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Less Talk, More Action

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From the National Citizens Coalition

By Peter Coleman

Meetings, meetings, and more meetings…

If Prime Minister Mark Carney could turn meetings into an Olympic sport, he’d be a gold medalist. At the recent Council of Federation meetings, the emphasis was on how well everyone gets along and how things are already in motion. Just trust the process, and results will follow. However, many Canadians — myself included — are still waiting for tangible outcomes.

(We also couldn’t sit idly by and watch those in attendance ignore immigration, and we were thankful that pressure eventually forced the premiers to address immigration.)

To be fair, I acknowledge that Carney has only been in office for a short time, so a comprehensive evaluation of his performance might be premature. That said, I find his approach heavy on rhetoric and light on action, though I sincerely hope he proves us wrong. The public is eager for concrete steps, not just promises. Here are some practical suggestions to move things forward.

  • First, repeal Bill C-69, often called the “no more pipelines” bill, which creates uncertainty for investors. Despite premiers Ford, Smith, and Moe signing agreements to support pipeline construction and the development of rare earth mineral mines — resources the world desperately needs — potential investors remain skeptical without clear economic stability. And B.C., Quebec, and even Manitoba represent major potential road blocks to national projects. Investors are not swayed by symbolic gestures; they want policy changes that ensure predictability.
  • Second, Carney should be upfront about Canada’s trade realities. While he claims to have held 90 bilateral meetings with countries interested in investing in Canada, the United States remains our most critical trading partner due to geographic proximity. The idea of drastically shifting exports from the U.S. to the European Union is unrealistic. Diversify, absolutely. But shipping costs to Europe and Asia are significantly higher, and geography will always play a decisive role in trade dynamics.
  • Third, it’s time to address Canada’s outdated supply management system, particularly in Quebec, where farmers are protected by quotas that lead to millions of liters of milk being dumped annually. This system inflates prices for Canadians and hinders trade deals, especially with the U.S. A bold solution would be to buy out farmers’ quotas at full market value and guarantee their sales levels for 5 to 10 years. If their sales drop after the market opens, a formula-based compensation could make them whole. The cost of this buyout and transitional support would be a fraction of what Canadians currently pay for overpriced milk and other protected products.

While the National Citizens Coalition strongly supports free markets, we recognize the need for pragmatic solutions in a fast-moving world. These issues don’t require endless meetings or self-congratulatory talk about progress. Working Canadians deserve decisive leadership and measurable results — on cartels being torn down, immigration, crime, housing, healthcare, and getting energy projects built and out to market.

Together, we’re changing the conversation, holding politicians to account, and expanding the social license for the projects and priorities we need to get this country back on track.

As our month-end approaches, we’re working to meet our fundraising goals and need your support. We’re aiming to raise $5,000 in the next week to fund our initiatives, including new industry-leading advertising and messaging. And we have some big news to come shortly that we’re excited to share!

Please consider donating today and sharing our message with friends and colleagues who might also support the cause of Canadian renewal, and more freedom through less government. Thank you for your ongoing commitment. We never take it for granted.

Peter Coleman
President
National Citizens Coalition

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Business

Trump: Americans to receive $2,000 each from tariff revenue

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From The Center Square

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President Donald Trump on Sunday said every American with the exception of the wealthy will receive $2,000 from the revenue the U.S. has collected from tariffs.

“A dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high-income people!) will be paid to revenue,” Trump posted on Truth Social. He did not say when or how the tariff revenue would be distributed.

“We are now the richest, most respected country in the world with almost no inflation and a record stock market price. 401Ks are highest ever,” Trump wrote. “We are taking in trillions of dollars and will soon begin paying down our enormous debt, $37 trillion. Record investment in the USA, plants and factories going up all over the place.”

Trump has said he wants to use tariffs to restore manufacturing jobs lost to lower-wage countries in decades past, shift the tax burden away from U.S. families and pay down the national debt. Economists, businesses and some public companies have warned that tariffs will raise prices on a wide range of consumer products.

Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs have been challenged in federal courts as unconstitutional by some business groups and Blue states, who argue that only Congress has the authority to enact tariffs. The U.S. Supreme Court last week heard oral arguments in a consolidated case challenging the tariffs.

Even some of the court’s conservative justices seemed skeptical of Trump’s authority to issue sweeping tariffs. Trump addressed that skepticism in his social media post.

“So let’s get this straight? The president of the United States is allowed (and fully approved by Congress) to stop ALL TRADE  with a foreign country (which is far more onerous than a tariff) and LICENSE a foreign country, but it is not allowed to put a simple tariff on a foreign country, even for the purposes of NATIONAL SECURITY,” he wrote. “That is not what our great founders had in mind. The whole thing is ridiculous! Other countries can tariff us, but we can’t tariff them?  It is their DREAM!!! Businesses are pouring into the USA ONLY BECAUSE OF TARIFFS. HAS THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT NOT BEEN TOLD THIS??? WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON???”

The Center Square’s Brett Rowland contributed to this report. 

Dan McCaleb is the executive editor of The Center Square.

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Agriculture

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency’s Bloodlust for Ostriches: Part 2

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I published an article about how the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) failed to follow the science when trying to justify their horrific extermination of hundreds of healthy ostriches on a farm in a remote location in British Columbia, Canada. I addressed their misleading claim that it was necessary to safeguard human and animal health. Both science and plain common sense demonstrated that their claim was misinformation.

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How legitimate is their claim that killing was necessary to preserve the export market?

Now, I cannot allow the CFIA’s second misleading rationale for slaughtering the ostriches to go unchallenged. Specifically, the CFIA claimed that the killing was also required to safeguard Canada’s almost billion-dollar poultry export market. The issue is that exports can be suspended if the policies of the World Organization for Animal Health are contravened. But what the CFIA failed to disclose to the public was that our country is not considered a single geographical zone when it comes to these policies. Rather, it is divided into numerous zones.

When looking at the World Organization for Animal Health’s Terrestrial Animal Health Code, Article 10.4.3 jumps out as being particularly important in this case. It states:

A country or zone may be considered free from high pathogenicity avian influenza when” “absence of infection with high pathogenicity avian influenza viruses, based on surveillance […] has been demonstrated in the country or zone for the past 12 months”.

During this twelve-month timeframe, exports from anywhere within the affected zone would presumably have to be suspended and biosecurity polices adhered to. Indeed, this could be problematic if it meant shutting down the export market of an entire country for an entire year. But that was not the case here. Consider these facts:

  1. The farmers at the heart of this case had no need to maintain an export market within their region for the viability of their farming operation.
  2. Biosecurity protocols imposed by the CFIA were already being adhered to.
  3. It is my understanding that the ostrich farm was isolated within a remote designated zone. Therefore, suspending exports from that zone would not risk harming export potential for other farmers. Even if the zone did incorporate far-away farms, the CFIA could have done the right thing and attempted negotiating redrawing of boundaries with the World Organization for Animal Health to prevent or minimize indirect harm to other farms.

In other words, the ostriches could have been tested after the flock recovered from the disease outbreak, with testing ending twelve months later. If these tests were consistently negative, the World Organization for Animal Health would have officially declared the zone housing the ostriches to be virus-free and it would lift its moratorium on exports from that isolated zone.

My assessment is that this would have allowed the ostriches to live, with no substantial negative impact on the ability to export poultry products from Canada.

Further, common sense also places the CFIA’s rationale into question. Their battle with the farmers took place over the better part of a year while they apparently ignored this subsection of the policy, yet Canada’s poultry export market continued unhindered.

So I am curious as to why the CFIA has been so hell-bent on killing healthy ostriches to purportedly preserve Canada’s export market. Why didn’t they advocate for the farmers from the very beginning by leaning on clauses like Article 10.4.3 to negotiate with the World Organization for Animal Health? I thought that government agencies were supposed to serve the public that pays them. I saw no evidence of the CFIA trying to help the farmers. Instead they seemed focused on doing everything but try to help them. The optics would have been much better for the CFIA if they could produce documentation showing that they rigorously negotiated on behalf of the farmers about Article 10.4.3 with the World Organization for Animal Health but the latter blatantly refused to honour the requests.

Ultimately, it seems to me that the CFIA not only failed to follow the science, but it was also selective in its interpretation and defense of the policies.

It also makes me wonder if Article 10.4.3 had anything to do with why the CFIA was so adamant about not allowing the birds to be tested almost one year after the outbreak. To have demonstrated an absence of the virus almost one year later would have shown that they were on the cusp of being able to use Article 10.4.3 to restore Canada’s coveted country-wide avian influenza-free status.

By the way, all countries claiming to have avian influenza-free status are misleading people. Avian influenza viruses are endemic. They are carried and transmitted by wild birds, especially waterfowl, that migrate around the globe.

The most hypocritical aspect of this is that the people responsible for the deaths of hundreds of valuable, healthy ostriches that were almost certainly virus-free (prove me wrong with data), likely let their own kids play on beaches and parks that are routinely populated by ducks, geese, and seagulls, and stipple-painted with the feces of these birds that serve as natural reservoirs for the virus.

All hail the hypocritical virtue signaling!

To be consistent with their reasoning, every person that supported what the CFIA did to the healthy ostriches should never step foot on any premises frequented by wild birds.


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