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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: longz who wrote (1552643)8/15/2025 7:39:19 PM
From: Goose942 Recommendations

Recommended By
Mongo2116
pocotrader

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1570753
 
Longz get your banjo and fight Forest Fires with all this free time you have without Silicon Investor.




To: longz who wrote (1552643)8/19/2025 10:28:38 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Respond to of 1570753
 
Canada: Liberals spent $170,000 on hotels, wine and candy for women they were bringing back from the Islamic State

Aug 19, 2025 9:00 am

By Christine Douglass-Williams

1 Comment

The grave dangers of repatriating ISIS brides and their offspring (aka Cubs of the Caliphate) have been well described HERE. Adding to the risk to Canadians is the obscene expectation by the Liberal government of Canada that Canadian taxpayers must pay for it as well.

The article below describes what the government is heaping on Canadian taxpayers, while risking public safety. Now the opposition Conservative party is calling for an investigation “into ‘appalling’ government spending on Canadian ISIS women.”



“From hotels, to wine and candy: Canada spent $170K to bring back women who joined Islamic State,” by Tyler Dawson, National Post, August 15, 2025:

The federal government spent more than $170,000 to bring Canadian women and their children back to the country after they went overseas to join the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, documents show.

As first reported by Global News, the documents, which were released under access to information legislation, contain details of the costs incurred when eight women, along with their children, were brought home from Syria. They include costs for business class air travel and hotel bills in Montreal that include wine, candy and chocolates. A number of the women have since been charged with terrorism offences.

“With Canadians lining up in food banks in record numbers and struggling with housing costs, the Liberal government must answer for why they spent $170,000 on lavish costs to repatriate reported ISIS criminals,” the letter reportedly says….

The first round of repatriations, completed in October 2022, cost $10,863, according to the documents from Global Affairs Canada. Canadians Kimberly Polman and Oumaima Chouay were returned to the country in that operation. Polman is facing terrorism charges and Chouay pleaded guilty last month to one charge of participating in the activities of a terrorist group.

The second operation, which occurred in April 2023, cost $132,746 in expenses for government staff and those returned to Canada.

Not all the expenses are detailed in the documents, but the total cost includes $20,331 for 23 hotel rooms at the Marriott hotel at the Montreal Airport, including room-service bills and a catering tab of nearly $3,000. At the time, four Canadian women — three of whom were arrested upon arrival — and their 10 children were returned to Canada, The Canadian Press reported.

Among that group was Edmontonian Aimee Lucia Vasconez, who was married to two different ISIS fighters, according to an affidavit filed in court by an RCMP officer. Another, Ammara Amjad, was also arrested and faces a terrorism charge.

Individual bills show that one room cost nearly $1,100, driven up from the original room cost of $638 by purchases of $95 worth of wine, a $105 room-service meal and $87 worth of items from the hotel gift store, including chocolate, chips and drugs such as Benadryl and Reactine.

The third repatriation operation, done in early July 2023, cost more than $27,500 and saw a government of Canada employee purchase snacks, including goldfish and granola bars, from Costco, and Timbits from Tim Hortons, for the operation. Hotel rooms in Montreal cost a bit more than $2,300…



To: longz who wrote (1552643)8/25/2025 2:43:55 PM
From: locogringo2 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
longz

  Read Replies (6) | Respond to of 1570753
 
Some record lows in Illinois tonight including Springfield, the Capital. Maybe the mega fat@$$ gov will run away to Cal.

Must be global warming in the middle of August.

Lows in Minnesota too.



To: longz who wrote (1552643)8/25/2025 9:23:31 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Respond to of 1570753
 
Trump says imports of wood products may pose national security threat to U.S.

Raising fears in B.C.Section 232 investigation could mean more tariffs for softwood sector, already dealing with 35% duty rate



Akshay Kulkarni · CBC News · Posted: Aug 25, 2025 6:00 AM CST | Last Updated: August 25



U.S. President Donald Trump could impose further tariffs as part of a Section 232 investigation into imported wood products — which is a law that authorizes investigations into matters of national security. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press/CBC)

B.C.'s forestry sector is awaiting the results of a U.S. Commerce Department investigation into the imports of wood products, which could impose further tariffs on the beleaguered industry.

It comes months after U.S. President Donald Trump launched a Section 232 investigation into whether importing timber, lumber and derivative products could pose a national security threat to the U.S.

The prospect of further tariffs on B.C.'s softwood lumber industry in particular — which is already dealing with a high 35 per cent duty imposed by the U.S. — could mean even more mill closures and job losses, experts say.

WATCH | Softwood lumber duties increased to 35%:



U.S. increases softwood lumber fees on Canada to 35.19% | Hanomansing Tonight

17 days ago

The U.S. Department of Commerce increased countervailing duties on Canadian softwood lumber on Friday, bringing the total to 35.19 per cent.

"Lumber is just one of many sectors that could get impacted … maybe lumber gets a lower tariff, but plywood and OSB [engingeered wood]and pulp get a higher tariff. We don't know," saidRuss Taylor, a forestry industry consultant and analyst.

"But, very clearly, this is a broad-based approach to how the U.S. can deal with applying tariffs based on whatever their logic is and, you know, [put] the chokehold on Canada," he added.

Under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, top U.S. officials can direct the Secretary of Commerce to look into suspected national security threats caused by imports. Within 270 days — roughly nine months — the secretary must present the president with a report and any recommendations for action.

Trump has previously imposed tariffs based on Section 232 investigations for steel, aluminum, autos, and copper, which have been particularly damaging to the Canadian economy, leading to job losses and a drop in exports.

The United States has long been the single largest market for B.C. lumber exports, representing over two-thirds of the market for the approximately $10-billion industry.

However, thousands of jobs have been lost as mills have been closing around the province in recent years, and major forestry companies are opening up new mills in the United States.

WATCH | Separating fact from fiction in the lumber dispute:



Separating fact from fiction in the U.S.-Canada softwood lumber trade war

12 days ago

The lumber mills on Mitchell Island along the Fraser River are still bustling, but there are worries they could be in trouble. Last Friday, the U.S. Department of Commerce announced a big hike on duties for Canadian softwood lumber. Other anti-dumping fees were announced in July. That means Canadian lumber is now subject to duties of more than 35 per cent. We speak with Kevin Mason, the managing director of ERA Forest Products Research, who provides some context on the ongoing trade dispute.
Taylor — who lists Teal Cedar, West Fraser Timber and Western Forest Products among the nearly 300 forestry companies he's worked for — says that, while the anticipated Section 232 tariffs could cause further mill curtailments in B.C., the U.S. forestry industry doesn't yet have the capacity to fill the void that would be left by a lack of Canadian imports.

"We're 22 to 24 per cent of U.S. consumption, so that can't go away to zero because they'll be short," he said of the U.S. softwood lumber market.

"And believe me, the U.S. mills will be very happy to raise their price … at a discount to the Canadian price because that's just free money in the short term for them," he added.

Ultimately, Taylor says that the average U.S. homebuilder is going to be the one that ends up paying more as it becomes more expensive to import Canadian lumber due to tariffs and duties.



A worker inspects lumber on a conveyor belt at West Fraser Pacific Inland Resources sawmill in Smithers, B.C., in February 2020. Over two-thirds of the B.C. softwood lumber industry exports are destined for the U.S. (Jesse Winter/Reuters)

Results could arrive in the fall: ministerThe Section232 investigation into imported wood products was initiated in March, the same week Trump ordered a similar investigation into imported copper.

That particular probe was finished in July, and the U.S. president ordered a 50 per cent tariff on imported copper as a result.



Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said the government's understanding is that the fall would be the latest the Section 232 investigation would be released. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Forests Minister Ravi Parmar told CBC News that the province's understanding is that Trump has received the Section 232 investigation into wood products, and may be sourcing more data before releasing its results.

The investigation will be released this fall at the latest, according to the minister.

"But as we know, he has released information that has impacted our pharmaceuticals industry, our copper industry," Parmar said.

"And so it very well could be just a matter of time that he puts another attack on our forest sector."Parmar previously said that the investigation could result in quotas, which could limit the amount of forestry products that could be brought into the U.S.

But Taylor says he has doubts over whether quotas would be imposed, saying the current state of affairs with high duties was already advantageous for the U.S.

"I'm not sure what else they would be looking for, except to say we can implement a tariff. Why don't we?" he said.

WATCH | PM announces $1.2B in softwood lumber supports:



Carney unveils $1.2B aid package for softwood lumber industry, while visiting B.C.
20 days ago

After months of pressure and pleading from B.C., the prime minister is making a significant monetary commitment to help Canada’s beleaguered forestry sector. As Brady Strachan reports, the promises come amid the US-sparked trade war and its impact on one of this province’s major exports.
Parmar said it was hard to say exactly what Trump would do, saying the president "changes his mind on a regular basis," but he was optimistic over recently-announced federal supports for the lumber industry as it awaits the investigation's results.

"I think it's important for the president to recognize that, as a man who ran on a mission to stand up for the middle class, he is adding the biggest tax on the middle class ever," the minister said in late July.

"And that is a tax for people who are simply trying to build a home, or those that are trying to rebuild their homes."



To: longz who wrote (1552643)9/4/2025 12:57:56 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1570753
 
Canada will thank U.S. President Donald Trump in 20 years, former Quebec premier says

By The Canadian Press

September 03, 2025 at 12:03PM EDT



Former Quebec premier Jean Charest speaks to reporters at a business luncheon on relations with the United States, in Quebec City, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot

QUÉBEC — Jean Charest says Canada will eventually thank U.S. President Donald Trump for providing the country with a much-needed economic shakeup.

The Quebec premier between 2003 and 2012 told business leaders in Quebec City on Tuesday that Trump is pulling Canada out of its “lethargy” and forcing its leaders to rethink the economy.

Charest is now a member of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s council on Canada-U.S. relations.He says Trump and his tariff war are forcing Canada to review its tax system, economy and the way it carries out major projects.

The ex-premier adds that Canada needs to reduce its dependence on the United States and expand into new markets.

Charest suggested the country under Carney’s leadership will accelerate big projects, rethink federalism, and redefine the country’s role in the world.

“I’m from the school of thought that we’ll thank Donald Trump in 20 years for shaking us up in Canada and bringing us out of our lethargy,” he said Tuesday in a speech at a Quebec City hotel. “It’s high time we rethink our economy.”

---

Thomas Laberge, The Canadian Press

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 3, 2025.



To: longz who wrote (1552643)9/7/2025 2:09:57 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
longz

  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 1570753
 
It seems pocono associates with criminal cops and broke the law of two countries.
Message 31691547

Washington State drug smuggling.
Message 31691587

There is maybe a reason pocono is not allowed entry to the US+A



To: longz who wrote (1552643)9/10/2025 12:00:28 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
the traveler

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1570753
 
This is terrible! Now Eric and pocotraitor won't be able to get their Happy Meal toy!

reddit.com



To: longz who wrote (1552643)9/10/2025 1:00:11 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Respond to of 1570753
 
This is funny! koan is awesome...!

koan in 2016
Message 30830850

koan in 2024
Message 34894084



To: longz who wrote (1552643)9/10/2025 1:12:40 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1570753
 
Dems Warn Surveillance Videos Perpetuate Stereotypes By Accurately Depicting Events

U.S.·Sep 9, 2025 · BabylonBee.com



WASHINGTON, D.C. — As national discourse continued to be centered around highly publicized violent crimes perpetrated on innocent victims, Democrats warned that surveillance videos perpetuate stereotypes by accurately depicting events.

A series of shocking incidents caught on various surveillance cameras brought the increase in violent crime to the public's attention, causing prominent members of the Democratic Party to push for the removal of security cameras, as they tend to portray violent criminals as violent criminals.

"It's wrong for these cameras to show things as they really are," said Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett. "With all these cameras everywhere, it's gettin' really hard to spin some crazy stories to create false narratives to fit our agendas, ya'll. For real. With videos goin' viral on social media, showing events as they actually happened, it perpetuates all those negative stereotypes. I'm not even playin'."

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries agreed that the continued use of surveillance video could lead to too many people being informed about what actually happens. "This is a dangerous and slippery slope," he told reporters. "If too many people know the truth about things that happen, it becomes far more difficult to feed them misinformation to shift public opinion in a direction that would be more favorable to our side. Showing violent criminals being violent criminals could lead to people thinking violent criminals are all violent criminals. That's something we can't have."

At publishing time, activists who had pushed for law enforcement agencies to adopt officer bodycams had organized a protest to demand that law enforcement agencies stop using officer bodycams.



To: longz who wrote (1552643)9/25/2025 10:08:51 PM
From: Maple MAGA 3 Recommendations

Recommended By
Doren
locogringo
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1570753
 
Brace yourself, more lies and crap about DJT coming.