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Canada’s Top Public Health Post Handed To Globalist Ally

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From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy

By Lee Harding

In late June, Nancy Hamzawi assumed the role of head of PHAC. As Lee Harding explains, her track record of heavy-handed, high-cost regulation signals trouble, especially now that the global Pandemic Agreement is in play. Freedom-loving Canadians should be paying attention.

Nancy Hamzawi’s rise to PHAC president shows Ottawa doubling down on bureaucracy over expertise

Nancy Hamzawi’s appointment as president of the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) should alarm Canadians who value privacy, limited government and medical freedom.

Although the recently resigned Theresa Tam was often called Canada’s “top doctor,” she reported to the PHAC president. Now Hamzawi becomes the fifth person to hold that position in just five years.

Unlike Tam, Hamzawi has no medical training—only a deep résumé in bureaucracy. And like Tam, she appears comfortably aligned with big government, big pharma and global institutions.

Hamzawi holds a master’s degree in chemical engineering from the University of Ottawa. She became assistant deputy minister of the science and technology branch at Environment and Climate Change Canada in 2018. According to her biography, she helped make Canada a world leader in addressing climate change and “plastic pollution.”

That leadership came at a cost. Canada is now implementing one of the most burdensome regulatory regimes on domestic manufacturers in the world. The new plastics registry will require businesses to report on the entire lifecycle of plastic—from production to disposal—feeding a government information machine at great expense, with no clear environmental payoff.

Hamzawi later became assistant deputy minister of Health Canada’s health products and food branch, another area where excessive regulation threatens an entire industry. Recent Liberal governments repeatedly attempted to force natural health product providers to prove efficacy through the same costly trials required for pharmaceutical drugs.

Past government consultations concluded this approach would do more harm than good. Herbs and traditional medicines have been used for centuries with excellent safety records. The real winners of such drug-level testing requirements would be expanding bureaucracies funded by new fees and fines and big pharmaceutical companies that benefit from sidelining their competition.

For a time, Hamzawi also served as acting federal lead and assistant deputy minister of policy and strategic integration for the COVID-19 Testing, Contact Tracing and Data Strategy Secretariat at Health Canada. During the pandemic, surveillance in the name of public health reached new heights of intrusiveness and new lows of accountability.

PHAC accessed the location data of 33 million mobile devices using “de-identified cell-tower based location data,” a method of tracking and analyzing the general movement patterns of mobile devices without directly identifying the individual users, from January 2019 to May 2023, reaching back even before the pandemic began.

PHAC also co-developed the ArriveCan app with the Canada Border Services Agency and formally owned it until mid-2022. Both agencies shared user data without a formal agreement. A later auditor general report criticized this “accountability void.”

ArriveCan, initially projected to cost $80,000, ballooned into a $59.5-million boondoggle. The glitch-prone app remained mandatory for cross-border air travel and, in 2022, wrongly instructed 10,000 vaccinated travellers to quarantine. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner also investigated complaints about how personal data was handled.

PHAC developed the COVID Alert app as well, intended to notify users of potential virus exposures. However, given the unreliability of Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test results and the limited risk to most Canadians, the app likely spread more fear than safety among its 6.9 million users. Polymerase Chain Reaction is used to detect genetic material, most commonly used to identify the presence of viruses like SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

Hamzawi may not bear primary responsibility for these failures, but she shares in them. Her record does not merit promotion. Yet in February 2023, she was named executive vice-president of health at PHAC.

Now, she holds the top job at an agency that has shown no remorse for embracing one of the most questionable global health strategies in modern history: lockdowns, masking, social distancing, mass quarantines, reliance on flawed PCR testing, rushed mRNA vaccines and the suppression of dissenting voices.

Had Canada adopted a focused protection approach—safeguarding the vulnerable while preserving freedom for the rest—as recommended in the Great Barrington Declaration, it could have avoided the enormous social and economic costs now weighing on the country. But Canadian health officials and the World Health Organization have shown no interest in such a reckoning.

In fact, the WHO is doubling down. On May 20, the World Health Assembly adopted the Pandemic Agreement, enabling even more sweeping measures in future emergencies. The agreement has raised alarms that international dictates could override national sovereignty and erode citizens’ rights, privacy and freedoms.

Don’t expect Hamzawi to push back. Her bio also says she “has also held several executive leadership positions in international affairs, regulatory programs and policy, and audit and evaluation.” Whatever the WHO has planned, she will almost certainly take Canada right along.

Canadians should be concerned.

Lee Harding is a research fellow for the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

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Canada has given $109 million to Communist China for ‘sustainable development’ since 2015

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

A briefing note showed Canadian aid has gone to ‘key foreign policy priorities in China, including human rights, gender equality, sustainable development, and climate change.’

A federal briefing note disclosed that well over $100 million has been provided to the Communist Chinese government in so-called “foreign aid” to promote “sustainable development” that includes woke ideology such as gender equality.

As reported by Blacklock’s Reporter, a recent briefing note titled Assistance to China from May for the Minister of International Development showed $109 million has gone to “key foreign policy priorities in China, including human rights, gender equality, sustainable development, and climate change” since 2015 and $645 million since 2003.

The briefing note asked directly if funding was “going to the Government of China.”

In reply, the briefing note stated, “Canada has not provided direct bilateral assistance to Chinese state authorities since 2013, though it continues to provide small amounts of funding to international partners and non-state partners on the ground.”

Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau came to power in 2015 and increased relations with the Communist Chinese regime. This trend under the Liberal Party government has continued with Prime Minister Mark Carney.

During a 2025 federal election campaign debate, Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre called out Carney for his ties to Communist China.

Conservative MP Andrew Scheer has consistently called out any money at all going to China, saying, “I don’t believe Canadian taxpayers should be sending any money to China.”

“We’re talking about a Communist dictatorial government that abuses human rights, quashes freedoms, violates rights of its citizens, and has a very aggressive foreign policy throughout the region,” he noted.

Scheer added that he has been calling on the Carney Liberals to “stand up for themselves, stand up for Canadians, stop being bullied and pushed around on the world stage, especially by China.”

Other countries have received millions of dollars in foreign aid, with $2.1 billion going to Ukraine, $195 million to Ethiopia, $172 million to Haiti, and $151 million to the West Bank and Gaza last year.

Foreign aid to all nations totaled $12.3 billion.

LifeSiteNews recently reported that the Canadian Liberal government gave millions in aid to Chinese universities.

China has been accused of direct election meddling in Canada, as reported by LifeSiteNews.

LifeSiteNews also reported that a new exposé by investigative journalist Sam Cooper has claimed there is compelling evidence that Carney and Trudeau are/were strongly influenced by an “elite network” of foreign actors, including those with ties to China and the World Economic Forum.

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Finance Titans May Have Found Trojan Horse For ‘Climate Mandates’

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Audrey Streb

Major global asset managers including BlackRock and Blackstone have been looking to buy power utilities across America in a move that some industry insiders warn could harm consumers, raise electricity costs and advance a climate-driven energy agenda.

In recent months, Blackstone reportedly sought regulatory approval to buy utilities in New Mexico and Texas all while a BlackRock-led group won approval Friday to purchase a major utility in Minnesota. While BlackRock and other huge asset managers have distanced themselves from environmental, social and governance (ESG) investment practices in recent years, some energy experts and consumer advocates that spoke to the Daily Caller News Foundation are concerned that buying up utilities may represent a new frontier of financial giants orchestrating “climate mandates.”

“BlackRock isn’t just influencing utilities anymore, they’re buying them. After years of ESG-driven coercion that pushed utilities to abandon reliable energy in favor of China-dependent renewables, BlackRock is now taking direct control. The result will be more of the same: higher costs, weaker grids, and millions in unpaid bills, all driven by the very climate mandates they lobbied for,” Jason Isaac, CEO of the American Energy Institute, told the DCNF. “Minnesotans should brace for more unreliable power, rising rates, and a media narrative that blames Trump for ending taxpayer-funded handouts instead of holding the woke politicians and Wall Street elites responsible for the crisis.”

Electricity demand is on the rise after years of stagnancy as the artificial intelligence (AI) race ushers in the build out of power-hungry data centers. Utility costs are also spiking as demand takes off in a trend that dates back to the Biden administration.

Against this backdrop, private investment titans like BlackRock and Blackstone are reportedly moving to buy power utility companies and invest in data center expansions and startups.

Minnesota recently granted the BlackRock-led group known as Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP) approval to buy one of the state’s major power utilities, Allete. GIP is also reportedly on the cusp of acquiring the major energy company, AES, according to sources familiar with the matter that spoke with Reuters. The Financial Times reported that the deal may be for $38 billion.

BlackRock referred the DCNF to Allete’s statement on regulators approving its partnership with GIP and declined to comment further for this story.

Allete’s statement notes that the impending partnership with the BlackRock-led group includes “guaranteed access to capital to fund ALLETE’s five-year plan for advancing transmission and renewable energy goals [and a] $50 million Clean Firm Technology Fund to support regional clean-energy projects and partnerships.”

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) renewed BlackRock’s ability to own up to 20% of utility voting shares in April, with former FERC Commissioner Mark Christie stating that BlackRock “pledged not to use its holdings to influence utility management” and that utilities need the access to capital.

Christie also warned in September 2024 that “this is an issue that deserves much greater scrutiny” and that “the influence that large shareholders, BlackRock or otherwise, can potentially exert across the consumer-serving utility industry should not be underestimated.”

Blackstone has reportedly sought regulatory approval to buy out the Public Service Company of New Mexico and Texas New Mexico Power Co. recently, according to The Associated Press. The asset management giant also secured a 19.9% stake in a Northern Indiana public utility for over $2 billion in January 2024.

“Blackstone’s sustainability strategy prioritizes accelerating decarbonization by investing in the energy transition and driving value accretive emissions reduction in our portfolio,” Blackstone’s 2024 sustainability report states. “We believe the transition to cleaner energy creates meaningful investment opportunities for private capital. For over a decade, we have pursued attractive investments in companies and assets that are part of the global energy transition as part of our broader energy investing strategy.”

Blackstone also announced on Sept. 15 that private equity funds affiliated with Blackstone Energy Transition Partners will acquire the Pennsylvania-based Hill Top Energy Center natural gas plant for almost $1 billion. The company also announced in July that funds managed by Blackstone Infrastructure and Blackstone Real Estate would invest over $25 billion to help build out Pennsylvania’s energy infrastructure to support the AI “revolution.”

“Renewable” energy goals and ESG investment tend to align with emissions-reduction targets, with some power companiesutilities and states that set goals to cut emissions striving to retire conventional energy sources like coal plants. Isaac added that companies like American Electric Power, in which BlackRock owns a significant stake, have been decommissioning coal plants and replacing them with intermittent sources like solar.

“What happens is when the wind stops blowing and the sun stops shining, then you have to ramp those generational assets back up, and that’s when price spikes happen,” Isaac said.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor of finance Greg Brown told the AP that the reason behind these buyouts are “very simple. Because there’s a lot of money to be made.”

Other experts devoted to consumer protection like Executive Director of Consumers’ Research Will Hild told the DCNF that investment companies like BlackRock stand to gain more than just a profit from these purchases.

“There is no world in which BlackRock’s ownership of American energy benefits ordinary American consumers,” Hild told the DCNF. “This is the same firm that proudly brought us the radical ESG rules and Net-Zero nonsense that forced all our energy bills to skyrocket. We wouldn’t have the scourge of woke capitalism without Larry Fink, who already controls nearly $13 trillion in assets and has been sued for violating anti-trust laws.”

ESG investors weigh a company by its social and environmental choices as well as its finances in a move that critics say bogs down businesses with new costs while doing little to combat climate change. One August 2023 InfluenceMap report showed that as Republicans at the state level and in Congress ramped up their opposition to ESG-focused practices, BlackRock and other major U.S. asset managers decreased their support for climate-related resolutions.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink also said in June 2023 that he no will no longer use the term ESG because it has been “politicized,” less than a year after he noted that climbing energy prices are “accelerating” the green energy transition.

“BlackRock has backpedaled on its ESG messaging and its aggressive, unapologetic imposition of ESG on everything they touch. But the leopard hasn’t changed its spots,” President of the Heartland Institute James Taylor told the DCNF. “It still has the same management group with the same values, and it’s still doing whatever it can to impose ESG on everything it touches, in actuality, if not in name.”

Taylor argued that whether BlackRock buys or acquires a large stake of a utility, it “can now assert itself over legislatures in dictating energy policy.”

Notably, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) threw their weight behind an antitrust lawsuit against major asset managers that alleges the firms colluded to tank coal production with their embrace of zero-emissions goals in May.

The lawsuit, backed by 11 state attorneys general, alleges that BlackRock and multiple other asset managers used their market power to suppress coal production, thereby hurting consumers by causing the price of coal to climb.

The DOJ and FTC’s “support for this baseless case undermines the Trump Administration’s goal of American energy independence,” a BlackRock spokesperson previously told the DCNF. “As we made clear in our earlier motion to dismiss, this case is trying to re-write antitrust law and is based on an absurd theory that coal companies conspired with their shareholders to reduce coal production.”

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