For my Canadian friends

I think this will be my last post on this topic until tomorrow when we've got the results

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Kathleen Smith

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The images that will stay with me - nay, haunt me - long after this election is over: Mark Carney standing silently with Vancouver’s Filipino community, at a vigil for the victims of yesterday’s horrific event, juxtaposed against the images of Pierre and Anaida Poilievre, celebrating on stage at a rally in his home riding.

One of these men rearranged his final campaign stops, cancelling 3, rescheduling 1, so that he could be where he should be tonight.

The other immediately referred to the event as an “attack” (before police had even held a news conference), then used the horrific events of yesterday to push out a disgusting video that makes what happened about “catch and release”, when the suspect is known to police thru mental health issues - not criminal activity - and after all that politicizing of lives lost in Vancouver, he chose to go to a rally as opposed to standing with those who are mourning

One of these men knows the seriousness of the moment, in every serious moment.

The other has failed to meet the moment, time and time again.

This shouldn’t even be a contest. But for those who still haven’t made up their minds, this moment should be the tipping point for you.

Barring any huge developments, this wiil serve as my last post about these two campaigns. Because if a picture is worth a thousand words, these two images are a dissertation on the choice Canadians had to make in this election.

I have faith we got it right.
 
Liberal minority:

Liberals: 168
Conservative: 144
Bloc: 24
NDP: 7
Green: 1

Carney won his seat and is PM. Poilievre lost his seat. So did Singh (leader of the NDP) who said he will step down.
 
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Canadians Against Pierre Poilievre

Mxty Boivin ·

BREAKING: MASS EXODUS OF FAR-RIGHT CANADIANS BEGINS

“We came here looking for a place where we could be racist and implement policies of fascism. Now we’re being told everyone has rights?”

As the final election results rolled in, panic erupted among Canada’s far-right. Sources confirm a mass exodus is now underway, with caravans of disillusioned patriots fleeing a country they claim has been “taken over by facts, empathy, and minorities with opinions.”

“I saw a pride flag next to a Treaty Land Acknowledgment and I just screamed,” said one man, tearfully zip-tying a Canadian flag to his snowmobile. “This used to be a place where I could yell about freedom while trying to take it away from everyone else.”

Leading the U-Haul convoy is disgraced former candidate Bierre Polimere, who broke down mid-rant outside a Florida-bound Esso:

“My best friend whose name I cannot share — the guy who once got kicked out of a curling bonspiel for yelling ‘go woke, go broke’ at the ice — just lost his seat in the election to a guy so fruity his last name has joy in it. Joy!

What’s next? Banning the Canadian Tire catalogue for not being inclusive enough? I didn’t sign up to lose to someone who smiles with their whole face. This is a national emergency.

We warned you. First they came for the slurs, then for the statues, and now? Now they’re using inclusive language and making eye contact in public. I’m done. I’m going where real men cry only during UFC entrances — Florida.”

The so-called “Freedom Convoy 2: Bye Now” has been spotted across provincial borders, armed with rage, expired passports, and the firm belief that they are the real victims.

Economists say Canada’s main losses from the exodus will be:

– Facebook rants
– Confederate flags repurposed as window curtains
– And long, meandering stories that begin with “I’m not racist, but…”
 
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