Those within the group who have been following the socio-political-legal aspects of the “fox and mandates” situation in Canada may be interested in one or both of the following recent developments:
1 - The Public Order Emergency Commission – which was created to inquire into the circumstances that led to the declaration of emergency on February 14, 2022, and the measures taken for dealing with the emergency – has opened the public submission process to allow Canadians to share their views and experiences on all aspects of the Commission’s mandate. Guidance on the production and submission of emails/letters, including a recommended submission deadline of early September is provided here: https://publicorderemergencycommission.ca/ The public hearings will be starting on September 19, which will receive extensive (live, I believe) coverage by various Canadian alt media sources.
2 – Rebel News reporters were in Coutts, Alberta, covering the border closure by truckers in late January and early February this year; Rebel has just released an hour-long documentary out of the coverage. It managed to capture the "raw democracy" at the grassroots level and the actual negotiations with the police (RCMP). Getting local MLAs on board was the key to success. Here’s the link to the documentary: https://www.rebelnews.com/trucker_rebellion_the_story_of_the_coutts_blockade_premiere?utm_campaign=ks_couttsrelease_8_19_22&utm_medium=email&utm_source=therebel
It is not every time that a grassroots protest is successful in effecting major political change, but the closing of the US/Canada border at Coutts did exactly that. Before the protest, every single province in Canada had numerous zany mandates. But once the protesters at Coutts managed to force Premier Jason Kenny to drop Alberta's mandates, all the other provinces followed suit within one month (as if each province was scared to be first). Personally, I suspect that the success of Coutts was what really freaked out the federal Liberals and got them to invoke the Emergencies Act almost as a knee-jerk reaction (a reaction which, many of us hope, they will live to regret). Only 3 months after the Coutts incident, Jason Kenny was voted down as the province's leader during a leadership review largely due to virtually every freedom fighter in Alberta purchasing a party membership in order to vote... Kenny’s replacement has not yet been chosen.
A Couple of Canadian Service Announcements…
1 - The Public Order Emergency Commission – which was created to inquire into the circumstances that led to the declaration of emergency on February 14, 2022, and the measures taken for dealing with the emergency – has opened the public submission process to allow Canadians to share their views and experiences on all aspects of the Commission’s mandate. Guidance on the production and submission of emails/letters, including a recommended submission deadline of early September is provided here: https://publicorderemergencycommission.ca/ The public hearings will be starting on September 19, which will receive extensive (live, I believe) coverage by various Canadian alt media sources.
2 – Rebel News reporters were in Coutts, Alberta, covering the border closure by truckers in late January and early February this year; Rebel has just released an hour-long documentary out of the coverage. It managed to capture the "raw democracy" at the grassroots level and the actual negotiations with the police (RCMP). Getting local MLAs on board was the key to success. Here’s the link to the documentary: https://www.rebelnews.com/trucker_rebellion_the_story_of_the_coutts_blockade_premiere?utm_campaign=ks_couttsrelease_8_19_22&utm_medium=email&utm_source=therebel
It is not every time that a grassroots protest is successful in effecting major political change, but the closing of the US/Canada border at Coutts did exactly that. Before the protest, every single province in Canada had numerous zany mandates. But once the protesters at Coutts managed to force Premier Jason Kenny to drop Alberta's mandates, all the other provinces followed suit within one month (as if each province was scared to be first). Personally, I suspect that the success of Coutts was what really freaked out the federal Liberals and got them to invoke the Emergencies Act almost as a knee-jerk reaction (a reaction which, many of us hope, they will live to regret). Only 3 months after the Coutts incident, Jason Kenny was voted down as the province's leader during a leadership review largely due to virtually every freedom fighter in Alberta purchasing a party membership in order to vote... Kenny’s replacement has not yet been chosen.
Ron M