shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 34,573
- 32,114
- 2,905
This will only get louder, especially as Canada allows abuses against their own citizens while blaming America, among other nations, for their plight.
The abuses of citizens in this country by the Creepy Ones, is indeed tiring.
A U.S. senator derided Canada as a freeloader on defence during a high-profile congressional hearing Tuesday in Washington — and suggested he's getting fed up with it.
It happened during an exchange about the anticipated $40 billion US in additional help for Ukraine that the U.S. Congress is expected to imminently pass.
Alaska's Dan Sullivan said he still supports American funding for Ukraine but he also expressed exasperation that so much of the military-assistance burden is falling on the U.S. He asked the witnesses whether they see U.S. allies stepping up and getting closer to reaching NATO's historic military spending target of two per cent of GDP.
Sullivan specifically mentioned Canada twice, and referred to Germany once in passing over the course of his broadside.
"Are you seeing a shift in our NATO allies to say, 'You know what? It's time for us to pull our own weight here. The Americans are doing it — once again," the Alaska Republican asked.
"[Because] $40 billion [more for Ukraine] — that's a lot of money. My constituents have got a lot of needs, too.
"We still have NATO allies, Canada one, who just freeload. And it's getting a little tiring."
The abuses of citizens in this country by the Creepy Ones, is indeed tiring.
What's new
A U.S. senator derided Canada as a freeloader on defence during a high-profile congressional hearing Tuesday in Washington — and suggested he's getting fed up with it.
It happened during an exchange about the anticipated $40 billion US in additional help for Ukraine that the U.S. Congress is expected to imminently pass.
Alaska's Dan Sullivan said he still supports American funding for Ukraine but he also expressed exasperation that so much of the military-assistance burden is falling on the U.S. He asked the witnesses whether they see U.S. allies stepping up and getting closer to reaching NATO's historic military spending target of two per cent of GDP.
Sullivan specifically mentioned Canada twice, and referred to Germany once in passing over the course of his broadside.
"Are you seeing a shift in our NATO allies to say, 'You know what? It's time for us to pull our own weight here. The Americans are doing it — once again," the Alaska Republican asked.
"[Because] $40 billion [more for Ukraine] — that's a lot of money. My constituents have got a lot of needs, too.
"We still have NATO allies, Canada one, who just freeload. And it's getting a little tiring."