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Pierre Poilievre asked a devastatingly simple question: why are Canadians starving in one of the richest countries on Earth? He laid it out. Food prices—70 percent higher than the Bank of Canada’s target. Four million food bank visits. A 400 percent increase. Those are breadline numbers. That’s collapse stuff....

102,875 Aufrufe • vor 10 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

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OTTAWA — After staging an affordability photo op in a grocery store conveniently missing price tags, Prime Minister Mark Carney finally showed up in Question Period and immediately learned why he’d avoided it. Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre opened by accusing the PM of scrubbing prices for the cameras, then reminded Canadians that groceries are rising faster here than anywhere else in the G7. The charge wasn’t subtle: if prices look bad, hide them; if questions look worse, skip Parliament. Carney’s response was familiar and evasive. He didn’t address the price tags. He didn’t address food inflation. He pivoted to meetings, cooperation, and a laundry list of talking points, jobs numbers, wage claims, tax cuts, a school food program, and the GST rebate he announced the day before. It was a recital, not an answer. When Poilievre pressed again, on deficits, fuel taxes on farmers, food bank lines, and a projects office that hasn’t approved a single new project, the Prime Minister countered with more slogans and a warning about Conservative legislation, carefully sidestepping the cost-of-living question he was asked. The exchange said everything. Poilievre stayed locked on prices, costs, and outcomes Canadians recognize at the checkout. Carney stayed locked on optics, process, and applause lines. The grocery store backdrop may have worked for a press conference. Under the lights of Question Period, with no price tags to remove and no script to hide behind, the performance fell apart. #cdnpoli

Dan Knight

48,752 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

EXCLUSIVE: Man Says Pierre Poilievre Was His Childhood Bully — But Still Plans to Vote for Him A Calgary man comes forward with allegations against Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, claiming he was physically and emotionally bullied by him as a teen. “Mr. Poilievre was one of my childhood bullies.” “He picked me up on my face and lift me up — which was not very good for the neck and the back.” “He gave me a beatdown on more than one occasion... he was quite the terror to most of the kids on the block.” The man says Pierre Poilievre disappeared from the neighborhood for several years: “One day, he up and vanished. And then he came back. But we didn't have any other interactions.” This raises the question whether there may be other reasons why Mr. Poilievre has not applied for a security clearance. Despite the lasting impact of the alleged abuse, he still says: “I haven't forgiven him. I haven't forgotten about it. But I do believe Pierre is the best choice of the candidates out there... I’m going to be voting for him.” The interviewee estimates Pierre Poilievre was 4–5 years older and had already left high school when he started. While they weren’t in school together, they lived on the same block — raising concern that Poilievre was targeting someone significantly younger during the alleged bullying. I reached out to Mr. Poilievre to ask whether he disputes these allegations and whether he plans to address them in a manner befitting someone seeking to be Prime Minister. As of publication, no response has been received. Consider supporting Media Bezirgan for more non-partisan news coverage.

Mocha Bezirgan 🇨🇦

288,673 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Last night, in a massive warehouse just outside Edmonton, something extraordinary happened. Fifteen thousand Canadians showed up—not for a concert, not for a protest, but for a political rally. For one reason: to hear Pierre Poilievre speak. But the real shock? The man who introduced him. Stephen Harper—the most successful Conservative prime minister in a generation—took the stage to deliver a blistering endorsement of Poilievre, and a scathing indictment of the Liberal regime. He didn’t mince words. Harper said what every Canadian knows but no one in the press gallery will admit: this country needs change—desperately. And he didn’t hedge. He didn’t qualify. He didn’t say “both parties have made mistakes.” No. Harper made it clear: this crisis—soaring costs, collapsing standards, vanishing jobs, growing division—it wasn’t created by Donald Trump. It was made right here. In Ottawa. By three terms of Liberal government and the Prime Minister who wants a fourth. “These were not created by Donald Trump… They were created by the policies of three Liberal terms—policies the present Prime Minister supported.” That’s as blunt as Harper gets. And it should be a headline on every newspaper in the country. But it won’t be. Because it hits too close to home for the elite class that’s spent nearly a decade covering for Trudeau’s failures. Harper pointed out that the Liberals and their media allies are now trying to blame everything on geopolitics. Blame Trump. Blame supply chains. Blame COVID. Blame war. Blame anything but themselves. Because the truth? They can’t run on their record—so they’re running from it. What is that record? Exploding debt Collapsing GDP per capita A federal bureaucracy that punishes work and rewards compliance A housing market that’s locked out an entire generation And an energy sector that’s been handed over to the Americans while Canadians sit unemployed on world-class resources And now, as Mark Carney floats in with his $180 million CBC top-up and another round of green buzzwords, Harper reminded everyone: they’ve had their shot. Three terms. And they blew it. He warned Canadians not to fall for the same routine again. Not to fall for the same slogans. Not to fall for the polished elites promising “solutions” to the very problems they created. He reminded Canadians that while the Liberals talk about “fighting Trump,” they’re really just using the U.S. as a scapegoat for their own failures. And what did Harper offer instead? A rallying cry to seize this moment—not as an excuse—but as an opportunity to rebuild a truly independent Canada. “The challenge from the United States… should not be another excuse for Liberal failure. It should be a historic opportunity.” But the line that hit hardest? It was personal. Harper reminded everyone that he’s the only person alive who actually led Canada through the global financial crisis. That little swipe at Mark Carney—you could feel the building rumble. Carney wants credit for crisis leadership? Harper was running the country when the global economy was imploding. He knows what real leadership looks like—and he said flatly that Pierre Poilievre is the only one on the stage today who’s shown it. Stephen Harper stood up and told the country what it needs to hear: Pierre Poilievre is ready to lead. Not because of branding. Not because he’s a “fresh face.” Not because some elite committee in Ottawa thinks it’s his turn. No—because he earned it. Harper laid it out plainly. Poilievre started in the back row. He built his career not on media hype or party privilege, but on policy work, persistence, and a rock-solid conservative vision. He wasn’t parachuted in. He wasn’t picked by insiders. He clawed his way up with substance. “Pierre is not new to this. He’s been on the national scene for more than two decades. He has been in cabinet. He has been in opposition. He’s a serious policy-maker. A leader who has grown through experience.” That’s what Stephen Harper said. And you could hear the crowd erupt when he said it. Because Canadians are desperate—desperate—for someone who doesn’t just play politics, but actually understands the fight. Someone who knows how Parliament works. Someone who has taken on the gatekeepers—and won. And Harper wasn’t just praising Poilievre’s résumé. He called him what the man actually is: an ideas-driven, battle-tested leader who has spent his entire career pushing back against the smug, bloated, bureaucratic class that now defines Ottawa. “Pierre has always been guided by conservative values… smaller government, fiscal responsibility, and making this country work for those who do the work.” Imagine that. A politician who talks about work—and means it. Harper could’ve stayed silent. He’s done the job. He’s earned his peace. But he stepped into that warehouse in Nisku for one reason: to make it clear that this is Pierre’s moment—and Canada can’t afford to miss it. “He is our leader. And he is the next Prime Minister of Canada.” That wasn’t hyperbole. That was a warning shot to the Liberal machine. A message to the Laurentian elite, the smug consultants, the CBC newsrooms, and every Davos-friendly banker currently circling Ottawa like vultures: your time is up. Stephen Harper didn’t back Pierre out of nostalgia. He backed him because he sees a real, competent, fearless leader—someone who knows that you don’t fix this country by managing the decline. You stop the decline. Pierre Poilievre isn’t Trudeau with a different haircut. He’s the anti-Trudeau. He’s not trying to be liked by the press gallery. He’s trying to restore the country. And if you want a Prime Minister who understands the value of work, who believes in the dignity of the individual, who will cut the red tape, slash the taxes, fire the gatekeepers, and take Canada back from the bureaucratic swamp—Harper made it clear: There is only one choice. Pierre Poilievre.

Dan Knight

218,896 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Ottawa — Well, that didn’t take long. In what can only be described as a public humiliation, Conservative MP Frank Caputo (Frank Caputo) dismantled Trudeau’s Public Safety Minister, Gary Anandasangaree, in a fiery parliamentary showdown that laid bare the rot at the heart of the Liberal government’s so-called border and public safety agenda. “The Globe and Mail reported 600 people are missing. You’re the minister. You’re expected to know this. The buck stops with you.” That was Caputo’s opening shot and the Minister never recovered. Now, for context: those 600 people are foreign nationals who were ordered deported from Canada — 70 percent of them violent criminals, including sex offenders. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a national disgrace. So Caputo asked the obvious question: Where are they? What did Minister Anandasangaree say? Nothing. He filibustered. He squirmed. He muttered something about “unprecedented removals.” Caputo cut through it instantly: “Do you know where they are — yes or no?” Still nothing. Then came the TikTok moment... literally. When Caputo pressed the Minister on the 1,000 border agents the Liberals promised but never hired, the Minister sneered, “I’m not here for your TikTok videos.” Excuse me? TikTok! The Chinese spyware app banned on government phones, is now a Liberal talking point? Caputo didn’t blink: “TikTok is banned. I don’t have an account. I’m here for Canadians. I’m here for answers.” It got worse. The Minister admitted, under pressure, that the RCMP haven’t hired a single one of the 1,000 officers they promised, despite a spike in violent crime across the country. Caputo’s response: “Okay, that’s a zero, I take it then.” Then Caputo dropped the hammer. He played the leaked audio... audio where Minister Anandasangaree admits the Liberal gun buyback scheme is a political stunt that won’t work. His words: “Don’t ask me to explain the logic to you. I’m not an expert on this.” And now he wants Canadians to believe the program is going “great” in Cape Breton, where, shocker, a Liberal MP’s brother-in-law just happens to be involved. When Caputo asked if the Minister spoke to that chief directly, Anandasangaree dodged again, reciting talking points from the Mass Casualty Commission like a robot. Caputo wasn’t having it: “He doesn’t get to talk out the clock… He has to speak to the questions he’s given. And I won’t stand for this.” And he didn’t. What happened in that committee room was simple: a government caught lying, stalling, and hiding, and one MP willing to call them out. Caputo exposed the truth: Carneys hand-picked “public safety” minister doesn’t know where violent criminals are, hasn’t hired a single new cop, and is overseeing a disarmament program he doesn’t even believe in — all while claiming it’s for “our safety.” This is the Liberal Party in 2025: globalist talking points, zero accountability, and a minister who can’t answer basic questions. But don’t worry — they’re watching your bank account and planning new laws to censor you online.

Dan Knight

59,758 Aufrufe • vor 9 Monaten

Eric Schmidt, former Google CEO, on why top programmers won't be replaced by AI, they'll be amplified by it: He starts with an observation about the existing hierarchy in software: "The very top programmers were worth 10 times more than the ones right below. There's something special about the mathematical reasoning skills of programmers." Rather than flattening that gap, he argues AI will widen it: "Those people will become more valuable, not less valuable, because these systems need to be controlled by humans at the moment. Those people will be capable of grasping the parallelization and the activities of this." To show what this amplification actually looks like in practice, Eric shares a story from a startup he's involved with. He was talking to one of the programmers there, who works on UIs, about his daily workflow: "He said, 'I write the spec of what I want and then I write a test function, an evaluation function. And then I turn it on.' I said, 'What time?' And he goes, '7:00 in the evening.' And I go, 'Okay. What do you then do?' Well, he has dinner with his wife and he goes to sleep." Eric continues: "I said, 'Do you wake up?' Said, 'No, I sleep very well.' 'When does it finish?' 'Oh, 4:00 in the morning.' And then he gets up, has breakfast, you know, does whatever he does, and then he sees what's been good." Eric Schmidt calls the whole thing "mindboggling." The story captures what amplification really means. The programmer isn't writing less code. He's producing a night's worth of work while asleep, because the machine is running on his spec, his tests, his judgment of what "good" looks like. The leverage belongs to those who can define the problem precisely, write the tests that matter, and recognize good output when they see it.

Big Brain AI

15,319 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Ready For Your Jaw Hit The Floor? This woman heard Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan, the largest bank in America on the Wall Street Journal’s podcast What she heard was so “f*cking out of touch” with America she had to stop what she was doing & make this video He said this about America: Question asked to him, “As the chief exec of America's biggest bank, you have an unrivaled insight into the financial health of the US consumer. What are people doing with their money right now?” Jamie Dimon’s response “Yeah, you have to look a little bit in context. The consumer's in pretty good shape right now. The consumer has, you know, unemployment under 4% has been there for two years. They still have excess money from COVID. — They're still spending it down. Housing prices are up, stock prices are up, jobs are plentiful.” Creator: “I'm sorry, what? The stimulus checks, the ones that went out in 2020 and 2021, three and four years ago, we're still spending it down? Who is he talking about? People are not doing well. This country is literally unaffordable. Child care, groceries, you've got colleagues out here telling us to eat fucking cereal for dinner. Everything is up in price. Even for those who are making ends meet and are able to still save, we have to be conscious as fuck to where you're putting your money because nothing is at a good price. What does he mean the consumer is doing well? Like these are the biggest decision makers in our financial systems. These are the people who work with Congress and who are talking about how do we create like a soft landing of inflation and He thinks we're doing okay. Like, guys, this is scary. I mean, it's been f*cking scary. Let's be real. No one's surprised” The CEO of the largest bank in America still thinks you have money from your Covid checks…. It’s almost unfathomable how out of touch with reality these people are.

Wall Street Apes

2,281,086 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren

ICYMI: Brad Jacobs, the founder of eight billion-dollar companies, makes an unexpected acknowledgment worth nearly $1 billion in his new book.. “I love David. I raised $750 million out of his David Senra audience, & I didn’t even have to pay him a fee,” & he laughed. He like slapped his knee & laughed." TLDR: The value of high-trust, high-signal media can quietly move hundreds of millions in capital. Credibility compounds over time. Read: How to Make a Few More Billion Dollars, Brad Jacobs David Senra, of David Senra & David Senra . . . I’m reading the book, not knowing this is about to happen, and he goes: “And then I found a different source of capital, which was two of the top 20 shareholders in the new company, came because David Senra profiled me on his Founders podcast.” And I’m like, “What? Oh my gosh.” So he had told me that in private, but then John, our mutual friend John Coogan (John Coogan), said "that was the best podcast endorsement of all time." So when I went to record with him in his house in Greenwich, we traveled with like a five-camera setup. It was like, we have an army that comes with us. And these aren’t business guys; these are just camera guys and podcast guys. And he goes, “I love David. I raised $750 million out of his audience, and I didn’t even have to pay him a fee,” and he laughed. He like slapped his knee and laughed. And I don’t know anything about investment banking, so I call a friend of mine. He’s like, “Oh yeah, that saved him quite a bit of money.” And so that’s what he’s talking about. It’s like, two people didn’t know who he was. They heard my episode on his first book. One put in $400 million. One put in $350 million and then joined his board. And they told Brad how they learned about him, and so then he put it in the book."

Molly O’Shea

47,419 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten