TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @cosminDZS

Saved - September 12, 2025 at 11:25 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I expressed concern over Professor Barbara Perry's claims about Charlie Kirk calling for the execution of queer people, which I believe to be false. Perry has promoted a secret list of over 300 alleged far-right hate groups in Canada for years, yet has not made her research public. This lack of transparency is troubling, especially since her list has influenced government policy. Recently, Ontario’s privacy czar ruled that she can keep this list secret, raising further concerns about the government's ability to create laws based on unverified information.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

Liberal-govt funded "anti-hate" professor Barbara Perry falsely claimed on @CBC that Charlie Kirk called for the "execution" of queer people Perry has made a career peddling a secret list of 300 'far-right hate groups' in Canada Where's the list Barbara?

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 1 expresses concern about calls framing Trump as a martyr and about retaliatory violence online, fearing escalation as the left is vilified and Democrats blamed by Trump. A video message Trump recorded in the Oval Office moves from condolences to politics: "It's a long past time for all Americans and the media to confront the fact that violence and murder are the tragic consequence of demonizing those with whom you disagree day after day, year after year, in the most hateful and despicable way possible." The reaction notes this rhetoric aligns with Trump's politics of vengeance and calls out hypocrisy in vilification, citing Charlie Kirk's line: "standing for everything that God hates, claiming that, you know, queer people are defective and dangerous and and should be executed." The discussion concludes that polarizing rhetoric fuels loss of civility and may encourage violence from both sides.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What concerns does that raise for you? Speaker 1: Yeah. I've had a little bit of time to look, and it is very disconcerting what we're seeing, especially from, you know, from Trump and his supporters as well, where they are calling him a martyr. There are some in online spaces that are calling for further violence, retaliatory violence. So I really fear that this will lead actually to an escalation as, you know, the the left in particular is vilified in in many of these narratives and quite explicitly in an ex post by sorry, comments by Trump from Trump yesterday, which really did put the blame fairly you know, soundly at the feet of of the left and and of liberals and by extension, democrats as well. Speaker 0: Can can we just pause you on that because I was gonna play an excerpt from that message. It was direct to sort of a video message that he recorded in the Oval Office and began to sort of calm the waters or at least speak out in condolences, but then it really did swing very quickly back to political discourse. Let's listen to that, Barbara, so everyone knows what we're referring to, and then we'll talk about it further. Speaker 2: It's a long past time for all Americans and the media to confront the fact that violence and murder are the tragic consequence of demonizing those with whom you disagree day after day, year after year, in the most hateful and despicable way possible. For years, those on the radical left have compared wonderful Americans like Charlie to Nazis and the world's worst mass murderers and criminals. This kind of rhetoric is directly responsible for the terrorism that we're seeing in our country today. Speaker 0: This kind of rhetoric is directly responsible. This is what's given rise to some today, Barbara, saying they're concerned about payback or additional political violence. Again, what is your reaction and concern about what that presidential message may indeed incite? Speaker 1: Yeah. This it it really irks me, and it really does concern me because it yeah. It's in very much in line with Trump's politics of vengeance, if you will, punishing, you know, the the enemies. You know, we've seen it from Trump in terms of job loss and investigations and mass arrests and and deportations, that sort of thing. But there's also the hypocrisy there, I think, that feeds into the the rhetoric, right, where he's talking about the polarizing rhetoric and the vilification, which is very much, you know, laid at his feet in terms of exactly the language that we're we're seeing there. The language even that Charlie Kirk, uses, you know, vilifying particular groups, talking about the, Democrats, for example, as, and I quote, standing for everything that God hates, claiming that, you know, queer people are defective and dangerous and and should be, be executed. I mean, that's sort of polarizing language that contributes to this environment, this loss of civility, and and encourages violence directed towards the enemy, whatever the strike. And we are seeing this from from both sides.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

@CBC For context: Prof Barbara Perry has pushed the “300+ hate groups” claim in Canada for over half a decade—without ever disclosing the content of her "research" for public scrutiny. Despite this, her gov-funded list has influenced Liberal govt policy.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

Dark day for Canada. Ontario’s privacy czar just ruled "anti-hate" researcher Barbara Perry can keep her gov-funded 300 "far-right groups" list secret. Trudeau now has a carte blanche to craft laws using shady blacklists concocted by activist profs. https://tnc.news/2024/09/27/perry-otu-300-far-right-list-secret-commissioner/

Ruling bars public release of “300 far-right groups” list funded by Liberal gov Ontario’s privacy commissioner has sided with Ontario Tech University “anti-hate” researcher Dr. Barbara Perry in keeping her 300 active Canadian “far-right” hate groups list secret. Perry’s work, which identifies hundreds of so-called far-right groups, has gained significant attention in mainst tnc.news

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

@CBC Still waiting for the totally iron-clad list Barbara. Any day now... https://t.co/AaqSg8abCQ

Saved - December 21, 2024 at 3:22 AM

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

Just the other day @RandPaul tore into Chrystia Freeland and Justin Trudeau in front of the entire U.S. Senate for using emergency powers to debank Canadian citizens and trample peaceful Freedom Convoy protesters. https://t.co/ygjKHcJg2N

Video Transcript AI Summary
Emergency powers can be abused, as seen in Canada. In early 2022, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked emergency powers during protests against COVID-19 restrictions, allowing him to freeze the bank accounts of protesters without due process. This included taking funds raised through crowdfunding to support the truckers. The Emergencies Act of 1988 granted the government significant authority to act against dissent. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland warned that financial institutions could freeze accounts without a court order if vehicles were used in protests. This situation highlights the dangers of excessive presidential power, which can target citizens unexpectedly. If such actions can occur in Canada, they could potentially happen in the U.S. as well.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: If anyone doubts that emergency powers can be abused, just look to Canada. As Gene Healy of Cato Institute wrote, America's neighbor to the north offers a cautionary tale about the risks that broad emergency powers could be turned inward against political dissent. In early 2022, Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, faced a mass protest against COVID nineteen restrictions, in which Canadian truckers obstructed key border crossings and effectively shut down the capital city with their rigs. Instead of simply clearing out protesters and punishing them via conventional legal means, Trudeau invoked emergency powers broad enough to permit the financial unpersoning of anyone participating in the protest. He went to their bank accounts and took their money. When people raise money voluntarily through crowd financing to help these truckers, he stole that money as well through martial rule. Without any rule of law, he took the money. No transaction with the protesters. He took their money. People were locked up under martial law. Canada's 1988 Emergencies Act gave the Trudeau Government staggering powers to subject individual protesters to debanking without due process. This is the danger of presidential power, of excessive presidential power. Isn't about any individual president, it's about all presidents of either party because men and women will succumb to the desire for power. It's inherent in all. That's why we must have checks and balances. Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister, Chrystia Freeland put it this way in describing Trudeau's martial law. As of February 2022, in a warning to the truckers, as of today, a bank or a financial service provider will be able to immediately freeze or suspend an account without a court order. The Government of Canada, essentially Trudeau, could freeze a bank account without a court order, without due process of law. We are today serving notice. If your truck is being used in these protests, your corporate accounts will be frozen. The insurance on your vehicle will be suspended. Send your trailers home. And while native born Americans may think that emergency powers are to be used to target others, I would venture to guess that the Canadian truckers protesting COVID era mandates didn't expect that their government would treat them as foreign adversaries and freeze their accounts. If it can happen in Canada, it can happen in the US.
Saved - October 27, 2024 at 8:57 PM

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

WAIT, hold on a second, Elections BC just admitted that British Columbia election supervisors can keep sealed ballot boxes IN THEIR HOMES?! How is this not a massive security risk?

@bobmackin - Bob Mackin

Elections BC allowed staff to take ballots home during advanced voting week #bcpol #bcelexn2024 https://thebreaker.news/business/elections-bc-home-box/

Elections BC allowed staff to take ballots home during advanced voting week - theBreaker Briefly: Elections BC spokesperson said ballots and […] thebreaker.news
Saved - May 13, 2024 at 7:45 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The RCMP's internal review of the Freedom Convoy reveals heavy political pressure, ministers manipulating intelligence, and discomfort over the Emergencies Act. Respondent officers felt high pressure from the Liberals and that their role was becoming highly politicized. Ministers misrepresented intelligence updates and relied on dubious quality information. Legacy media, including the Canadian Anti-Hate Network, spread false narratives. The Liberals continue to be supported by the legacy media despite interference and politicization. Global News hid important facts from the public, further demonizing the protesters.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

The RCMP has publicly released its Freedom Convoy internal review and it's damning for the Liberals. Officers complained of heavy political pressure, ministers manipulating intelligence for their own ends and discomfort over the Emergencies Act. https://tnc.news/2024/05/13/rcmp-officers-uncomfortable-with-political-pressure/

RCMP officers uncomfortable with political pressure, Emergencies Act during Freedom Convoy: internal report An RCMP review of the federal police response to the 2022 Freedom Convoy reveals that officers were uncomfortable with the unprecedented invocation of the Emergencies Act and felt immense pressure from government officials.  tnc.news

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

At the height of the Liberal government’s response to the Freedom Convoy, then public safety minister Marco Mendicino claimed the police faced no pressure from the government and were entirely independent.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Except respondent RCMP officers expressed in post-response interviews that they felt the pressure from the Liberals was “high” and their role was becoming “highly politicized.”

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

In reality, Liberal government ministers were skirting the chain of command and asking for intelligence updates every hour which they then misrepresented and falsely attributed the conclusions to the RCMP.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Additionally, RCMP respondents said that the intelligence provided to their respective task force was of dubious quality and had an overreliance on legacy media reports.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

As you know, the legacy media frequently cited partisan groups like the Canadian Anti-Hate Network whose director was found to have spread a false narrative that an antisemitic flyer was present at the protest. In reality, the photograph was from an unrelated protest in Miami.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

With this level of interference and politicization of law enforcement, any other government would be cooked but the Liberals continue to get propped up, especially by the legacy media.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Global News had exclusive access to this report in March, yet they hid the above facts from the public, further demonizing the protesters to further justify Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's actions. Truly abhorrent https://t.co/uduxURs1jQ

Saved - April 17, 2024 at 2:06 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A Canadian Forces chaplain, Captain Beatrice Gale, was suspended after an alleged inappropriate comment or request. Gale, who was previously celebrated as an LGBTQ champion, had her chaplaincy revoked and received a minor service infraction. The incident did not meet the criminal threshold, and the military did not involve civilian police. The Department of National Defence refused to make the summary hearing public, citing privacy.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

The @CanadianForces tried to cover this scandal up but I'm blowing the lid. A @RMCCanadaCMR chaplain who was hailed by the Canadian military as an LGBTQ champion on Transgender Day of Visibility has been suspended following an alleged groping request. https://tnc.news/2024/04/17/trans-military-chaplain-sexual-groping/

Trans military chaplain suspended over alleged sexual groping comment A Royal Military College chaplain who was hailed by the Canadian military as an LGBTQ champion on Transgender Day of Visibility has been suspended following an alleged groping request.  tnc.news

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

On Transgender Day of Visibility, the Department of National Defence (DND) lauded Captain Beatrice Gale as a trailblazer. A few days later Gale was suspended for making an "inappropriate comment or request.” https://t.co/OMc4qaHaRL

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Military chaplains are given a position of privileged authority and trust, where they can counsel cadets at the college who are struggling with suicide, grief or family issues.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Last year, the military also dedicated a five-minute production to Gale’s transition “from man to woman.” https://t.co/WOyRG4LH6i

Video Transcript AI Summary
I wrote a poem called "Suicide Note" apologizing to my family for being a transgender woman. I struggled with my identity, hiding it for years. Coming out at 43 was terrifying, but surprisingly, my family was accepting. As a transgender chaplain, I aim to support others in the 2SLGBTQI+ community. I hope to promote understanding and acceptance within the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service. Translation: I wrote a poem titled "Suicide Note" apologizing to my family for being a transgender woman. I struggled with my identity, hiding it for years. Coming out at 43 was terrifying, but surprisingly, my family was accepting. As a transgender chaplain, I aim to support others in the 2SLGBTQI+ community. I hope to promote understanding and acceptance within the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I wrote a poem. And the name of the poem was suicide note. In that poem, I apologize to my children, and I apologize to my wife because I knew I couldn't live because I I I'm a woman, and this is something I know that is not acceptable and that the world will not understand. And because of this, I will likely die. I found puberty to be quite confusing. The changes that were happening with me, didn't really reflect who I felt I was. I knew that I was different. I was always I always felt more comfortable with, with feminine forms. So it's something I worked really hard to, suppress. It's something I worked really hard to hide. I didn't let people into what I was wrestling with. But I found ways to express myself in other ways which were safe. I was really into to punk music. I was lead singer in a punk band. And part of that punk persona was for a skirt and tights on stage. It felt like I was at home with myself in that sort of way. It wasn't until I was about about 35 when I realized that this is not something that was gonna go away. And by the age of 40, it had become a crisis. It was not that long ago that, that, well, no. So my wife knew at that point. But really, it seemed like this was just something that was gonna be part of my private life. The level of education around gender identity and gender expression wasn't there yet. And, it took me until 43 to be able to say, this is something I'm going to do. I'm going to publicly come out. Solenoid ends this life of time. That's given to us all. It was terrifying. And what really surprised me, but also distressed me, was how accepting so many people worked. Because I had rejected myself for so long. When I came out to my family, to my kids in particular, the 2 oldest, were immediately accepting. My youngest, it really struck him hard, but, you know, it it wasn't very long before he was he was calling me mom. The truth is, the vast majority of transgender people don't have the same support I have. Most lose their marriages and many even lose their family and friends. I am fortunate. I really thought everyone was going to reject me. I'm still married. And I also thought I was the only one, which is bizarre because I got to Kingston, and it's like, there are, you know, there's a there's a a number of transgender members here. It was very freeing for me. It allowed me to, for the first time in my life, break out of this box which wasn't meant for me. What I bring to the cadets here is the same thing that any other chaplain would. Most of the cadets that I talk to actually don't see me as transgender. They see me as a chaplain. For me, it's a really, it's a humbling role to be able to be here, to talk to people, and their their concerns, their fears. It makes us stronger when we share our challenges. And I hope that being a transgender chaplain sends a message to the 2SLGBTQI plus community that the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service cares, that it cares for that community. I know that the Chaplain General wants to know if there are any chaplains who continue to discriminate against the 2SLGBTQI plus community. I feel like we're on the right track, but I feel like that progress is fragile, and I feel like there's a lot of hurt, and I hope that I hope that we can honour that hurt, and that we can seek to not do it again.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

An anonymous source familiar with the situation told True North that Gale allegedly had asked to grope the buttocks of a male Lieutenant after becoming intoxicated during a mess dinner.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

The DND stated that Captain Gale, who identifies as a woman and is the CAF's first openly transgender chaplain, had her chaplaincy revoked after a summary hearing and received a minor service infraction, with a loss of two days' pay and the removal of 20 days of leave.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

CAF didn’t escalate the matter to civilian police, a deviation from their usual protocol in similar cases where sexual misconduct is suspected. After an investigation, the Military Police and Crown decided the incident didn't meet the criminal threshold.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

DND also refused to make the summary hearing public, citing privacy. When True North attempted to get a charge report on Gale’s misconduct the military refused to provide any documents despite regulations requiring that a reason be given as to why the matter was declared private.

Saved - April 5, 2024 at 7:12 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A CTV pundit and McGill professor, Raphaël Melançon, suggests the need for an Interpol-like agency to regulate online "truth." He also proposes that regulators should decide who can be a journalist, potentially excluding outlets like Rebel News Online and Epoch Times. Melançon alleges the presence of Confederate flags at a Conservative campaign rally in Montreal, but did not provide evidence when asked.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

MUST-WATCH: @CTV pundit and @mcgillu prof Raphaël Melançon said that he wants an Interpol-like agency to police the "truth" online. Canada's Laurentian elite have gone full authoritarian. https://tnc.news/2024/04/05/ctv-police-misinformation-online/ 🧵More clips below...

Video Transcript AI Summary
We need to collaborate with other countries to regulate misinformation online. An international body, similar to Interpol, could ensure accurate information on the internet and social media.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Yes. There is what we can do in Canada in our jurisdiction but there's also the fact that you have lies coming from abroad and, our our laws do not apply to what happens outside of our of our borders. So, unfortunately, we will need to work alongside with our international allies, especially in liberal democracies, to ensure that the same regulations are applied elsewhere, and that we can prevent and act, maybe to have even, an international body dedicated as as we have Interpol, for instance. We could have an international body, dedicated to, ensuring that information propagated on on the Internet and, on social media is correct and that we act as as fast as possible.
CTV pundit wants Interpol-like agency to police misinformation online The Canadian government should license journalists and partner with international allies to create an intergovernmental policing body to monitor the internet. Those were the views expressed by CTV pundit and McGill professor Raphaël Melançon during a lecture last week.  tnc.news

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Melançon also said during a lecture to the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, that regulators should decide who gets to be a journalist via licenses and independent outlets like @RebelNewsOnline and @EpochTimes should be barred from covering press conferences.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The professionalization of journalism is crucial for ensuring trustworthy information. Currently, anyone can claim to be a journalist in Canada, posing a significant problem. Unlike other professions, journalists have no mandatory regulations. Should partisan media like Rebel News or Epoch Times be treated as activists rather than journalists? With 46 professional orders in Quebec, why not establish one for journalists given their impact on society? Upholding a code of ethics and verifying journalists' backgrounds is essential to combat fake news and protect the public's right to accurate information.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The professionalization of journalism will be essential so that people can know which reporter or which news outlets they can trust to get reliable information. At the moment, in Canada, anyone can pretend to be a journalist. This, in my humble point of view, is a major issue. We wouldn't let and also as a former journalist. We wouldn't let a fake physician, lawyer, accountant or psychologist do that, knowing the major consequences it could have on those who trust them? That's exactly why we have professional orders, to prevent con artists from pretending to be someone or something they are not in reality. To this day, members of the press have no obligation whatsoever regarding what they write or say in media. Adhesion to the Federation Professional Des Journalies du Quebec or to the Conseil de Presse du Quebec, for instance, is not mandatory, and no license is required for journalists to work and cover events in Quebec. That, to me, is a problem. Should so called journalists from partisan media, such as the far right Rebel News or the Falun Gong controlled Epoch Times, be allowed to cover government press conferences, or should they rather be considered as activist organizations and treated like so? To this day, the rules are not clear. In Quebec, there are 46 professional orders in total. If we have an order for social workers, for geologists, for dietitians, and for acupuncturists, why wouldn't we have one for journalists? Considering the substantial power they have on the on the future of our society and the and and the fact that they are the so called 4th estate. If other countries have done it before, why wouldn't we do it too? This, of course, is nothing against the freedom of press. As a former journalist, I'm a huge partisan of freedom of press but also of the independence of the press. It's all about protecting the population's right to have access to verified, credible and reliable information. In this era of fake news, we must implement mechanisms that will allow for the enforcement of a code of ethics on professional journalists and regulate who can or cannot be part of the profession with regards to their academic background, of course, but also to their past actions. If you propagate fake news, you're out.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Melançon also alleged that at a campaign rally for Conservative leader @PierrePoilievre in Montreal, he witnessed “so many trucks with confederate flags” outside and referenced the Conservatives when speaking of "far-right parties". When I contacted Melançon to ask for evidence, he did not reply to my request.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The election of Pierre Polievre as the new leader of the Conservative Party of Canada marked a shift towards the far right. He openly opposed vaccine mandates and supported the freedom convoy protesters, winning the leadership race in 2022. His campaign events included people yelling anti-vaccine sentiments, showing a concerning ideological shift in the party. Polievre's actions legitimized extreme views and undermined efforts to combat COVID-19.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Of course, one could not talk about far right parties without mentioning the election of Pierre Polievre as the new leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, which marked a major a major shift in the party's position and political approach. Of course, here, I'm not going to link the Conservative Party of Canada to the far right, but still, we had to acknowledge that while he was running for the CPC's leadership in the midst of the pandemic, Paliev did not refrain from speaking openly against vaccine mandates and publicly supporting the freedom convoy protesters, seeking the support of the most radical elements of his party in order to in order to win the leadership race in 2022 which ended up with a landslide victory for him and you can see Polievre here, walking outside with protesters during the pandemic. I myself vividly remember a partisan event that I attended during the CPC's leadership race in Montreal. As a former political staffer under Stephen Harper's government in Ottawa, I was curious to see Paliev in action while he was on tour across Canada. His campaign team had gathered thousands of thousands of conservative members in a packed convention center in the West Island here in Montreal. I recall that when we got there, I was surprised to see so many trucks with Confederate flags in the parking lot. I was it was a pretty good sign of the reasons that brought such a large crowd inside that hotel that day. Once inside, I could not believe what I saw and heard. Whenever Poliyev mentioned vaccines or confinement, people in the audience were yelling things such as, we're not in China that way. It's just an anecdote, of course, but to me, it showed an important ideological shift for that party which I no longer recognized compared to the conservative party I had worked for just a few years prior to that event. Comparing vaccines to dictatorships? Really? What Polyaev did in order to win his party's leadership simply legitimized and reinforced the ideas of those who perceived Canada as being at the brink of fascism simply because the Trudeau government was trying to save as many lives as possible at a time when the fear of COVID 19 had paralyzed the entire world.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Read more about the lecture here: https://tnc.news/2024/04/05/ctv-police-misinformation-online/

CTV pundit wants Interpol-like agency to police misinformation online The Canadian government should license journalists and partner with international allies to create an intergovernmental policing body to monitor the internet. Those were the views expressed by CTV pundit and McGill professor Raphaël Melançon during a lecture last week.  tnc.news
Saved - February 28, 2024 at 7:00 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Liberal MP Kevin Lamoureux expressed gratitude for the marginalization of six million unvaccinated Canadians, referring to them as far-right. Some find this statement hateful and believe it demonstrates Liberal acceptance of hatred towards those who prioritize freedom. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also referred to unvaccinated individuals as extremists who should not be tolerated in 2021.

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

Liberal MP @Kevin_Lamoureux said "thank goodness" that six million unvaccinated Canadians were "marginalized" from society because they were "far-right." What a vile thing to say. Hatred is okay for the Liberals when it's against people who value freedom. https://tnc.news/2024/02/28/unvaccinated-marginalized-far-right/

Video Transcript AI Summary
The debate aims to prevent a repeat of the divisive ArriveScam in 2021, demonizing unvaccinated Canadians. The government funded a flawed study by David Fisman to support this policy, sparking questions about wasted money. The parliamentary secretary dismisses critics as far-right deniers, emphasizing the importance of protecting Canadians' health.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Purpose of the debate today is to recognize a horrible thing happened and we wanna prevent it from the future. If we look back to ArriveScam, how it started in 2021 during the election, it was used to say to Canadians that unvaxxed Canadians were a danger to vaccinated Canadians. It was the demonization of millions of Canadians. And in the summer of 2021, we knew the Delta variant, the omicron, both vaccinated and unvaccinated people could get and spread the disease. Our own public officials from the Public Agent Public Health Agency of Canada did not have the science to support this policy, so the government initiated a study with a guy named David Fisman at the University of Toronto, and this study was so bad, Madame Speaker, that there's a book called Fisman's Fraud, The Rise of Canadian Hate Science. And I just wanna know how much money did they spend on these studies to support this Arrive scam when they knew that they didn't have the science to even support it from day 1? Speaker 1: The honorable parliamentary secretary. Well, mad madam speaker, the mega conservative far right is coming out. These are the the anti, you know, these are the ones that still deny, the the, you know, the the pandemic. And at the end of the day, you know, thank goodness it was, that Canadians and the majority of the people in the house saw the value of protecting the health and well-being of Canadians and that the far right was marginalized, back then, madam Cyr, because as a direct result, more people are living today in Canada. As a direct result, a lot more people are healthier during, that process.
“Thank goodness” unvaccinated Canadians were marginalized, said Liberal MP Liberal MP Kevin Lamoureux praised his government for marginalizing millions of unvaccinated Canadians at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic because they were “far-right” in the House of Commons.  tnc.news

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴

@Kevin_Lamoureux Prime Minister Justin Trudeau set an example when he called unvaccinated people "extremists" who shouldn't be tolerated in 2021. https://tnc.news/2024/02/28/unvaccinated-marginalized-far-right/

“Thank goodness” unvaccinated Canadians were marginalized, said Liberal MP Liberal MP Kevin Lamoureux praised his government for marginalizing millions of unvaccinated Canadians at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic because they were “far-right” in the House of Commons.  tnc.news
Saved - October 31, 2023 at 5:49 AM

@cosminDZS - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa 🇷🇴🦇

Remember when PM Justin Trudeau said that it was "misinformation" that his government wants to reduce fertilizer use by 30%. Well Agriculture Minister @L_MacAulay just let the cat out of the bag in his latest report. These maniacs want a blanket 30% fertilizer use reduction. https://t.co/IH8oyzkOoT

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