Good morning, it’s Thursday, November 20th. In today’s news, the CBSA Union President confirms that Canada is an open-border state, Carney’s corporate conflicts cast a shadow over our nation, foreign mafias are threatening lawyers, the Liberal’s increased federal bureaucracy by another 9% last year, and much more.
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CBSA Union President Confirms That Canada is an Open-Border State
It is not hyperbole to say that Canada has an open border. It is very, very literal.
At a recent parliamentary hearing, the President of the CBSA union revealed something almost unbelievable: Canada is now admitting refugee claimants through a self-serve phone application, without interviews, without verification, and without any meaningful face-to-face screening.
This is not speculation. This is not political spin. This is the person who represents the officers at the border, under oath, describing how the system actually works.
It’s called One Touch, and it amounts to one of the most negligent border practices ever implemented by a Western country.
According to the union chief:
Canada collects only basic “tombstone” information—name and date of birth (which could be completely fabricated)—and biometrics.
Claimants are then released into Canada and instructed to complete the rest of their security and eligibility screening on their own, after they’ve already entered the country.
Officers no longer interview claimants or ask follow-up questions — the very tools used to detect coaching, fraud, or security risks.
Approximately 10% never complete the forms at all, meaning around 10,000 people per year simply disappear into the country with no completed screening.
The union president admitted that removing human interaction means losing the only mechanism officers have for detecting lies, threats, or criminal histories. It cripples intelligence gathering. It makes fraud easy. It creates a backlog down the line when inland officers have to go looking for people who have already vanished.
This grants unfettered physical access into Canada.
Once inside, the claimant enters a system that already struggles to track hearings, enforce removals, or manage its existing caseload. The CBSA union head isn’t warning about theoretical loopholes — he’s describing real ones.
By the federal government’s own estimates, anywhere from 20,000 to 500,000 illegal immigrants are already living in Canada.
A range that large is not an estimate. It means they have no idea how many people entered the country, overstayed, evaded the system, or simply disappeared in the way the union president described.
The idea that any of these individuals will be tracked down and deported is a fantasy. Canada cannot even process its legitimate caseloads — let alone locate tens or hundreds of thousands of untracked individuals.
This isn’t a border. It’s a suggestion.
Canada is no longer functioning as a nation-state with enforceable sovereignty. It is behaving like an open-borders globalist experiment — a place where entry is self-declared, enforcement is optional, and the government’s own data openly confesses that it has lost control of who is here and who isn’t.
And the results speak for themselves: ballooning asylum queues, overwhelmed cities, spiralling public costs, and a public that is never consulted — only lectured.
We are living inside the consequences of a political class that treats borders as obsolete, sovereignty as old-fashioned, and the Canadian public as a nuisance. The catastrophe was not an accident. It was designed. Source.
Blind Trust or Political Blindspot? Carney’s Corporate Conflicts Cast Shadow Over Canada
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s conflict-of-interest troubles are set to dominate the next House ethics committee meeting as Clerk of the Privy Council Michael Sabia is called to testify. Sabia—one of only two people allowed to administer Carney’s massive conflict-of-interest screen—oversees a list of more than 100 companies tied to Brookfield and Stripe, the very firms that defined Carney’s high-powered private-sector career.
Carney’s chief of staff, Marc-André Blanchard, will also face the committee, adding to the pressure on a government already struggling to convince Canadians that the prime minister isn’t governing in the shadow of his former corporate employers.
Before entering politics, Carney sat at the top of Brookfield Asset Management—an empire managing over US$1 trillion—and helped raise capital for Brookfield’s clean-energy funds while simultaneously serving on Stripe’s board. That deep entanglement has fueled a growing narrative that Carney didn’t leave Bay Street for Ottawa so much as he brought Bay Street with him.
Carney argues that putting all of his assets—except his real estate—into a blind trust was “above and beyond” what the law required. But Conservatives say the sheer scale of his holdings makes this meaningless, calling his situation unprecedented for a sitting prime minister and insisting he should be forced to divest entirely. His opponents say the conflict screen is practically impossible to enforce when the PM has had direct ties to more than 100 corporations that interact with government policy daily.
Even former top civil servants admit this is unlike anything Ottawa has dealt with before. The magnitude of Carney’s private-sector footprint means decisions touching energy, finance, infrastructure, tech, and global investment could all intersect with companies he had a hand in guiding or profiting from.
Critics say that’s not a conflict to “manage”—it’s a structural vulnerability to corruption.
Yet some establishment voices, like former Privy Council clerk Michael Wernick, caution against tightening the rules, arguing that stricter divestment requirements might discourage private-sector leaders from entering public life. But for many Canadians, that misses the point: the issue isn’t business experience—it’s concentration of power. And Carney’s concentration is larger than any prime minister in modern Canadian history.
As Sabia and Blanchard testify, MPs will have to confront the central question: Can a prime minister with this level of corporate entanglement ever truly operate at arm’s length, or is Canada now being governed by someone whose private-sector loyalties shadow every decision he makes?
The hearings are expected to offer the most revealing look yet into whether current ethics rules can handle a prime minister whose conflicts aren’t incidental—they’re systemic.
Foreign Mafias Are Now Threatening B.C. Lawyers
Canada is a nation run by criminals, for foreign criminals. No where is this more evident than British Columbia. Officers of the court — the people meant to uphold the rule of law — are being told to pay up or face harm by overseas crime networks. The Law Society has urged members to call police, and the province has built a new Extortion Task Force that now includes the border agency because the threats are tied to transnational groups linked to India’s Lawrence Bishnoi gang. Canada’s legal system is now a battle field for foreign power struggles.
When criminal networks feel bold enough to intimidate lawyers, it tells you that they believe there is no real state standing in their way. And in many parts of B.C., that belief is not wrong.
The decay shows up in quieter places too — not only in threats, but in the day-to-day handling of money and property. As reported by Sam Cooper, a B.C. lawyer was suspended for sixteen weeks after $9 million in suspicious funds passed through his trust account over seven years. The files involved opaque mortgages, shifting creditors, odd third-party lenders, and clients tied to a Vancouver Police drug-trafficking probe that included money counters, burner phones, and civil forfeiture orders. Despite all of this, the lawyer pressed on without asking basic questions about who these people were, where the money came from, or why his trust account needed to be used at all.
Justice Cullen warned about this exact pattern in his inquiry: private loans, land titles, and trust accounts have become easy channels for criminal networks. His report pointed to the risks around lawyers’ offices and the real-estate market, yet years later the same behaviour rolls on. Institutions know the weaknesses. They watch the same schemes repeat. And still, the system drifts.
This is the shape of modern infiltration. Foreign states use mafias to lean on diaspora communities. Criminal networks exploit our property market and legal structures. Regulators warn, but rarely act. And Canada, lacking the laws and will to counter hybrid threats, slips further into a place where outside groups set the terms.
The signs are no longer subtle. When lawyers start fearing unknown numbers and checking their inboxes twice, it means the line has already been crossed.
Canada can keep pretending this is normal. Or it can admit the truth: the state is being hollowed out from both ends — by networks pushing in, and by institutions that no longer push back. Source and Source.
Canada’s Federal Bureaucracy Increased By Another 9% Last Year
The federal bureaucracy’s cost rose $6 billion (9%) last year, reaching $71.4 billion in 2024‑25—an 80% increase over the past decade—driven by 99,000 new public servants added since 2015‑16. Spending on consultants, contractors, and outsourcing also jumped to $23.1 billion, more than doubling over the same period.
The Carney government plans to cut 40,000 public service jobs over the next five years, mostly through attrition, aiming to save $60 billion and redirect funds toward transportation, energy, and growth initiatives. Critics argue the bureaucracy remains bloated, noting spending on both employees and consultants has surged despite programs being delivered largely by provinces or the private sector.
Federal program spending is projected at 15.3% of GDP, still higher than pre-pandemic levels, while Ottawa faces a $78.3 billion average deficit this year. In fact, nearly half of Canada’s $1.27 trillion national debt has been accumulated in just the last five years. Experts warn that modest cuts won’t be enough to rein in the bureaucracy or long-term spending. More
Canada’s Own Pablo: Fugitive Olympian Hit With New Murder Charges, $15 Million Bounty
The Justice Department has issued new charges against Canadian fugitive and former Olympian Ryan James Wedding, accusing him of running a billion-dollar drug empire and orchestrating the murder of a federal witness. Officials say Wedding created a website to help locate the witness, who was later shot five times in the head before he could testify.
Wedding now faces charges for witness tampering, intimidation, murder, money laundering, and drug trafficking, on top of his 2024 indictment. The US has raised its bounty on him to $15 million, calling him a “modern-day Pablo Escobar.”
Authorities say Wedding’s cartel-linked network spans Colombia, Mexico, Canada, and the United States, moving massive quantities of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and meth. More than 35 people have been indicted, with 2+ metric tons of cocaine and $15 million in assets seized.
Seven Canadians linked to the ring were arrested on Nov. 18—including Wedding’s lawyer, Deepak Paradkar, who is accused of directing him to kill the witness. Wedding remains shielded by the Sinaloa Cartel and is considered one of the top threats to public safety in both the United States and Canada. More
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Some countries—including Mexico, Norway, the UK, South Korea, Ireland, and Chile—have begun restricting UPF marketing, especially to children, taxing sugary drinks, and implementing front-of-package labels. Experts call for a coordinated global response, including regulation, labeling, taxation, and limits on marketing, emphasizing protection for children over corporate profit. More
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On This Day in 1945, the Nuremberg war crimes trials opened, putting 24 top Nazi officials before a tribunal of judges from the victorious Allied powers.





















On a related note, I have recently noticed how there are a bunch of people here in the region most call “Canada” and south of us in the “United States” that have strong opinions about so called “immigrants” (these are usually people with a low melanin content in their skin that have European heritage referring to non-English speaking and/or darker skinned people in my experience).
My question for all of you is based around this conundrum I have been thinking about for a few months now (given that nationstates such as “Canada” and the “United States of America” were built on imperialistic invasions from outsiders, mass murder, land theft, broken treaties and a campaign that depended upon a generally malicious, duplicitous and nefarious dehumanization of the original inhabitants of this land) by what authority do the Canadian and United States federal governments claim to be able to declare who is an “illegal” immigrant and who is “legal”?
For those not aware, Canada and the US were built on the bones of genocided cultures that were comprised of humans deemed as sub-human and not worthy of compassion, respect or kindness as per an edict put out by the Catholic Church called the Doctrine Of Discovery.
If you are not familiar with the details of the Romanus Pontifex and The Doctrine Of Discovery, here are some of the basics:
The “Romanus Pontifex” was a Papal Bull dictated by Pope Nicolas V on January 8th, 1455 stated:
“Invade, search out, capture, vanquish and subdue. All Saracens and pagans whatsoever, And other enemies of Christ wheresoever placed... And reduce their persons to perpetual slavery…”
These nefarious Eurocentric edicts and fallacious concepts were used as a framework to “legally” describe the “discovery” of new and unknown lands, assigning the right to European Christians to assume ownership of “discovered” lands (regardless of who was already living there and tending that land).
These declarations (known as “papal bulls”) provided religious authority for Christian empires to invade and subjugate non‐Christian lands, peoples and sovereign nations, impose Christianity on these populations, and claim their resources.
The Doctrine of Discovery is still an important legal concept in Canada today even though it was written hundreds of years ago. Both French and English colonial powers in what would later be known as Canada used the Doctrine of Discovery to claim Indigenous lands and force their cultural and religious beliefs on Indigenous peoples. Once Canada was created, the Doctrine of Discovery influenced the imposition of national, colonial laws on Indigenous peoples. This is because it denies the validity of longstanding systems of Indigenous governance and sovereignty.
Now that we have explored pertinent historical and philosophical realities pertaining to this question of Do statist regimes built on the Doctrine Of Discovery have the legitimate authority to declare who is a “legal” and “illegal” immigrant?
This is horrifying and makes me cry 😢