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Two More White Victims of Trudeau’s Replacement Immigration Policy: Bumbling Mounties Let Killer Go

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Former prosecutor says trucker could have been arrested, RCMP disagree

[Navjeet Singh went through a stop sign in in Altona, Manitoba. Shades of another Sikh who did the same thing in Humbolt, Saskatchewan, and wiped out 1 members of the tiny community’s hockey team. This Singh killed two. — beautiful Sara Unger and her daughter Alexa. Driver Navjeet Singh was apprehended at the scene. He was shaken up. The bumbling Mounties did not detain him. He’s since fled. Of course, nobody knows nuffin. It turns out we don’t even know if he’s a Canadian citizen. Thanks, Justin.]

Search continues for man wanted on Canada-wide warrant after highway death of mother, daughter

Tyler Searle By: Tyler Searle Posted:

A former Crown prosecutor says Manitoba RCMP likely could have arrested a semi-truck driver now wanted on Canada-wide warrant, but police argue it wouldn’t have stopped the man from leaving before they pressed charges.

Mounties continued the search Friday for 25-year-old Navjeet Singh, who was charged Wednesday in a fatal collision that killed Sara Unger, 35, and her eight-year-old Alexa Unger.

“I think anybody looking back on this turn of events on this case might say, ‘Well, wasn’t it foreseeable, wasn’t it predictable that this could have happened?’” said former prosecutor Brandon Trask.

Navjeet Singh is wanted by RCMP in connection with the fatal crash. (Supplied)
Navjeet Singh is wanted by RCMP in connection with the fatal crash. (Supplied)

“I would be concerned if people in the public are left with the impression that police don’t have the ability to arrest somebody if they’ve got a belief based on reasonable grounds that an individual had committed an offence.”

Police allege Singh was driving a semi-trailer that blew a stop sign at an intersection near Altona and struck the Ungers’ SUV on Nov. 15.

Singh was taken to hospital after the crash and officers attempted to interview him, but he was too shaken up to provide a statement. Investigators scheduled a meeting with him later but he failed to show up, RCMP Sgt. Paul Manaigre said.

A warrant was issued for his arrest, but Singh had not been seen by police for two days as of Friday evening. It is unclear whether he remains in Winnipeg, or may have fled the province.

Manaigre said officers did not detain Singh at the hospital because they were not within their legal rights. The investigation was ongoing and police were not prepared to lay charges, he said.

Trask, who teaches law at the University of Manitoba, said eyewitness statements and preliminary evidence collected from an accident or crime scene can form the basis for an arrest. Officers can then detain a person for up to 24 hours as they continue to gather evidence and prepare charges, he said.

Police said early on that charges were anticipated in the crash, which happened at the intersection of provincial roads 201 and 306. A witness travelling behind the Ungers’ SUV told investigators the semi-truck appeared to be travelling at high speed.

Manaigre defended RCMP’s decision not to arrest Singh immediately, saying officers had no indication he would be a flight risk.

“Hindsight is always 20-20. When you look at, ‘OK, now he is running,’ Well, then of course we should have detained him, but when you can’t get information from the driver at the hospital … we can’t talk to him.”

He said it is not uncommon for people involved in accidents to be given time to recover from shock before they provide a statement to investigators.

“You’ll need probably those few days for your mind to come out of it and then hopefully you’ll start recollecting events, which is what you want,” Manaigre said. “If we actually went and arrested him, well now you’re starting the 24-hour clock and you’ve got 24 hours to deal with him. He has to be released or taken into custody … You haven’t accomplished anything.”

SUPPLIED
                                Sara Unger, 35, and her eight-year-old daughter Alexa Unger, who lived in the Rural Municipality of Rhineland, were killed at the intersection of provincial roads 201 and 306, shortly after 7 p.m. November 15. RCMP said a tractor-trailer did not stop at a stop sign while travelling east on PR 201.
SUPPLIED Sara Unger, 35, and her eight-year-old daughter Alexa Unger, who lived in the Rural Municipality of Rhineland, were killed at the intersection of provincial roads 201 and 306, shortly after 7 p.m. November 15. RCMP said a tractor-trailer did not stop at a stop sign while travelling east on PR 201.

Manaigre said it may have been possible to arrest and charge Singh before having to release him, but such a move could compromise the case against him later on if it was rushed.

“I’d rather do things properly at the beginning,” he said.

Winnipeg defence lawyer Scott Newman said police often seek the opinion of an accident re-constructionist before determining whether a collision was criminal. Such examinations can include mechanical inspections of a vehicle and a review of the scene, he said.

Newman said it is too early to say for certain whether Singh is intentionally evading police.

“I have to be cautious because I don’t know what evidence the police had,” he said.

“I can imagine where if somebody gets out of an accident … you might want to go and see your family, you may want to go and see a lawyer and get legal advice from somebody you trust in your home community. I don’t think this is a situation where we can say he’s fled the country.”

Police said Singh holds a valid Ontario driver’s licence. They did not confirm whether he is a Canadian citizen.

tyler.searle@freepress.mb.ca

How to Grow an Economy: “Refugee” Claimants Cost us $224.00 Per Day or $81,760 Per Year

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How to Grow an Economy: “Refugee” Claimants Cost us $224.00 Per Day or $81,760 Per Year

People claiming to be refugees in Canada get $224.00 per day from our Government to eat and stay in a hotel room. That works out to be $81,760 per year. $20,000 more than the average Canadian Salary. Absolutely unbelievable.

Mike Bator, People’s Party of Canada Candidate in Burlington, On Immigration Reform:

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Access to Canada was once a carefully managed privilege, considering individual character, national needs, and capacities. It took into account our ability to build houses and sustain population growth while maintaining infrastructure like education, transportation, and healthcare.

Immigrants didn’t always have degrees or higher education—take my grandparents, for instance, peasant farmers who fled post-WWI Poland. Back then, the government imposed rules about where immigrants could live. My grandparents spent five years in Edmonton to earn their citizenship before moving to Toronto and starting a family. My former father-in-law, a highly skilled electrician from Manchester, needed a sponsor to immigrate. His family of five initially shared a townhouse in Oakville with their sponsor before buying a home in rural Acton, where he later established a globally recognized airport runway lighting company.

Backed by solid financials, European Christian values, and a holistic approach to nation-building, immigrants thrived, contributing significantly to our nation. Now, we face what seems like a mass immigration invasion, straining our resources and infrastructure. We need a sound, manageable approach to immigration, not an overwhelming influx.

I’m tired of ineffective leadership and slogans that don’t address the real issues. No, Mr. Trudeau, we won’t let our nation be destroyed. No, Mr. Poilievre, we reject unrealistic housing solutions. No, Mr. Singh, your actions do not justify undermining Canada’s foundations. If you cherish Canada and want to preserve the country you grew up in, it’s time to reject these corrupt globalists. Vote for @MaximeBernier to protect our nation’s integrity and future

Access to Canada was once a carefully managed privilege, considering individual character, national needs, and capacities. It took into account our ability to build houses and sustain population growth while maintaining infrastructure like education, transportation, and healthcare.

Immigrants didn’t always have degrees or higher education—take my grandparents, for instance, peasant farmers who fled post-WWI Poland. Back then, the government imposed rules about where immigrants could live. My grandparents spent five years in Edmonton to earn their citizenship before moving to Toronto and starting a family. My former father-in-law, a highly skilled electrician from Manchester, needed a sponsor to immigrate. His family of five initially shared a townhouse in Oakville with their sponsor before buying a home in rural Acton, where he later established a globally recognized airport runway lighting company.

Backed by solid financials, European Christian values, and a holistic approach to nation-building, immigrants thrived, contributing significantly to our nation. Now, we face what seems like a mass immigration invasion, straining our resources and infrastructure. We need a sound, manageable approach to immigration, not an overwhelming influx.

I’m tired of ineffective leadership and slogans that don’t address the real issues. No, Mr. Trudeau, we won’t let our nation be destroyed. No, Mr. Poilievre, we reject unrealistic housing solutions. No, Mr. Singh, your actions do not justify undermining Canada’s foundations. If you cherish Canada and want to preserve the country you grew up in, it’s time to reject these corrupt globalists. Vote for @MaximeBernier to protect our nation’s integrity and future

Immigration enrichment

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Immigration enrichment

The Indian Invasion of Canada: A Longtime Subscriber Writes

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The East Indian Invasion of Canada: A Longtime Subscriber Writes

Dear Paul,

Complete invasion of Indians from India in Niagara. I was at Holiday Inn Welland 3 nights a month who all Indians.

One at reception desk celebratIing one year here took a Canadians job.

A Chinese home owner in St Catherines said that she felt as if she was living in India now. She used to commute from Toronto to St Catherines last few years. Now the drive commute takes 4 hours not 2.

That is how long it took me to drive there one way — 4 hours.  

Crystal Beach has been invaded last two years with Indians.

They bought the huge new 3-generations mansions.

Brampton has a high crime rate now with new immigrants so many Indians are moving to Niagara.

No expansion of the infrastructure of roads, hospitals etc to catch up.

No MORE GREEN SPACE for the environment or wild life or indigenous plants and trees microclimate.

This invasion is TO HELP TRUDEAU BRING IN MORE VOTERS LIKE OBAMA and KAMALA did for the next election. TO HELL WITH the damage to future young Canadians’ standard of life or loss of jobs.

Black Lives Matter NOW. I had art that was on loan to Kenderdine Art Gallery University of Saskatchewan 30 years for potential future donation now rejected because white artists like John Scott, 

Eldon Garnett, Courtney Milne etc. They even rejected one First Nations artist by mistake because they did not know who he was. ha ha 

What about hoards of Muslims invading would close down all religions churches and synagogues.

Not to mention the Third World ethics in paying taxes etc. running banks and governance services.

Best regards,

Olivia B-C

Global Warming is a Hoax

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Global Warming is a Hoax

“The problem is that we, and I agree completely that we’ve had a global temperature increase in the 20th century – yes – but an increase from what. Probably an increase from the lowest point we’ve had for the last 10,000 years. And this means…that…it will be very hard, indeed, to prove whether the increase in temperature in the 20th century was man made, or it’s a natural variation. It will be very hard because we made ourselves an extremely poor experiment. We started to observe meteorology at the coldest spot in the last 10,000 years”.

The Only Way to Save Europe

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Tough Talk Needed on Border Issues

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Tough talk needed on border issues

“Lay low for 14 days and you’re in as an illegal”

  • National Post
  • 14 Nov 2024
  • JAMIE SARKONAK
With the threat of mass deportations from the U.S., and a policy in Canada that allows unauthorized residents to claim asylum should they lay low for 14 days, it’s only rational for would-be claimants to try, Jamie Sarkonak says.

Currently, as the rules stand, migrants from the United States can cross into Canada, wait two weeks, and become eligible to file a refugee claim here. The northern border sure must be looking like a home-free line, now that Donald Trump has been elected on a promise to carry out mass deportations of illegal migrants.

So, if there was ever a time Canada needed to send a very loud, very public, “no more Mr. Nice Guy” message to economically motivated asylum seekers — firm messaging backed up by policy changes to ward their numbers off — it’s right now.

The numbers are already too high. Last year, nearly 150,000 people staked refugee claims here, rendering us the fifth-largest destination for asylum seekers that year. Two years’ worth of asylum claims are inching their way through the immigration system, many of these from friendly not-at-war countries that have no business sending us thousands of refugees.

India, Nigeria, and Mexico are where the largest number of claims come from, but there are many others that shouldn’t be sending refugees our way. Each successful applicant — from friendly, at-peace countries — is a potential online advertisement for immigration services online; that is, potential inspiration for others looking to claim refugee status. Of course, many of these claimants aren’t actually in danger, as required by law, and are willing to travel home, prompting immigration consultants to make warnings against doing so.

With the threat of mass deportations from the U.S., and a policy in Canada that allows unauthorized residents to claim asylum should they lay low for 14 days, it’s only rational for would-be claimants to try. It could very well be a painful squeeze — the U.S. received 1.2 million asylum claims last year alone, and some fraction of that number can be expected to divert to the north come 2025.

The trek to Canada will be a rational one for many. To observers on the outside, we’re the country that welcomes everyone, hands out bags of free food, offers free care, has loads of jobs to fill along with land, oh so much land. We know this isn’t actually how Canada works, but they don’t.

Seriously. Extensive immigration influencer videos have advertised Canadian “free food” to those abroad, which have no doubt made this country a more attractive place to attempt asylum. Rent is often covered by the Canadian tax base as the wait for claim adjudication drags on — which ultimately puts low-income Canadians in competition with migrants for housing. Some also end up competing with homeless Canadians, taking up critical space in shelters from Vancouver to Toronto.

MANY OF THESE CLAIMANTS AREN’T ACTUALLY IN DANGER.

In health care, it’s a similar problem. These populations strain the health-care system: the Star reported last week that “Midwives and physicians in emergency departments said they’re seeing significantly more uninsured clients accessing care at later stages of a complicated pregnancy or an already developed cancer or AIDS.” The uninsured being, in part, migrants who are in Canada illegally. Bad deal for us, good deal for them.

Between rosy influencer advertising and borders-open messaging from our own Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a lot more needs to be done to reverse the perception that Canada is a welcome home for economic “refugees.”

The incoming Trump administration has been strong out of the gate in turning around the perception of the United States as a bottomless bread basket of free amenities. Federal and state governments have rolled out unauthorized-friendly initiatives for a while now: feds have done their best to soften deportation rules, and some state governments have offered perks like pre-paid debit cards for migrants, as well as free rent. But Trump’s messaging has been clear that deportations are coming, and his border-enforcer-to-be, Tom Homan, is just as forceful: “You better start packing now, cause you’re going home,” Homan told a crowd earlier this year.

We haven’t been so firm. Visitor visa rules were tightened this week, but the home-free-in-twoweeks line remains in place.

Most of our country’s messaging includes tepid inward-facing assurances that everything is under control. The faceless blob that is the Canadian administrative state says there’s nothing to worry about: the RCMP learned from post-2016 migration which “provided us with the tools and insight necessary to address similar types of occurrences.” The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) says, “we are ready to respond and adapt as needed.”

Homan, meanwhile, isn’t raving about our competency, stating in a recent TV interview that the northern border is an “extreme national security vulnerability” and that “tough conversations” are soon to be had with Canada.

Meanwhile, Immigration Minister Marc Miller is nonchalant, telling the Globe and Mail: “We will always be acting in the national interest and those measures that we move to undertake, regardless of what decision is taken by the new administration, to make sure that our borders are secure, that people that are coming to Canada do so in a regular pathway, and the reality that not everyone is welcome here.”

Well, that sure sends a message. “Not everyone is welcome here.”

Each statement from Canadian officials has the same bland, inoffensive lack of substance that could only come from either a comms department trained to generate few words of meaning or an AI text generator. None are backed by the force of strong, loophole-closing policy change.

Miller’s job right now isn’t just to soothe Canadians with words as bland as beige walls. He has to dispel years of false impressions of Canadian life inspired by a multitude of enthusiastic foreign-language Youtube and Tiktok howto vlogs about immigration, with rhetoric and hard policy. Right now, he’s falling short.

Canadian Tradition Haters Trash Remembrance Day

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The woke hijacking of Remembrance Day

  • National Post
  • 15 Nov 2024
  • MICHAEL HIGGINS
On Remembrance Day, it is left to ordinary Canadians to honour the dead, Michael Higgins writes.

Left to our virtue-signalling elites, our hapless leaders and our ignorant educators, Canada would have forsworn its solemn duty to remember the dead and honour those who served.

Thankfully, ordinary Canadians are less susceptible to the vagaries of woke culture and DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) policies, and understand that bravery, duty and sacrifice are virtues that require us occasionally to pause, reflect and honour those who served.

But what can we say to the likes of Aaron Hobbs, the principal of Ottawa’s Sir Robert Borden High School, whose characterization of Remembrance Day was that it was usually about “a white guy who has done something related to the military”?

Hobbs’ insult to every Canadian who has served and serves still was made in defence of allowing an Arabic-language Palestinian protest song to be played during a Remembrance Day assembly at the school. Only after righteous anger ensued did Hobbs issue a pro forma apology.

Remembrance Day should have been about honouring those “who have sacrificed their lives for the freedoms we hold dear,” he said in a statement. The inclusion of the song was not in line with the schools “values of respect and unity.”

Whatever values Hobbs seeks to instil in his young students, virtue is not one of them.

Meanwhile, in the lead-up to Remembrance Day, Sackville Heights Elementary in Nova Scotia asked military personnel attending its ceremony not to wear their uniforms in order to “maintain a welcoming environment for all.”

That the school’s leaders thought it would be better to be “welcoming” to all than to have children be proud of those in uniform is a testament to their twisted values. If they want to keep children safe, they should introduce them to the people who are willing to die for that very reason.

Principal Rachael Webster later apologized for the harm the request caused. She added that pupils who didn’t feel safe seeing uniformed military personnel would be accommodated.

There is a certain irony in giving trigger warnings about soldiers.

Hobbs and Webster are examples of people who have lost sight of what is important in order to embrace what is woke. It is unfortunate that they will pass that corrupted sense of value onto a younger generation.

SOME PEOPLE HAVE NO IDEA HOW TO BEHAVE VIRTUOUSLY.

Meanwhile, at the City of Toronto’s official Remembrance Day ceremony, veterans and the public had to sit through an almost twominute-long presentation that included Indigenous land acknowledgments and touched on treaties, settlers, migrants and the transatlantic slave trade.

One of the hallmarks of the new woke is to showcase Canada as a terrible partner in the slave trade, for which we must feel guilty. This is simply a lie, but truth hardly matters to people who haven’t the decency to honour our veterans without an unnecessary preamble.

Rick Hillier, former chief of the defence staff, expressed his outrage on X. “We are nothing but ‘sheep’ to put up with this condescending lecture at any time, but especially today. A day devoted to those who served and sacrificed to build a country that doesn’t have that. Shame,” he wrote.

With leaders such as ours, it is no wonder that brainwashed pro-palestinian protesters thought it was appropriate to show up to a Remembrance Day ceremony in Kingston, Ont., with a flag proclaiming, “To Remember Is To End All War. Free Palestine.”

But “Lest we forget” isn’t about ending the tragedy and futility of war — and the protesters know this. They know Remembrance Day is about honouring those who served. Which is why hijacking the event is such an unforgivable insult.

But since schools don’t teach virtue anymore — just ask Hobbs and Webster — some people have no idea how to behave virtuously.

If the City of Toronto wants a real history lesson, and Hobbs and Webster want to know how to craft a statement with real meaning, I would refer them to Pericles’ oration over the Athenian dead. Pericles understood the choice men faced when confronted with death.

“And when the moment came they were minded to resist and suffer, rather than to fly and save their lives; they ran away from the word of dishonour, but on the battlefield their feet stood fast, and in an instant, at the height of their fortune, they passed away from the scene, not of their fear, but of their glory,’ he said.

And Athens, just as Canada, was greater for their sacrifice.

“I would have you day by day fix your eyes upon the greatness of Athens, until you become filled with the love of her; and when you are impressed by the spectacle of her glory, reflect that this empire has been acquired by men who knew their duty and had the courage to do it,” he continued.

It is left to ordinary Canadians to honour the dead, to remember the cost and to reflect on the courage of those who died and served. Those who love Canada will remember that she was built on the sacrifices of such men. And those who don’t remember will probably become high school principals.

Article Name:The woke hijacking of Remembrance Day

Publication:National Post

Author:MICHAEL HIGGINS

Start Page:A8

End Page:A8

Anti-White RACISM in New Zealand Parliament

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Anti-White RACISM in New Zealand Parliament!


below.

TRANSCRIPT:

Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to this edition of the Jolly Heretic. Now, today I would like to talk about what happened on the floor of the New Zealand Parliament a few days ago, and what it shows us.

And what it shows us is the mask of the left is surely finally off. These people are not genuinely concerned with equality and harm avoidance. They are concerned with power. They are concerned with power for themselves, and they are concerned with ripping down anything. Anything that is symbolic of traditional power structures, that is symbolic of law and order, that is basically symbolic of civilization.

And that is because they are resentful, they think they should have power, they are narcissistic, they are entitled, they hate anything that is symbolic of power because they feel they don’t have it. Because they’re mentally unstable, and therefore, they go for it and try to destroy it. 

So, what is the situation in New Zealand? In New Zealand, there are 65 members of parliament for constituencies, and 51 list MPs. In addition, there are seven Maori MPs. There are seven seats set aside just for Maori people who make up 20 percent of the population. Can you imagine if there were a number of seats set aside in the English Parliament for the descendants of the Anglo Saxons? There would be uproar. But no, there are seven seats set aside for them.

All the government in New Zealand is trying to do is to make it clear that the New Zealand government is sovereign. It’s essentially a bill on equality and ensuring equality between people in New Zealand so that there aren’t extra rights for certain groups. But of course, that’s not good enough for the Maori.

That’s not good enough for the Māori MPs, anyway, I don’t know about the Māori, perhaps they don’t support this nonsense, but it’s not good enough for the Māori MPs. They opposed this bill, and in Parliament, the youngest MP in Parliament, one Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, let’s just call her Hana Clark, tore up the bill, and it initiated a haka, a war dance, a declaration of war, a means of intimidating his majesty’s elected government, a violent, frightening declaration of war. Now some would argue that she and the other Maori MPs and the obsequious white leftists that danced along with it should be arrested at once for treason, for declaring war on his majesty’s government, should be put on trial and hanged.

I’m not saying that should be the case. But some might argue that. But that is what you have. It’s not about equality, because the bill is actually in favor of equality. It’s about intimidation, and it’s about ensuring extra rights and extra power for certain peoples. And that is what the European left in the New Zealand Parliament dance alongside.

That is what they were in favor of, that there should be extra rights for minority peoples. Why? Because they see them. The left are neurotic, are mentally unstable. They therefore are paranoid. They see themselves as disempowered and they want power. They’re frightened to engage in a fair fight. So what do they do? They virtue signal, they signal about equality and harm avoidance. But the studies of course indicate they don’t really care about this. What they’re mainly motivated by is hatred and resentment. They resent symbols of power, like the New Zealand Parliament, like the laws of New Zealand, like whatever, and therefore they will militate in favor of trying to destroy those symbols of power and bring everything down, bring civilization down. Because they are resentful people. 

Being mentally unstable, they’re also emotionally incontinent, and so they quite enjoy getting involved in a haka, and expressing themselves, and letting off steam, because they’re so tense, and they’re so unhappy all of the time. But that’s what you’re dealing with. And what the Maori try to argue is, ‘Oh God, oh the Europeans have done these terrible things, they’ve come here and treated the Maori badly, and thus the Maori should have extra rights’.

The Maori went to Chatham Island and wiped out, genocided a group called the Moriori. And when the Maori genocide you the evidence indicates is that they used to engage in cannibalism. And this process continued until the British went there in the 19th century. 

You can dress it up however you like. You can dress it up to do with equality, or Christianity, or whatever. But there are group selection battles between peoples that are based around power. And what this was about, this bill, is to, by making everybody equal, is taking away special privileges from the Maori, giving them less power, making them equal citizens of New Zealand, as I understand it.

And they don’t like this. And the left in New Zealand, the white left, they don’t like it either, because they identify with the Maori, and they—because they see the Maori as disempowered—and they use the Maori as a means of virtue signaling, and as a means of gaining status over their own people via virtue signaling, and they like what the Maori represents, and the haka represents, which is violence and disorder and putting down symbols of power, that kind of thing, because they’re resentful people, and so they get involved.

And so the mask is off. The liberals are not about equality or love or justice. They are about power for their own client groups that they can use for their own benefit and power for themselves. I mean, that’s essentially. You know, and this is the extent that they would sacrifice people and whatever for power, it’s all about power.

And I just wonder if we should do this in the British Parliament? I mean, next time the Labor Party passes a law that Anglo Saxon members of Parliament don’t like. Should we dress up like this? And Morris dance? That’ll show them. 

We have confronted a fundamental difference between left and right. Those that are governed by reason, and order, and protecting civilization, and keeping things going. And those that are governed by emotion, violence, and hatred. That is the difference between left and right. And what has happened in New Zealand Parliament with the obsequious leftists getting involved in the Haka, getting involved in the war dance, getting involved in intimidation, rather than logical argument, only goes to show this.