Sunday 25 August 2019

Canadian Political History of Treason Are you a SLAVE?


Canadian Political History of Treason Are you a SLAVE?

by Dallas Hills

  • Posted by DallasBC on September 11, 2014 at 3:00pm
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    Canadian Political History of Treason
    Are you a SLAVE?
    We will look at the most dangerous and corrupt legislation that destroyed the Corporation of Canada in 1974 - the year they decided to STOP USING THE BANK OF CANADA.

    This Article is going to exam Each Prime Minister since the Foundation of Canada - and show evidence Canada has been hijacked by ruthless corruption 

    We need to connect the DOTS as one would say.
    One of the biggest questions I encounter when talking about restoring the Bank of Canada, is who changed the policy in 1974? And who is responsible for the Trillion dollar robbery since then?

    First we must look at who was in political power at the time and who held the key positions. Also understand how they ALL climbed the latter to become Prime Minister of Canada and who funded them.
    Now let’s take a look at the Political Parties involved and Prime Ministers before and after and connect the dots.
    Crime Minister: Pierre Trudeau

    Pierre Trudeau was a Communist








    Justin Trudeau- born and raised a communist


    Minister of Finance: John Turner
    Left to Right -Pierre Trudeau, John Turner,Jean Chretien, Lester Pearson
    Governor of the Bank of Canada: Gerald Bouey

    Because of the Criminal changes to the Bank of Canada in 1974 our national debt has skyrocketed from 21.6 billion to 588 billion in three short years in 1977.
     Liberal - William Lyon Mackenzie King, He served as the tenth Prime Minister of Canada from December 29, 1921 to June 28, 1926; from September 25, 1926 to August 7, 1930;

    This Article is going to exam Each Prime Minister since the Foundation of Canada - and show evidence Canada has been hijacked by ruthless corruption 
    Conservative - Richard Bedford Bennett Prime Minister August 7, 1930 - October 23, 1935







    He was a vigorous debater, not afraid of challenges, confident, perhaps too confident, of his own knowledge. In the subsequent litigation deriving from this issue that pitted the province against the Royal Bank of Canada [see Arthur Lewis Watkins Sifton*], he acted for the bank and would ultimately be successful in 1913 on appeal to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.

    Bennett was that rare being, a successful Alberta Conservative,  embracing workmen’s compensation, trade unions, government grain elevators, and government control of freight rates. As he put it in his maiden speech in the commons, 20 Nov. 1911, 

    “The great struggle of the future will be between human rights and property interests; and it is the duty and the function of government to provide that there shall be no undue regard for the latter that limits or lessens the other.”
    ” He believed in Borden’s Naval Aid Bill of 1912–13  He thought that the self-governing nations within the empire should be federated, that there must be recognition, “of common interests, common traditions, & above all common responsibilities and obligations.” “I hold out to this House,” 

     “the vision of a wider hope, the hope that one day this Dominion will be the dominant factor in that great federation.” The Naval Aid Bill nevertheless foundered in the Liberal-dominated Senate.

    Bennett was a maverick, his views on Canadian railways, tariffs, and Canada’s position within the empire not always conforming to party policy. 

    Bennett needed neither position nor money
    ; his object was to put his knowledge and experience at the service of his country. He wrote Borden an aggrieved 20-page letter. There was no reply.

    On 1 July 1920 Sir Robert Borden resigned, worn out with the war, Versailles, and politics. To strengthen his government he asked Bennett to be minister of justice. Canada was in disarray socially and politically: a post-war recession, rising unemployment, continued labour unrest

    Bennett’s return to Ottawa he was sworn in to a clutch of portfolios: minister of finance, acting minister of mines, acting minister of the interior, and acting superintendent general of Indian affairs. 

    One of the principal issues in 1927 was old-age pensions, which Bennett strongly favoured.  

    Bennett was also an advocate of unemployment insurance 

    Unemployment insurance should be funded by premiums paid by both the person concerned and the government, he argued. The subscription principle would encourage economy and industry. But Heaps’s proposals were voted down. Another major debate in 1927 arose over the administration of war pensions, mainly the narrow way entitlement was being viewed by the Board of Pension Commissioners. Bennett said the Pension Act was being handled too harshly, putting on the applicant the onus of proving his case. 

     “Shall we be statesmen or politicians?” he asked in one debate.

    His acceptance speech was sincerity and sentiment. He admitted being rich, but stressed that he had made his money from hard work. As elected leader, he would resign his company directorships. “No man may serve you as he should if he has over his shoulder always the shadow of pecuniary obligations.” Service to Canada would be his motto; out of Mark 9:35 he would be “servant of all.”

    He was not, however, without rueful reflections about his role: “Sometimes I wonder why I ever undertook this work at my time of life, after all my years of toil and effort.” 

    There were not sufficient women candidates. Liberals were running women in hopeless constituencies simply to attract the female vote. Bennett wanted them in safe seats but was unable to persuade the constituencies. 

    There were plenty of issues. After some years of steadily increasing prosperity, the stock market crash of 1929 and a collapse in the price of natural products had begun to undermine the Canadian economy.

     Unemployment was greatly on the rise, and there was no security net. King’s angry assertion in April 1930 that he would not give any provincial Tory government even a five-cent piece to help with joblessness was exploited by the Conservatives in cartoons and speeches. Bennett promised employment, through tariff protection for Canadian industries and a large program of public works. It was the issue that won him the election.

     Bennett himself took on Finance besides the portfolio usual to the prime minister, External Affairs (which he almost single-handedly saved from extinction, his caucus wanting to abolish it).

     He knew so much and hated to see questions incompetently handled; he found it difficult to praise those who did not meet his standards.

    Bennett took office with action on his mind. Action he had promised and action Canada got. A special session of parliament was called for 8 September. He believed that tariffs were necessary not only to keep Canada independent of the United States but to create markets for Canadian producers, so tariff revision, steeply upward on a range of manufactured goods, was instituted.

     The emergency Unemployment Relief Act, providing $20 million for public works at the federal and local levels, was also passed. Parliament prorogued in two weeks. Then it was organization for the Imperial Conference in London, which was to start on 30 September and which Bennett hoped would provide a solution to Canada’s economic difficulties through the establishment of a reciprocal preference in trade. The conference was mostly a Canadian idea but Canadians would be a day late for it.

     Bennett came to the point. “I offer to the Mother Country and to all the other parts of the Empire, a preference in the Canadian market in exchange for a like preference in theirs.” The proposal was bold, blunt, and frank. It left the British government, committed to free trade, in shock. By that weekend the British papers were full of Bennett and Canada. “Empire or not? "

     Unemployment and Farm Relief Act was passed to provide funds for further public works as well as direct relief (more than $28 million would be spent and similar acts would be passed in 1932, 1933, 1934, and 1935). Bennett also began to try to find ways to help market the wheat crop, efforts that would culminate in the establishment of the Canadian Wheat Board in 1935.

     “We no longer live in a political Empire,” Bennett declared after the adoption that year of the Statute of Westminster, which gave Canada and the other dominions autonomy in external relations. But he still hoped to construct “a new economic Empire.” 

     His ideal continued to be an imperial preferential trade arrangement in which Canada would “play a part of ever-increasing importance.”  Meantime Britain introduced a general tariff of 10 per cent, a development that gave some encouragement to Bennett’s hopes.

     Bennett was unerring in his judgement of able financial men. 

    When the conference opened in the Parliament Buildings on 21 July, Bennett was chosen to chair it. His opening speech suggested that Britain might have free entry into Canada for any products that would “not injuriously affect Canadian enterprise.”  and there was intense lobbying by Canadian industrialists on cotton, coal, iron, and steel. Bennett did not want to wreck his own conference, but he and his cabinet colleagues believed that Britain was offering very little. 

    What emerged from the Ottawa conference was not any great imperial economic principle but hard-fought bilateral treaties.  In a few years, Canadian exports to Britain were up 60 per cent; Britain’s to Canada were up 5.

     Canada was being inundated with American programs, hence American values. In December 1928 the King government  to inquire into radio broadcasting. Its report the following September was a model of concision and decision. . Radio, it maintained, had to be Canadian, English and French, but Canadian. Existing radio offered too much entertainment and not enough education. 

    To these conclusions the leaders in the commons all subscribed, King, Bennett, and James Shaver Woodsworth, who headed the Labour group. The problem was how to put them into effect. Where lay the constitutional authority to regulate radio? Quebec claimed it fell within provincial jurisdiction. King had shied away from the question; Bennett acted as soon as he returned from London in December 1930. A reference was made to the Supreme Court of Canada and on 30 June 1931 it decided for the federal government. Quebec appealed to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, supported by Ontario. Judgement was given in London on 9 Feb. 1932 in favour of Ottawa.

    Radio was of surpassing importance, essential in nation building, and with a high educational value.  Only public ownership could ensure to all Canadians the service of radio; no Canadian government was justified in leaving the airwaves to private exploitation. The House of Commons approved overwhelmingly the act setting up the CRBC.

    The following year the country was facing even graver difficulties. Unemployment had reached 27 per cent of the workforce, as high as in the United States. On the prairies, drought, crop failures, and soil erosion continued, turning especially southern Saskatchewan into a dust bowl. The government’s budgetary deficit stood at $150 million and more than a million and a half Canadians were dependent on direct relief. The work camps for unemployed single men that had been set up in 1932 under the aegis of the Department of National Defence were becoming hotbeds of discontent. Everywhere established institutions seemed to be under threat. Bennett was doing the best he could to weather the economic storm; the problem was, as he told Sir Robert Borden, “that we are subject to the play of forces which we did not create and which we cannot either regulate or control.” People demanded action, but “any action at this time except to maintain the ship of state on an even keel . . . involves possible consequences about which I hesitate even to think.”

    The pervasive feel of the depression was of this very helplessness. watching the freight trains going by with men riding to unknown destinations and for unknown purposes, battered and bruised by economic forces over which they had no control.

    By 4 March 1933, the day Franklin Delano Roosevelt was sworn in as president of the United States, almost every bank in the United States had locked its doors. The Canadian banking system had stood up well – there had not been a Canadian bank failure since 1923 – but there was urgent need of a central bank to regulate credit. announced there would be a royal commission on banking and currency in Canada. 

     The legislation passed almost unanimously in 1934 and the Bank of Canada was established the following year with Graham Ford Towers* as its first governor. The chartered banks did not like it; they had to give up their profitable issue of bank notes in favour of a national currency, and they were required to transfer their gold reserves to the Bank of Canada. For the gold, they sought a much higher price than they had paid, a demand Bennett thought iniquitous. R. B. said to James Herbert Stitt, mp for Selkirk, who asked about it, “his eyebrows bristling like quills . . . ‘Jimmie Stitt, you quit worrying. We are going to get that gold and it is just about time for us to find out whether the banks or this government is running this country.’”

    There was other legislation in 1934. The Farmers’ Creditors Arrangement Act was designed to allow families to remain on their farms rather than lose them to foreclosure.  The Public Works Construction Act launched a federal building program, worth $40 million, aimed at getting the unemployed back to work. A special committee (which later became a royal commission) headed by H. H. Stevens was set up to investigate mass buying by large businesses and the difference between the prices received by producers and the prices consumers were being charged. But Bennett considered the Bank of Canada his best domestic achievement.

    Nevertheless, his government found the going difficult. “It may be too late,” Manion had reflected as early as 9 Dec. 1933, “to save the party from deluge.” In 1934 Conservatives lost provincial elections in both Ontario and Saskatchewan; they also lost four of five federal by-elections in September 1934. There were increasing doubts within the party that they could win a general election. Then in October the popular Stevens, having in the eyes of many in the cabinet overstepped the mark in his criticism of Canadian capitalists, was forced to resign his portfolio.

    The Bennett New Deal of 1935, promising federal government intervention to achieve social and economic reform, arose from that political anguish. It was also genuine Bennett, policies he had espoused for many years, with roots in his own political instincts. He had long believed in old-age pensions, unemployment insurance, and labour unions. What was new was the strong rhetoric devised by William Herridge and Bennett’s executive assistant Roderick K. Finlayson and delivered by Bennett in incisive radio speeches. “The old order is gone,” Bennett announced. “If you believe things should be left as they are you and I hold irreconcilable views. I am for reform. And, in my mind, reform means Government intervention. . . . It means the end of laissez-faire.” According to Manion, the New Deal speeches had not been discussed in cabinet. The centrepiece of Bennett’s program was the Employment and Social Insurance Act. It was followed by bills introducing a minimum wage, an eight-hour day, and a 48-hour work week. There were doubts about the constitutionality of these measures, but with elections due in a few months that was worth risking.

     The strategy was thwarted by two things: King’s clever tactic of saying very little and, more to the point, Bennett’s illness. In February it was just a bad cold, but on 7 March atrial fibrillation of the heart was diagnosed. The doctors said he needed to rest for a month. His health was excuse sufficient that, had he chosen to retire then, it might have been managed. But the party would have had to select a new leader. The temporary house leader was Sir George Halsey Perley*, 77 years old, in voice and physique wasted and feeble; the leadership would probably have then devolved on H. H. Stevens, whom Bennett would not have had at any price. In Bennett’s absence more New Deal legislation was passed, especially the important Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act, which set in motion a mighty enterprise that would eventually teach 100,000 farmers how to handle and restore the dust bowl in southern Saskatchewan. 

     The Canadian Wheat Board Act was then passed, as was a supplementary public works bill providing another $18 million for construction projects. Legislation was also approved to implement some of the recommendations of the price spreads commission, including the establishment of the Dominion Trade and Industry Commission to regulate business activity.

     If Bennett was hard with the bankers of 1934, he was much more so with the trekkers of 1935, who threatened to disrupt law and order. The trek did not need to end the way it did, with a Dominion Day riot in Regina, the killing of a policeman, and many injuries, one case leading to the death of a trekker, Nicholas John Schaack*, three months later; better communications between Ottawa and the Saskatchewan government might have avoided it. Bennett with his back up could be a chalcenterous animal.

     Bennett distrusted public disorder. Strikes when legitimate he accepted, as disagreements inevitable over work or wages. But public law and order were to him fundamental. He hated the Communists with their too clever tactics at undermining the state. He himself was fearless and outspoken, able to face down and even convert a hostile crowd. There are many worse things in the world, Bennett would have said, than “Peace, Order, and good Government.” In his mind that was what Canada was all about.

     Bennett fought a stirring campaign. But he was not sanguine, believing that Stevens had “crucified” the party. Bennett was indeed defeated on 14 Oct. 1935, but in terms of the popular vote it was not a massive defeat. The Liberals really had no policy; they expected the depression would defeat Bennett and the depression did exactly that.

    Seats in the House of Commons were quite another matter: the Liberals took 173, the Conservatives 40, and the other parties 32. The Reconstruction Party won only one, Stevens being elected, but their 8.7 per cent of the popular vote had cut deeply into Conservative seats. Stevens’s defection owed not a little to Bennett himself. Stevens and the wide sympathy that his price spreads commission evoked ought not to have been allowed to get away. The most popular politician nationally that the Conservatives had, Stevens should have been tolerated, even cosseted. Bennett was incapable of it. The Toronto Evening Telegram remarked about Bennett the day after the election, a “great statesman [was] defeated by a poor politician.”

    For the next three years Bennett was a model opposition leader; indeed, government legislation was often improved by his interventions. In 1936 he was in the house almost every day, the most faithful of his party in his duty to parliament. Ostensibly he bore no grudges; he seemed to have accepted that the Canadian people who had suffered so much in the depression would want to punish the government. But he had given so greatly of himself, his energy, his health, and his fortune to captain the Canadian ship through that storm, he was hurt that so few Canadians seemed to be cognizant of his sacrifices. His charities, which were private, had become a huge burden. The requests he received in a single week “make life almost unbearable.” He estimated that in the years 1927–37 he had spent $2.3 million. His benevolence was in fact outrunning his income.

     When Bennett came to speak he was transformed: his moral force, his booming voice, his sheer bravura triumphed over hecklers, over everybody. Hutchison had never seen anything like it. Bennett did the same with an even noisier Vancouver crowd the next night. Now in the spring of 1937 there seemed to be a newer Bennett, relaxed, his leg thrown casually over the arm of a chair in his office, talking almost continually about politics, Alexander the Great, Ming pottery, and the military geography of the South African War.

    After the abdication of Edward VIII in December 1936 (“. . . speak / Of one that lov’d not wisely but too well,” Bennett quoted Othello in the House of Commons) Bennett and Mildred went to London for the coronation of George VI and then to a spa in Germany. He checked in at 228 pounds. Even for a man six feet tall, he was heavy; maple sugar and chocolates had taken their toll. His English doctor told him to lose at least 10 pounds to ease the strain on his heart. That autumn of 1937 Bennett discussed retirement, but the party persuaded him to carry on. By March 1938 he knew he could not continue. King could call an election any time and Bennett was now incapable of taking his party through it. He resigned on 6 March 1938, but stayed on until a new leader was chosen in July. 

    There came a flood of appreciations for his work, including one from King; Bennett’s replies suggested that the compliments would have meant a great deal more to him had they come three to four years earlier, when the going was really difficult.

    Saturday, 28 Jan. 1939. There was a luncheon aboard for 292; there were toasts and tears and Byron: “Fare thee well! and if for ever, / Still for ever, fare thee well.” He resigned his seat as mp for Calgary West that day. The Montclare sailed in the evening.

     April 1938 letter from Harold Adams Innis*, professor of economics at the University of Toronto, when Bennett resigned the Conservative leadership: “Your leadership of the party especially during the years when you were Prime Minister was marked by a distinction which has not been surpassed. . . . No one has ever been asked to carry the burdens of unprecedented depression such as you assumed and no one could have shouldered them with such ability. I am confident that we shall look to those years as landmarks in Canadian history because of your energy and direction.”

    No Canadian prime minister served Canada at greater personal cost, cost to his health and well-being, his own fortune, and even, be it said, his historical reputation. No Canadian prime minister deserved less the obloquy he received. He took Canada through the hardest years of the depression, and he did it with courage and determination. He put in place institutions and social policies that Canadians still have and still cherish. Despite his failings, perhaps he should be cherished too.



    Liberal - William Lyon Mackenzie King was re-elected Prime Minister from October 23, 1935 to November 15, 1948.
    Quotes by Former Prime Ministers and Presidents
    King was first elected to Parliament as a Liberal in a 1908 by-election, and was re-elected by acclamation in a 1909 by-election following his  He lost his seat in the 1911 general election, which saw the Conservatives defeat his Liberals.


    The mother of Canadian Senate scandals
    The Beauharnois scandal in 1931 embroiled William Lyon Mackenzie King in a crisis over a massive hydroelectric power development on the St. Lawrence River.

    Senate scandals, like the current one involving the trial of Senator Mike Duffy, are not new. In 1931, the Liberals and their leader William Lyon Mackenzie King, who had lost the federal election to R.B. Bennett and the Conservatives a year earlier, became embroiled in the Beauharnois Scandal. At issue was whether or not the King government had been paid off by Robert Sweezy of the Beauharnois Light, Heat and Power Company, who donated millions of dollars to the Liberal federal campaign in 1930.

    In March 1929, the Liberal cabinet through an order-in-council had approved the massive Beauharnois hydroelectric power development on the St. Lawrence River. Three key Liberal senators and friends of Mackenzie King, W.L. McDougald, Andrew Haydon and Donat Raymond were either shareholders of the company or, in the case of Haydon, connected through his Ottawa law firm. McDougald, who had donated to a secret party fund organized by Liberal stalwart Peter Larkin, a Toronto tea merchant, to help King financially (fairly routine in those years), was cast as the scapegoat of this melodrama.

    In 1931, Bennett appointed a parliamentary committee to investigate the Beauharnois deal and all of the sordid details of the Liberals’ links to the company. Just as the actions of Prime Minister Stephen Harper surrounding Nigel Wright’s $90,000 repayment of Duffy’s expenses are now front and centre—what he knew, when he knew it and why did everyone around him know—so too were questions raised about King’s knowledge of insider lobbying and alleged payoffs, as told in this adapted excerpt from Allan Levine’s biography, King: William Lyon Mackenzie King: A Life Guided by the Hand of Destiny (2011).


    Like a deer caught in headlights, Mackenzie King was stunned by the exposé [of Beauharnois’s financial details]. “I confess I am amazed at some of the things that are being disclosed of which I have known nothing,” he wrote on July 10, 1931. All three Liberal-appointed senators were summoned to testify before the committee. Raymond had little to tell, and Haydon had had a heart attack and was unable to testify. McDougald, after some prodding, did answer the committee’s numerous queries, but not until July 20, which caused King great anxiety.


    From the start of the committee’s investigation, King felt that there was an implication fostered by McDougald that he had a special association with King. That may well have been so, but King, growing tenser by the day in the heat of July, was prepared to disavow such a relationship. “It would seem that McDougald had tried to leave the impression that his friendship with me gave him an influence in Ottawa he did not possess,” King wrote angrily in his diary. “I have nothing to hide and have no reason to shield McDougald in any way, beyond his having been a friend of the party in its time of need during 1921. 

    The extent to which he had misled others in relation to myself, he himself will have to answer for. It would look as though he had deliberately ‘used’ me to further his ends… The truth is Beauharnois meant nothing to me in any way till [Montreal businessman Frank] Jones and his group applied for the approval… I did not know of any connection with McDougald in the matter.”

    There was yet more to come. Hidden in the mass of paper the Commons committee scrutinized was a bill from McDougald’s office for the $852.32 incurred on the trips to Bermuda and New York in the spring of 1930 [that King, Haydon and McDougald had taken]. 

    In other words, it appeared as if the Beauharnois company had paid for King’s vacation. When Ian Mackenzie of Vancouver, the Liberal member on the committee, informed King about this he was “amazed” and furious. He explained his recollection of the trip to Mackenzie and others, which he was compelled to do several more times in the course of the investigation. In King’s version, he and Haydon had gone together to Bermuda and McDougald had “joined” them there, and without his knowledge, McDougald had paid the hotel bill.

    When the story of the scandal was made public, King decided to adopt a proactive strategy and issued a statement in the House of Commons in which he denied any knowledge of what had transpired and said he knew nothing of McDougald’s submission of the bill to Beauharnois, had not talked about Beauharnois with either McDougald or Haydon and had been surprised that McDougald had settled the Bermuda hotel account. He failed to address the obvious question that if he was so troubled by McDougald’s payment, why had he not given him the money back? The hotel bill was clearly an error, and most journalists interpreted it that way.

    As calm as King appeared when he made his remarks in the House, he was in a real panic over McDougald’s impending appearance before the committee. This anxiety was heightened by his tremendous fear that McDougald would reveal the closely guarded secret of the Peter Larkin trust fund.

    The committee room was overflowing on July 20. Much to King’s relief, McDougald was “calm and collected” and answered all of the questions posed to him about his Beauharnois stock purchase in a professional manner. Best of all, he declared that he had nothing to do with the election campaign funds given by Robert Sweezy to Haydon, nor did he reveal anything about the Liberal fund set up for King’s use. Furthermore, he explained that the hotel bill was a secretarial error and that Beauharnois never paid for King’s travel expenses.

    Unlike the recent sponsorship scandal and corrupt misuse of public money in Quebec, no crimes were committed with Beauharnois and no one was sent to jail. But guilty parties were named and punishment meted out accordingly. The official report was full of condemnation—for the promoters of the project, their financial manipulations and overt attempt to buy Liberal Party support, as well as for Senators McDougald and Haydon for their conduct and blatant conflict of interest. The report was slightly less harsh on Donat Raymond. Nothing was written about King’s actions or that of any other politicians involved in the project.

    King failed to address the obvious question that if he was so troubled by McDougald’s payment, why had he not given him the money back?

    In an effort to cleanse his and the party’s soul, King responded to the damaging issues raised in the report in a heartrending three-and-a-half-hour speech he delivered in the House of Commons. He was contrite, but to a point. No untoward influence had been brought to bear on him, he told himself, and, in a classic case of wilful blindness, he claimed that he had no knowledge of the hundreds of thousands of dollars of campaign funds Sweezy and Beauharnois sent to the Liberals.

    The Beauharnois ordeal was not quite over. Under substantial pressure, Sweezy was forced to resign as president of the company. McDougald also lost his position as head of the Beauharnois board of directors. The real trouble for McDougald was in the Senate, where the former Conservative prime minister Arthur Meighen had been appointed government leader in February 1932. 

    Confrontational and partisan as ever, Meighen wanted to expel McDougald as well as Haydon and Raymond, which was easier said than done. A Senate inquiry was scheduled for the end of October 1931.

    At a tense meeting a bitter McDougald maintained that he had done nothing wrong. King disagreed and thought McDougald was being disingenuous. He pushed him to resign his Senate seat, which “would be best in the end.” Righteous as ever, King did not want his retirement fund tainted with what he regarded as dirty money. He informed McDougald that he intended to return his contribution to the Larkin fund. Understandably hurt by this suggestion, McDougald felt as if King was divorcing him from his life, which was precisely what happened, though King denied it at the time.

    Having reflected on his position further, McDougald became more defiant and was determined not to resign. He faced the Senate inquiry committee and once more answered questions without saying anything revealing. The same thing went for Raymond. Andrew Haydon’s health, however, was worse. He had not recovered from his heart attack and was unable to appear. Instead, he wrote out a statement, with input from King and his attorneys, and the committee questioned him twice at his home with a physician present. When it was over, the Senate committee’s report censured both McDougald and Haydon for acting in a manner “unfitting and inconsistent” with their positions as senators. 

    Raymond was merely criticized for his conduct as a Liberal Party fundraiser and for accepting money from a corporation with which he had financial ties. McDougald had no more room to manoeuvre. Following a negotiated deal, which guaranteed an end to the investigations, he finally resigned his Senate seat.

    As explosive and juicy as the details of the Beauharnois Scandal were, its exposure and investigations did not end partisanship, Senate appointments for party hacks, questionable lobbying practices or the incestuous relationship between Canadian big business and the major political parties. Moreover, the Beauharnois hydroelectric project continued, and by the time its third phase was completed in 1961 the scandal was forgotten.
    ——————————–
    The King-Byng crisis of 1926 is still paying it forward nearly a century later

    A new look
    at some of the events that our collective conscious has decreed as disasters, and find the surprising upsides.

    Nearly a century on, the King-Byng affair of 1926 is still considered the mother of all constitutional crises in Canada and the example everyone turns to when serious drama breaks out in Parliament.

    It all kicked off with a scandal involving customs officials taking bribes to overlook bootlegged U.S. liquor. Faced with censure in the House of Commons, a weakened Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King sought to have Parliament dissolved and a new election called.

    At this point, Mackenzie King had been in power for less than a year after the October 1925 election, and had hung onto power in a minority government despite having won fewer seats than his arch-rival, Conservative leader Arthur Meighen.

    Governor General Julian Byng was having none of it. He rejected Mackenzie King’s request and asked Meighen to try forming the government instead. Mackenzie King was outraged; he railed against Byng for having the gall to reject the advice of an elected leader

    Sir Julian Hedworth George Byng, Field Marshal and Viscount Byng of Vimy, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., M.V.O., who commanded the Canadian Corps during the Battle of Vimy Ridge and was the Governor General of Canada from 1921 to 1926  during the so-called King-Byng affair. Photo courtesy of George Metcalf Archival Collection

    At any rate, it didn’t last long. Within weeks, Meighan proved unable to keep the confidence of the House and a new election was called. Mackenzie King framed the campaign around the issue of a governor general (who at this time was still a British citizen) doing the bidding of London and interfering in how Canadian politicians run the country. And it worked: Mackenzie King won a majority government. He would go on to win three more elections afterward (and lost one in 1930).

    The whole messy affair was beneficial in the long run, though. It helped clarify the relationship between colonial Canada and the imperial centre in Britain, as there was still a sense in the 1920s that the governor general was there to supervise the dominion. In the years afterward — thanks in no small part to Mackenzie King’s insistence — it became firmly established that the governor general acted on the advice of Canadian ministers, not British ones. The Statute of Westminster, signed in 1931, further made it clear that Canada had legislative independence from the British Parliament.

    Though Canadian politics still sees moments of tricky situations around minority governments, few have been as controversial as the 2008 coalition crisis — and that’s when the King-Byng lessons paid off. Just weeks after Stephen Harper’s Conservatives won the election with a minority, the Liberals, NDP and Bloc Québécois announced an agreement to jointly defeat them and form a government. The catalyst was a fall fiscal update that included, among other things, a surprise cancelling of the per-vote subsidy that the opposition parties were more reliant on. The deal would make Stéphane Dion prime minister despite having already announced his resignation as Liberal leader.

    After much speculation over whether Governor General Michaëlle Jean should allow a new election if requested by Harper, it turned out that question was never put to her. Instead, Harper asked for a prorogation, and Jean agreed to the request.

     Parliament reconvened nearly two months later, Harper’s government survived, and went on to win the next election with a majority.

    For all the world of differences between 2008 and 1926, the debate over the governor general’s role was on much firmer ground. And the country avoided a coalition government that, in retrospect, was even shakier than it seemed at the time. Thanks, King-Byng affair

    King also forged the Letter of Pattenet , and years later was founf to be a frud 




    NOTE:  Conservative - Sir Robert Laird Borden Prime Minister October 10, 1911 - October 12, 1917 October 12, 1917 - July 10, 1920
    After his defeat King went on the lecture circuit on behalf of the Liberal Party.
    But then In June 1914 John D. Rockefeller, Jr. hired him as a Director [of the Rockefeller Foundation in New York City, heading their new Department of Industrial Research. It paid $12,000 per year, compared to the meager $2,500 per year the Liberal Party was paying.
    That big money five times his wage increase I wonder what Rockefeller needed.
    He worked for the Foundation until 1918, forming a close working association and friendship with Rockefeller, advising him through the turbulent period of the 1914 strike and Ludlow massacre at a family-owned coal company in Colorado, which subsequently set the stage for a new era King became one of the earliest expert practitioners in the emerging field of industrial relations.
    Working for the Rockefellers performing valuable service by helping to keep war-related industries running smoothly
    King expanded the Department of External Affairs, founded in 1909, to further promote Canadian autonomy from Britain.
    Prior to this, Canada had relied on British diplomats who owed their first loyalty to London.
    King recruited many high-calibre people for the new venture, including future Prime Minister Lester Pearson. This project was a key element of his overall strategy, setting Canada on a course independent of Britain.
    In domestic affairs King strengthened the Liberal policy of increasing the powers of the provincial governments by transferring to the governments of Manitoba, Alberta, and Saskatchewan the ownership of the crown lands within those provinces, as well as the subsoil rights; these in particular would become increasingly important, as petroleum and other natural resources proved very abundant.
    NOTE: King new centralized power is absolute power and absolute power corrupts.
    Canada's Central Bank Scam Prime Minister Paul Martin's Badly Kept Secret

    The people who knew didn’t stop it -  Paul Martin said he knew and he was Prime Minster of Canada, but he never stopped it WHY?
    Paul Martin was the Finance Minister during the Chretien government November 4, 1993 December 12, 2003
    An intriguing secret overhangs the federal election. Prime Minister Chretien appeared to have everything in the bag, so utterly was his control of information.
    He knew exactly what had brought on the financial bust of the late 1980s, and how the Private Banks had been bailed out by enabling them to quadruple their holdings of federal government bonds by being able to acquire them without putting up any of their own money. The statutory reserves - were some 8% to 10% of the deposits the banks received in their chequing accounts that had to be re-deposited on an interest-free basis with the Bank of Canada.
    Such reserves had been abolished in a bill sneaked through parliament in 1991 without debate or press release.
    Conservative - Martin Brian Mulroney September 17, 1984 - June 25, 1993
    When critics dug up the facts of that bailout, the banks cried indignantly:  "It was an unjust tax on the banks!" But it was no tax at all. From a "lender of the last resort", the government had simply moved into the position of "the donor of the first resort".
    Throughout the 1980s it had bailed out bankrupt banks. 
    And since the government of Canada is the sole shareholder of the Bank of Canada when it switched its borrowing from its own bank the Bank of Canada to the distressed banks, they lent back to the government some of the money it had bestowed on them as a gift.
    That was the secret of secrets, the dead rat beneath our floor boards that poisoned the very air politicians breathe.
    Yet Canadians, who pay, ultimately pay the shot in the GST every time they go into a store. They were the ones who really bailed out our banks. The details have been withheld from the public, but the total picture is revealed to them whenever they do a bit of shopping or drive over the potholes in our roads, or suffer from the crumbling of our infrastructure, to poverty and homeless people are the end results.
    Mulroney was well rewarded for his years of service and recognized recently with his 75 year birthday efforts and they held a Party For him - 

    Conservative  - Charles Joseph Clark  was Prime Minister June 4, 1979 - March 3, 1980 and April 20, 1968 - June 4, 1979
    Clark rose quickly in federal politics, entering the House of Commons in the 1972 election and winning the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party in 1976. He came to power in the 1979 election, defeating the Liberal government of Pierre Trudeau and ending sixteen years of continuous Liberal rule. Taking office the day before his 40th birthday, Clark is the youngest person to become Prime Minister. His tenure was brief as he only won a minority government, and it was defeated on a motion of non-confidence. Clark's Progressive Conservative Party lost the 1980 election and Clark lost the leadership of the party in 1983.
    Liberal John Napier Turner June 30, 1984 - September 17, 1984
    "Any country that is willing to surrender economic levers inevitably yields levers politically and surrenders a large chunk of its ability to remain a sovereign nation. I don't believe our future depends on our yielding those economic levers of sovereignty to become a junior partner in Fortress North America to the United States." -- John Turner, October 12, 1988

    Not the words one would expect to hear from a former company director on the subject of Free Trade. But despite his many years in business, John Turner's vision of Canada went beyond mere dollars and cents. He understood the risks involved in signing the Free Trade Agreement and he fought valiantly to persuade Canadians to defeat the party supporting it. And he almost won.

    Liberal - Pierre Elliott Trudeau March 3, 1980 - June 29, 1984
    As further proof of his "fiscal responsibility", he stashed away government revenue to "hide against a rainy day". It was in fact the part cost of keeping the sun shining on our banks' excursions into the US financial Wild West.
     Not only were these incompatible with their banking activities, but not particularly successful. They have already cost them a small fortune.
    But that was not enough, Mr. Martin got himself into an awful row behind closed doors with the Auditor-General of that day, Denis Desautels, on the government's practice of ignoring double entry bookkeeping.
    When it built a bridge, a school, or a penitentiary, it wrote off the spending in a single year while keeping the debt incurred on its books as a liability.
    After weeks of wrangling a compromise was reached in which this accrual accountancy (also known as `capital budgeting') would be introduced with respect only to the aboriginal peoples' accounts and the environment.
    That resulted in the discovery of an unrecognized surplus that he wore like a Purple Heart Cross.
    Yet under the terms of his settlement with the Auditor-General, the final balance sheets of the government would be subject to approval by the Auditor-General. Until that approval is forthcoming, Mr. Martin is as much in the dark about the government's balance-sheets as the general public.
     Accordingly it falls to the electorate to decide whether he really has been a prudent administrator, or has just bullied his auditor.
     Could it be that in Canada we reward them with 10-year runs as head of state?  That was the grand illusion of Mr. Martin's career. The time has come to prove him wrong.
    But surely, all these things are far too complicated for the ordinary elector to understand. Hence how did the public pierce the mystery and grasp the essential fact that Mr. Martin has been up to no great good.
    Thus Roy MacGregor (The Globe & Mail 7/06/04 ) sums up the situation" With voters putting the boots to Martin so early, it means the public attention span has ample time to wander over to those who might take his place. Two weeks ago the election was Paul Martin's to lose, and it appears he lost it almost instantly; today, it is Stephen Harper's to lose."
    This adds up to a crisis of our democratic system. The need for proportional representation, so that minority groups at present unrepresented in parliament will be able to demand vital information that is at present denied the major parties, or who simply fail to fight for it. Being a major party involves a massive dependence on major finances for TV ads, the attaches major parties to our banks with nose-rings.
    How then did Mr. Martin's secret get through to them despite its complexity that left Mr. Martin himself confused?
    We pay them 160 million dollars a day in interest
    The answer is simple. There has been a massive redistribution of the national income, and with the increasing break-down of or our infrastructure and the ongoing voracity of our banks, it continues, day and night.
    Heather Scoffield ( The Tories' $90-billion question" Globe and Mail 7/06) sums it up : "Both Tim O'Neill, chief economist of the Bank of Montreal and Dale Orr, managing director at Global Insight (Canada) recognize a scenario such as Conservatives as a viable option, as long as spending is frozen. On the other hand, most economists agree that keeping spending in check will involve cuts to some programs."
    That is the great secret that Mr. Martin could only add to, but not hide
    The last bailout of the Private Banks was no one-shot affair, but an ongoing entitlement. When two of our major banks have had fines imposed on them by the regulatory authorities in the US $80 million - quite apart from likely class actions for which they are setting aside reserves - that comes out of the hides of Canadian taxpayers.
    Vital information about Mr. Martin's fiscal prudence comes to voters whenever they go into a store and pay the GST that Mr. Martin as Liberal Finance Minister was supposed to do away with.
    You can fool the public three times with tales of self-aggrandizement, but the fourth time is a toughie these days.
    “Once a nation parts with the control of its currency and credit, it matters not who makes the nations laws. Usury, once in control, will wreck any nation. Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored to government and recognised as its most sacred responsibility, all talk of the sovereignty of parliament and of democracy is idle and futile.
    ― William Lyon Mackenzie King
    How Ironic King is now on the 50 dollar Canadian Bill when he was so against Private Banks. It’s not a Canadian bill; it’s a private bank bill with wording that says Canadian.
    Andrew Jackson - As a military officer he virtually acquired Florida by force of arms from Spain and defended New Orleans against the British. As President he fought the rewarding of government positions to party loyalists, paid of the US Debt and he abolished the Private Banking system from the US and established the position that an individual state could not nullify the laws of the land. He was a strong and competent President, but his treatment of the Native Americans was shameful.
    Video below
    If congress has the right under the Constitution to issue paper money, it was given them to use themselves, not to be delegated to individuals or corporations. -Andrew Jackson
    If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their  currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks…will deprive the people of  all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered…. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs. – Thomas Jefferson in the debate over the Re-charter of the Bank Bill (1809)“I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.” – Thomas Jefferson
    History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over governments by controlling money and its issuance. -James Madison
    President Jackson- ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATED
    Rothschild’s had lost a fierce battle with President Jackson with regard to keeping their Central Bank. For in 1834, Jackson removed all government deposits from the Rothschild’s “Second Bank in the United States.”
    President William McKinley ASSASSINATED
    A new System of National Banks was established in 1862 eliminating the Central Bank up through 1901. It was on September 6 1901 that President William McKinley was assassinated through the intrigues of the Rothschild’s and their hit-men.
    With McKinley out of the way, the path to the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was easily paved through of the House of Rothschild.
    President William McKinley was known as a “hard money” man. This was because he advocated a gold standard. McKinley was against “easy money” with no backing — printed by lenders at interest to the borrower - namely the US government.
    This was the essence of McKinley’s 1896 & 1900 successful campaign
    Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt had been groomed by the powerful Rothschild’s political machine to be the Governor of NY and future President of the United States. In 1900, McKinley was forced by Republican partisans to appoint “Teddy” Roosevelt as Vice President to get the “Jewish vote.” McKinley’s appointment of Roosevelt soon turned out to be his demise.
    The Government should create, issue, and circulate all the currency and credits needed to satisfy the spending power of the Government and the buying power of consumers. By the adoption of these principles, the taxpayers will be saved immense sums of interest. Money will cease to be master and become the servant of humanity. -Abraham Lincoln.
    Issue of currency should be lodged with the government and be protected from domination by Wall Street. We are opposed to…provision [which] would place our currency and credit system in private hands. – Theodore Roosevelt
    Despite these warnings, Woodrow Wilson signed the 1913 Federal Reserve Act. A few years later he wrote: I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men. We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most  completely controlled and dominated Governments in the civilized world no longer a  Government by free opinion, no longer a Government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a Government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men. -Woodrow Wilson.
    Years later, reflecting on the major banks’ control in Washington, President Franklin Roosevelt paid this indirect praise to his distant predecessor President Andrew Jackson, who had “killed” the 2nd Bank of the US (an earlier type of the Federal Reserve System). After Jackson’s administration the bankers’ influence was gradually restored and increased, culminating in the passage of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. Roosevelt knew this history.
    (In a letter to Colonel House, dated November 21, 1933)
    The real truth of the matter is, as you and I know, that a financial element in the large centers has owned the government ever since the days of Andrew Jackson… -Franklin D. Roosevelt
     (In a letter to Colonel House, dated November 21, 1933)
    When a government is dependent upon bankers for money, they and not the leaders of the government control the situation, since the hand that gives is above the hand that takes… Money has no motherland; financiers are without patriotism and without decency; their sole object is gain.” – Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France, 1815
    “The death of Lincoln was a disaster for Christendom. There was no man in the United States great enough to wear his boots and the bankers went anew to grab the riches. I fear that foreign bankers with their craftiness and tortuous tricks will entirely control the exuberant riches of America and use it to systematically corrupt civilization.” Otto von Bismark (1815-1898), German Chancellor, after the Lincoln assassination
    Mayer Amschel Rothschild
    “Let me issue and control a nation’s money and I care not who writes the laws.” Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), founder of the House of Rothschild.
    “The few who understand the system will either be so interested in its profits or be so dependent upon its favours that there will be no opposition from that class, while on the other hand, the great body of people, mentally incapable of comprehending the tremendous advantage that capital derives from the system, will bear its burdens without complaint, and perhaps without even suspecting that the system is inimical to their interests.” The Rothschild brothers of London writing to associates in New York, 1863.
    It has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with creating "revenue" or raising money to build roads and schools. That is a total delusion played off by both Republicans and Democrats to prevent people from realizing the far more powerful truth that federal income taxes aren't necessary at all.
    John F Kennedy  vs. The Federal Reserve
    On June 4, 1963, President John F. Kennedy signed Executive Order (EO) 11110 to compel the U.S. Treasury to issue paper certificates backed by silver held by the Treasury. The certificates directly challenged the authority of the Federal Reserve Bank to "loan" fiat (unbacked) money to the United States government at interest.
    Executive Order 11110
    AMENDMENT OF EXECUTIVE ORDER NO. 10289 AS AMENDED, RELATING TO THE PERFORMANCE OF CERTAIN FUNCTIONS AFFECTING THE DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. By virtue of the authority vested in me by section 301 of title 3 of the United States Code, it is ordered as follows:
    SECTION 1. Executive Order No. 10289 of September 19, 1951, as amended, is hereby further amended - (a) By adding at the end of paragraph 1 thereof the following subparagraph (j): "(j) The authority vested in the President by paragraph (b) of section 43 of the Act of May 12, 1933, as amended (31 U.S.C. 821 (b)), to issue silver certificates against any silver bullion, silver, or standard silver dollars in the Treasury not then held for redemption of any outstanding silver certificates, to prescribe the denominations of such silver certificates, and to coin standard silver dollars and subsidiary silver currency for their redemption," and (b) By revoking subparagraphs (b) and (c) of paragraph 2 thereof.
    SECTION 2. The amendment made by this Order shall not affect any act done, or any right accruing or accrued or any suit or proceeding had or commenced in any civil or criminal cause prior to the date of this Order but all such liabilities shall continue and may be enforced as if said amendments had not been made.
    JOHN F. KENNEDY, THE WHITE HOUSE, June 4, 1963
    John F Kennedy – ASSASSINATED
    On June 4, 1963, President Kennedy signed Executive Order 11110. The order could have—and should have—begun the process of ending the Federal Reserve money monopoly in America. Instead, President Kennedy was assassinated and a few months later the silver certificates he ordered into circulation were removed.
    One thing is for certain: Fiat money cannot compete with real money. Had President Kennedy and the silver certificates survived, the Federal Reserve would have been out of business
    Just some History for those who attempt to stop the Private banking Cartel what happens
    Back to Canada
    Prime Minister R.B. Bennett called for a Royal Commission in 1933, and it reported in favor of a Central Bank. The Bank began operations on March 11, 1935, after the passage of the Bank of Canada Act.
    Initially the Bank was founded as a privately owned corporation in order to ensure it was free from political influence.
     In 1938, under Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, it became a Crown Corporation, fully owned by the government with the Governor appointed by Cabinet.
    The responsibility for creating small bills was transferred from the Finance Department to the Bank of Canada and the private banks were ordered to remove their currency from circulation by 1945.
    The Bank of Canada played an important role in financing Canada's war effort during World War II. After the war, the Bank's role was expanded as it was mandated to encourage economic growth in Canada.
    The subsidiary Industrial Development Bank was formed to stimulate investment in Canadian businesses.
    The monetary policy of the Bank was geared towards low interest rates and full employment with little concern about inflation. When inflation began to raise in the early 1960s, the Governor, James Coyne ordered a reduction in the money supply.
    Now we see the change to our Bank of Canada coming slowly being re –rooted in stealth.
    Prime Minister John Diefenbaker disagreed with this move, and ordered a return to full employment policies.
    This caused a brief crisis because the Bank was supposed to be an arm’s length organization, not under political control.
    Coyne resigned, and was replaced by Louis Rasminsky.
    Louis Rasminsky, Governor of the Bank of Canada from 1961 to 1973, succeeding James Coyne He was succeeded by Gerald Bouey.
    NOTE: 1974 Bank of Canada stopped its Primary Role changed during Gerald Bouey was Governor of Bank of Canada.
    Prime Minister: Pierre Trudeau
    Minister of Finance: John Turner
    Governor of the Bank of Canada: Gerald Bouey
    Gerald Keith Bouey, was the fourth Governor of the Bank of Canada from 1973 to 1987
    In 1948 Bouey joined the Bank of Canada Research Department and became Assistant Chief in 1953, Deputy Chief in 1956 and Chief of Research in 1962. Bouey became Advisor to the Governor in 1965, Deputy Governor in 1969 and Governor in 1973.
    In 1981, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada and promoted to Companion in 1987.
    During  his role as Prime Minister Trudeau and former Governor of the Bank of Canada Gerald Bouey removed control of Canada's currency by allowing private banks to secretly control and print the public's money into existence rather than borrowing it at  Zero percent interest.
    NOTE: “In 1867 Canada’s debt was $94 million and it grew slowly until 1915, when WWI pushed the figure to $2.4 billion.
    During the Great Depression the debt rose to $5 billion, and by the end of WWII it had reached $18 billion.”
    Conservative - Prime Minister Martin Brian Mulroney September 17, 1984 - June 25, 1993 removed that restriction, so money “created” by any bank is imaginary.
    There was a small administrative fee, interest on bonds, but for purposes of this illustration, there was virtually zero interest. We were borrowing money from ourselves. $100 borrowed @ 0 interest is $100.
    All these Prime Ministers, Finance Minister, and every political party are the same. They may use different names or be a liberal, of Conservative but all on the same agenda. They removed our Bank of Canada deliberately and creating mass debt. Is this a crime YES?
    LIBERALS – CONSERVATIVES ARE TO CLOSE TO THE BANKS
    These are slow steps year after year to enslave the Canadian people.
    Canada’s deficit isn’t a problem of over-spending or having too many programs, it is a problem of paying compound interest to this Private Corporation. (Private Banks)
    Private Banks create money by putting an amount in the ledger (out of thin air). So far, public/private banks do the same. Private Banks, however, charge compound interest.
    For those who need a math refresher, compound interest means that interest is charged on the principal plus the interest so far accrued, ad infinitum.  So, $100 borrowed @ 3% interest becomes $103, $103 becomes $107, $107 becomes $110.21,  $110.21 becomes $113.50. And so on and son and so on. (Some numbers rounded.)
    You get the idea – a runaway train taking taxpayers’ money and transferring it via interest to the banksters. 
    This is wealth re-distribution on a monumental, unfathomable scale.  And people get upset at governments for paying $610 a month to the disabled, sick, or injured Canadian citizens!  Who is actually Hah! Chump change!
    I’ve read and watched a few versions of who did what but whether it was  pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, or the bankster cabal, the upshot is, in 1973/74, then Governor of the Bank of Canada, Gerald Bouey, seems to have  made the decision by himself to start borrowing on behalf of Canada from private banks.
    NOTE: Impossible for one man to do this. This was well orchestrated in stealth,
    According to the Honourable Paul Hellyer, who asked Pierre Trudeau’s biographer, there is no record of Trudeau himself, or the government of the day making this monumentally damaging decision!  One un-elected man did this!!
    Now I find this hard to believe myself. We can’t ask Gerald Bouey as he died February 6, 2004.
    The conclusion is they were all involved and this was done in stealth and has succeeded to remove Canadian Sovereignty 
    How has this damaged Canada? Let me count the ways.
    When we pay interest on interest on interest, we grow the amount of debt, which for governments is called deficit.  Unlike a mortgage, where the interest portion of the monthly payment decreases as the principal is paid down, the deficit rises because of the increase, not just in borrowing, but in compound interest on the total.
    Without continually raising taxes, there becomes less and less money for governments to do anything in terms of programs, infrastructure, MP’s salaries and pensions, foreign aid, etc.
    So governments keep borrowing and borrowing and borrowing.  Giving tax cuts to corporations and the wealthiest citizens just takes more money out of government revenue, so more borrowing must be done. 
    Canada’s deficit isn’t a problem of over-spending or having too many programs, it is a problem of paying compound interest to Private banksters.
    You can easily understand now, why we don’t have a healthcare crisis, we have an interest-paying crisis, affecting our healthcare and all program funding.
    If this sounds too simple, it isn’t. It seems hard to get one’s head around because unnecessarily borrowing at interest is so obviously stupid and against a country’s best interests.
    A 12-year old Victoria Grant can explain the basics in 6 minutes.

    Victoria Grant - Public Banking 2013: Funding the New Economy, June 3rd 2013 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scl77-YWdJM&feature=youtu.be
    NOTE: Yet as recently as the 2001 Ontario budget, James Flaherty, as Minister of Finance for Ontario “sold” the 91 year old  Province of Ontario Savings Office to a private bank. 
    It actually made a profit, and the Province could get loans at better rates than from private banks. Reason given?  To end “wasteful activities that could be eliminated”.  Baloney! It made a profit of $10 Million!
    These people are committing fraud and need to be arrested.
    This is the stated “reason” for all the cuts.  It’s called “starving the beast”: drive up the deficit to show the need for cuts later. It’s akin to ripping up your clothes to justify getting new ones, only backwards.
    The deficit could be stopped in its tracks right now, if Canada would start borrowing from the Bank of Canada instead of private banks.  Yes.
    Unfortunately we, and almost all, if not all nations, have a Goldman Sachs man in place. Ours is Governor of the Bank of Canada, Mark Carney. He was on the guest list of the Bilderberg meeting in June 2012.
    There were a few other Canadians on the list, including Alberta’s Alison Redford. I’ll put a link to Bilderberg info for those who don’t know about this annual secret meeting of CEOS, Governments, banking, media moguls, industry leaders and US Presidential hopefuls!
    It is thought to be working towards a One World Government. Think Globalized industry & finance making global laws. The Trans Pacific Partnership gets us well on the way there, according to leaked documents.
    All Major Canadian Parties are owned and bought and paid for, with the possible exception of the Green party, since Elizabeth May understands this theft, perpetuate this bank theft from our citizens. 
    This turned out to another Globalist Puppet as we all see now in 2018
    Every Premier has been so far assimilated into the corporatist corrupt system!
    Not one knows how to create jobs, but they sure can sell us all out for their piece of the pie.
    We know where PM Harper and Minister Flaherty stand.
    There is a link below to a conversation about it with the NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair. 
    The only man in recent times who wanted to use the public bank was Bob Rae when he was Ontario’s Premier, and he was told he couldn’t.
    That’s why he couldn’t fulfill some of his election promises and had to take other steps, such as the infamous Rae days. Blame the Private banksters.
    Bill Abram he passed away in 2012 he was inspirational to many



    Who Changed The Bank Of Canada’s Policies In 1974 And Why? But the Information as Usual has been removed to hide the Crime 
    Official History of the Bank of Canada

    Honourable Paul Hellyer: A Global Hope Plan
    Money is not a guarantee of happiness! But it can help solve many problems that affect our quality of life. These include the provision of job opportunities, adequate health care, public education at a cost that ordinary people can afford, the safety and efficiency of our public infrastructure, our ability to live in reasonable comfort when we retire, and the elimination of poverty in the midst of plenty. So if money is necessary to accomplish all of these things it is absolutely essential to understand what it is and where it comes from.

    NAFTA's Chapter 11: Corporate Cases




    Latest Chapter 11 News

    Comprehensive Report: "NAFTA Chapter 11 Investor-State Cases: Lessons for the Central American Free Trade Agreement"

    The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) includes an array of new corporate investment rights and protections that are unprecedented in scope and power. NAFTA allows corporations to sue the national government of a NAFTA country in secret arbitration tribunals if they feel that a regulation or government decision affects their investment in conflict with these new NAFTA rights. If a corporation wins, the taxpayers of the "losing" NAFTA nation must foot the bill. This extraordinary attack on governments' ability to regulate in the public interest is a key element of recent and proposed NAFTA expansions like the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) and agreements with PeruPanama and Colombia.
    NAFTA's investment chapter (Chapter 11) contains a variety of new rights and protections for investors and investments in NAFTA countries. If a company believes that a NAFTA government has violated these new investor rights and protections, it can initiate a binding dispute resolution process for monetary damages before a trade tribunal, offering none of the basic due process or openness guarantees afforded in national courts. These so-called "investor-to-state" cases are litigated in the special international arbitration bodies of the World Bank and the United Nations, which are closed to public participation, observation and input. A three-person panel composed of professional arbitrators listens to arguments in the case, with powers to award an unlimited amount of taxpayer dollars to corporations whose NAFTA investor privileges and rights they judge to have been impacted.

    Bank interest is what is behind the austerity programs in Canada, European Union, Britain and the US
    The people are suffering in order to pay the Private banksters!
    Yet any country can have a publicly owned bank. It only takes the political will to set one up.
    And Canada had done this for the past for 75 years but has since stopped.
    Because of the changes to the Bank of Canada in 1974 our national debt has skyrocketed from 21.6 billion to nearly 588 billion in 3 years


    Some information of James Elliott Coyne, Governor of the Bank of Canada, from 1955 to 1961, During his time in office, he had a much-publicized debate with Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, a debate often referred to as the "Coyne Affair" (or sometimes the "Coyne Crisis"), which led to his resignation.
    NOTE: Before Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney, there was James Coyne.
    Beginning in the late 1950s, Mr. Coyne set in motion a chain of events that would eventually allow his successors to comfortably range beyond the confines of interest-rate setting.
    What these individuals did is treason.
    In Canada, the central bank’s arm’s-length relationship with cabinet will be linked forever to Mr. Coyne, who engaged in a public war of wills with the government of John Diefenbaker, culminating in the Bank of Canada governor’s resignation in 1961.
    The incident became known as the “Coyne Affair,” a traumatic event that roiled financial markets, embarrassed the government and wounded morale at the Bank of Canada.
    But in the fallout, Mr. Diefenbaker accepted that the Bank of Canada should have a clear mandate to operate without day-to-day interference from government.
     Possibly the greatest thing James Coyne did was to spark the crisis
    The capsule history of Mr. Coyne’s fight with Mr. Diefenbaker characterizes the incident as a battle between a principled central banker who wanted to guard against inflation, and a prime minister who wanted to stoke a lacklustre economy. (With strict austerity policies or not be diverted from his austerity programme)
    Conservative - Richard Bedford Bennett,. He served as the 11th Prime Minister of Canada from August 7, 1930, to October 23, 1935, during the worst of the Great Depression years.
    Following his defeat as Prime Minister, Bennett moved to England, and was elevated to the peerage as Viscount Bennett.
    Do you remember Premier Gordon Campbell who sold BC out and then shipped to Europe as a Canadian Ambassador?
    NOTE: Gordon had to resign because of fraud and Christy Clark unelected became Premier of BC and she is selling BC out also.
    Some important friendships
    One day, while Bennett was crossing the Miramichi River on the ferry boat, This was the beginning of an improbable but important friendship with Max Aitken, later the industrialist and British press baron, Lord Beaverbrook.
    This friendship would become important to his success later in life, as would his friendship with the Chatham lawyer, Lemuel J. Tweedie, a prominent Conservative politician.
    Another important friendship was with the prominent Shirreff family of Chatham, the father being High Sheriff of Northumberland County for 25 years. The son, Harry, joined the E.B. Eddy Company, a large pulp and paper company. Their friendship was crucial to his later life when Jennie Shirreff married the head of the Eddy Company. She later made Bennett the lawyer for her extensive interests.
    He was already negotiating with Sir James Lougheed to move to Calgary and become his law partner. Lougheed was Calgary's richest man.
    Bennett moved to Alberta in 1897. In 1908 he was one of five people appointed to the first Library Board for the city of Calgary
    Before Bennett became Prime Minister he was already being groomed by the most financial men in Canada. In 1910, Bennett became a director of Calgary Power Ltd. (now formally TransAlta Corporation) and just a year later he became the President. During his leadership projects completed included the first storage reservoir at Lake Minnewanka, a second transmission line to Calgary and the construction of the Kananaskis Falls hydro station. At that time, he was also director of Rocky Mountains Cement Company and Security Trust.
    In 1905, when Alberta was carved out of the territories and made a province, Bennett became the first leader of the Alberta Conservative Party. In 1909, he won a seat in the provincial legislature, before switching to federal politics.


    Liberal - Louis Stephen St. Laurent, 12th Prime Minister of Canada, from 15 November 1948 to 21 June 1957.
    I find this interesting
    He became one of Quebec's leading lawyers and was so highly regarded that he was offered a position in the Cabinet of the Conservative Prime Minister Arthur Meighen
    It was not until he was nearly 60 that St-Laurent finally agreed to enter politics when Liberal Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King appealed to his sense of duty in late 1941
    Political Record
    •          Trans-Canada Highway Act 1949
    •          Promoted Canada's membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) 1949
    •          Welcomed Newfoundland into Confederation 1949
    •          Canadian participation in the Korean War 1950-1953
    •          Appointed Vincent Massey first Canadian-born Governor General 1952
    •          Start of construction of the St. Lawrence Seaway 1954
    •          Equalization payments 1956
    •          Canada Council established 1957
    •          Leader of the Opposition 1957-1958

    William Lyon Mackenzie King and the Liberal party felt there was no man better qualified to succeed as Prime Minister. St. Laurent was persuaded to stand as a candidate at the leadership convention in August 1948, which he won.
    Conservative - John George Diefenbaker, 13th Prime Minister of Canada, serving from June 21, 1957,

    Previous prime ministers had concerned themselves with the reconciliation of French and English culture in Canada, John Diefenbaker aspired to include those of other ethnic extractions in the national identity. Furthermore, he drew attention to the rights of Canada's indigenous population, who had also been left out of the "two founding nations" equation. Under his prime ministership, Canada's Aboriginal peoples were allowed to vote federally for the first time, and James Gladstone, a member of the Kainai First Nation (Blood Tribe) was the first Native person appointed to the Senate. In 1942, he criticized the government's treatment of Japanese Canadians. 
    Diefenbaker championed the Canadian Bill of Rights in 1958 and gave all Aboriginal people the right to vote in 1960.  
    Under NORAD, Canada had agreed to have missiles on its soil, but Diefenbaker did not want these to be armed with nuclear warheads. When the United States began pressuring him to accept the nuclear warheads, he vacillated. 
    The Bomarc Missile Program was highly controversial in Canada.  John Diefenbaker initially agreed to deploy the missiles, and shortly thereafter controversially scrapped the Avro Arrow, a supersonic manned interceptor aircraft, arguing that the missile program made the Arrow unnecessary
    Now we have an idea why it was scrapped, still many unanswered questions here. I lean towards corruption.
    Initially, it was unclear whether the missiles would be equipped with nuclear warheads. By 1960 it became known that the missiles were to have a nuclear payload, and a debate ensued about whether Canada should accept nuclear weapons. Ultimately, the Diefenbaker government decided that the Bomarcs should not be equipped with nuclear warheads. The dispute split the Diefenbaker Cabinet, and led to the collapse of the government in 1963

    Liberal - Lester Bowles "Mike" Pearson He was the 14th Prime Minister of Canada from 22 April 1963 to 20 April 1968.
    Chrétien worked his way up to parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister Pearson.
    But how did he get into cabinet and became Finance Minister?
    Well here it is Lester Pearson's great ambition in life was to be a professional baseball player," Chrétien recalls. "In those days, we had an annual softball game between the MPs and the Parliamentary Press Gallery. I pitched for the MPs' team. Pearson was the manager. We won the game. And that was the day I earned my seat in the cabinet.
    Jean Chrétien "I didn't want my first vote to be against my party," Chrétien recalled. "But I had committed during the campaign to vote against [the missile installation] unless there was proof we'd agreed to it."
    Fifty years later, Chrétien fesses up on how he ended up voting with the Liberal government.
    "They showed me some secret cabinet documents," he told the conference. "I couldn't speak much English and couldn't understand what I was reading, but they told me, 'Here's the commitment in writing.'  So I voted with the government."
    This is how it works ONE BOSS, and do as your told, no independent thought do as the Party Boss says.
    Liberal Party - Joseph Philippe Pierre Yves Elliott Trudeau, usually known as Pierre Trudeau or Pierre Elliott Trudeau, was the 15th Prime Minister of Canada from April 20, 1968 to June 4, 1979. So this happened while he was Prime Minister.
    Note: (BANK OF CANADA WAS REMOVED FROM ITS PROPER FUNCTION IN 1974)
    Conservative - Charles Joseph "Joe" Clark 16th Prime Minister of Canada, from June 4, 1979, to March 3, 1980.
    After he was defeated in the next election he returned in 1984 as a senior cabinet minister in Brian Mulroney's cabinet
    Conservative Martin Brian Mulroney (18th Prime Minister of Canada from September 17, 1984 to June 25, 1993
    Now who was he working for that’s the question sure not the good of the country

    Major disastrous economic reforms, such as:
    Canada - US Free Trade Deal – which has
    NAFTA: Manufacturing job loss in Canada
    Mulroney was another prime minister of Canada who was a threat to Canadian nationhood also ran up 300 billion dollars of new debt.
    NAFTA, massive corporate tax cuts and do-nothing industrial policies promoted by Ottawa are destroying Canada’s manufacturing sector - this at a time when corporate profits are at an all time high. Free trade policies have hurt both Canadian workers and workers in poorer countries.

    Wal-Mart: The High Cost Of Low Prices FULL MOVIE

    No Canadian manufacturing Business can compete with slave labour
    Goods and Service tax:
    • Another Tax brought in and we all know this was another TAX scam
    Meech Lake Accord:
    • Resistance built and support plummeted as a deal done in the dark came into the light. Another blunder and millions of TAX dollars wasted
    Charlottetown Accord
     Another blunder and millions of TAX dollars wasted
    The judge said he could not accept Mulroney’s testimony that his acceptance of at least $300,000 in cash was an error in judgment. Rather, it was an attempt to hide the transactions and cost the Canadian tax payers millions because they called him a crook. He sued Canada well you the tax payer.
    Conservatives and Brian Mulroney had fallen to very low levels in the polls and Mulroney realizing that he could not possibly win another mandate, decided to step down.  REALLY,
    So Kim Campbell took his place as acting Prime Minister (She was never voted in by the Canadian citizens just the Conservative Party).

    Conservative Kim" Campbell 19th Prime Minister of Canada, from June 25, 1993 to November 4, 1993, she was acting Prime Minister for 132 days until she was defeated in the next election.
    Gun Control
    • Another blunder and millions of TAX dollars wasted actually 7 Billion and climbing,
    Liberal leader Jean Chretien defeated her in the election mostly because of the corruption of Brian Mulroney and policies such as NAFTA, Charlottetown Accord, GST, Charlottetown Accord, Gun control all were found negative for the future of Canada.
    The results of this election wiped the Conservatives out of government. As the results began to come in on election night, the vote for the Liberals became a landslide. The final results were Liberals - 177 seats, Bloc = 54 seats, Reform Party 52 seats, NDP 9 seats, Progressive Conservatives 2 seats and others
    Liberal Party - Joseph Philippe Pierre Yves Elliott Trudeau returned March 3, 1980 to June 30, 1984 as Prime Minister.
    Now here is something to consider and do some research your selves.
    NOTE: Prime Minister: Pierre Trudeau appointed John Turner Minister of Finance: Governor of the Bank of Canada:
    Pierre Elliott Trudeau stepped down June 4, 1979. This is important!
    John Napier Wyndham Turner, 17th Prime Minister of Canada from June 30, 1984 to September 17, 1984.
    What happened from June 4, 1979 to June 30, 1979 in these 26 days?


    We know for 75 years we were involved in two world wars, built TransCanada Highway from east to west or vise versa, infrastructure, EI, pension’s funds, Top of the world Health care and only had a debt of 21.6 Billion dollars.
    Turner held the office of Prime Minister for 79 days (the second shortest tenure in Canadian history after Charles Tupper), as he dissolved Parliament immediately after being sworn in as Prime Minister.
    Connecting the DOTS
    He then flew over to see the Queen; something does not sit well with this.
    So why would he have to fly over to see the Queen, well here is what most Canadians think that Canada is an independent country. Well it’s not
    What powers does the Queen have?
    The Queen has the right to rule: the people are not citizens, but subjects of the monarch. Most public servants must swear an oath of loyalty, or make an affirmation of their loyalty, to the crown.
    The Canadian Oath of Allegiance is a promise or declaration of fealty to the Canadian monarch, taken, along with other specific oaths of office, by new occupants of various federal and provincial government offices, members of federal, provincial, and municipal police forces, military of the Canadian Forces and, in some provinces, all lawyers upon admission to the bar. The Oath of Allegiance also makes up the first portion of the Oath of Citizenship, the taking of which is a requirement of obtaining Canadian citizenship.
    The Queen has the right to be consulted and to "advise and warn" ministers. Otherwise her residual powers - the "royal prerogative" - are mostly exercised through the government of the day. These include the power to enact legislation, to award honours (on the advice of the prime minister), to sign treaties and to declare war.
    But royal prerogative is the subject of controversy, because it confers on governments the power to make major decisions without recourse to parliament. When Edward Heath brought Britain into the EEC in 1972, parliament was not consulted until afterwards. Similarly, Margaret Thatcher used royal prerogative to go to war in the Falklands in 1982.
    In Canada Apr 3, 2011 - Queen dissolves Canadian Parliament for third time in 3 years for – Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper will visit the Governor General today to dissolve Parliament, setting the stage for a federal election in early May.
    The Harper government was defeated in the House of Commons on Friday on a non-confidence motion declaring the government in contempt of Parliament.
    It is the first time in Canadian history that a government has been found in contempt.
    For those in denial of the Queen’s power over her colony-states, here are previous occurrences:
    Canadian Harper PM wins suspension of Parliament

    The Queen has two individual powers that could cause a political crisis if they were ever exercised. She may refuse a government's request to dissolve parliament and call an election, if she believes a government can legitimately be formed. She also has the right to choose the prime minister: a formality in the case of a clear majority, but potentially controversial after an inconclusive general election.
    Over the past 10 years, the Canadian cost of supporting the monarchy has more than doubled. We pay the Queen roughly 50 million a year.
    CANADA QUEEN REMINDS CANADA WHO IS THE SOVEREIGN RULER

    QUEEN of 16 Member States - QUEEN of CANADA
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=1wffqnlcRI8


    In his political career, Turner held several prominent Cabinet posts, including ----
    ---Minister of Justice and Minister of Finance, under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau from 1968 to June 4, 1979. So he was involved in the Bank of Canada Remember 1974 Bank of Canada was removed, we had 21.6 billion dollar debt to ourselves, and in 1997 just 3 short years’ later Canadian citizens were in debt to a private bank of a tune of 588 billion, WHAT HAPPENED?
    If you got money you can get away with Murder or get away with anything you want that’s our system they created for us. It’s the law that taught us this. Go ahead and break the law if you have money or write the law yourself if you have money.
    Montreal Police were told to increase tickets from 18 a day to 28. This is just a tax grab.
    Now with Canada going into recession or possible a depression and the prospect of having to implement the unpopular wage and price controls, Turner surprisingly resigned his position as Prime Mister of Canada from June 4, 1979 to June 30, 1974 in only 26 days.
    So from 1974- 1977 Canada debt went from $21.6 billion to 588 billion in three short years
    NOTE: John Turner was made Minister of Justice, which was the position that Trudeau had held before becoming Prime Minister and while in that position
    Trudeau and the Liberals won the 74 election by opposing wage and price controls, but once in power, Trudeau switched horses and decided to bring them in.
    Turner under growing pressure in his position as Finance Minister and with no other interesting options available to him decided to leave politics and in 1979
    In 1979 the Liberals were defeated and Trudeau stepped down. Turner was asked to run for the leadership but seeing the fortunes of the party at low ebb and a potentially a long hard battle to rebuild it at hand, he decided against it.
    Through the twists of political fate, Joe Clark was defeated during a vote of confidence, Trudeau returned as leader and the Liberals won another majority mandate.

    After a hiatus from politics from 1975 to 1984, Turner returned and successfully contested the Liberal leadership. Turner held the office of Prime Minister for 79 days (the second shortest tenure in Canadian history after Charles Tupper), as he dissolved Parliament immediately after being sworn in as Prime Minister.
    Why did he dissolve Parliament?
    Then he calls an election and then went on to lose the 1984 election in a landslide to Conservative Martin Brian Mulroney September 17, 1984 - June 25, 1993. But I will go into more detail on this later.
    John Turner was also saddled with the negative issues of the Trudeau years and the desire by many for a change. One of the main issues of the election was some patronage appointments which were made and which he approved of which although traditional and in line with past practices and standards, did not go down well with the electorate.
    The Conservatives jumped on these appointments and made them into a banner of corrupt Liberal practices. Turner and the Liberals were badly beaten. 
    From the late 1960s until the mid-1980s, he dominated the Canadian political scene and was appointed as Lester Pearson's Parliamentary Secretary, and later became his Minister of Justice and Minister of Finance
    Liberal Party - Lester Bowles "Mike" Pearson was the 14th Prime Minister of Canada from 22 April 1963 to 20 April 1968, as the head of two back-to Liberal Governments in 1963 and 1965
    John Napier Wyndham Turner 17th Prime Minister of Canada from June 30 to September 17, 1984.

    In his political career, Turner held several prominent Cabinet posts, including Minister of Justice and Minister of Finance, under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau from 1968 to 1975.

    Isn’t that convenient he returned the same favour Lester Pearson did for him and did they same exact thing for John Napier he was appointed Minister of Justice and Minister of Finance
    NOTE: Prime Minister: Pierre Trudeau Minister of Finance: John Turner Governor of the Bank of Canada:
    Amid a world recession and the prospect of having to implement the unpopular wage and price controls, Turner surprisingly resigned his position in 1975. After a hiatus from politics from 1975 to 1984, Turner returned and successfully contested the Liberal leadership.
    Why did he contest the Liberal Leadership? I have my opinion.
    Turner held the office of Prime Minister for 79 days (the second shortest tenure in Canadian history after Charles Tupper), as he dissolved Parliament immediately after being sworn in as Prime Minister, and went on to lose the 1984 election in a landslide.
    Turner stayed on as Liberal leader and headed the Official Opposition for the next six years, leading his party to a modest recovery in the 1988 campaign, resigning from politics in 1990.
    1984, and John Turner succeeded him as Prime Minister.
    Admirers praise the force of Trudeau's intellect and salute his political acumen in preserving national unity against the Quebec sovereignty movement, suppressing a violent revolt, and establishing the Charter of Rights and Freedoms within Canada's constitution. Critics accuse him of arrogance, economic mismanagement, and unduly favouring the federal government relative to the provinces, especially in trying to distribute the oil wealth of the Prairies.
    Liberal - Paul Edgar Philippe Martin also known as Paul Martin, Jr. was the 21st Prime Minister of Canada.
    Martin served as the Member of Parliament from 1988 election to his retirement in 2008.
    Now we have Harper and let’s take a good look at what he has done or not done for Canada, by far he has to be the worst Prime Minister in our history of Canada.
    NOTE: Bank of Canada is still the Number one fraud, but Harper also well aware of this fraud of the bank of Canada still continues to put many more nails in to the Canadian coffin than any other Prime Minster.


    His Policies will shock you if you have not paid attention. I also will understand as the main Media in Canada has not informed most Canadians of his dealing.
    THE NEW CANADA UNDER STEVEN HARPER
    Conservative -Stephen Harper Prime Minister is the 22nd and current Prime Minister of Canada .Harper became Prime Minister in 2006, forming a minority government after the 2006 election.
    Harper with a power base in Alberta and home of Canada's oil boom, Known as an ally of Canadian fossil fuels, has promoted their export to the U.S. and China.
    Environment
    Harper dismantled many environmental restrictions on economic growth.
    Canada has become an international laggard in environmental policy and practice is now an incontrovertible fact.
    In 2009, the Conference Board of Canada ranked Canada 15th out of 17 wealthy industrialized nations on environmental performance. In 2010, researchers at Simon Fraser University ranked Canada 24th out of 25 OECD nations on environmental performance.
    Not one of the bills introduced in the current session is intended to improve Canada’s environmental record. Instead, environmental laws are being weakened to expedite industrial development. Standards are being relaxed to meet industry’s demands.
    Military-Industrial Complex
    Harper increased federal defense spending by nearly $1 billion annually in his first four years in office, with more projected. The new Canada is a place where militarism is given pride of place over peacemaking.
    The blending of sport and the military, with the government as the marching band, is part of the new nationalism the Conservatives are trying to instil. It is another example of how the state, under Stephen Harper's governance, is becoming all-intrusive. ... State controls are now at a highpoint in our modern history. There is every indication they will extend further
    Harper sells out Canada
    To be blunt, Canadians have not spent years reducing the ownership of sectors of the economy by our own governments, only to see them bought and controlled by foreign governments instead $15 billion takeover of Canada’s Nexen oil and gas giant by the China National Offshore Oil Corporation.
    Harper also allowed Malaysia’s state-owned Petronas’ $6 billion takeover of natural gas company Progress Energy.
    Canada also used to have a state-owned energy company — PetroCanada — that allowed us a significant window on the oil and gas industry from exploration to gas stations.
    What’s more, five of the world’s top-10 most profitable companies are big oil and gas firms
    But a Conservative government began privatizing PetroCanada and the following Liberal government finished it off.
    Harper has not only gone in the opposite direction, it’s also allowing foreign companies to take over what is rightfully ours. Brilliant!

    Below is a short list of some of the recent crimes against this country perpetrated by Mr. Harper and his cronies:
    Refuses to take responsibility for ANYTHING
    Refused to take responsibility for the detainment and TORTURE of Afghani soldiers
    Hired a convicted fraud-artist to help with his campaign
    Appointed a creationist as science minister (who refused to answer questions about evolution because “it was against his religious beliefs)
    Plans to spend billions of dollars on a new fleet of fighters while millions don’t have enough to eat, highest poverty in Canadian history
    Ignore elections act legislation by “in-and-out”-ing large cash sums to individual ridings to defraud tax-payers and fund local candidates.
    Continued centralization of power in the Premier’s office at the expense of elected representatives
    Used the RCMP to suppress free-speech during the G8/G20 summit (and spent 1.4 BILLION on that security)
    Harper Got Canada kicked off the UN Security Council.
    The Right Did Wrong:
    How Stephen Harper’s government destroyed Canada’s reputation as an honest broker and lost the vote for a seat at the UN Security Council.
    Has been an ardent supporter of the oil-sands, and enemy of environmentalism. Since he was elected, Canada has had the worst environmental record of any of the G8 nations.http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/harper-won-t-take-no-for-an-answer-...
    Used his newly appointed Senate (full of conservative politicians unable to get elected in their own ridings), to kill a climate bill that had already passed the house (presumably at the behest of his key sponsor, the Alberta oil-sands companies).
    Showed a decided partisan bias during stimulus spending, in which 60% of stimulus money was spent in conservative ridings (when only 46% of ridings were conservative; leaving the other 54% percent to split the remaining 40% of the money)
    Used $50 million of a G8 legacy fund to pay for projects in Tony Clement’s riding of Muskoka/Parry Sound, despite the bulk of the projects having NOTHING to do with the G8/G20 and being, in some cases, 100 km away from any of the summit sites (all of this without the approval of parliament).
    Forced municipal and hospital amalgamations (reduced local democracy).
    Forced amalgamations of school boards and stripped trustees of powers
    Diminished workers rights to engage in fair collective bargaining
    Deregulation and privatization (less public control)
    Gutting of the Ontario Women’s Directorate
    Changed Legislative rules to limit parliamentary debate.
    Cut back on advocacy groups funding
    Reduced the number of ridings and representatives in Ontario by about 25%.
    Set up the permanent voter’s list which helped disenfranchise enough students and tenants to help them to squeak to a second “majority” with less than 10,000 votes province-wide in 9 ridings and only 45% of the popular vote despite a citizens’ campaign for “strategic voting” to defeat the government.
    Ejected REGISTERED attendees from his campaign stops after SEARCHING THROUGH THEIR FACEBOOK PROFILES.  These people were actually there to listen, but clearly the only people that Harper can talk to are people who already bought his bullshit.
    Has actually lowered taxes on the wealthy to the point where the bottom 10% wage earners are actually taxed more than the top 1%.
    Did not investigate the “Bev Oda” scandal, in which one of his own ministers pencilled in a “not” that denied federal funding to an international aid organization, and then lied about it.
    Misrepresented a quote from auditor general Sheila Fraser to make it sound like she supported the Harper Government’s handling of the G8 monies (she was in fact referring to the Liberal handling of the 9/11 relief fund…)
    Okay, so I think the above is a good start but I think they sum a lot of the above up nicely.  I will add to this post as I go on…
    Harper promised open accountable government, Harper has lead one of the most secretive, authoritarian governments in Canadian history.
    Stephen Harper has reshaped Canada in two years:
    Two years of Harper government have brought profound changes to Canada, and some may be hard to undo. Not everyone is celebrating Canada’s birthday this year.
    Most are getting ready the funeral of Canada.
    Stephen Harper’s Conservatives have reshaped much of this country in 24 short months.
    From the environment, to health care, to foreign policy, this is a different Canada than it was May 2, 2011, and many of the Harper initiatives may not be easily undone by future governments, or even future leaders of a Conservative government
    The two-year-old government has cut scientific research, muzzled its scientists, put limits on the independence of Statistics Canada and is facing charges that it plans to wield more influence over the CBC..
    But some of the biggest changes in two years under the Harper government have been our place in the world.
    What's happening here: There is a "lack of sense of inner self-restraint on the part of the prime minister, a sense that it is some kind of war and therefore anything is legitimate, that it's quite acceptable for a prime minister to lie.
    Prorogued Parliament (three!) to cover up/interrupt investigations into misconduct in his cabinet
    The Canadian Parliament was dissolved in March 2011, after his government failed a no-confidence vote on the issue of the Cabinet being in contempt of parliament.

    American TV political commentator Rachel Maddow shares her thoughts on Harper’s political machinations

     

    Harper has made Canada the laughing stock of the world [video]

    In behaving more like would be third-world dictator rather than like the leader of an industrialized nation, Stephen Harper has made Canada (rightly) the laughing stock of the world.
    Ironically, if you want to hear from the other Canada, the former Canada, the one so much admired by the world, hold your breath.
    Trade Deals – you think NAFTA crippled this nation have a look at these trade deals from Harper
    Some facts on FIPA
    Formally called the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP) - is finally breaking out of the secret chambers of the ruling elite and the federal government.


    Now back to Bank of Canada has amassed a federal debt over $600 billion by mid-2013
    Prime Minister: Pierre Trudeau
    Minister of Finance: John Turner
    Governor of the Bank of Canada: Gerald Bouey
    Because of the changes to the Bank of Canada in 1974 our national debt has skyrocketed from 21.6 billion to nearly 600 billion.
    Which are owed to private banks like CIBC, TD Bank, the Royal bank, and Scotia banks and every one of these banks have Bilderberg association.

    And secondly, what was the reasoning for the change in policy?
    Pierre Elliot Trudeau, like many other Canadian Prime Ministers attended the Bilderberg group meetings before being elected.
    Trudeau also served in the mid-1990s on Power Corp.’s international advisory board. Also Paul Martin
    Paul Desmarais financed Paul Martin Political career
    Gerald Bouey was a member of David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission. Rockefeller is also a chairman of the Bilderberg group.
    Both the trilateral commission and Bilderberg g group are very well known for promoting a global government or what others have called a “new world order”.
    “Some even believe we (the Rockefeller family) are part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterizing my family and me as ‘internationalists’ and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure – one world, if you will. If that’s the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it.”
    - David Rockefeller, Memoirs, page 405
    David Rockefeller Sept. 23, 1994 “This present window of opportunity, during which a truly peaceful and interdependent world order might be built, will not be open for too long — we are on the verge of a global transformation. All we need is the right major crisis and the nations will accept the New World Order.”
    With every day that passes a global economic collapse seems to be only a matter of time.
    Mainly due to the massive amounts of debt we are forced to pay unlawfully.
    Could this be the right major crisis that he spoke of?
    The change in policy came, to help the Canadian economy recover from what the government billed as a major recession. When in reality the recession was small at best. Well it has and they succeeded to enslave US all.
    Former Prime Minister - John Turner said the most powerful business man sit behind secret meeting to sell out Canadian sovereignty
    While Paul Martin was doing a presentation a student asked him about the Bilderberg group and he replied if this student asks anymore such question he would leave. In the video Oh Canada our Bought and Sold land you can see this in the video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UbACCGf6q-c
    From readers Digest
    Reader Digest what it should have said
    The history of Canada’s federal debt; obviously something went terribly wrong after 1974. Over a 108 year period (1867-1974) the accumulated debt shows as nearly a flat line growing to only $21.6 billion. But around 1974, the debt began to grow exponentially
    So, what happened around 1974? In that year
    To achieve that goal, the Committee discouraged borrowing from a nation’s own central bank interest-free and encouraged borrowing from private creditors
    The Basel Committee was established by the central-bank Governors of the Group of Ten countries of the member central banks of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), which included Canada.

    A key objective of the Committee was and is to maintain “monetary and financial stability.”To achieve that goal, the Committee discouraged borrowing from a nation’s own central bank interest-free and encouraged borrowing from private creditors, all in the name of “maintaining the stability of the currency.”
    The presumption was that borrowing from a central bank with the power to create money on its books would inflate the money supply and prices. Borrowing from private creditors, on the other hand, was considered not to be inflationary, since it involved the recycling of pre-existing money.
    What the bankers did not reveal, although they had long known it themselves, was that private banks create the money they lend just as public banks do. The difference is simply that a publicly-owned bank returns the interest to the government and the community, while a privately-owned bank siphons the interest into its capital account, to be re-invested at further interest, progressively drawing money out of the productive economy.
    Lobbying by the banks and adoption of monetarism — the idea that “markets know best” and should be without regulation, and that public services should be privatized — took hold.
    So, around 1974, the Government of Canada began to borrow all of the monies to cover its shortfalls from the private sector at interest rather than creating money through the Bank of Canada interest-free. In other words, since 1974, the Bank of Canada has not been acting in the best interest of its shareholders: the people of Canada.
    To understand how ridiculous the present situation is, consider the 1993 Auditor General of Canada report (Section 5.41)3 which states:
    NOTE: Of this, $37 billion represents the accumulated shortfall in meeting the cost of government programs since Confederation. The remainder, $386 billion, represents the amount the government has borrowed to service the debt created by previous annual shortfalls.
    In other words, of the accumulated debt of $423 billion, the government really needed to borrow only $37 billion—accumulated over 127 years—to cover its shortfalls on real spending for goods and services.

    The rest of that accumulated debt was monies borrowed to service the debt, essentially a payment of interest on interest to the private sector when the government could have created the money to cover the shortfall at what amounts to be no interest.
    In 2011, alone, Canadian taxpayers paid the private banks an estimated $37.7 billion to service the federal debt
    From 1974–1975 to 2010, Canadian taxpayers have paid one trillion, 100 billion dollars ($1,100,000,000,000) in interest on the federal debt to private lenders.
    In 2011, alone, Canadian taxpayers paid the private banks an estimated $37.7 billion to service the federal debt—over $103 million each and every day of the year!
    These are tax dollars that were stolen through fraud and corruption that could have gone towards infrastructure, health care, education, and other social needs.
    If the Government of Canada used the Bank of Canada to create the money to cover its shortfall as it was intended to we would not have any of these problems. Ultimately, the government could pay off the federal debt through the same means.
    And consider this AGAIN: from confederation to 1974, Canada fought two world wars, went through a major depression, constructed major infrastructures such as the St. Lawrence Seaway, Trans-Canada Highway, International airports, Canadian National Railway, and brought in social welfare programs such as Family Allowance, Old Age Security pensions, Canada Pension Plan, Universal Health Care and wound up with a total accumulated debt of only $21.6 billion.
    Today our federal debt is approaching $600 billion and the government is continually cutting services while our infrastructure is not being maintained. Meanwhile, the private banks keep increasing their already obscene profits. This “subsidy” to the private banks must end.
    The Solution
    The solution to this problem is simply for the government to stop borrowing money from the private banks at interest and borrow from the Bank of Canada at no interest. The private banks should also be prevented from creating money. That right should be returned to the People of Canada through the Bank of Canada.

    This is how it should work Canada gives the Bank of Canada an IOU; bank of Canada creates money to Canada at 0 percent interest.
    Canada takes the money and gives it to Canadian people to create jobs.
    The Canadian people pay back the bank of Canada and since there is no compounded interest the DEBT will not grow
    This will allow the people of Canada to pay off the debt and use the money on real things rather than paying some private bank that steals your hard earned labour for money.
    Also whoever was responsible for these crimes prosecuted to full extent of the LAW by the PEOPLE...
     And, over a mere 39 years, it reached over $600 billion in 2013.
    Canada our bought and sold out country


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