Feb 182026
 

Indigenous Street

Canada appears to be on the doorstep of its final demise, as more and more people are discovering the country’s dismal political history and its disintegration as a viable sovereign nation.

It can be argued that Canada is already finished as a nation, particularly in the light of a recent court ruling declaring that various indigenous tribes were the legitimate ‘owners’ of long-established and developed Canadian municipalities – and that not even the Crown had any jurisdiction over such lands.

The re-naming of Vancouver’s Trutch Street to šxʷməθkʷəy̓əmasəm Street in the Musqueam language is an affront not just to Canada’s identity, but to fundamental linguistic principles and to the means of communication itself.

Also symbolic of Canada’s collective mental illness, the recent mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge BC was attributed to a female ‘gun person’ when in fact it was well known that the shooter was a male ‘trans-sexual.’

Attempting to blame the underlying cause of the shootings on the need for more gun controls, Canadian officials, along with the media of the Left, appeared oblivious to the fact that Canada has perhaps the strictest gun control laws in the world. In fact, the right to use weapons of any sort in self defense is effectively illegal in Canada, which in and of itself negates Canada’s right to exist.

Last week’s announcements by four of Canada’s most western provinces (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba) to separate from Canada has apparently caught the Canadian government by surprise, when it should have been an expected consequence of their own making.

Upon recalling the analysis’ and predictions of early 1990s Canadian authors William Trench (Only You Can Save Canada) and Joe C. W. Armstrong (Farewell the Peaceful Kingdom), it becomes abundantly clear that, as a free nation, Canada has been committing a slow suicide for most of the past century.

Even then, Joe Armstrong described Canada as “nearly a totalitarian society, frighteningly close to dictatorship. Canadian sovereignty no longer exists. After ten years of struggle to document what has happened, I find myself far more disillusioned with the general populace than I am with Canada’s leaders.”

And similarly, William Trench realized that what ‘multi-culturalism’ means in practice is that “There is no such thing as a Canadian.” And in describing Canada’s immigration policy of his time he wrote: “Give me your lying, your cheating, your feuding masses, yearning to live for free.”

Those words were written over three decades ago and were based on many decades of Canadian history and politics prior to their being published. But most significantly, they accurately describe Canada’s zeitgeist of 2026.

Common to all of Canada’s failures and its decline as a sovereign nation has been the ideology of the Left. Unless all things Left are politically abandoned and seen for the harm that they do, little will change for Canadians, or for any of the provinces hoping to escape – not from Canada – but from the Left.

Thus in addressing Canada’s dystopia, when Steven Crowder repeatedly emphasized that the Left is always wrong, he got it Just Right.

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