Denmark Bans the Burqa

Cory Morgan video ( below ) is one of many he’s done re: the Reserves.
We see in the news constant stories about primitive Reservations with LACK of clean drinking water.
QUESTION: Who is to blame ?
ANSWER = NOT US !
Either the money is embezzled ….or the facilities are built and poorly maintained
In another Cory Morgan video ( forthcoming ) he says that Housing is provided..then later some are arsoned by the Band members as a means of getting a new (clean) house.
The Gov’t continually cuts ( blank ) cheques to the Band = The Chief .
Steven Harper had introduced a Law that proper and transparent accounting of the Band was required (which Trudeau later killed).
It is quite clear the Federal money is effectively mismanaged if not outright stolen.
Personally, I don’t/can’t feel sorry for the given Band.
My sympathies go to the hard -working taxpayer whose $$$ MILLION in Tax $$$ go to these Band’s ad- nauseum.
These Bands governance models are perfect examples of the ” COMMUNIST MODEL”.
“You’ll Own Nothing and be Happy”.
Property is not owned…it’s part of the great collective.
Democracy doesn’t exist..the rules and law are either from their cultures or simply at whims of the Chief.
The Chiefs’ (control) role to Band Members = much the same as Rabbi’s to Jews.
Final Comments:
Are we NON First Nations about to come under the same governance model……moreso as our Gov’ts are continually surrendering OUR lands to First Nations and thus we are becoming increasingly beholden to a given ” Chief “?
Reducto ad Absurdum.
……there are approx 200 First Nations Bands in BC...hence will these 200 Chiefs ultimately become THE rulers over ALL BC collectively ?
Roland
Attachments area
Preview YouTube video The real reasons native reserves can’t get clean drinking water in Canada


Aug 17, 2025

Source: Wikimedia Commons
British Columbia continues to rename streets, provincial parks and even entire cities in Indigenous languages that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization classifies as “critically endangered.”
One prominent example came in 2018, when the province renamed Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park—home to one of North America’s largest sockeye salmon runs—to Tsútswecw Provincial Park.
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The new name, pronounced “choo-chwek,” is a Secwepemc term meaning “many rivers.”
According to the B.C. government, the name change formed part of the province’s “reconciliation” efforts and its five-year commitment to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Located between Adams Lake and Shuswap Lake, Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park was established in 1977 to conserve and protect the spawning beds used by various species of salmon.
The park’s former namesake, Haig-Brown, was a conservationist who wrote several books educating the public about the importance of protecting salmon, watersheds and sustainability.
Despite his efforts — and both historical and personal significance to the park — the B.C. government went ahead with the name-change as part of its “reconciliation efforts with Indigenous peoples.”
More recently, the City of Vancouver made headlines this year when it renamed Trutch Street to šxʷməθkʷəy̓əmasəm following a unanimous 2021 city council vote in favour of the name change.
@fun.flamingosNewest street name in Vancouver
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The new street name translates from the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm language to “Musqueamview,” referring to a vantage point or perspective overlooking traditional Musqueam territory.
According to the most recent comprehensive report on British Columbia First Nations languages, there are just over 100 fluent speakers of the language — and far fewer are capable of reading or writing in it.
Delivery agents, banks, emergency responders, city systems, and even agencies like Canada Post and ICBC have said they’ve had trouble displaying and processing the new name.

On Vancouver Island, meanwhile, the city of Powell River, which has a population of about 15,000, faces a possible name change in 2026 following calls from the Tla’amin Nation to drop the colonial name.
The local visitor information centre has already rebranded as the “Qathet Visitor Centre,” adopting the Tla’amin word for “working together.”
A newly installed poster at the centre instructs visitors to “identify your intentions and willingness to abide by Tla’amin protocol,” though staff have admitted they cannot explain what those protocols entail.
The Tla’amin Nation estimates only 68 people speak its language fluently.
British Columbia is home to roughly 30 Indigenous languages, all of which UNESCO categorizes as “critically endangered.”
That status—Grade 1 on the organization’s vitality scale—generally means a language is spoken almost exclusively by great-grandparents or older generations, with little intergenerational transmission.
But that hasn’t stopped the B.C. government from utilizing these languages—rarely spoken, even amongst the Aboriginal populations that created them—to rename everything from streets to community centres to entire communities.
Part of the History of the Great White Tribe of Southern Africa
| Michael BatorAug 7 |

Burlington’s youth are suffering, just like young Canadians across the country, and the culprits are clear: Justin Trudeau and his globalist heir, Mark Carney. Their obsession with mass immigration, unchecked Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) programs, and reckless money printing has flooded our job market, priced our kids out of homes, and left Burlington’s young people jobless and hopeless. Walk into a Tim Hortons or gas station on Appleby Line or Guelph Line or just about anywhere, and you’ll see foreign workers, not local teens, behind the counters. Enough is enough: it’s time to slam the brakes on immigration, shut down the TFW scam, and put Burlington’s youth—and all Canadians—first!
Burlington’s Youth Locked Out of Jobs by TFWs
In Burlington, our kids can’t get a break. Tim Hortons and gas stations, once summer job staples for local teens, are now staffed by TFWs, thanks to Trudeau’s 2022 decision to let businesses fill 30% of low-wage jobs with foreign workers.
In 2023, Canada approved 239,646 TFWs, with 20% in fast food and retail—exactly the roles Burlington’s youth rely on to start their careers. Ontario Tim Hortons alone hired 714 TFWs in 2023, up from 58 in 2019, and Burlington’s no exception.
Head to Brant Street or Fairview Street, and you’ll see foreign workers serving coffee, delivering packages and jobs our kids used to have and now, our kids are turned away.
Why? Because TFWs are a corporate dream: tied to employers by work permits, they’ll take minimum wage and grueling shifts without complaint, or risk deportation. Meanwhile, Burlington’s youth, who deserve fair pay and hours, are ignored. In July 2024, the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area (CMA), which includes Burlington, had an 8.9% unemployment rate, with youth unemployment hitting 13.5% province-wide. Burlington’s jobless youth are part of the 120,000 young Ontarians aged 15–24 without work, a 50% spike in two years.
Employers game the system, posting fake job ads to secure Labour Market Impact Assessments (LMIAs) while sidelining local teens. Carney’s “fix”? A pathetic cap of 82,000 TFW permits in 2025, still stealing thousands of jobs from Burlington’s kids, plus 285,750 more through the International Mobility Program.
This isn’t a solution—it’s a slap in the face.
Youth Unemployment in Burlington: A National Crisis Hits Home
Burlington’s youth are suffering just like their peers across Canada. The national youth unemployment rate soared to 13.5% in 2024, the worst in a decade outside the pandemic, with employment for teens and young adults dropping to 53.8% by December. In Ontario, youth unemployment mirrors this crisis, and Burlington feels the pinch.
The Halton Region, including Burlington, saw 7.7% unemployment in September 2024, with youth facing even tougher odds in a tight job market. Local fast food joints, retail and gas stations, like those on Plains Road, this Burlington road and that Canadian one too, are hiring TFWs while Burlington teens can’t land entry-level gigs to build resumes or pay for school.
Economist Mike Moffatt says it plain: the TFW surge is killing youth employment.
In Burlington, youth employment services report a flood of jobless teens, part of the 2,500 young Calgarians served by similar programs in 2024, struggling to compete with TFWs who have more experience or accept lower wages.
These are the jobs that teach Burlington’s kids responsibility and independence, but Carney’s Liberals keep handing them to foreigners. It’s not just a national disgrace—“it’s personal for every Burlington parent watching their kid get rejected again and again.
Mass Immigration and Money Printing: Pricing Burlington’s Youth Out
Carney’s following Trudeau’s globalist playbook, flooding Canada with immigrants while Burlington’s youth pay the price. In 2023, 98% of Canada’s population growth came from immigration, with 60% from temporary residents, pushing the population to 41 million by April 2024.
Carney’s 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan keeps the floodgates open: 395,000 permanent residents in 2025, plus hundreds of thousands of TFWs and students. His so-called “cap” only cuts temporary residents by 445,000 over 2025–2026, leaving 3 million temporary residents clogging the system.
Even Carney admits we “can’t afford not to” have mass immigration, as he told Cardus in November 2024, proving he’s just another elite selling out Canadians.
To bankroll this madness, Carney’s Liberals lean on the Bank of Canada’s trick: printing money like it’s free.
From 2020 to 2022, the bank pumped $400 billion into the economy, tanking the dollar and spiking inflation to 6.8% in 2022. In Burlington, this means youth can’t afford to live—average one-bedroom rents hit $2,200/month in Halton Region in 2024, up 8% from 2023.
Try paying that on a part-time or full-time job you can’t even get because TFWs took it.
Carney’s “housing strategy” is a sham, promising homes while immigration drives demand through the roof. Burlington’s youth are priced out of their own city, forced to live with parents or leave.
Carney’s Sellout: Burlington Deserves Better
Mark Carney, the Bay Street banker turned Liberal puppet, is no different from Trudeau. His weak TFW “caps” and immigration “tweaks” let corporations keep exploiting cheap labor while Burlington’s youth languish.
In 2025, 82,000 TFWs and 395,000 permanent residents are still too many when our kids can’t find work or afford rent. We demand real change: shut down the TFW program’s loopholes, slash immigration to sustainable levels, and stop printing money that screws over our youth.
Burlington’s kids deserve jobs, not rejection letters. They deserve homes in their hometown, not a lifetime of debt.
This is a fight for Burlington’s future—and Canada’s. The PPC will put Canadians first, no compromises.
Join us to take back our city and our country from Carney’s globalist betrayal. Burlington’s youth are counting on us.