Monday, February 14, 2022

THANKS TRUCKERS ALL ONTARIO END OF PASSPORTS MAR 1 - NO INDOOR CAPACITY LIMIT UP TO 50.

JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)

WELCOME TO GERMANY 1939 CANADASTAN. TRUDEAU IS THE OFFICIAL DICTATOR OF CANADASTAN TODAY

 HERES AN UPDATE-OF THE TRUCKERS SETUP 2:32PM MON FEB 14,22

HERES THE FALSE FLAG AGAINST THE TRUCKERS I WAS TALKING ABOUT. WERE THE GOVERNMENT COMMUNIST NAZIS IN PARLIAMONT CAN KILL THE  TRUCKERS UNDER MARTIAL LAW. NOW I KNOW WHY COMMUNIST NAZI LITTLE DADDYS BOY JUSTIN CALLED ON MARTIAL LAW THIS MORNING.  WELL IT JUST HAPPENED THAT THAT LITTLE  COMMUNIST NAZI JASON KENNY IN ALBERTA . AND THE POLICE. JUST CAUGHT 3 TRUCKS WITH ALL KINDS OF WEAPS IN THEM.  11 LIBERAL SEWER RATS WERE  CHARGED.  WELL THIS  IS HOW THE LIBERAL SEWER RAT GOVERNMENT SETS  UP THE TRUCKERS  TO GET RID OF THEM.

THE SETUP WAS FEB 3RD PROPGANDA HERE ALREADY. THE GUNS PROPAGANDA AGAINST THE TRUCKERS. AND IT JUST HAPPENED FEB 3 THAT WEAPONS WERE STOLEN. DO WE SEE THE SETUP HERE. THE ONLY DIFFERENCE. THEIR WAS TO MANY TRUCKERS IN OTTAWA. THEY HAD TO DO THE FALSE FLAG IN ALBERTA INSTEAD. BECAUSE IT WAS ALBERTA WERE THESE WEAPONS WERE STOLEN. SO THE MEDIA CLAIMS. AND ALL 3 ESCAPED. THEY NEVER CAUGHT THE WEAPON THIEVES.

Canadian police warn of guns at trucker protest against vaccine mandate paralysing capital-Issued on: 03/02/2022 - 00:00

Police in Ottawa see signs that guns have been brought into a truckers' protest against vaccine mandates that has paralysed the Canadian capital, the police chief said on Wednesday, adding that calling in the military would pose major risks."We have had an indication around firearms coming into this jurisdiction as part of this demonstration as much as a week and a half ago," Chief Peter Sloly told a briefing.He said there was evidence of "a significant element from the United States in the funding and organising" of the protest.Dozens of truck drivers protesting about COVID-19 vaccine mandates have blocked central routes in the city for six days. Residents have been getting angrier at perceived inaction by the police, who have largely stood to one side.The protesters say they have no intention of leaving until the government scraps the vaccine mandates.Police have declined to end the protest, citing the risk of aggravating tensions. They say they are investigating reports of criminal offences, including hate crimes and desecration of public property, and have made three arrests so far."We're looking at every single option, including military aid," Sloly said. "Mixing them into a population in the downtown core in a highly volatile demonstration ... may mitigate some risks and may create and escalate a whole bunch of other risks."The demonstration began as a move to force the Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to drop a vaccine mandate for cross-border truckers. It has since turned into a more populist anti-Trudeau movement.Trudeau on Monday said Canadians were disgusted by the behaviour of some protesters and vowed not to be intimidated.The inaction of police – some of whom have posed for selfies with demonstrators  –contrasts with more robust action by authorities in the western province of Alberta.The Royal Canadian Mounted Police on Tuesday moved in on truckers blockading the U.S. border at the town of Coutts but pulled back after clashes with some drivers. (REUTERS)

Explosive device, guns, stolen EPS uniforms seized during Edmonton bust BY Sean Amato-CTV News Edmonton-Published Feb. 3, 2022 2:04 p.m. EST

Police are still searching for three men after an explosive device, "numerous" firearms and several first responder uniforms were discovered at a house in southeast Edmonton.Edmonton Police Service said officers noticed the men "loading suspicious items into a taxi" in the area of 44 Avenue and James Crescent at 3:50 a.m. on Saturday. The three men ran into a home when they saw officers, police said.Officers searched the bags left behind and found rifles with silencers, "several other firearms," and an EPS uniform.A tactical team was called in and police said they negotiated with the people inside the house."We got a call from police, nobody was supposed to come into the crescent or go out and stay away from the windows and doors," said Sant Kalirai, who lives near the scene.Kalirai believes the house is a rental and said police have been there several times recently."Kind of seemed like they were not good citizens. I kind of avoided them cause the police were coming by," he said."It was scary, we had no idea what was going on. We just saw all these SWAT team members, the canine team was there. They moved in about a year ago and the police have been there on a weekly basis," said neighbour Melissa Auchenberg.She said the police caved the garage door in, and photos of the scene confirm that. Part of the fence in the backyard was also destroyed.The scene of an EPS tactical mission in southeast Edmonton. (Source: Dave Mitchell/CTV News EdmontonEventually a man, a woman and a child came out of the house, police said. But when the residence was cleared early Sunday morning, none of the three suspects that officers originally spotted were found.Police searched the house and said they found more guns, an improvised explosive device, and police, fire and EMS uniforms.Police arrested a fourth man from the house on outstanding warrants, but EPS didn't specify what those charges were.No injuries were reported in the incident.
 

HAPPY VALENTINES DAY LADIES.

COMMUNIST NAZI DICTATOR JUSTIN TRUDEAU INVOKES MARIAL LAW OR EMERGENCIES ACT ON TRUCKERS. BUT HERE IN ONTARIO. STARTING FEB 17. NO INDOOR LIMITS OF PEOPLE UP TO 50.  AND STARTING MAR 1- NO MORE VACCINE PASSPORTS PROOF OF VACCINATION EXCEPT BUSSINESSES THAT WANT IT. AND WANT TO GO BROKE.. AND BESIDES THAT COMMUNIST PUPPET DOUG FORD HAS ELECTIONS COMING UP SHORTLY IN TORONTO. THE MASK MANDATES I MISSED WHAT DATE THEY WILL BE LIFTED. AND DOUG FORD INSISTED ITS NOT THE TRUCKERS THAT CHANGED THEIR MINDS. WE WERE TALKING ABOUT THE CHANGES MONTHS AGO CLAIMS FORD. THANKS TRUCKERS. YOU STOP THE BORDER FROM TRADE. YOU GOT IT MADE. THANK YOU TRUCKERS FOR STOPPING THAT COMMUNIST, NAZI LITTLE DICTATOR HIDING IN THE SEWER LITTLE DADDYS BOY JUSTI TRUDEAU.  AND THAT  COMMUNIST NAZI DOUG FORD IN ONTARIO. THAT COMMUNIST NAZI MAYOR OF OTTAWA JIM WATSON MADE UP A FALSE LETTER THAT SAID TAMAR THE LEADER OF THE TRUCKERS  WOULD MOVE THE TRUCKS. TAMAR LICH SENT OUT A TWEET SAING THAT A PILE OF BULL SHITE LIES.

Tamara Lich on Freedom Convoy: We are calling on all levels of Government in Canada to end all COVID mandates and restrictions. We will continue our protest until we see a clear plan for their elimination-THANKS TAMAR AND TRUCKERS. I CAN NOT EVEN FIND THE REAL TAMAR LICH TWITTER. ONLY THE FAKE INDIAN CULT TWITTER AGAINST HER COMES UP.

The Canadian Press-Mon, February 14, 2022, 10:20 a.m.

TORONTO — Ontario is ending its vaccine certificate system on March 1, when capacity limits will lift as well, Premier Doug Ford announced Monday, though he said masking requirements will remain for now.Ford insisted the step is not a result of pressure from anti-vaccine mandate protesters."Today’s announcement is not because of what’s happening in Ottawa or Windsor, but despite it," he said."The extraordinary measures that we introduced during this pandemic were always intended as a last resort. I stood at this very podium and promised you that these tools would only be used for as long as they were absolutely necessary and not one day longer. The removal of these measures has always been our objective."Public health indicators have been improving, and Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore presented a plan to lift the COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine certificates, Ford said, a plan that has been in the works since before protesters began occupying downtown Ottawa.Ontario is fast-tracking previously announced steps to lift restrictions, including moving the next step of its reopening plan up to Thursday instead of next Monday.On that day, social gathering limits will increase to 50 people indoors and 100 people outdoors, while capacity limits will be removed in places such as restaurants, bars, gyms and movie theatres. Capacity at businesses such as grocery stores, pharmacies and retail stores will be set at the number of people who can maintain a distance of two metres.Less than two weeks later, on March 1, capacity limits will be lifted in all remaining indoor public settings and proof-of-vaccination requirements will end for all settings.A vaccine mandate for staff in long-term care homes will remain, Ford said.The province also announced that youth aged 12 to 17 can book booster doses of a COVID-19 vaccine as of 8 a.m. on Friday.This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 14, 2022.The Canadian Press.

Trudeau to invoke the Emergencies Act to clear protesters, border blockades-The act and its predecessor has only been used once in peacetime, by Trudeau’s father during the October Crisis in 1970-National Post Wire Services-Feb 14, 2022

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will inform Canada’s premiers of his intention to invoke special measures to give the federal government extraordinary powers to deal with protests that have shut some border crossings with the United States and paralyzed parts of Canada’s capital, CBC News said on Monday.

AND NOW TODAY COMMUNIST NAZI PIERRES LITTLE BOY COMMUNIST NAZI LITTLE DICTATOR JUSTIN INVOKES MARTIAL ON THE TRUCKERS IN OTTAWA
His dad invoked the War Measures Act 50 years ago. Now some want Justin Trudeau to say sorry-Fifty years after the October Crisis of 1970, the Bloc is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to officially apologize for his father’s use of the War Measures Act and Canadian military.By Alex BallingallOttawa Bureau-Wed., Oct. 28, 2020

OTTAWA—It was Pierre Trudeau’s “just watch me” moment. And the Bloc Québécois wants his son to apologize for it.Fifty years after the October Crisis of 1970, the Bloc is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to officially apologize for his father’s use of the War Measures Act and Canadian military — at the request of the Quebec government — to quash terrorist activity in the province 50 years ago. In a motion it plans to debate in the House of Commons, the Bloc says Trudeau should apologize on behalf of the federal government for “the use of the army against Quebec’s civilian population to arbitrarily arrest, detain without charge and intimidate nearly 500 innocent Quebecers.”The reference is to how Pierre Trudeau used the law to suspend civil liberties and sent in the military — uttering his famed quip “just watch me” when asked how far he would go — after members of radical separatist Front de Libération du Quebec (FLQ) kidnapped provincial cabinet minister Pierre Laporte and British diplomat James Cross. Laporte was killed and his body found in the trunk of a car two days after the War Measures Act was invoked.The law suspended normal civil liberties, allowing for searches without warrants, arrests and detentions without bail, and for membership of the FLQ to be deemed a criminal act.Speaking to reporters in Ottawa on Wednesday, Bloc Leader Yves-François Blanchet pointed to how hundreds of people were detained and interrogated during the crisis, and that then-Progressive Conservative leader Robert Stanfield criticized the elder Trudeau’s use of these extraordinary powers. So did NDP leader Tommy Douglas.Blanchet argued parties that vote against his call for a formal apology from the federal government will show their pronouncements of respect for the Quebec nation are hollow.“You cannot pretend to be deeply in love with Quebec without respecting this desire of Quebecers to receive some apologies from Her Majesty’s Government,” he said.The Conservatives have already said they will vote against the motion, while the NDP says it supports it. That means the motion can only pass if the governing Liberals agree to make the apology — something the prime minister has suggested he won’t do.In the Commons on Wednesday, Blanchet referenced Trudeau’s refusal — on principle — to consider sending in the military during the Wet’suwet’en solidary blockades this year and asked if that same principle should have applied to his father’s decision-making towards Quebec in 1970.Trudeau responded that the use of the War Measures Act and military was after they were requested by then-Quebec premier Robert Bourassa and Montreal mayor Jean Drapeau, and that the focus should be on the killing of Laporte after he was kidnapped by FLQ operatives while playing in his yard with his children.“He was taken and assassinated by a terrorist cell,” Trudeau said. “Those are the events of the October Crisis that we should remember. Yes, there will always political debates around what happened, but let’s remember the fact that a Quebec politician was taken and assassinated in an awful context and we should remember his family and his service.”Daniel Béland is a professor at McGill University and director of the school’s Quebec Studies program. He said the Bloc motion appears to simplify the complex reality of the October Crisis, which he described as a seminal event in the history of Quebec nationalism.“I don’t think you can just put the blame on the federal government,” he said, describing a sense of panic after the kidnappings of Cross and Laporte that prompted requests from Quebec politicians for Ottawa’s intervention.But the crisis “still creates strong emotions” in the province, he said, describing how civil society has been alight with discussion during the 50th anniversary this month, including over a controversial new documentary film by the son of one of the key FLQ operatives.“There is of course the death of one man, Pierre Laporte… and that’s a big aspect of it. But also the consequences of the War Measures Act and all the people who were jailed in a seemingly arbitrary manner — that’s also part of the trauma,” he said. “So there are different layers to this story.”Quebec author Jocelyne Robert has supported calls from the Bloc and Parti Québécois for a government apology. In an interview with the Star on Wednesday, Robert recounted how she was 22, pregnant and newly-married at the time, living in an apartment in Montreal with her parents. They supported Quebec independence, she said, and they knew some figures in the FLQ, but they were firmly “pacifist.”She said police came to their home to question them three times, including once when they pointed a gun at her father’s head. She and her husband were arrested the third time and jailed for 24 hours, during which time she said she was strip searched, interrogated for hours, subjected to a gynecological exam and told she could be shot if she tried to escape.“I had the impression that I was in a film, that I was at the cinema in a horror drama. I had the impression that I was in a totalitarian country,” she said in French.Robert — who also recounted her story in various Quebec media in recent weeks — said she did not speak of her experience for years, and that while Laporte’s death was “terrible” and the situation was “serious,” she believes a government apology would be appropriate for what she and others experienced.“I know well that it won’t change anything,” she said. “But I think on the level of principle, it’s important that the government recognizes that it made a mistake, because I think it was an enormous mistake.”   

Emergencies Act-Article by-Denis Smith, Richard Foot, Eli Yarhi, Andrew McIntosh-    March 18, 2020

In July 1988, the War Measures Act was repealed and replaced by the Emergencies Act. The Emergencies Act authorizes “the taking of special temporary measures to ensure safety and security during national emergencies and to amend other Acts in consequence thereof.” In contrast to the sweeping powers and violation of civil liberties authorized by the War Measures Act, the Emergencies Act created more limited and specific powers for the federal government to deal with security emergencies of five different types: national emergencies; public welfare emergencies; public order emergencies; international emergencies; and war emergencies. Under the Act, Cabinet orders and regulations must be reviewed by Parliament, meaning the Cabinet cannot act on its own, unlike under the War Measures Act. The Emergencies Act outlines how people affected by government actions during emergencies are to be compensated. It also notes that government actions are subject to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Canadian Bill of Rights.

The War Measures Act was a federal law adopted by Parliament-on 22 August 1914, after the beginning of the First World War. It gave broad powers to the Canadian government to maintain security and order during “war, invasion or insurrection.” It was used, controversially, to suspend the civil liberties of people in Canada who were considered “enemy aliens” during both world wars. This led to mass arrests and detentions without charges or trials. (See also: Internment in Canada; Ukrainian Internment in Canada; Internment of Japanese Canadians.) In 1960, the War Measures Act was amended by the Canadian Bill of Rights, the country’s first federal law to protect human rights and fundamental freedoms. The bill declared that fundamental freedoms of speech, religion, assembly and of the press were to be upheld regardless of “race, national origin, colour, religion or sex.” It also asserted the right to “life, liberty, security of the person and enjoyment of property, and the right not to be deprived thereof except by due process of law.”However, Section 2 of the Bill of Rights stated that Parliament could override the rights afforded by the bill by inserting a “notwithstanding” clause in the applicable statute passed by Parliament — such as the War Measures Act. This was done only once, during the 1970 October Crisis-in Quebec.The suspension of civil liberties in Quebec was politically controversial. When the crisis was over, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau pledged to refine and limit the application of the Act in internal crises. However, by the time the final Trudeau government was defeated in 1984, the War Measures Act had not been modified. Repealing and Replacing the War Measures Act-In the decades following the world wars, Canadians who had been interned and who had their property seized under the provisions of the War Measures Act began lobbying for compensation for and recognition of their wartime treatment. Under Prime Minister    Brian Mulroney, the federal government repealed the War Measures Act and replaced it with the Emergencies Act, which received royal assent on 21 July 1988.The Japanese Canadian redress movement resulted in an official apology from Prime Minister Mulroney on the floor of the House of Commons In 1988. Financial compensation was also given to people affected by the government’s invocation of the War Measures Act. In the case of people interned during the First World War, a community settlement fund was established in 2008 to support commemorative and educational projects about Canada’s first national internment operations.Characteristics of the Emergencies Act.The Emergencies Act is different from the War Measures Act in some important ways. The Act created more limited and specific powers for the federal government to deal with security emergencies. Under the Emergencies Act, Cabinet orders and regulations must be reviewed by Parliament, meaning the Cabinet cannot act on its own, unlike under the War Measures Act. The Emergencies Act outlines how people affected by government actions during emergencies are to be compensated. It also notes that government actions are subject to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Canadian Bill of Rights.Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms-National Emergency-The Emergencies Act defines a “national emergency” as “an urgent and critical situation of a temporary nature that: a) seriously endangers the lives, health or safety of Canadians and is of such proportions or nature as to exceed the capacity or authority of a province to deal with it; or b) seriously threatens the ability of the Government of Canada to preserve the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of Canada.”If a national emergency is declared, the Act prohibits the federal government from detaining, imprisoning or interning Canadian citizens or permanent residents “on the basis of race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.”Public Welfare Emergency-The Act defines a “public welfare emergency” as one “that is caused by a real or imminent a) fire, flood, drought, storm, earthquake or other natural phenomenon; b) disease in human beings, animals or plants; or c) accident or pollution; and that results or may result in a danger to life or property, social disruption or a breakdown in the flow of essential goods, services or resources, so serious as to be a national emergency.”If a public welfare emergency is declared, the federal government is required to specify a) the “state of affairs constituting the emergency;” b) the “special temporary measures that the Governor in Council anticipates may be necessary for dealing with the emergency;” and c) the “area of Canada to which the direct effects of the emergency extend.”Under the Act, a public welfare emergency grants the federal government the right to: regulate or prohibit travel “to, from or within any specified area;”evacuate people and remove personal property from any specified area, and to make arrangements “for the adequate care and protection of the persons and property;”requisition or use property; direct any person or “class of persons” to render essential services, with “the provision of reasonable compensation;”regulate “the distribution and availability of essential goods, services and resources;”authorize and make emergency payments; establish emergency shelters and hospitals; assess “damage to any works or undertakings and the repair, replacement or restoration thereof;”assess damage to the environment; impose fines and indictments “for contravention of any order or regulation made under this section.”If a public welfare emergency is declared, the Act prohibits the federal government from assuming control of any police force that normally falls under the jurisdiction of a municipality or province. The Act also stipulates that a public welfare emergency “expires at the end of ninety days unless the declaration is previously revoked or continued in accordance with this Act.”Public Order Emergency-The Act defines a “public order emergency” as one that “arises from threats to the security of Canada and that is so serious as to be a national emergency.” The Act also stipulates that “threats to the security of Canada” are to be defined in accordance with section 2 of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act. (See Canadian Security Intelligence Service.)-If a public order emergency is declared, the federal government is required to specify: a) the “state of affairs constituting the emergency;” b) the “special temporary measures that the Governor in Council anticipates may be necessary for dealing with the emergency;” and c) the “area of Canada to which the direct effects of the emergency extend.”Under the Act, a public order emergency grants the federal government the right to: regulate or prohibit “any public assembly that may reasonably be expected to lead to a breach of the peace; travel to, from or within any specified area; or the use of specified property;”designate and secure protected places; assume control, restoration and maintenance of public utilities and services; direct any person or “class of persons” to render essential services, with “the provision of reasonable compensation;” impose fines and indictments “for contravention of any order or regulation made under this section.”The Act specifies that the application of these powers must not interfere with the ability of a province to respond to an emergency of its own. A public order emergency “expires at the end of thirty days unless the declaration is previously revoked or continued in accordance with this Act.”Other Emergencies and Provisions-The Act lists similar stipulations to be applied in case of an international emergency or a war emergency. It also lists the requirements for proper parliamentary supervision during the application of the Act, and for compensation of people and groups after the application of the Act.

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