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Canadian Foreign Interference (General)

😉


Yup. Remember, you can’t spell Power Corporation without c-h-i-n-a
(Assets Management Company - AMC)

View attachment 88600

*And by Power Corporation we understand that to mean the empire chaired brothers Paul and AndrĂ© Desmarais (husband of Jean ChrĂ©tien’s daughter, France) and tied significantly to Europeam and particularly Asian (Chinese) ties
that loop back to Canada in not-insignificant ways, including underwriting and administering a large portion of Canada’s private health insurance services (Great West Life, Canada Life
sound familiar?)
Just look at the who’s who in the Canada-China Business Council. These guys are pushing Ottawa’s buttons, and are probably responsible for getting Harper to roll over on Beijing after resisting them. The Liberals have long been cozy with these guys.
 
Just look at the who’s who in the Canada-China Business Council. These guys are pushing Ottawa’s buttons, and are probably responsible for getting Harper to roll over on Beijing after resisting them. The Liberals have long been cozy with these guys.
Yup, imagine that
yet another friend of Trudeau Desmarais.
 
Globe and Mail has an interesting headline story today.

Wesley Wark has a newsletter that looks at Canadian security issues and he has been following the Public Inquiry into Foreign Interference pretty closely. Well worth subscribing to for anyone interested Canadian security issues. Here is his take on the Washington Post escapade and the G & M reporting:

 
Heard on the radio at 9:00 AM this morning.

Corus reporter talking about the LPC Caucus meeting.

Liberals claiming they will come out the meeting presenting a "United Front".

....

I know I've heard that term somewhere before.


Yup, they’re pretty much not even trying to hide it now


Oh to have been a fly on the wall during today’s caucus meeting

 
😉


Yup. Remember, you can’t spell Power Corporation without c-h-i-n-a
(Assets Management Company - AMC)

View attachment 88600

*And by Power Corporation we understand that to mean the empire chaired brothers Paul and AndrĂ© Desmarais (husband of Jean ChrĂ©tien’s daughter, France) and tied significantly to Europeam and particularly Asian (Chinese) ties
that loop back to Canada in not-insignificant ways, including underwriting and administering a large portion of Canada’s private health insurance services (Great West Life, Canada Life
sound familiar?)
I recall blowing the whistle about Power Corp and the Laurentien Elites about 10 years ago and being told it was all in my head. Just another crazy conspiracy I was pushing.😂
 
I recall blowing the whistle about Power Corp and the Laurentien Elites about 10 years ago and being told it was all in my head. Just another crazy conspiracy I was pushing.😂
Tin foil hat time

Think About It GIF by Big Potato Games
 

Trudeau cries wolf on foreign interference​

The Editorial Board- Globe & Mail 24 Oct 24

For many months, the Trudeau government has invoked the phrase “national security,” waving it like an amulet to ward off urgent questions about foreign interference in Canadian politics.

The Liberals have tried to portray this stance as a defence of Canada’s intelligence-gathering capacity – sources and methods must be protected, as if the only option for disclosure was to disgorge every detail of every state secret.

In reality, it is a defence of the Liberals’ partisan interests. The government has kept sensitive information from public view when doing so would harm those interests. And it has disclosed sensitive information when helpful to its interests. The needs of the Trudeau government, not Canada’s security, have been the guiding principle, if it can be called that.

That pattern began in February, 2023, when The Globe and Mail reported that China had interfered in two federal elections. The government stonewalled for weeks and then, faced with growing cries for a public inquiry, appointed former governor-general David Johnston as special rapporteur.

The deficiencies in Mr. Johnston’s effort were obvious at the time. With hindsight, it was nothing less than an attempt to smother the controversy over Beijing’s actions by invoking the need for secrecy.

The Liberals resisted calls for a public inquiry through most of the summer. After conceding to the inevitability of an inquiry, the government promised that Justice Marie-JosĂ©e Hogue would be given “full access to all relevant cabinet documents as well as all other information she deems relevant for the purposes of her inquiry.” But the inquiry has had to repeatedly wrestle with the government over disclosure.

The Trudeau government has also insisted the public cannot know the names of parliamentarians that have wittingly or unwittingly colluded with foreign governments, a bombshell dropped in a heavily redacted June report from the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians. (The Prime Minister’s Office made those redactions; the call was Mr. Trudeau’s to make.)

Any identification of those parliamentarians could compromise national security, the government claimed. In his testimony to the foreign interference inquiry last week, Mr. Trudeau branded those who had leaked information as “criminals.” And yet, he himself lifted that veil of secrecy to point an accusing finger. “I have the names of a number of parliamentarians, former parliamentarians and/or candidates in the Conservative Party of Canada, who are engaged, or at high risk” of foreign interference, he said.

So much for the need for ironclad secrecy.

Two days before Mr. Trudeau’s testimony, the RCMP said it had evidence linking agents of the Indian government to homicides and other violent crimes in Canada, and the government announced that it had expelled India’s high commissioner and five other diplomats.

In a news conference that day, Mr. Trudeau seemed to say that the timing was the RCMP’s call. “The decision to inform Canadians right now by the RCMP is aimed at keeping Canadians safe, at disrupting this pattern of behaviour that these Indian diplomats have been involved in,” he said.

Yet days before, Mr. Trudeau’s national-security adviser and the deputy minister of foreign affairs provided sensitive intelligence about the situation to The Washington Post.

That was not the first time the Liberals prioritized communication strategy in the matter of India’s alleged illegal activities. In September, 2023, The Globe was preparing to publish a story about those allegations when the Prime Minister’s Office asked for publication to be delayed a month, invoking national security. When questioned, the PMO asked for a week’s delay and, finally, a day’s delay.

The Globe agreed, out of abundance of caution. (That considered response is a contrast to Mr. Trudeau’s allusion in his testimony to later “erroneous” and “salacious” headlines.)

By the following afternoon, those national-security concerns seemed to have evaporated as Mr. Trudeau rose to speak in the House of Commons. The delay gave the Prime Minister time to come up with a communications strategy. It was just one more instance of using national-security concerns for partisan advantage.

Image over substance, and party before country. For many months – for far too many months – that has been how Mr. Trudeau and his Liberals have approached what should be the deadly serious matter of foreign interference.
 

Trudeau cries wolf on foreign interference​

The Editorial Board- Globe & Mail 24 Oct 24

For many months, the Trudeau government has invoked the phrase “national security,” waving it like an amulet to ward off urgent questions about foreign interference in Canadian politics.

The Liberals have tried to portray this stance as a defence of Canada’s intelligence-gathering capacity – sources and methods must be protected, as if the only option for disclosure was to disgorge every detail of every state secret.

In reality, it is a defence of the Liberals’ partisan interests. The government has kept sensitive information from public view when doing so would harm those interests. And it has disclosed sensitive information when helpful to its interests. The needs of the Trudeau government, not Canada’s security, have been the guiding principle, if it can be called that.

That pattern began in February, 2023, when The Globe and Mail reported that China had interfered in two federal elections. The government stonewalled for weeks and then, faced with growing cries for a public inquiry, appointed former governor-general David Johnston as special rapporteur.

The deficiencies in Mr. Johnston’s effort were obvious at the time. With hindsight, it was nothing less than an attempt to smother the controversy over Beijing’s actions by invoking the need for secrecy.

The Liberals resisted calls for a public inquiry through most of the summer. After conceding to the inevitability of an inquiry, the government promised that Justice Marie-JosĂ©e Hogue would be given “full access to all relevant cabinet documents as well as all other information she deems relevant for the purposes of her inquiry.” But the inquiry has had to repeatedly wrestle with the government over disclosure.

The Trudeau government has also insisted the public cannot know the names of parliamentarians that have wittingly or unwittingly colluded with foreign governments, a bombshell dropped in a heavily redacted June report from the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians. (The Prime Minister’s Office made those redactions; the call was Mr. Trudeau’s to make.)

Any identification of those parliamentarians could compromise national security, the government claimed. In his testimony to the foreign interference inquiry last week, Mr. Trudeau branded those who had leaked information as “criminals.” And yet, he himself lifted that veil of secrecy to point an accusing finger. “I have the names of a number of parliamentarians, former parliamentarians and/or candidates in the Conservative Party of Canada, who are engaged, or at high risk” of foreign interference, he said.

So much for the need for ironclad secrecy.

Two days before Mr. Trudeau’s testimony, the RCMP said it had evidence linking agents of the Indian government to homicides and other violent crimes in Canada, and the government announced that it had expelled India’s high commissioner and five other diplomats.

In a news conference that day, Mr. Trudeau seemed to say that the timing was the RCMP’s call. “The decision to inform Canadians right now by the RCMP is aimed at keeping Canadians safe, at disrupting this pattern of behaviour that these Indian diplomats have been involved in,” he said.

Yet days before, Mr. Trudeau’s national-security adviser and the deputy minister of foreign affairs provided sensitive intelligence about the situation to The Washington Post.

That was not the first time the Liberals prioritized communication strategy in the matter of India’s alleged illegal activities. In September, 2023, The Globe was preparing to publish a story about those allegations when the Prime Minister’s Office asked for publication to be delayed a month, invoking national security. When questioned, the PMO asked for a week’s delay and, finally, a day’s delay.

The Globe agreed, out of abundance of caution. (That considered response is a contrast to Mr. Trudeau’s allusion in his testimony to later “erroneous” and “salacious” headlines.)

By the following afternoon, those national-security concerns seemed to have evaporated as Mr. Trudeau rose to speak in the House of Commons. The delay gave the Prime Minister time to come up with a communications strategy. It was just one more instance of using national-security concerns for partisan advantage.

Image over substance, and party before country. For many months – for far too many months – that has been how Mr. Trudeau and his Liberals have approached what should be the deadly serious matter of foreign interference.
The author is really making some creative stretches to assume its to protect them selves that they are not releasing information but we also know multiple RCMP national security investigations are on going, so it really is more fair to assume that they cannot release more information on certain subjects without compromising investigations.
 
Mod note: Some posts have been deleted in accordance with the rules currently in place - a reminder from the owner's rules (highlights mine) ....
... I am requesting that no reference be made of any sort to him or his work ...
Any further commentary on the issue will also be summarily deleted.

Thanks for helping protect the site and Mike.

Milnet.ca Staff
 

In Monday's shocker press conference, journalist Sam Cooper pointed the finger at
Liberal MP Parm Bains,
Liberal-appointed Senator Yuen Pau Woo,
Liberal MP Mary Ng,
and Conservative-appointed Senator Victor Oh for collaborating with CCP-based influence networks.

4 of the original 11 named. We'll see where this goes from here
 

In Monday's shocker press conference, journalist Sam Cooper pointed the finger at
Liberal MP Parm Bains,
Liberal-appointed Senator Yuen Pau Woo,
Liberal MP Mary Ng,
and Conservative-appointed Senator Victor Oh for collaborating with CCP-based influence networks.

4 of the original 11 named. We'll see where this goes from here
sure hope his evidence is solid. but I am really glad that someone with some knowledge has finally spoken up
 
I’ve heard these names mentioned before as being involved. Cooper better have his stuff wired tight

 
I’ve heard these names mentioned before as being involved. Cooper better have his stuff wired tight

Some feel that Cooper has a solid source set. I’ve followed him for a long time and there aren’t any cracks of light in his argumentation that I can see
he portrays a consistent and coherent unfolding of the interference from pre-2019 times.
 
Some feel that Cooper has a solid source set. I’ve followed him for a long time and there aren’t any cracks of light in his argumentation that I can see
he portrays a consistent and coherent unfolding of the interference from pre-2019 times.
No disagreement from me. But if sued, can he use those sources as a defence against libel? I don’t know. đŸ€·â€â™‚ïž
 

On Oct. 16 he issued a statement calling on Trudeau to release the names of “all MPs” known to have collaborated with foreign interference.

Asked by the National Post whether Poilievre would release names should Conservatives form government, which many polls suggest may happen whenever a federal election is called, a spokesman said “yes.”

“For those who are deemed to have knowingly participated in foreign interference, yes,” wrote Poilievre spokesperson Sebastian Skamski.
Emphasis mine. So it’s interesting that Poilievre tells Trudeau to release the names of all MPs (remember, some were unwitting) but if the Tories form govt, they will release the names who knowingly participated, or witting.

So why didn’t they tell Trudeau to do the same, and not all MPs? Or alternatively, why wouldn’t they release the names of all MPs as per their Oct 16 statement? Why the difference?

His office has not yet responded to questions about how a future Poilievre-led government might seek to release such information, given the sensitives around sharing top-secret information and the risks posed to those collecting it.

exactly my point in this thread.
 
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