shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 38,193
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The Canadian elite are concerned that Canadians want civil liberties and a voice rather than maintaining the caste system. Trumps call for Canada to join the U.S has been far more effective than the Canadian apparatuses thought possible. When you put the boot on the neck of citizens, why would they care to support the Police State when Trump is offering a cherished Constitution?
They now know just how much whistleblowers have exposed and it has to concern them. "Angus Reid Institute says the share of Conservatives supporting the monarchy has fallen from 53 per cent in 2016 to 30 per cent now."
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Don't blame me, I'm just the Messenger. They are probably hoping they can smooth over Trump with a lavish trip to Buckingham Palace because right now there is a deep divide, especially among conservatives who less and less support the monarchy. None of this surprises me after experiencing what I and so many others have.
I hope King Charles demands that our Charter of Rights is adhered to, especially in Ontario. You can be sure that the lose of faith in our system is going to continue to fall as our economy declines and from the RCMP, OPP on down, they are allowed to destroy our nation.
Americans well know how our police state operates. Maybe a few agencies in a few states in America are dumb but the FBI is WELL aware of what is going on here.
Speaking to reporters after the speech from the throne on Tuesday, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre struck a decidedly institutionalist tone.
"We joined today in thanking His Majesty for coming to Canada and delivering the throne speech, reinforcing our ancient, great British liberties," he said. "A parliamentary system that goes back 800 years. A system that has served Canada well and has been the foundation of what I love to call the Canadian promise."
A Conservative praising the monarch might not seem unusual. Former foreign affairs minister John Baird, a close ally of Poilievre's, once demanded that his department hang a portrait of the Queen in the foyer of its headquarters.
But support for the monarchy among Conservative voters seems to have slipped in recent years. Pollara recently found Conservatives are evenly split on Canada remaining a constitutional monarchy and the Angus Reid Institute says the share of Conservatives supporting the monarchy has fallen from 53 per cent in 2016 to 30 per cent now.
More than that, Poilievre has enthusiastically embraced the modern style of populism. He has thrived on conflict and for the last three years has held himself out as a politician ready to do battle with the system — aligning himself with the self-styled "freedom convoy," vowing to fire the governor of the Bank of Canada and do battle with "elites," "gatekeepers" "liberal media" and "woke ideology" on behalf of the "common people."
They now know just how much whistleblowers have exposed and it has to concern them. "Angus Reid Institute says the share of Conservatives supporting the monarchy has fallen from 53 per cent in 2016 to 30 per cent now."
"
Don't blame me, I'm just the Messenger. They are probably hoping they can smooth over Trump with a lavish trip to Buckingham Palace because right now there is a deep divide, especially among conservatives who less and less support the monarchy. None of this surprises me after experiencing what I and so many others have.
I hope King Charles demands that our Charter of Rights is adhered to, especially in Ontario. You can be sure that the lose of faith in our system is going to continue to fall as our economy declines and from the RCMP, OPP on down, they are allowed to destroy our nation.
Americans well know how our police state operates. Maybe a few agencies in a few states in America are dumb but the FBI is WELL aware of what is going on here.
Speaking to reporters after the speech from the throne on Tuesday, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre struck a decidedly institutionalist tone.
"We joined today in thanking His Majesty for coming to Canada and delivering the throne speech, reinforcing our ancient, great British liberties," he said. "A parliamentary system that goes back 800 years. A system that has served Canada well and has been the foundation of what I love to call the Canadian promise."
A Conservative praising the monarch might not seem unusual. Former foreign affairs minister John Baird, a close ally of Poilievre's, once demanded that his department hang a portrait of the Queen in the foyer of its headquarters.
But support for the monarchy among Conservative voters seems to have slipped in recent years. Pollara recently found Conservatives are evenly split on Canada remaining a constitutional monarchy and the Angus Reid Institute says the share of Conservatives supporting the monarchy has fallen from 53 per cent in 2016 to 30 per cent now.
More than that, Poilievre has enthusiastically embraced the modern style of populism. He has thrived on conflict and for the last three years has held himself out as a politician ready to do battle with the system — aligning himself with the self-styled "freedom convoy," vowing to fire the governor of the Bank of Canada and do battle with "elites," "gatekeepers" "liberal media" and "woke ideology" on behalf of the "common people."
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