Expropriation of farmers. “Farmers in Ontario are being forced off their land.”

https://x.com/JamesMelville/status/1800428436105932855

Waterloo public aroused by forced sale of farms
Fuelled by a series of front page articles in the Waterloo Region Record, local residents are becoming aroused and angry about a 750-acre land assembly surrounded in secrecy

Fuelled by a series of front page articles in the Waterloo Region Record, local residents are becoming aroused and angry about a 750-acre land assembly surrounded in secrecy.

What is known is that Landacre, acting on behalf of the Regional Municipality of Waterloo and Ontario Realty Corporation, has made offers of purchase to the owners of six farms and six residential sites and has told them if they refuse to sell, they will be expropriated.

But Wilmot Township and Waterloo Region politicians and staff have been sworn to non-disclosure agreements so the public and the property owners do not know why the land is being purchased. There is speculation it is for a major manufacturing facility, but so far no companies have been identified.

Recently Wilmot Township council chambers at Castle Kilbride in Baden was packed by about 100 angry residents, including president Mark Reusser of the Waterloo Federation of Agriculture and Adam van Bergijik, owner of Mountain Oak Cheese Company, seeking answers.

Van Bergijik and his son, Arjo, produce cheeses that have won national and international awards and sell from an on-farm store near Haysville. They crop land that is within the bounds of the land assembly, but their barns and cheese plant are south of the boundary.

The land assembly is south of Highway 7&8, south-east of New Hamburg and extends one road south and to Wilmot Centre.

For a week, The Record has run one and sometimes two front page articles about the land assembly and columnist Luisa D’Amato has decried the secrecy and purchase of “prime farmland.”

https://www.ontariofarmer.com/news/farm-news/waterloo-public-aroused-by-forced-sale-of-farms

Disturbing manifesto of Nashville ‘trans’ school shooter shows the darkness of LGBT ideology

(LifeSiteNews) — On March 27, 2023. 28-year-old Audrey Hale, a young woman who identified as transgender, entered Covenant Christian School in Nashville, Tennessee, with two AR-style weapons and a handgun, shooting open a locked side door to gain access. She began her shooting spree at around 10:13 a.m., killing three 9-year-old children – Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs, and William Kinney – and three adults – 61-year-old substitute teacher Cynthia Peak, 60-year-old principal Dr. Katherine Koonce, and 61-year-old custodian Mike Hill. She was killed 14 minutes later by police.  

LGBT groups immediately called for the suppression of the shooter’s manifesto, obviously fearing that it would reveal another act of transgender terrorism. Law enforcement announced their decision to keep the manifesto secret, and the mainstream media agreed, despite the obvious public interest in the contents of the manifesto. Indeed, the press openly attempted to present the mass shooting as a case of a persecuted LGBT person being pushed too far by a Christian community.  

The Daily Mail’s headline: “Nashville mass shooter was rejected by her Christian parents.” NBC News: “Fear pervades Tennessee’s community amid focus on Nashville shooter’s gender identity.” The Associated Press: “The head of the of the Christian elementary school in Nashville who was killed in a shooting there on Monday was described by friends as smart, loving and a rare female leader within a male-led religious culture.” USA Todaycorrected initial reports that had “misgendered” the shooter. And the worst, from Reuters: “Former Christian school student kills 3 children, 3 staff in Nashville shooting.”  

This week, the press ban broke. The Tennessee Star obtained four dozen pages of Hale’s manifesto, and the writings reveal an angry young woman who was furious at her Christian parents—they loved her dearly and Hale still lived with them, at age 28, at the time of the shooting—and upset that puberty blockers were not available when she was a child. Hale referred to herself as “Aiden,” and the journal entries obtained by the Star are titled “My Imaginary Penis,” accompanied by a crude drawing of a male member. 

Hale’s papers give a glimpse into a disturbed mind. “My penis exists in my head. I swear… I’m a male,” she writes. She fantasizes about being able to have sex with a woman as “Aiden”; writes that her use of the male name in a job application had caused problems with the background check; says that being raised as a girl was “torture.” She appears to have struggled with same-sex attraction as a teen, and worried that her classmates would call her a “dyke.” She didn’t learn about transgenderism until she was in her twenties and embraced it immediately. 

“I finally found the answer—that changing one’s gender is possible,” she wrote. Audrey’s mother, however, was not supportive of her daughter identifying as male. “What she believes, how she grew up, conservatively, and that LGBTQ—especially transgender—was an enigma, nearly non-existent. I hate parental views; how my mom sees me as a daughter—and she’d not bear to want to lose that daughter because a son would be the death of Audrey.”  

Hale wrote of puberty blockers: “I’d kill to have those resources. 2017 was the birth of puberty blockers and a newfound discovery for treatment of non-conforming transgender children.” Hale, however, “was in the 6th grade, puberty already hit me.” She also wrote about simulating sexual scenes between male dolls and stuffed toys and took photos, writing: “I am such a pervert. I waste too much time in my fantasies.” That entry was written two weeks before she gunned down six people at Covenant Christian School. 

Hale’s journal entries—frequently referred to as her “manifesto”—were recovered by police from her car outside the school after she was killed along with hand-drawn maps, and although the chief of police stated that they would be released eventually, the FBI advised against their publication. The families of Audrey Hale’s victims launched a public records lawsuit, stating that they should have the right to determine whether the writing should be released.  

Last November, three pages of Hale’s notes were leaked to conservative podcaster Steven Crowder, revealing that Hale gloated about targeting “white privileged crackers” and writing the day of the attack: “Today is the day. The day has finally come. I can’t believe it’s here. Don’t know how I was able to get this far but here I am. I’m a little nervous but excited too, been excited for the past two weeks. I’m ready…I hope my victims aren’t. God let my wrath take over my anxiety. It might be 10 minutes tops. It might be 3-7. It’s gonna go quick. I hope I have a high death count. Ready to die.”  

Seven Nashville police officers were suspended after an investigation into the leaked pages, but this latest leak is far more substantial. The Tennessee Star obtained the four dozen new pages of Hale’s writings from “a source close to the investigation” who believed they should be made public, and they confirm what most expected: that Hale was a deeply troubled, homicidal trans activist. However, there are still several mysteries about Hale’s murder spree. Her clothing, for example, was covered with handwritten words and numbers, which have not been revealed; she also wore an anklet with the mysterious number “508407.” Nobody knows what it means.  

After a trans-identifying killer shot three adults and three little children, the press, law enforcement, and LGBT groups responded by colluding to keep the truth from the public—and to present Audrey Hale as a victim. Thank to a courageous whistleblower, we now know more of the truth.  

Immigration agent tells Canadian kids to just “invest in Bitcoin”

On this episode of The Faulkner Show, Harrison Faulkner speaks with Brampton-based immigration consultant Kanwar Sierah at an international student protest in Brampton. When asked what his response is to Canadians who feel like international students are taking jobs away from young Canadians, Sierah replied that Canadian kids should start businesses and invest in Bitcoin. Watch the full conversation between Faulknet and Sierah on the latest episode of The Faulkner Show.