Authorized by the Registered Agent of the Conservative Party of Canada
In November, the Liberal government used your tax dollars to launch
Canada.ca/Results, a self-congratulatory mid-mandate progress report of
sorts.
Never mind the irony of the Liberal government giving the Liberal
government a glowing review of its own accomplishments; it contains
countless stretches of the truth and omits just as many facts.
In response, we have put together this far more accurate analysis of the first two years of Justin Trudeau’s mandate...https://liberalresults.ca/
Laurel & Hardy - Blue Ridge Mountains Of Virginia (1937) from Jennifer Vanderpool on Vimeo.
Blue Mist Vistas, 2015 was an exhibition at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Virginia.The exhibition included bygone ephemera and historic media as well as 500 numbered letterpress postcard prints, a billboard, and series of images.
A homeless vet says he's been given a second chance in life after he received over $360,000 for helping a stranded woman buy gas. "It's like winning the lottery." https://t.co/32JcKqG6H8pic.twitter.com/ou88AkB1Gy
Dogs can contract leptospirosis by drinking from water
sources contaminated with urine from infected animals. (Frank
Augstein/Associated Press)An Ottawa veterinarian is sounding the alarm after treating a dog for leptospirosis at his clinic last week.
Leptospirosis is
a bacterial disease that causes vomiting, diarrhea and
severe weight loss in animals. Without treatment it can lead to kidney
failure and death. The disease can also be passed on to humans. Dogs can catch the "zoonotic" disease when they drink water that's
been contaminated with the urine of other animals, such as puddles in
dog parks.
Dr. Ian Cameron knows the symptoms
of leptospirosis first-hand. Seventeen years ago, when he was a student
at the University of Guelph, he contracted the disease from the infected
dogs he was treating.
"It felt like my kidneys were on fire," recalled Cameron. "It was extremely painful, I felt really nauseous for a long time."...http://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.4414595
By
AFP Mount Agung volcano is seen spewing smoke and ash in Bali, Indonesia.
The alert for the volcano belching huge plumes of smoke on Indonesia's
resort island of Bali has been raised to the highest level, officials
said Monday, with fears a significant eruption could be imminent. (File
pix)
INDONESIA: The alert for a volcano belching huge plumes of smoke on
Indonesia's resort island of Bali has been raised to the highest level,
officials said Monday, with fears a significant eruption could be
imminent.
The exclusion zone around Mount Agung, which is 75
kilometres (47 miles) from the tourist hub of Kuta, has been widened to
10 kilometers, with people living in the exclusion zone being urged to
evacuate.
"The volcano's alert level has been raised to the
highest level," said senior state volcanologist Gede Suantika. "Constant
tremors can be felt."
Huge plumes of smoke have been pouring out
of the volcano since Tuesday and Suantika said it was belching thick
grey smoke as high as 3,400 metres (11,154 feet) early Monday.
About
25,000 people living nearby the mountain have already left their homes
and evacuated since Mount Agung first started to spew smoke Tuesday.
"Continuous
ash puffs are sometimes accompanied by explosive eruptions accompanied
by a weak sound of boom," the National Board for Disaster Management
wrote on Facebook.
"The rays of fire are increasingly observed at night. This indicates the potential for a larger eruption is imminent."
National disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho called for people to stay calm.
The
airport in Bali's capital Denpasar, a top holiday destination that
attracts millions of foreign tourists every year, has been closed...https://www.nst.com.my/node/307845/amp
A possible
new source has come forward with corroborating information about the
discovery of a large frozen city two miles under the Antarctic ice,
located roughly 16 miles from the geographic South Pole. The
breakthrough to the city occurred in August 2016, according to this
latest source, and it was visited a few months later by VIPs such as
John Kerry and Buzz Aldrin.
On November 18th, the source’s testimony was introduced in a video published by “Pete”, host of the Creepy Little Book
Youtube channel. He says that he decided to go forward in releasing
the information since he had found a new source five days ago who had
corroborated information gleaned from previous sources about events in
Antarctica.
In the
comments section of his video, Pete says that his sources are from
outside the United States, and are not connected to Corey Goode and
David Wilcock. Furthermore, when it comes to his latest whistleblower,
Pete affirms that he is “confident in the sincerity of the source of
this information”.
I recommend
watching Pete’s video first before continuing to read this article,
which will analyze and connect key points of his testimony to other
important information, and assess the reliability of Pete and his new
source...Read more, video: exopolitics.org
Lorena is an activist with Animal SOS, an
animal sanctuary in Northern Italy, and dedicates her life to saving
animals from abusive situations. She is taking care of Bea until she
finds a proper home for her in Turin, Italy. (Diana Bagnoli)
Jeremy Bensette has tracked rare birds to the far ends of Ontario,
putting enough kilometres on his navy SUV to cross Canada 11 and-a-half
times without leaving the province.
The 27-year-old is doing an Ontario Big Year, setting out on January
1st to spot as many species of birds in the province as possible before
the end of 2017...
Did you know the oil and gas sector spends more than any other industry in Canada to protect the environment and every acre of land disturbed by development must be reclaimed.
I really think that these politicians should put their efforts elsewhere
and concentrate on things that affect our people more than a name,'
says Kenneth Ruben. (Submitted)
If you think all Inuit are insulted by the Edmonton Eskimos name, think again.
Since the latest push by the mayor of Winnipeg to get the CFL team to change the name
to something "more inclusive," many Inuit have spoken out on social
media, and reached out to CBC North, to voice their support for the
moniker.
Tourist Deborah Whitman-Perry of Newmarket, Ont., hooked a chinook
salmon weighing 83 pounds three ounces last Sunday on the B.C. coast.
Guide Tyler Mills helped reel it in after an hour's battle at Rivers
Inlet.Special to the Vancouver Sun
Tourist Deborah Whitman-Perry of Newmarket, Ont., caught the giant
weighing 83 pounds, three ounces (38 kg) — the equivalent of an
11-year-old boy — with assistance from guide Tyler Mills during a trip
with Good Hope Cannery last Sunday at Rivers Inlet. The fish battled for
about an hour on a 30-pound (14-kg) test fishing line...http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/monster+chinook+caught+released+coast+record+books/7135250/story.html
The academic world is totally dedicated to
the diversification of all White-created nations. The research effort,
the collection of data, the preparation of surveys, the proposals for
lucrative grants, the long string of mediocre articles and books
regularly published, are overwhelmingly biased in favour of mass
immigration. It is assumed among all academics that White "homogeneous
communities" without a program of diversification are inherently
"backward looking", "reactionary", "anti-democratic", devoid of "youth"
and "energy", and out of touch with the "requirements" of the times...http://www.eurocanadian.ca/2017/11/diversity-destroying-cohesion-social-capital-whites.html
Attention..☢☢☢☢ please Here the world's,, First 🐔🐔🐔 Begin's Now... Anyone wants To join..Them..With.......... 4995. Cuties...🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔 Then keep smiling..😊😊😊😊 pic.twitter.com/YeX8K3NlKI
Kevin Annett is a former United Church minister in Vancouver, Canada,
who was fired without cause in 1995, and then expelled from the same
church without due process, after he had unearthed evidence of the theft
of native land by church officers, and of the murder of native children
at the United Church residential school in Port Alberni, British
Columbia, where Kevin ministered.
Since his firing and blacklisting by the United Church, Reverend
Annett has worked as an advocate and counsellor in aboriginal healing
circles on the west coast. He organized the first international Tribunal
into Canadian residential schools in Vancouver in June, 1998, at which a
United Nations affiliate, IHRAAM, presided. This website is a partial
summary of that investigation.
Reverend Annett is working with aboriginal and human rights groups
around the world in an effort to bring charges of complicity in Genocide
against the government of Canada, the Anglican, United and Roman
Catholic churches, and the RCMP. He is serving as the secretary of the
recently-established Truth Commission into Genocide in Canada, and has
authored a book about his experiences, "Love and Death in the Valley"...http://canadiangenocide.nativeweb.org/intro.html
Antarctica is approaching its peak summertime, when the people living
and working at coastal stations will experience a few weeks of 24-hour
daylight around Christmastime. Collected here are images from the past
few years of the Antarctic landscape, wildlife, research facilities, and
some of the scientific work taking place there.
An emperor penguin, the largest of all penguins, stands proudly on
the McMurdo Ice Shelf with Mount Erebus in the distance on January 23,
2017. Mount Erebus is the southernmost active volcano on Earth.
A wild boar spotted near Big River, Sask., in November 2016. 'They will
eat anything and live in almost any habitat in Saskatchewan, so we
should expect some really significant issues if we can't turn this
around,' says U of S associate professor Ryan Brook. (Submitted by Ryan
Brook)
As wild boar sightings rise dramatically in the province, one researcher
is hoping to find out just how many of the pigs there are in
Saskatchewan so measures can be taken to control the population growth.
"In the late '80s, early '90s, they were brought over from Europe and
Asia and raised as meat," said Ryan Brook, an associate professor in
the University of Saskatchewan's college of agriculture and
bioresources.
The tallow tree, a “super invader” with toxic leaves and no natural enemies in North America, is conquering the South.
Overtaking forests from Texas to Florida, tallows grow three times
faster than most native hardwoods, and each one casts off 100,000 seeds a
year. Controlled burns haven’t stopped their spread, nor have herbicide
sprays from helicopters. Cutting them down works only when each stump
is immediately doused with chemicals. Harvesting them for biofuel
remains more a promise than a practical solution.
Some scientists say introducing a flea beetle from the tallow’s native habitat in eastern China may be the best alternative.
STRANGE trumpet-like sounds have been heard in the skies over Canada
and Indonesia which some have interpreted as the sign of the apocalypse
or even that Nibiru is approaching.
Several people have
reported hearing strange humming, loud booms, grinding metal and
trumpet-like noises, according to a video which has gone viral.
Christians
fear such ominous messages could signal the end, as the Bible points
out that trumpet sounds will be heard before the apocalypse begins.
Revelation
8:10-11 says: "The third angel blew his trumpet, and a great star fell
from heaven, blazing like a torch, and it fell on a third of the rivers
and on the springs of water. The name of the star is Wormwood.”
Renowned publication National Geographic has published new pictures of
the contenders to win the annual photo contest Nature Photographer Of
The Year 2017. In the photos, as always, you can find incredible flora
and fauna of different continents of the world, reports the
Chronicle.info with reference to 24tv.ua...https://qtelegram.com/wildlife-in-the-most-spectacular-images-from-national-geographic-photos/21054
By Garett Sloane
Sean Parker, the billionaire early Facebook investor and
Napster founder, says Mark Zuckerberg knowingly created a monster with
addictive social media.
Parker, speaking at an Axios event, pulled back the curtain on Facebook's early days, saying it was designed to consume people.
And all this time everyone thought it was designed for people to consume.
Nope, all the sharing and liking were used like a drug to
get people hooked on checking Facebook non-stop. "How do we consume as
much of your time and conscious attention as possible," said Parker,
referring to Facebook's earliest mission.
Igor Armicach, a
doctoral student at Hebrew University's Arachnid Collection, looks onto
giant spider webs, spun by long-jawed spiders (Tetragnatha), along the
Soreq creek bank, near Jerusalem November 7, 2017. (Reuters/Ronen
Zvulun)
On the banks of a creek near Jerusalem stands an enchanted forest, its
trees shrouded by giant cobwebs woven by long-jawed spiders.
BREAKING: HealthCanada makes deadly #mifegymiso more accessible. Pharmacies to distribute, No training for docs, no written patient consent pic.twitter.com/LgFUuD3iVG
From left, Ontario Regional Grand Chief Isadore Day, Hayley Williamson,
Education Minister Mitzie Hunter, Lauri Hoeg, Indigenous Relations and
Reconciliation Minister David Zimmer, Pamala Agwa and her two daughters
at the announcement of changes to Ontario's curriculum at Milliken Mills
High School in Unionville, Ont. (Rhiannon Johnson/CBC)
Ontario will incorporate the contributions, histories, culture and
perspectives of Indigenous peoples into a revised curriculum for all
students in the province, the education minister announced Wednesday.
Mitzie Hunter made the announcement at Milliken Mills High School in
Unionville with David Zimmer, Ontario's Minister of Indigenous Relations
and Reconciliation.
"As part of Ontario's response to the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission's report, our commitment was to bring learning about First
Nation, Métis and Inuit people [into] Ontario's education curriculum,"
said Hunter.
The announcement was made in conjunction with Ontario's Treaties Recognition Week.
An ancient religious divide is helping fuel a resurgence of conflicts
in the Middle East and Muslim countries. Struggles between Sunni and
Shia forces have fed a Syrian civil war that threatens to transform the
map of the Middle East, spurred violence that is fracturing Iraq, and
widened fissures in a number of tense Gulf countries. Growing sectarian
clashes have also sparked a revival of transnational jihadi networks
that poses a threat beyond the region.
Islam’s schism, simmering
for fourteen centuries, doesn’t explain all the political, economic, and
geostrategic factors involved in these conflicts, but it has become one
prism through which to understand the underlying tensions. Two
countries that compete for the leadership of Islam, Sunni Saudi Arabia
and Shia Iran, have used the sectarian divide to further their
ambitions. How their rivalry is settled will likely shape the political
balance between Sunnis and Shias and the future of the region,
especially in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Bahrain, and Yemen...https://www.cfr.org/interactives/sunni-shia-divide?cid=otr-marketing_url-sunni_shia_infoguide#!/sunni-shia-divide?cid=otr-marketing_url-sunni_shia_infoguide
YETI and Orvis Present: Andy from Colorblind Media on Vimeo.
Renowned photographer Andy Anderson has lived a life of passion, traveling the world to shoot everything under the sun, including fly fishing and wingshooting. He shares some of his thoughts and philosophies about the art form to which he has dedicated his life.
Presented by: YETI and Orvis
Featuring: Andy Anderson
Directed and filmed by: Cavin Brothers and David Mangum
Edited by: Reid Ogden and Rita Baucom
Music by: Ryan Baucom
Production: Colorblind Media
Special thanks: Dave Brown Outfitters, Zach Anderson, Michael Perez, Valer Austin, Kevin St. Clair, Owen St. Clair, and Warner Glenn
Jeff Doty of the CDC weighs a rodent that was caught in the forest in Manfuette, Republic of Congo. (Melina Mara / The Washington Post)
Along a narrow, winding river, a team of American scientists is
traveling deep into the Congo rain forest to a village that can be
reached only by boat.
The scientists are from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and they have embarked on this watery journey to solve a decades-old mystery about a rare and fatal disease: monkeypox.
A
cousin to the deadly smallpox virus, the monkeypox virus initially
infects people through contact with wild animals and can then spread
from person to person. The disease produces fever and a rash that often
turns into painful lesions that can feel like cigarette burns. It kills
up to 1 in 10 of its victims, similar to pneumonic plague, and is
particularly dangerous in children. Monkeypox is on the U.S. government
list of pathogens such as anthrax and Ebola with the greatest potential to threaten human health. There is no cure...http://www.chicagotribune.com/lifestyles/health/ct-monkeypox-virus-in-africa-20171106-story.html
If you're sick of gloom & doom news & lack of positive reporting here's something good. ISIS convoy in Mosul being taken out. #TrumpEffectpic.twitter.com/agE14khEZS
By FreedomDaily The Muslim Brotherhood’s strategic 30-year plan for taking over
America from within was a closely-guarded secret until the FBI raided a
house in Annandale, Virginia, where agents found a disturbing bundle of
documents containing a blueprint for the Muslim takeover of our country.
Now that the cat is out of the bag, we must do everything in our power
to expose what’s going on, as startlingly, these
American-hating vermin
are in the final phase of their 5-step plan to destroy our country.
Twenty-seven years ago, Muslim Brotherhood leader Yusuf al-Qaradwai
traveled to America to organize Muslims across America, educating them
with his diabolical plan for the compete Muslim takeover of America that
would take 30 years to complete. It included a key tactic known as
“Muruna,” where Muslims are able to violate Sharia Law in order to
convince Americans that they are just like us. Just like an Ebola virus,
Muruna is extremely effective, as Muslims are now able to seamlessly
integrate into every facet of our society, as they make their way into
our public school systems, our federal and law enforcement agencies,
and key positions within our government...https://freedomdaily.com/virginia-american-nightmare-raid/
Ryan Wunsch's "Bucket List Photo" of a
lightning bolt near his home in Leader, Sask., was chosen as an Editor's
Favourite in National Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year
contest for 2017.Ryan Wunsch
Ryan Wunsch wanted to capture a terrific lightning bolt photo this
year, but despite his time in tornado alley, it just didn’t happen.
Then he returned home to Leader this summer and a small storm came through.
Peanut the Prairie Dog, one of the animal ambassadors for the Wild West
Wildlife Rehabilitation Center, now has his own Instagram account.
(Photo courtesy of wild_about_peanut Instagram account.
AMARILLO, Texas (KVII) — A popular prairie dog at the Wild West Wildlife Rehabilitation Center now has his own Instagram account.
The Pyramids of Giza and the Great Sphinx.
Photograph by B. ANTHONY STEWART, National Geographic Creative
Egypt’s Great Pyramid of Giza—one
of the wonders of the ancient world, and a dazzling feat of
architectural genius—contains a hidden void at least a hundred feet
long, scientists announced on Thursday.
The space’s dimensions resemble those of the pyramid’s Grand Gallery,
the 153-foot-long, 26-foot-tall corridor that leads to the burial
chamber of Khufu, the pharaoh for whom the pyramid was built.
However, it remains unclear what lies within the space, what purpose it served, or if it’s one or multiple spaces.
The void is the first large inner structure discovered within the
4,500-year-old pyramid since the 1800s—a find made possible by recent
advances in high-energy particle physics. The results were published in the journal Nature.
The vast snowfields over the Jumbo Valley, the area of the proposed Jumbo ski resort in British Columbia. ed Rhodes/Postmedia News
OTTAWA — In a landmark freedom-of-religion case, the Supreme Court of
Canada has ruled that a massive ski resort development in southeast
British Columbia can go ahead despite a claim by a First Nation that it
violates sacred land.
The decision clarifies a boundary on the Charter right to freedom of
religion, establishing that the government does not have a duty to
protect an object of religious beliefs. Instead, the duty is to protect
the right to hold such beliefs and to practice those beliefs in worship.
“In short, the Charter protects the freedom to worship, but does not
protect the spiritual focal point of worship,” the decision says.