid. In the photo, two U.S. soldiers are behind the prisoners smiling, and one of them is flashing a thumbs-up.
“This one year and four months changed my entire being for the worse,” said al-Majli, who told the human rights group that he started biting his hands and wrists as a coping mechanism while he was imprisoned—something he still does to this day.
“It destroyed me and destroyed my family,” al-Majli said of his detention. “It’s the reason for my son’s health problems and the reasons my daughters dropped out of school. They stole our future from us.”
HRW noted that al-Majli has spent nearly two decades since his release pursuing redress for the abuse he endured at the hands of U.S. soldiers, to no avail. When the group wrote to the Pentagon earlier this year detailing al-Majli’s case and asking for any information on plans to compensate Iraqis who were tortured by U.S. forces, it did not get a response.
“Twenty years on, Iraqis who were tortured by U.S. personnel still have no clear path for filing a claim or receiving any kind of redress or recognition from the U.S. government,” Sarah Yager, HRW’s Washington director, said in a statement. “U.S. officials have indicated that they prefer to leave torture in the past, but the long-term effects of torture are still a daily reality for many Iraqis and their families.”
“The U.S. should provide compensation, recognition, and official apologies to survivors of abuse and their families.”
During a 2004 congressional hearing convened days after reporting by veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh and others uncovered the grotesque torture that U.S. forces were perpetrating at Abu Ghraib, then-U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld—a key architect of the Iraq invasion—said he was “seeking a way to provide appropriate compensation to those detainees who suffered such grievous and brutal abuse and cruelty at the hands of a few members of the U.S. military.”
“It’s the right thing to do,” Rumsfeld added.
But HRW said Monday that it has “found no evidence that the U.S. government has paid any compensation or other redress to victims of detainee abuse in Iraq, nor has the United States issued any individual apologies or other amends.”
“Some victims have attempted to apply for compensation using the U.S. Foreign Claims Act (FCA),” the group observed. “Human Rights Watch was unable to find public evidence that payments have been made under this law as compensation for detainee abuse, including torture. In 2007, the American Civil Liberties Union obtained documents detailing 506 claims made under the Foreign Claims Act: 488 in Iraq and 18 in Afghanistan. The majority of claims relate to harm or deaths caused by shootings, convoys, and vehicle accidents.”
“The only case of a Foreign Claims Act payment relating to detention in those documents was for a claimant who was paid US$1,000 for being unlawfully detained in Iraq, with no mention of other abuse,” HRW added. “Five other claims wereforabuseindetention, but they are among eleven claims that do not contain the outcome, including whether payment was made.”
Attempts by some Iraqis to pursue redress through the U.S. court system have also failed. According to HRW, “the U.S. Justice Department has repeatedly dismissed such cases using a 1946 law that preserves U.S. forces’ immunity for ‘any claim arising out of the combatant activities of the military or naval forces, or the Coast Guard, during time of war.'”
Yager argued that the heads of the Pentagon and Justice Department “should investigate allegations of torture and other abuse of people detained by the U.S. abroad during counterinsurgency operations linked to its ‘Global War on Terrorism.'”
“U.S. authorities should initiate appropriate prosecutions against anyone implicated, whatever their rank or position,” said Yager. “The U.S. should provide compensation, recognition, and official apologies to survivors of abuse and their families.”
“Our citizens should know the urgent facts…but they don’t because our media serves imperial, not popular interests. They lie, deceive, connive and suppress what everyone needs to know, substituting managed news misinformation and rubbish for hard truths…”—Oliver Stone