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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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The UN Pushing Carbon Taxes, Punishing Prosperity, And Promoting Poverty

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Samuel Peterson

Unelected regulators and bureaucrats from the United Nations have pushed for crushing the global economy in the name of saving the planet.

In October, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), a specialized agency within the U.N., proposed a carbon tax in order to slash the emissions of shipping vessels. This comes after the IMO’s April 2025 decision to adopt net-zero standards for global shipping.

Had the IMO agreed to the regulation, it would have been the first global tax on greenhouse gas emissions. Thankfully, the United States was able to effectively shut down those proposals; however, while these regulations have been temporarily halted, the erroneous ideas behind them continue to grow in support.

Proponents of carbon taxes generally argue that since climate change is an existential threat to human existence, drastic measures must be taken in all aspects of our lives to address the projected costs. People should eat less meat and use public transportation more often. In the political arena, they should vote out so-called “climate deniers.” In the economic sphere, carbon taxes are offered as a technocratic quick fix to carbon emissions. Is any of this worth it? Or are the benefits greater than the costs? In the case of climate change, the answer is no.

Carbon taxes are not a matter of scientific fact. As with all models, the assumptions drive the analysis. In the case of carbon taxes, the time horizon selected plays a major role in the outcome. So, too, does the discount rate and the specific integrated assessment models.

In other words, “Two economists can give vastly different estimates of the social cost of carbon, even if they agree on the objective facts underlying the analysis.” If the assumptions are subjective, as they are in carbon taxes, then they are not scientific facts. As I’ve pointed out, “carbon pricing models are as much political constructs as they are economic tools.” One must also ask whether carbon taxes will remain unchanged or gradually increase over time to advance other political agendas. In this proposal, the answer is that it increases over time.

Additionally, since these models are driven by assumptions, one would be right in asking who gets to impose these taxes? Of course, those would be the unelected bureaucrats at the IMO. No American who would be subject to these taxes ever voted for the people attempting to create the “world’s first global carbon tax.” It brings to mind the phrase “no taxation without representation.”

In an ironic twist, imposing carbon taxes on global shipping might actually be one of the worst ways to slash emissions, given the enormous gains from trade. Simply put, trade makes the world grow rich. Not just wealthy nations like those in the West, but every nation, even the most poor, grows richer. In wealthy countries, trade can help address climate change by enabling adaptation and innovation. For poorer countries, material gains from trade can help prevent their populations from starving and also help them advance along the environmental Kuznets curve.

In other words, the advantages of trade can, over time, make a country go from being so poor that a high level of air pollution is necessary for its survival to being rich enough to afford reducing or eliminating pollution. Carbon taxes, if sufficiently high, can prevent or significantly delay these processes, thereby undermining their supposed purpose. Not to mention, as of today, maritime shipping accounts for only about 3% of total global emissions.

The same ingenuity that brought us modern shipping will continue to power the global economy and fund growth and innovation, if we let it. The world does not need a layer of global bureaucracy for the sake of virtue signaling. What it needs is an understanding of both economics and human progress.

History shows that prosperity, innovation, and free trade are what make societies cleaner, healthier, and richer. Our choice is not between saving the planet and saving the economy; it is between free societies and free markets or surrendering responsibility to unelected international regulators and busybodies. The former has lifted billions out of poverty, and the latter threatens to drag us all backwards.

Samuel Peterson is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Energy Research.

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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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