Understand what is. Imagine what could, perhaps should be #Monarchy #History #Christianity #HumanRights #Democracy #cdnpoli #Sustainability #UrbanFoodProduction

Joined April 2011
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Open Letter to All Canadians: It's Time for Change .. 🍁Patriate Succession, Abolish Indian Act, Reform Senate 🏛️Canada is a fully sovereign nation, yet our highest public office is still governed by the domestic succession laws of a foreign parliament in London. At the same time, our relationship with First Nations remain trapped in the paternalistic, colonial architecture of the 1876 Indian Act. It is time for a modern, independent, and made-in-Canada solution. We can dismantle the Indian Act, empower our regions, and secure a fully resident Head of State without adding a single dollar to the Canadian taxpayer's burdens. Royal Succession and Parliamentary Integration 👑 1. A Democratic, Resident Crown Choice: We invite the top three heirs to our throne who have reached the age of majority to step forward. Commitment: To qualify, they must voluntarily pledge permanent residency, drop all claims to foreign crowns, and commit to exclusive service to Canada. Vote: Canadians choose our future leader in a non-partisan, national Ranked-Ballot, Referendum. The Shield: Each candidate names an advocate to champion their merits, they don't campaign. Vote numbers are permanently sealed as a state secret. All 3 candidates sign a Covenant of Unanimity, ensuring the winner takes office with 100% unified support. The Job: The winner immediately becomes our resident Governor General at Rideau Hall to train for the role. The moment they succeed to the throne, the office of Governor General dissolves permanently. The line of succession begins with Canada's new monarch, absolute primogeniture, irrespective of religious belief. The Checkpoint: If a future heir reaches the age of majority and refuses to pledge residency & service, they forfeit their place but not that of their heirs. The Sideways Jump: Succession instantly jumps sideways to a willing sibling or cousin. The branch that walked away is legally moved via Generational Tailing to the end of that generation's line as a backup of last resort. Fiscal Neutrality: The budget for the resident Crown is funded entirely by converting the existing Governor General appropriations into an openly audited Civil List. Working Royals are legally barred from private corporate earnings. Those of legal age & not serving are barred from use of their royal titles. 🌿 2. Abolishing the Indian Act Dismantling the Bureaucracy: We repeal Section 91(24) and dissolve the bloated federal ministries in Ottawa within 24 months. Sovereign Capitals: Each Nation designates a Sovereign Capital Region (5 sq km), as close as possible to the historic geographic centre of their traditional lands, seat of government, court, and schools, with powers similar to a province, under the Crown. Several have hereditary leadership, some not. Direct Sovereign Grants: All federal funding is redirected straight to the traditional national councils via unconditional block grants, modeled after the Canada Health Transfer. Bypassing Ottawa middlemen saves billions. Wealth Generation: All disparate Band reserve lands are handed to the Nations in absolute ownership to lease, develop, or sell freely, unlocking billions in dead capital for whatever purpose their govts choose. 3. A Reconstituted, Balanced Senate We transform the Senate into a 120-seat non-partisan chamber of regional and sovereign stewardship, split into two equal blocks: Regional Appointees (60 Seats): Crown Appointed from a shortlist 2/3 majority approved by their respective provincial legislators. Senators caucus regionally, not by political party, & defend regional interests. To protect historic balances, seats are split regionally: Ontario (15), Quebec (15), Atlantic (15), and the West/North (15). Indigenous Peers (60 Seats): Chosen by each First Nation, using hereditary or other forms of selection as desired by each of the 50 to 60 pre-Columbian First Nations. Elected Supremacy: The elected House of Commons keeps the ultimate right to govern. If the Senate rejects a bill, it triggers a 180-day pause. After 180 days, the Commons can override the rejection with a standard 50% 1 majority vote and answer to Canadians for their choice. 🛡️This framework completes the circle of Canadian independence. It protects the historic rights of Ontario and Quebec, gives the West a powerful new voice, and restores true sovereign-to-sovereign treaty relations with First Nations. Let's move past colonial laws and partisan gridlock. Let's build a constitution that truly fits the land we share. Read the full framework and join the constitutional conversation below. 👇#CdnPol #ConstitutionalReform #FirstNations #Crown #SenateReform
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16 Jun 1937, 89 years ago, Simeon II was born in Sofia. He succeded his father (Boris III) when 6 yrs old as Tsar Siméon II (‘Симеон II’ in Bulgarian), reigning from 1943 to 1946. In 1946, the monarchy was abolished by a referendum, forcing Simeon into exile. But he returned in 1996, founded a political party and won the elections. As Prime Minister he was known as Simeon Borissov Sakskoburggotski (‘Симеон Борисов Сакскобургготски’), governing from 2001 to 2005. Happy birthday, Your Majesty !!
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Nickle Resolution was a motion in Parliament championed by Conservative MP, William Folger Nickle whose father was Scottish & his mother was American. The motion was not a law & expired with that parliament. It was primarily a reaction to the Knighting of one politician, Sam Hughes without the recommendation of Canada's PM. On 30 January 1934, PM R. B. Bennett said about the Nickle Resolution and the shelf-life of parliamentary resolutions: "It has been a matter of passing comment, as pointed out by an eminent lawyer not long ago, that a resolution of a House of Commons which has long since ceased to be, could not bind future Parliaments and future Houses of Commons. ... The power of a mere resolution by this House, if acceded to, would create such a condition that no principle which secures life or liberty would be safe." R. B. Bennett's government submitted honours lists to the King every year from 1933 until its defeat in 1935, recommending that various prominent Canadians receive knighthoods, including: Sir Lyman Poore Duff, Chief Justice of Canada; Sir James Howden MacBrien, Commissioner of the RCMP; Sir Frederick Banting, the discoverer of insulin; and Sir Ernest MacMillan, composer and conductor. 14 Mar 1934, an initiative by Labour MP, Humphrey Mitchell, sought to re-establish the Nickle Resolution & was defeated in Parliament 113 > 94. If hereditary titles were used to highlight extraordinary achievements of extraordinary Canadians they would be a way to incorporate national pride over generations. How many Canadians know who was awarded the Order of Canada? Almost none. Canada HAS had many extraordinary citizens AND CANADIANS need to remember & celebrate each of them. Canadians know the names of more Presidents than Prime Ministers of Canada. I say grant all of them Baronetages in the peerage of Nova Scotia, both living & posthumously. I'd say the same of our astronauts, our great inventors, nation builders, great diplomats, & world renown artists. Collective memory is an essential component of a shared narrative & of national pride. UK heroes have titles, & are remembered, celebrated. Hereditary titles can be an essential component of restoring Canada's greatness, to benefit all Canadians, & nothing to do with class or privilege. Restoring hereditary titles for extraordinary Canadians would go a long way to making their achievements a part of our national consciousness over generations.
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Yes @FreeAlbertaRob. Alberta is rebounding. Good. But the rebound does not prove Trudeau caused Alberta’s lost decade or that separation unlocks prosperity. Oil prices collapsed first. WTI fell 55% from June 2014 to January 2015, before Trudeau became prime minister. And the oil-price environment stayed much weaker through his time in office. Harper governed with real WTI around US$115/barrel. Trudeau governed with real WTI around US$73/barrel. That is not a small difference. It is the long-cycle context Alberta grievance politics leaves out. Alberta GDP per person fell hard. Canada’s average carried part of that decline because Alberta started from such a high base. Then TMX tells the federation story. Private capital stepped back. Canada carried the risk. Canada delivered capacity. Alberta now uses it. Alberta’s current strength is not evidence for leaving Canada. It is evidence that Alberta gains when Canada solves problems too large for one province to solve alone. Part IV of The Alberta Effect lays out the data: Alberta is recovering. The drivers are oil prices, TMX, record production, tariff insulation, and Canada. x.com/paulstewartii/status/2…

The usual mindless drivel from Canada’s Chief Laurentian elite representative @acoyne Andrew, let me try and spell it out for you yet again. 1. Trudeau waged a sustained economic attack on Alberta with a string of destructive laws and policies that cost Albertans hundreds of billions in investments and hundreds of thousands of jobs while dealing with a cost of living crisis fueled by your buddy, Justin’s, open borders policies and failed Keynesian monetary theories. 2. Trudeau was replaced by Carney and, as part of Energy MOU, retracted or amended the 9 bad laws you refer to. 3. As a result, we have seen tens of billions of new private sector investment announcements in Alberta with much more to be announced shortly. We knuckle draggers in Alberta call this the initial signs of an economic boom (you are forgiven if you have forgotten what that looks like). 4. Premier Smith sees this flood of investment and jobs - stemming from the repeal of most of the terrible legislation under the MOU - as evidence that we can still make Canada work for Alberta and is fighting to make that case to Albertans despite your - and those of your ilk - continuing your feckless attacks on her. The reason for the block Andrew is I simply don’t value your opinion on the affairs of Alberta. You show your disdain for our province at every opportunity and I don’t need you clogging my feed with your 20x a day posts. But I will instead merely mute you so you can still follow my posts as I don’t wish to hurt your feelings. Have fun on that wonderfully balanced CBC At-Issue panel trying to unpack the important issues distressing Albertans with your fellow Toronto/Montreal panelists.
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Albania, EU Membership, Investment, Corruption & Trump. I wonder what @princeleka thinks about all this.
I doubt the barefoot hike. I'm no fan of the Christopher Columbus complex, and I happen to admire elites who develop a country rather than exploit one. So let me explain what is actually going on here. I did, among others, property across Eastern Europe during my years at Babcock & Brown, and I spent the better part of a decade fighting a court case in Romania against people who tried to defraud my land title. I won. And here is the lesson I paid for: the one thing that separates an investable Eastern Europe from an uninvestable one is European Union membership. It is the guardian of the rule of law in an otherwise wild East, the easiest place in the world to lose your money. That is the lens through which I read what is happening on Sazan Island. You see, there was a time when Western elites saw themselves as custodians of institutions, rules and the places they touched. That instinct is fading. What remains too often is the Columbus reflex: arrive by yacht, "discover" land that people already know perfectly well, and treat the rules as obstacles reserved for everyone else. And then have the wisdom to go on camera and brag about it. Jesus. No wonder Albanians are now on the streets in their thousands. "We were on a friend's boat and stopped for a swim. That's how we found it. We swam to the island. We went on a hike, barefoot all the way up to the top, and we were just captivated." What she "found" has been there for millions of years, in the Adriatic, not "the Mediterranean." It has a name. Sazan Island sits where the Adriatic meets the Ionian: a former military base, Italian and then Cold War, including a Soviet submarine base, inside a protected national marine park that has been open to the public since 2017 via boat tour from Vlorë. An island crawling with snakes, including the nose-horned viper, Europe's most venomous. So much for the barefoot hike. Nothing was discovered, and nothing justifies any entitlement. Quite the contrary. What actually happened is that Jared Kushner set out to cash in on his father-in-law's temporary power as President of the United States. That status means precisely nothing in Switzerland, with its seven centuries of direct democracy and institutions no outsider can buy. But it means everything to a weak man like Albania's prime minister, Edi Rama, cornered at home, courting Washington, and now under criminal investigation for how his government handed this deal away. Kushner understands that asymmetry perfectly. And he wants to exploit it. Period. In Albania, he can. Albania is chronically bureaucratic, the long tail of its communist heritage, a home-grown Stalinism so absolute it broke even with Moscow and sealed the country off from the world. That legacy is the same one that ran, and still runs at times, from Sarajevo to Tirana, from Bucharest to Belgrade: decades of one-party rule that hollowed out the courts, the press and property itself, and left a vacuum filled by the personalised, strongman power of a connected few. It is the soil in which corruption flourishes, and Albania's greatest vulnerability. And on that soil, in one of Europe's poorest countries, the island's protected status was suddenly changed in December 2024, in the weeks between Trump's election victory and his inauguration. Just like that. The public-tender rule was bypassed. "Strategic Investor" status went to a Kushner-linked SPV before the inauguration: no business plan, no feasibility study. Wonderful. Because Ivanka "discovered it". Right? Wrong. A country vulnerability like that can be met in two ways. A responsible investor sticks to the rules and ties his fortunes to the country's long-term development, because that is what makes returns durable in the first place. And that will take a lot of time and upfront investment, with a highly uncertain reward. That's called risk-taking. A powerful one, on the other hand, willing to bend the rules, as this deal suggests the Trump family is content to do, sees only something to exploit. The subsequent damage runs far deeper and longer than a few harmless bungalows built without a proper concession. What is happening here is that Kushner is becoming part of the problem that corrodes Albania's path into the European Union. That is the real issue here. Just like the issue when JD Vance travelled to Europe and openly campaigned for illiberal politicians while lecturing Europeans about democracy. Who do these people think they are? Guardians of democracy? Consider what the Albanian path actually looks like right now. The Balkans, like much of post-communist Europe, are chronically corrupt. But they are also full of people fighting to turn their countries toward something better, and EU accession is the single most powerful tool they have. It forces the one thing that actually develops a country: predictable rules, secure property, contracts that hold, and the credible belief that the same rules apply to everyone. That belief is what brought the great wave of investment into Poland. Its absence is why Romania and Bulgaria remained under special monitoring for years after accession. The rule of law that eventually held in that Bucharest courtroom, and saved me, exists because membership forced it into being. Brussels learned the lesson. Today enlargement runs on a "fundamentals first" basis. Which is exactly where Albania stands. Last month it became only the second candidate after Montenegro to clear those rule-of-law benchmarks, with the EU's own enlargement commissioner describing SPAK, the very prosecutor now investigating this deal, as the country's "most trusted institution." The concession lands squarely on the chapters that decide membership: the judiciary, justice and public procurement. So this is not a side issue to Albania's European future. It is a direct test of it. And that is why this does not help. It does the opposite. A single family connected to the presidency of the United States showing that the rules bend on demand corrodes the one asset a poor country cannot afford to lose: the belief, hard-won and easily lost, that the rules are real. Then those same people have the chutzpah to complain about corruption in Eastern Europe and lecture the world about American exceptionalism. It is all so deeply wrong. And make no mistake, it erodes our democracies too, ever so slightly. The thousands in the streets of Tirana understand all of this instinctively. They are not protesting a resort. They are defending the only thing that gives their country a future and hope: the rule of law applied equally to all. And make no mistake about who the brave ones are. They are not on a yacht. They are on the street of Tirana and inside SPAK, because in Albania, stepping on the toes of the powerful is done in the knowledge that the danger is real. Confronting entrenched corruption in the Balkans has cost prosecutors, judges and journalists their their lives. That is the issue here, ladies and gentlemen! I doubt Ivanka loses any sleep over any of this. Her concern is closing the deal while her father remains in office. And on a timeline that tight, a public tender, one they may well have won fairly, becomes an inconvenience rather than a safeguard. That is the difference between a custodian of capitalism and democracy like Warren Buffett and the late Charlie Munger and a primitive land-grabber without any moral compass and integrity.
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All but two PMs were at least partly Scot or Irish. The other two were Quebecois, & therefore, likely of at least partial Bretagne descent. So-called 'English' #Canada was in fact primarily Gaelic ethnically & culturally as were our so-called 'French' partners in Confederation.
Paternal ancestry of Canada’s 24 Prime Ministers
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Perhaps Canada's two Official Languages ought to be Manx & Cree.
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Alberta - and all of Canada - are set to boom in the coming years. Foreign direct investment in Canada is at its highest level in 18 years - and twice that of the next closest G7 country.
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Chrétien: When you look at the polls, Canadians have never been more united. Thank you to Donald Trump for that. I should propose him for the Order of Canada, but I cannot succeed. Do you know why? Rosie: He's not Canadian? Chrétien: Because we don't give it to a person who has a criminal record.
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Fellow Canadian conservatives: please reflect on this poll. Yes, the US and is and always will be our largest trading partner. And yes, we have to find a modus vivendi with whoever is in the White House, even a President who flippantly insults and threatens us. But it is self-defeating to attack the Prime Minister for trying to diversify away from our imprudent dependence on an unreliable US market. Have the humility to listen to Canadians. Stop dismissing Trump’s attacks as a distraction, or worse yet, as somehow justified. And heed the wise words of @stephenharper: "Canada must adapt to new geopolitical realities. To be clear, these realities mean we must reduce our dependence on the U.S." cbc.ca/news/politics/stephen…
Federal Poll Net Opinion of Countries as a Canadian Partner 🇬🇧United Kingdom: 83.5 🇩🇪Germany: 82.4 🇲🇽Mexico: 79.8 🇫🇷France: 79.5 🇨🇳China: -2.9 🇺🇸United States: -38.0 Nanos May 3-6, 2026 n=1003 ±3.1%
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
We have a “deal”. It is CUSMA. It was negotiated in good faith by Canada at the request of President Trump. If he doesn’t like his own agreement, ok. There’s a process to discuss. But we should always be looking at diversifying our export markets on a reciprocal basis.
He really doesn't want a deal.
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Genuine victims of residential schools have lost the most over false claims of a 'mass grave,' writes Terry Glavin nationalpost.com/opinion/ter…
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
There is nothing remotely conservative about separatism. Separatism is not conservative. This is not a partisan question.
Two former Conservative Finance Ministers, both part of Lead Not Leave, speak forcefully for Alberta in Canada. Varcoe: 'Canada is not a lost cause' — Former Alberta finance ministers say don't hold separation referendum - Calgary Herald apple.news/AJyCyNT-2QB2-yRHt…
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Removing internal trade barriers that create unnecessary costs and limit opportunities for Canadian businesses and consumers is critical to building one Canadian economy.  When it comes to direct-to-consumer alcohol sales, the federal government has done its part by removing all federal barriers to interprovincial alcohol trade.  Today, I expressed my concern regarding delays by certain provinces and territories in implementing a direct-to-consumer alcohol sales framework by May 2026. Now is the time for action.   Read my statement: canada.ca/en/intergovernment…

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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Be it resolved: The West should stay in Canada. If you haven't yet watched our @AristotleFdn debate between @jkenney and @ikwilson , you can watch it here: youtube.com/watch?v=emEKa-pL…
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Rob Wolvin retweeted
Mark Carney walked into the Economic Club of New York, & instead of grovelling like every other world leader who's come to kiss the ring, he stole the MAGA slogan straight off Trump's head & used it as a weapon. "Canada Strong will help make America great again." 1/2 🧵#cdnpoli
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