Joined October 2016
7,140 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
23 Nov 2025
Author: Mr. Larkin - Ontario, Canada I grew up in Toronto in the 50s & 60s, back when this city was quietly becoming a home for people from every corner of the world. Long before anyone talked about “multiculturalism,” we already had families here who had come through the Underground Railroad. Real survivors. People who escaped slavery, found safety on Canadian soil, raised their children here, and carried themselves with a dignity that told you exactly what freedom meant. Nobody questioned their loyalty. Nobody asked them to pick sides in anything. They were welcomed, and they appreciated this place with a depth you could feel. And then the waves of new immigrants came — Italians, Greeks, Portuguese, Ukrainians, Jamaicans, Chinese, Germans, Polish,—huge list — all landing in Toronto with a suitcase, a language barrier, and a hope that their kids might live better than they did. Their parents worked two jobs, saved every nickel, and didn’t complain because they knew exactly what they’d left behind. And their kids, the ones I went to school with, became some of the most Canadian people you could ever meet. As Canadian as me, and I’m six generations deep. The thing that tied all those groups together – the Underground Railroad families, the post-war immigrants, the first-generation kids I grew up with – was an unwritten understanding: Canada was the refuge, not the battleground. Nobody dragged old feuds onto Canadian soil. Nobody walked around waving flags from back home demanding we take sides. Nobody tried to turn Canada into the place they ran from. You came here, you acclimated, you kept your head down, and you built a life. That was the silent agreement. Somewhere along the way, something shifted. These days people feel comfortable shouting at other Canadians for not supporting their overseas cause, marching with flags from everywhere but the country they’re living in, accusing anyone who disagrees with their politics of hate, racism, or whatever label shuts down conversation the fastest. And the rest of us — immigrants, children of immigrants, and those of us with roots going back generations — find ourselves asking when gratitude turned into entitlement, and when we started importing battles that were never ours to begin with. Ignorance, stupidity, racism, bigotry — those come in every shape, colour, and background. Nobody owns them. But there’s a world of difference between disagreeing with an idea and hating a people. Criticizing an ideology is not an act of racism. Wanting to protect Canada’s peace doesn’t make you a bigot. It makes you someone who remembers the old understanding — the one the Underground Railroad families lived by, and the one every hardworking immigrant family after them respected: if Canada gives you a home, you honour it. Not by being silent forever, but by knowing what’s worth fighting about — and what should’ve been left behind at the border. So yes, when you choose Canada, you choose it fully. You acclimate. You contribute. You don’t drag us into battles we never asked for. And if someone can’t manage that simple respect, then maybe they need to ask themselves why they came here in the first place. The End! #cdnmedia #onpoli #CdnPoli
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Replying to @IamBrookJackson
This tweet is still up. “97 times.” And Metabiota worked out of Hunter Biden’s office. It is a sad state of affairs. x.com/potus/status/149008633…

Here’s the deal: Unvaccinated individuals are 97 times more likely to die compared to those who are boosted. Protect yourself and those around you by getting vaccinated and boosted today.
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Carney keeps saying it over & over again. "World Order" "New World Order" In fact, Carney's wife says the same darn thing CLEARLY he got his talking points from someone other then CANADIANS! 😡 Do we even have a CHOICE in the matter. @CTVNews @CTV @globalnews @brianlilley
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canadians will be forced to be part of "the next world order" that will emerge from Europe. This will be a unilateral decision that will not ask Canadians for their input. "Canada will be part of that effort."
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Mark Carney PANICS As Canada's $21 Billion dollar Waste Giant GFL OFFICIALLY Abandons Ontario For Miami Beach! Why so silent Mark? You are Canadas biggest problem!
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
🚨 240,000 Canadians sent postcards to senators opposing Bill C-9. The Senate hid them in a warehouse in Gatineau. Not delivered. Not read. Not acknowledged. This is what democracy looks like when the government is afraid of it. 🇨🇦 #CdnPoli #BillC9 #Senate
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Canada proposing banning "social media services" to children 16 and under. Social media is so toxic to developing minds, they must be shielded from its indoctrinating effects. But they can consent to a Covid jab without parental consent. They can "change their genders" and parents must affirm. They can be exposed to trans and drag queen book reading. Oh yeah, and this has nothing to do with protecting kids, but rather regulating and gathering data on the adults, who will now have to prove their age to access "social media services". Canada. Mutilates children. Euthanizes its citizens. Blocks news outlets. Criminalizes speech. Freezes bank accounts. Jails political dissidents. And now wants to "regulate" "social media services". A perfect combination of 1930's Germany and modern-day North Korea and China.
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Free Willy
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Here are headlines from the UK, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. Simultaneously, they all want a social media ban. "To protect the children". Our governments aren't calling the shots; they're following orders. This is just one example. Every law passed happens in the exact same way in all for 4 countries. This cannot be possible unless each leader of each country works for the exact same people. Our leaders are not elected; they are installed. #UK #NewZealand #Canada #Austrailia
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What drugs is Olivia Chow on?
A Toronto Police officer is dead & Mayor Olivia Chow, who claims to know the wife for 20 years, says: "They Are Very Much In Our FARTS" This woman is a incompetent living joke.
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Replying to @FoodProfessor
Macklem moved the goalposts... x.com/RMC19861987/status/206…

Tiff Macklem - Sept 18, 2025. "We are projecting a recession, we are projecting slow growth, something around 1%." 🕐GDP growth of 0.2% over 9 months. Tiff Macklem - June 10, 2026. "Recession is not the word I would use. I would describe the economy as weak. It hasn't grown really over the last year." His definition changed. Why? @MarcNixon24 @cbcwatcher @ryangerritsen
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Canada is a leading producer of potash, nickel, cobalt, gold, critical minerals, along with Oil reserves, so why is CANADA declining in growth for many years now? Nothing to do with President Trump, Russia, Iran or COVID, but easy to pass the blame ELBOWS UP 🇨🇦
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"...wasn't sufficiently educated to understand her methods." That's acadamese for "Just pulled the numbers outta my ass."
Academic Barbara Perry was cross-examined by lawyers yesterday in the @caylanford defamation trial Her "300 far-right hate groups" list came up & Perry admitted that the list was never published because she never got "permission" from the Liberal govt junonews.com/p/exclusive-dr-…
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Lasagna with Beef - €2925.00 Salmon - €3825.00 Chocolate Mousse for desert - €1350.00 Telling Canadians they will have to make sacrifices because of the failing economy Priceless
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No! It's a back-door to digital ID under the guise of safety
Mark Carney’s government is expected to announce a social media ban for minors under 16 this week. Is this a move you support?
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Genetically Modified Mayo: Hellmann's 'Real' Mayonnaise now requires a bioengineered label on its jars. Less than 2% of each jar is egg...98% is chemicals, oils, corn starch, EDTA & thickened with gums. This isn’t food anymore — it’s a Frankenstein experiment in a jar. GMO corn, seed oils that inflame your arteries and disrupt hormones, EDTA that leaches minerals from your body, and synthetic gums that wreck your gut lining. Every spoonful is quietly feeding chronic disease, autoimmune chaos, and the slow poisoning of America’s families. They slapped a “bioengineered” warning on it like it’s no big deal — because they know most people won’t read it. Hellmann’s sold its soul for profit while we were busy trusting the brand our grandparents used. STOP FEEDING THIS TO YOUR KIDS. Boycott it. Throw it out. Make your own in 60 seconds with real ingredients. Your body will thank you. Quick Homemade Butter Mayo (Immersion Blender – makes about 1 cup) Ingredients: - 1 large egg (room temperature) - 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice - 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard (or prepared mustard) - ¼ teaspoon salt (or to taste; use ½ tsp if butter is unsalted) - 1 cup (2 sticks) butter, melted and cooled slightly to warm (not hot) Directions: 1. Place the egg, lemon juice, mustard, and salt in a tall narrow jar or container that just fits your immersion blender head. 2. Insert the immersion blender to the bottom and blend for a few seconds until combined. 3. With the blender running, slowly pour in the melted butter. Move the blender up and down gently as it thickens into creamy mayo (about 30-60 seconds total). 4. Taste and adjust salt or lemon if needed. Store in a glass jar in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
BREAKING: @globalnews Just fairly and calmly reported on the “thousands of COVID vaccine-injured” including a vax-injured woman whose story is displayed as a sympathy piece. No “anti-vax” inferences or “fact-checks” called. Maybe there is fair journalism in Canada. They then pass along the news that @DeanAllisonMP is forming the @AllisonInquiry in Sept to hear from the vaccine-injured. We have broken through. Let’s see if Global keeps this story up when the establishment starts fighting back, thoiugh.😏
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I came across this today.l Had to share it. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Ms. Jackie retweeted
Never forget that Trudeau kneeled for pipes in a septic field.
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Right.....
Feds censor as "confidential" files on what Kamloops First Nation did with $12.1 million in funding to recover alleged Indian Residential School graves. @Tkemlups acknowledged Feb 18 it never exhumed remains. “The community received funding for field work.” — Carolane Gratton @GCIndigenous blacklocks.ca/alleged-graves… @OIC_CI_Canada
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It's been sick for awhile Dear James
Canadian Dollar looks sick. Canada’s currency is sending a signal policymakers appear unwilling to hear. The recent softness in the Canadian dollar is not a transient fluctuation driven by cyclical noise. It reflects a deeper reassessment by global capital markets of Canada’s structural trajectory—one increasingly defined by weak productivity, regulatory overreach, and a persistent misallocation of capital away from its core competitive strengths. For much of the past two decades, Canada benefited from a favorable external environment: rising commodity demand, proximity to the world’s largest consumer market, and a stable financial system. That foundation has been gradually eroded. Productivity growth has stagnated to near-zero levels, business investment has lagged OECD peers, and regulatory burdens, particularly in energy and infrastructure, have constrained the very sectors where Canada retains a natural advantage. Instead of addressing these structural deficiencies early, policy discourse has largely normalized them. Two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth are framed as manageable. Declining output per worker is treated as an abstract statistic rather than a direct threat to living standards. Meanwhile, the public sector has crowded out the private sector for over a decade. Yet Bay St and the BOC say it’s but a flesh wound. Currency markets are less forgiving. They function as a real-time referendum on policy credibility and long-term growth expectations. The Canadian dollar’s weakness is not merely a reflection of interest rate differentials; it is a signal that global investors are demanding a higher risk premium for exposure to an economy with deterioratin fundamentals. Compounding this dynamic is an extraordinary degree of home bias among domestic investors. Canadian portfolios remain heavily concentrated in domestic equities and real estate despite clear evidence of underperformance relative to global benchmarks. This insularity amplifies vulnerability: when domestic fundamentals weaken, both the currency and asset prices adjust simultaneously. The core issue is strategic drift. Canada possesses abundant natural resources, a highly educated population, and geographic advantages that should position it as a leading beneficiary of global energy transition and supply chain realignment. Yet policy choices for decades have systematically undermined these advantages, favoring redistribution and regulation over growth and competitiveness. Absent a meaningful shift, toward investment, productivity, and resource development, the message from currency markets is unlikely to change. Exchange rates do not move on rhetoric. They move on relative performance. And on that measure, Canada is falling behind.
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