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CHILLING: Mark Carney Plans Implementation of a POLICE STATE in Canada within Weeks

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Canada’s C-2, C-8, C-9 Bills allow the state the power to spy, censor, search and silence Canadians in the name of ‘safety’ and 'convenience'.


The Canadian government is about to turn the country into a police state.  They are about to introduce three new laws, all seemingly harmless, all seemingly just 'admin', but combined they effectively end every Canadian’s right to privacy, free speech, and a fair trial.  If that weren’t chilling enough, failure to comply with the new laws, even inadvertently saying something the government doesn’t like, you could face a $50,000 fine and long jail-time.  


Bill C-2 - Mass Surveillance

First there’s Bill C-2.  Officially called the Strong Borders Act, This legislation would empowers authorities to open private letters of any Canadian without a warrant, criminalise the use of cash for transactions over $10,000, and gives an army of government officials — not police — the power to conduct warrantless searches of Canadians’ computers and cell phones.


Bill C-8 - Lawfare

Next is Bill C-8:  the Cyber Security Act . This legislation gives federal cabinet ministers the power to kick individual Canadians off the Internet entirely. It allows the government to demand subscriber information, designate any company as a “designated operator”, and impose sweeping regulations on those companies.


If a minister demands information, the company must hand it over. If the company suffers losses as a result, the law offers no compensation. Individuals face administrative penalties of up to $50,000 per day, while companies could be fined up to $15 million.


In theory, Canadians could challenge this in court — but practically speaking, only someone with at least $100,000 to fund legal action would stand a chance. For most people, there is no real remedy. Under C-8, the government could remove someone’s access to the Internet and strip them of fundamental rights without proper justification or recourse.


Bill C-9 Mass Censorship

Then there’s Bill C-9, the so-called Combating Act. This legislation would lead to more Canadians being prosecuted not for what they’ve done, but for what they’ve said or written. C-9 eliminates the current legal requirement that speech-related prosecutions be reviewed by the Attorney General, stripping away an important safeguard. It also allows judges to impose much longer jail sentences if they feel that a hateful emotion played a role in the alleged crime.


The government claims these powers are necessary to defend against hackers and hostile foreign actors. But hacking and cybercrime are already illegal under the Criminal Code. The government already has the tools it needs to protect Canadians — it simply wants more power.


Freedoms are fragile. It’s critical that every Member of Parliament — whether Liberal, Conservative, NDP, or Green — understands what’s at stake. Canadians must demand that Parliament vote against Bill C-2, Bill C-8, Bill C-9, and reject the return of the Online Harms Act. This isn’t a partisan issue. It’s a fight for the basic freedoms that define Canada.


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