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🚨 DANIELLE SMITH PUSHES BACK ON FOREIGN INTERFERENCE CLAIMS Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says there is currently: “NO credible evidence” of state actors interfering in Alberta politics. According to Smith, Alberta’s Public Safety Minister has already been in contact with the RCMP — and the RCMP reportedly confirmed the...

37,698 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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CBC's own investigation revealed that the disinformation campaign around Alberta separatism largely came from click farmers and YouTube operators in the Netherlands...content creators chasing ad revenue by hiring actors and pumping out sensational videos Meanwhile, the RCMP has told the Alberta government that, as of April 2026, they have found no credible evidence of foreign interference in the provincial separatist movement Yet on CBC, Dragons' Den investor Arlene Dickinson insisted there is Russian disinformation at work. When she said, "I find that very difficult to believe... that there's no foreign interference in this," CBC anchor Andrew Nichols offered no pushback. The network's own reporting on the Dutch operators did not substantiate the kind of coordinated foreign interference she implied. This echoes CBC's coverage of the Freedom Convoy, where figures like Justin Ling pushed narratives of extremism and foreign interference with little hard evidence at the time—narratives that politicians and officials later cited as "proof" during the public inquiry. It feels like another CBC-driven frenzy. Arlene Dickinson's certainty aside, the stakes here go far beyond a few protesters on Parliament Hill. This concerns an entire province's grievances and future. Painting legitimate discontent as the product of foreign puppets risks alienating people further rather than addressing root issues Brodie Fenlon, as Editor-in-Chief, it might be time to dial back the hype and stick closer to the facts on the ground Brodie Fenlon

cbcwatcher

25,213 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

A few days ago Kathy Flett (insert Alberta flag here) and I had a woman walk up to us in the park and tell us she disagreed with Alberta independence. To be clear, I was already obviously recording our conversation with a LARGE camera. She said she didn’t want to be recorded, but then continued engaging in the conversation while the camera was still there. My position is simple: if you keep talking to someone who is clearly recording in a public place, that is consent enough for me. And in public, consent to record is not required anyway. It’s just a polite thing to ask or respect when possible. That said, I still blurred her identifiable features and even adjusted her voice because I’m not trying to embarrass anyone. I’m trying to have real conversations with Albertans. She talked about immigrating to Canada from Ireland as a child, how her family chose Canada because of Canadian values, and how she worries Alberta is moving away from things like a social safety net, education, professions, and liberal democracy. I don’t agree with her conclusion, but I do think the conversation revealed something important. A lot of people who oppose Alberta independence are angry at the Alberta government. Fair enough. So am I on many issues. But my answer is not to cling harder to a broken Canadian system. My answer is to ask whether the system itself is the problem. If both Ottawa and Edmonton keep failing people, then the answer isn’t more of the same. Alberta Independence is about the power to build something better.

Jon Alberta Patriot

17,729 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

Alberta Outsourcing Policing to Foreigners: Ministry Won’t Rule Out Officers from Notoriously Corrupt Countries An advertisement from a federally licensed immigration consultant suggesting that foreign police officers from any country could immigrate to Alberta to police Albertans has sparked public outrage. Minister Joseph Schow’s press secretary confirmed to Media Bezirgan that 25 invitations have been issued to foreign police officers to immigrate to Alberta under the new Alberta Advantage Immigration Program. Although the immigration minister’s office said that recruits are “prioritized” from countries with legal frameworks similar to Canada’s, it has not provided a definitive answer on whether the new program allows Alberta’s police chiefs to recruit from countries like Nigeria, where a Canadian judge has ruled that bribery and extortion are official policy of the national police force. “The Alberta Association of Chiefs of Police (AACP) thoroughly vets potential recruits to ensure they are meeting Alberta’s standards for integrity, merit, and national security,” the minister’s press secretary, Hunter Baril, said. However, critics question whether the AACP can be trusted with this task, given their silence on Alberta’s new provincial police force—an organization already mired in controversy over its lack of compliance with Alberta’s stated standards of integrity, merit, and national security. 🧵👇🏻

Mocha Bezirgan 🇨🇦

20,710 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce