Business
Mounties, Overstretched and Overmatched by Foreign Mafias, No Longer Fit for Service
The Trump administration levying crippling 35 percent tariffs on some Canadian products, demonstrates how Ottawa has lost trust in Washington, and Canada’s prosperity is now hanging in the balance of our failed policing and national security.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, once a proud symbol of Canadian law and order, is now an institution in crisis. Reports that nearly 20 percent of members are off on sick leave confirm what many of us who have served and worked alongside the RCMP have known for years: the force is no longer capable of fulfilling its federal policing mandate.
Instead of standing at the forefront of the fight against transnational organized crime, terrorism financing, cybercrime, and foreign interference, the RCMP is bogged down in contract policing, backfilling gaps with temporary duty assignments, and diverting precious resources to VIP security. What was once a national force is now an overstretched patchwork, trying—and failing—to be all things to all people.
Canada’s experiment with a single, catch-all police service has failed. The RCMP was never designed to simultaneously manage small-town contract policing, high-level financial crime investigations, and the protection of politicians. Today, the cracks are undeniable. Provinces rely on the RCMP because it’s cheaper than funding their own forces, while Ottawa relies on the RCMP to guard VIPs because it has no dedicated protective service. The result? A federal police force that spends its time plugging local holes and babysitting politicians instead of targeting the global networks undermining our sovereignty.
The toll on RCMP members is devastating. With staffing shortages at every level, members are burned out, forced into temporary duty postings, and left unsupported in the face of rising public criticism. Morale has collapsed. Sick leave numbers are skyrocketing. The culture of the force is fraying. A police service that cannot sustain its own workforce is in no position to sustain public confidence.
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Make no mistake: Canada is increasingly vulnerable. While the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia maintain specialized agencies to tackle financial crime, organized crime, and protective services, Canada continues to rely on a hollowed-out RCMP. Criminal networks—particularly those with transnational reach—are exploiting this weakness. Money launderers, fentanyl traffickers, cybercriminals, and hostile foreign actors know exactly where the gaps are.
As Sam Cooper reported for The Bureau last week, RCMP leaders — constrained not only by archaic laws but by incompetent and, some argue, politically neutered leadership — have shown a deeply troubling pattern of stonewalling the United States, Canada’s most critical law enforcement partner. This posture has led to inaction and a lack of cooperation on the Falkland superlab case and other major transnational drug trafficking organizations that threaten the national security of both countries. Former DEA chief Derek Maltz called the Falkland case a “major disaster.”
We cannot keep pretending that “business as usual” will fix this. Canada needs a bold new policing structure:
- A streamlined federal force laser-focused on organized crime, financial crime, cybercrime, and national security threats.
- A dedicated protective service agency for VIPs and diplomats, modeled on international best practice.
- A phased withdrawal from contract policing, allowing provinces and municipalities to assume full responsibility for frontline community policing.
This is not about tearing down the RCMP—it is about saving Canada’s capacity to police itself in an era of unprecedented threats. The current model is unsustainable, and tinkering at the edges won’t cut it.
For too long, politicians have lacked the courage to confront the RCMP’s structural crisis. They prefer to paper over cracks, pour money into stop-gap measures, and let the Mounties continue struggling under an impossible mandate. But every year we delay, Canada grows weaker, and criminal networks grow stronger.
It is time for Ottawa to show leadership and face reality: the RCMP, as currently structured, is no longer fit for service. If we fail to act now, we will pay the price in lost sovereignty, compromised security, and shattered public trust. The Bureau’s reporting on the Falkland lab case, and its apparent ties to the Trump administration levying crippling 35 percent tariffs on some Canadian products, demonstrates not only that Ottawa has lost the trust of some offices in Washington, but that the nation’s prosperity is now hanging in the balance of our failed policing and national security postures.
Former senior RCMP officer Garry Clement consults with corporations on anti-money laundering, contributed to the Canadian academic text Dirty Money, and wrote Canada Under Siege, and Undercover, In the Shady World of Organized Crime and the RCMP
Business
Carney and other world leaders should recognize world’s dependence on fossil fuels
From the Fraser Institute
By Julio Mejía and Elmira Aliakbari
Simply put, despite trillions invested in the energy transition, the world is more dependent on fossil fuels today than when the United Nations launched its first COP. No wonder that ahead of COP30, leading voices of the net-zero-by-2050 agenda, including Bill Gates, are acknowledging both the vital role of fossil fuels on the planet and the failure of efforts to cut them.
On the heels of his first federal budget, which promises more spending to promote a “green economy,” Prime Minister Carney will soon fly to Brazil for COP30, the 30th United Nations climate summit. Like the former Trudeau government, the Carney government has pledged to achieve “net-zero” emissions in Canada—and compel other countries to pursue net-zero—by 2050. To achieve a net-zero world, it’s necessary to phase out fossil fuels—oil, natural gas, coal—or offset their CO2 emissions with technologies such as “carbon capture” or large-scale tree planting.
But after trillions of dollars spent in pursuit of that goal, it appears more unrealistic than ever. It’s time for world leaders, including Canada’s policymakers, to face reality and be honest about the costly commitments they make on behalf of their citizens.
For starters, carbon capture—the process of trapping and storing carbon dioxide so it’s unable to affect the atmosphere—is a developing technology not yet capable of large-scale deployment. And planting enough trees to offset global emissions would require vast amounts of land, take decades to absorb significant CO2 and risk unpredictable losses from wildfires and drought. Due to these constraints, in their net-zero quest governments and private investors have poured significant resources into “clean energy” such as wind and solar to replace fossil fuels.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), from 2015 to 2024, the world’s public and private investment in clean energy totalled and estimated US$14.6 trillion (inflation-adjusted). Yet from 1995 (the first COP year) to 2024, global fossil fuel consumption increased by more than 64 per cent. Specifically, oil consumption grew by 39 per cent, natural gas by 96 per cent and coal by 76 per cent. As of 2024, fossil fuels accounted for 80.6 per cent of global energy consumption, slightly lower than the 85.6 per cent in 1995.
The Canadian case shows an even greater mismatch between Ottawa’s COP commitments and its actual results. Despite billions spent by the federal government on the low-carbon economy (electric vehicle subsidies, tax credits to corporations, etc.), fossil fuel consumption in our country has increased by 23 per cent between 1995 and 2024. Over the same period, the share of fossil fuels in Canada’s total energy consumption climbed from 62.0 to 66.3 per cent.
Simply put, despite trillions invested in the energy transition, the world is more dependent on fossil fuels today than when the United Nations launched its first COP. No wonder that ahead of COP30, leading voices of the net-zero-by-2050 agenda, including Bill Gates, are acknowledging both the vital role of fossil fuels on the planet and the failure of efforts to cut them.
Why has this massive effort, which includes many countries and trillions of dollars, failed to transition humanity away from fossil fuels?
As renowned scholar Vaclav Smil explains, it can take centuries—not decades—for an energy source to become globally predominant. For thousands of years, humanity relied on wood, charcoal, dried dung and other traditional biomass fuels for heating and cooking, with coal only becoming a major energy source around 1900. It took oil 150 years after its introduction into energy markets to account for one-quarter of global fossil fuel consumption, a milestone reached only in the 1950s. And for natural gas, it took about 130 years after its commercial development to reach 25 per cent of global fossil fuel consumption at the end of the 20th century.
Yet, coal, oil and natural gas didn’t completely replace traditional biomass to meet the surging energy demand as the modern world developed. As of 2020, nearly three billion people in developing countries still relied on charcoal, straw and dried dung to supply their basic energy needs. In light of these facts, the most vocal proponents of the global energy transition seem, at the very least, out of touch.
The world’s continued reliance on fossil fuels should prompt world leaders at COP30 to exercise caution before pushing the same unrealistic commitments of the past. And Prime Minister Carney, in particular, should be careful not to keep leading Canadians into costly ventures that lead nowhere near their intended results.
Business
Liberals refuse to disclose the amount of taxpayer dollars headed to LGBT projects in foreign countries
From LifeSiteNews
The Liberal government of Prime Minister Mark Carney will not openly disclose how much money from its foreign-aid budget is going toward overseas “gender identity” and “decolonization” projects.
According to the government, there are “concerns” that disclosing the amount of funds could endanger certain LGBT organizations that get money from it.
On November 3, Global Affairs Canada, in response to a question on the order paper from a Conservative MP, said that the funding amounts could not be made public due to claimed “security concerns” and “confidentiality requirements.”
“These are the most common reasons projects are considered sensitive: the organization or individuals might be in danger if it becomes known that they are receiving funds from a foreign government; (or) implementing a project related to sensitive topics such as two-spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and additional sexually and gender-diverse people rights, human trafficking, early/forced marriage, (and) human rights defenders,” Global Affairs noted.
Continuing, Global Affairs said that there is a possible “danger” to partner organizations that could be “forced to close” or even “arrested” due to “harassment from the local population or government.”
As reported by LifeSiteNews, Carney’s budget will include millions in taxpayer money for “SLGBTQI+ communities,” gender equality, and “pride” safety.
Canada’s 2025 federal budget is allotting some $54.6 million to LGBT groups in a move criticized by Campaign Life Coalition as prioritizing activist agendas over struggling families’ basic needs.
Canadian taxpayers are already dealing with high inflation and high taxes due in part to the Liberal government overspending and excessive money printing, and even admitting that giving money to Ukraine comes at the “taxpayers’” expense.
As recently reported by LifeSiteNews, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem gave a grim assessment of the state of the economy, essentially telling Canadians that they should accept a “lower” standard of living.
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