shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
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I find this astonishing really.
We have an unaccountable Security Industrial Complex that destroys lives without accountability and if smart, young, ambitious Canadians, the same Canadians the Creepy Ones destroy; it is somehow a danger to Canada? They actually view Elon Musk as a "problem".
Now that certainly could be open to interpretation. I'd love to hear more from him as he is no idiot, and neither, I hope am I, or certainly Musk for that matter.
It sounds to me as if Canada setting the conditions to silence Canadians. I hope JD Vance speaks out about this as we do NOT need further suppression of rights.
They need not worry, the U.S State Department going back two decades knows more than they could ever get through twitter or facebook influencers. The greatest national security threat is found within, but they are telling Canadians "be afraid of those American influencers on twitter who might try and convince you to leave Canada to contribute to Americas success".
Who allowed these dishonest police agencies to destroy our civil liberties and economy to begin with? Who set the conditions that ensured our decline to allow the U.S to be such a vibrant alternative?
Former senior Canadian intelligence officials say Canada needs to be on the lookout for campaigns aimed at destabilizing the country amid U.S. President Donald Trump's escalating 51st state threats.
And they told CBC News that the most potent weapon wielded by the Trump administration to advance the cause of annexation would likely not be the intelligence agencies directed by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard.
"I would regard Mr. Musk as a problem," said Ward Elcock, who headed CSIS for a decade including during the 9/11 attacks and also served as national security adviser. "I think that's on a number of fronts."
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He says that in spite of visible signs of Canadian unity in the face of annexation threats, there are those who are vulnerable to the siren call, particularly among the young who feel economically disadvantaged.
"That would be one of the linchpins, one of the cracks in the armour that another country would be looking at trying to exploit," he told CBC News. "If you have individuals who are concerned about where their next meal is coming from or if they're going to get a roof over their head, that supersedes sovereignty."
We have an unaccountable Security Industrial Complex that destroys lives without accountability and if smart, young, ambitious Canadians, the same Canadians the Creepy Ones destroy; it is somehow a danger to Canada? They actually view Elon Musk as a "problem".
Now that certainly could be open to interpretation. I'd love to hear more from him as he is no idiot, and neither, I hope am I, or certainly Musk for that matter.
It sounds to me as if Canada setting the conditions to silence Canadians. I hope JD Vance speaks out about this as we do NOT need further suppression of rights.
They need not worry, the U.S State Department going back two decades knows more than they could ever get through twitter or facebook influencers. The greatest national security threat is found within, but they are telling Canadians "be afraid of those American influencers on twitter who might try and convince you to leave Canada to contribute to Americas success".
Who allowed these dishonest police agencies to destroy our civil liberties and economy to begin with? Who set the conditions that ensured our decline to allow the U.S to be such a vibrant alternative?
Former senior Canadian intelligence officials say Canada needs to be on the lookout for campaigns aimed at destabilizing the country amid U.S. President Donald Trump's escalating 51st state threats.
And they told CBC News that the most potent weapon wielded by the Trump administration to advance the cause of annexation would likely not be the intelligence agencies directed by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard.
"I would regard Mr. Musk as a problem," said Ward Elcock, who headed CSIS for a decade including during the 9/11 attacks and also served as national security adviser. "I think that's on a number of fronts."
........................
Economic distress: Canada's weak spot
Neil Bisson is a former CSIS intelligence officer who is now director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network and teaches at the University of Ottawa's Professional Development Institute.He says that in spite of visible signs of Canadian unity in the face of annexation threats, there are those who are vulnerable to the siren call, particularly among the young who feel economically disadvantaged.
"That would be one of the linchpins, one of the cracks in the armour that another country would be looking at trying to exploit," he told CBC News. "If you have individuals who are concerned about where their next meal is coming from or if they're going to get a roof over their head, that supersedes sovereignty."
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