Former Independent Member for Lanark-Frontenac-Kingston.
True believer of Freedom, Justice and Democracy.


Randy Hillier

Canada as Peacemaker Again: The Full 5-Part Op-Ed Series
Next up Wednesday March 18th

#2 Ending the Oil Wars Without Betraying Our Allies
if you missed the first installment


Here it is

Op-Ed #1: Why the Middle East Wars Never End — And What They’ve Done to Us
If you’re a 68-year-old Canadian or American like me, raised in the Cold War, that old feeling still lives in your chest: America and the West are the good guys. We beat the Nazis, stared down the Soviets, stood for freedom. “Us versus them” wasn’t slogans — it was truth. Our wars felt righteous.

I’ve carried that belief for decades. But watching another wave of strikes on Iran in 2026 — missiles flying, gas prices jumping again — I finally faced something that hurts: the story we told ourselves has a painful hole in it.

The Cold War ended in 1991. The evil empire was gone. And almost overnight, America’s wars moved to one place: oil country. Iraq twice. Libya. Syria. Yemen. Venezuela in January. Now Iran and the Strait of Hormuz. It’s not random. It’s the price of the petro-dollar — and I’ve come to see that system as something that quietly hollowed out the soul of the countries I love.
Here’s what they never taught us.
In 1971, Nixon slammed the gold window shut. The dollar was no longer backed by anything real. To keep the world needing dollars, we cut a deal with Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states: price your oil only in U.S. dollars, recycle the profits into our Treasuries and stocks, and we’ll protect you with our military.
That deal let us run huge deficits year after year without paying the normal price. We got the “exorbitant privilege.” It felt like winning the lottery.

But look what we lost.
Manufacturing — the backbone of the America and Canada I grew up in — fell from 21–28% of our economies in the 1950s and 1960s to barely 9.5–10% today. Factories closed. Jobs that built cars, steel, and appliances with our own hands moved overseas. Our prosperity now rides on their labour and their resources — China’s factories, Gulf oil, Asian sweat. We print dollars; they do the real work.

And worse — we paid for it in blood.
Hundreds of thousands died in Iraq. Tens of thousands in Libya and Yemen. Countless more in Syria. And right now, in March 2026, thousands of Iranians and Israelis are dying while the U.S. and Israel press the campaign to keep the dollar pricing system alive. These were never sold as oil wars. They were wrapped in noble language: stopping dictators, fighting terror, preventing nuclear threats, liberating the people. Few of those reasons were honest. But the real motive was protecting the petro-dollar so our easy prosperity could continue.

We didn’t just import debt and called it wealth- We created an illusion and called it reality- built upon graves.
That system didn’t just change our foreign policy. It changed us. It made us softer, dependent, less productive in the way that once defined our nations culture and heritage. Productivity growth slowed after the 1970s. We became world champions at casino finance, consumption, and stock buybacks instead of building things with our own hands. The Greatest Generation and our parents earned their pride through factories humming with North American workers. We earned ours by policing oil routes so the dollar stays king.

I feel real sadness writing this — not anger at America or Canada, but a deep, aching regret. The countries I loved as a boy didn’t need endless desert wars to stay rich. They earned their place the hard way: through discipline, factories, honest work, and with a moral compass.

The petro-dollar let us outsource the dying along with the manufacturing. We got cheap goods, cheap credit, and poor health. Others got the graves.

Younger generations see this more clearly than we do. They grew up with the 2008 crash, forever wars, and China’s rise. They ask the question we were never taught: whose prosperity are we really protecting?
Understanding this doesn’t make you unpatriotic. It makes you honest. It explains why “peace in the Middle East” has always stayed out of reach.
Next week I’ll show you how Canada can be the peacemaker again — ending the oil wars without betraying our allies.
The petro-dollar trap doesn’t have to be forever. With clear eyes and good old Canadian common sense, we can lead the way out.
It’s time we remembered who we really are.

4 weeks ago | [YT] | 34

Randy Hillier

Covid—Canada’s Chernobyl: The Fallout of Lies!

As a Canadian who stood against the tide during the COVID-19 crisis—founding No More Lockdowns Canada (@NML_Canada)



I’ve watched our nation’s response unfold like a tragic echo of history. What if I told you that Canada’s handling of COVID mirrored the Soviet Union’s Chernobyl disaster, not in radiation clouds, but in a toxic fog of deception? Both were crises amplified by systemic flaws and lies, leaving scars on bodies, minds, and trust.





But here’s the heart of it: Many complied out of genuine care—for our families, neighbors, and country. They masked up, locked down, and trusted the experts believing it was the compassionate choice. Yet, looking back, those good intentions were built on shifting sands of lies, and misinformation. It’s time we reflect, not in anger, but in shared sorrow and resolve, to heal and prevent another fallout.



The Haunting Parallels: Denial vs. Dread



Remember the chilling images of Chernobyl’s meltdown? Soviet officials minimized the blast, calling it a “minor incident” while radiation poisoned the air. They suppressed known reactor flaws to protect their image of unassailable power and infallible virtue, delaying evacuations and forcing parades amid the toxic fallout. The lies weren’t born of malice but of a system terrified of admitting weakness or fault to the public.



Now, flip the script to COVID in Canada: Instead of downplaying, our leaders amplified fears with dire exaggerated models predicting apocalyptic death tolls and touted foolhardy solutions like lockdowns and vaccines as infallible shields, while debates over supportive options like vitamin D or ivermectin were sidelined. We were told “two weeks to flatten the curve,” but it stretched into years of isolation. Measures like the Emergencies Act—invoked against peaceful truckers and later deemed unconstitutional—frozen bank accounts and silenced voices. In the U.S. and Canada, intelligence agencies pressured main stream and social media to censor dissent, much like the KGB buried Chernobyl truths. The inversion stings deep: Chernobyl’s lies let danger spread unchecked; COVID’s lies bred unnecessary panic, shuttering schools and businesses while sidelining treatments and natural immunity discussions.



For those who complied—like so many kind-hearted Canadians who queued for shots or stayed home to “protect grandma”—this wasn’t blind obedience. It was heartfelt trust in a system promising safety. But the emotional toll? Families divided, children robbed of joy, elders dying alone. Didn’t we all feel that ache in our souls?



The Devastating Fallout: Broken Trust and Lingering Pain



Chernobyl’s deception claimed lives—thousands from cancer, with whistleblowers like Valery Legasov driven to despair and suicide. It exposed the systemic USSR’s rot, hastening its collapse as Gorbachev admitted: the lies shattered illusions.

COVID’s fallout hits closer to home: Excess deaths from delayed care, skyrocketing mental health crises, and economic despair that pushed families to the brink. In Canada, unconstitutional lockdowns eroded freedoms we took for granted, while marginalized experts—doctors, scientists, and everyday heroes—faced smears and job losses for questioning the narrative. I know this pain firsthand; reputations were attacked, not for harm, but for daring to dissent. Yet, for compliers, the regret might cut even deeper: Realizing your sacrifices were based on partial truths—overstated risks, understated harms—feels like a betrayal of your goodwill.



This isn’t about blame; it’s about empathy. We complied to save lives, but the lies left us all wounded—isolated, anxious, and distrustful of institutions that once felt like guardians.



Why the Lies? A Secular Vacuum Filled by State Dogma


In secular societies like modern Canada—where faith in God has faded for many—the state steps in as the new moral compass, its policies becoming unquestionable dogma. Just as the Soviets replaced religion with communist orthodoxy, treating dissent as heresy, COVID elevated “public health” to a sacred rite. Lies glued it together: Self-interest (protecting careers), groupthink (enforced consensus), and censorship (silencing alternatives) ensured conformity. Surveillance apps tracked us, propaganda urged “unity,” and legal tools punished non-believers—echoing inquisitions where purity demanded obedience.



But in this vacuum, we’ve lost something profound: The humility of divine faith, which reminds us no human system is infallible. Without it, state power swells, turning good intentions into unintended tyranny.



A Path Forward: Reclaim Truth, Restore Compassion



To those who complied: Your heart was in the right place—we all wanted to protect the vulnerable. But let’s honor that by demanding better: Independent inquiries into COVID policies, reforms to prevent intelligence overreach, and protections for free speech. Canada isn’t the USSR, but without vigilance, lies will corrode us too.

The long-term fallout from the Chernobyl lies includes a silver lining. The startling reformation of the USSR, the end of their authoritarian government, and the restoration of universal Christian moral standards.



Will COVID be Canada’s Chernobyl? Let’s rebuild with empathy, questioning dogma not out of rebellion, but love for our shared humanity. The fallout of lies doesn’t have to define us—truth can set us free. Join the conversation at @NML_Canada



open.substack.com/pub/randyhillier/p/covidcanadas-…

1 month ago | [YT] | 88

Randy Hillier

How the Canadian WASP Stung Itself to Death


I have been a witness to a sixty-year assisted suicide. I stood on the playground in 1965 and watched the Red Ensign come down, replaced by a secular leaf that promised a new, "inclusive" era. I didn’t know then that I was watching the first stitch being pulled from the fabric of my own civilization. I have lived to see the Canada of my youth—a place of quiet order, thrift, liberty, and privacy—be systematically dismantled by the very people it was built by. We didn’t vote for a tragedy; we were told we were "progressing." But in our polite, Canadian quest to be "nice," we effectively stung ourselves to death.


The Erasure of the Sacred


It began with a quiet retreat from the symbols that told us who we were. When we took down the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew, we weren’t just changing a flag; we were removing the literal compass of our culture. We traded the "Supremacy of God" for the "Supremacy of the State." By the time we scrubbed the Lord’s Prayer and God Save the Queen from our schools, the message to my generation was clear: your history is an embarrassment, and your faith is a private hobby. We replaced a deep, rooted identity with an " undefined multicultural" experiment that made our own heritage just one of many options—leaving the nation with a hollow core and a "post-national" identity that belongs to everyone and, therefore, to no one.


The Economic Betrayal: The Death of the Single-Income Home


In my youth, the "Protestant work ethic" wasn't a slogan; it was a sacred contract. If a man worked hard, he could own a piece of this land and raise a family on a single, honest income. That wasn’t just an economic reality; it was the foundation of our social stability. It allowed a mother to be present, a home to be a sanctuary, and a family to be beholden to no one but themselves.


We shredded that contract. Through a sixty-year program of debt-fueled "growth" and a welfare state that expanded as our self-reliance withered, we debased the very currency of our lives. My dollar today is a ghost, buying barely 10% of what it did when I was a young man. We traded the dignity of a debt-free home for a mountain of private and public debt that now exceeds our entire GDP. Today, it takes two incomes just to tread water in a rental market, leaving our children too broke, too tired, or too anxious to even consider starting a family of their own. We sold our birthright for a mess of "consumer credit."


The Legal Betrayal: The Rise of the Surveillance State


The most bitter sting, however, came from our own "progressive" laws. In 1969, we were sold the lie that "the state has no place in the bedrooms of the nation." We thought we were gaining liberty by evicting the Church’s moral oversight. What a catastrophic trade. As we removed the "moral" authority of our faith, we invited the "technical" tyranny of the State.


I have watched my right to be "left alone" evaporate in a thousand polite increments. We moved from a culture where an officer needed "probable cause" to one where the state can demand your breath, your data, and your compliance on a whim. Under the guise of "public safety" and "national security," we have built a surveillance apparatus that would have been unthinkable in 1965. We are "liberated" from the Ten Commandments, but we are enslaved to a digital panopticon that tracks our every move and freezes our bank accounts if we dare to dissent. We traded the "Supremacy of God" for the "Supremacy of the Algorithm."


The Achievement That Failed


The bureaucrats in Ottawa will show you charts of increased longevity to prove their success. But I look at the tent cities in our parks, the skyrocketing rates of "Medical Assistance in Dying," and a "loneliness epidemic" born of a profound, secular despair. We have more "Rights," but we have no "Rites." We have "Inclusion," but we have no Community.


We were so terrified of being "intolerant" that we became intolerant of our own existence. We scrubbed the Lord’s Prayer and God Save the Queen from our schools, and in doing so, we told our children they came from nowhere and belonged to nothing. We stung ourselves with our own "progressive" ideals, and as I look at the fractured, indebted Canada of 2026, I realize we didn’t just lose our flag—we lost our home.


We will never find our long-lost home, but we can rebuild and restore it, with the tools of our Christian faith, heritage, culture and our children. This old Canadian WASP isn’t done yet.

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________________________________________

1 month ago | [YT] | 84

Randy Hillier

Livestream Today

The Philosopher, the Stoic and the Teddy Bear Podcast Thursday January 29, 2026 - 12pm PDT / 3pm EST.

Special Guests:
@randyhillier
&
Jordan Kealy
@Jordan_Keal


Party politics and the New World Order. Then we move on to answering more of your questions. Live on X, Substack, YouTube and Rumble.

1 month ago | [YT] | 22

Randy Hillier

from Randy.Hillier.Substack.com


Is Radical Islam a derivative of Zionism?

While Bibi Netanyahu the alleged criminal and fugitive from international law remains at large and enjoying a round of golf at Mar A largo, alleged American fugitive Nicholas Maduro has been kidnapped in Caracas and is enroute to an American prison.
Although the American track record of using the military to create democracy is somewhat spotty at best and Trump promised not to do this ever again. Promises are often short lived in politics and seldom last an entire election cycle.
But what is often overlooked is the consequences for Americans and the Western world when the military is used to impose democracy
One thing that is an observable fact while watching politics for 60 years.is that every time the USA resorts to military action There are second order consequences.
1. The American surveillance state grows larger.
2. The need for more censorship is justified.
3. Disrespect and abuse of due process escalates.
4. And America's beacon for world liberty dims.
It’s a simple and timeless fact that when you make enemies abroad, it becomes more dangerous at home. America has a poor record of "freeing" people, or making other countries "better off."
1. Libya 2. Iraq 3. Ukraine 4. Syria 5. Chile 6. Yugoslavia 7. Grenada 8. Panama 9. Afghanistan 10. Cambodia 11. Vietnam Come to mind. But sure, this time it will be different in Venezuela.
Have military/corporate interests overtaken America's interest in Liberty?




Is Radical Islam a derivative of Zionism?
I do not oppose Zionism out of hatred for the Jewish people or the State of Israel, nor do I harbor animosity toward Muslims or the Islamic faith. However, we must recognize that both Zionism and radical Islam pose significant challenges to Western nations. These challenges must be confronted and understood not only through their historical context, but with principled evaluation.
Our Former Allies: The Arab Revolt
During World War I, Great Britain and its allies courted Arab tribes to revolt against the Ottoman Empire. One may even argue that the dismemberment and exploitation of the Ottoman Empire was a key objective and motivation that triggered WW1. Figures like Lawrence of Arabia symbolize an era where Muslim Arabs were essential Western allies. Following the war, these tribes were rewarded with territories and the establishment of monarchies. In return, the West secured access to exploit and profit from the region’s energy resources.
The primary failures of this arrangement were the 1916 Sykes-Picot treaty where the 3 Western powers Great Britan, France and Russia secretly agreed how to plunder and partition the Ottoman empire: and the British Mandate for Palestine. Following the 1917 Balfour Declaration, Britain permitted and facilitated the sale of Palestinian land to European Jewish settlers. This included the "Haavara Agreement," which allowed 60,000 German Jews to emigrate to Palestine in exchange for money/assets. This influx led to escalating tensions with the indigenous Arab population in Palestine. By 1948, amidst open warfare, Britain withdrew, and the State of Israel was declared.
The Expansion of Zionism (1948–1967)
The 1948 conflict resulted in the Nakba, or "catastrophe," during which approximately 750,000 Palestinians were displaced. While a tenuous ceasefire held for nearly two decades, the 1967 Six-Day War fundamentally altered the map. Israel’s preemptive strike led to the seizure of the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights, the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza. While the Sinai was returned to Egypt in 1982, the other territories remain under military occupation. This second conflict displaced an additional 400,000 Palestinians.
Defining Zionism is an Ideology,
Zionism is the political ideology that justifies a Jewish nation-state, yet it also serves as the foundation for laws that marginalize non-Jewish residents. It functions as an ethno-racial ideology, promoting a hierarchy of humanity based on ancestry or faith.
History is replete with similar frameworks. South Africa’s Apartheid system classified Black citizens as inferior; the West eventually found this abhorrent and sanctioned the regime. The 1947 Partition of India created borders based on religion, leading to mass displacement and ongoing hostilities. Even the United States long maintained a racial hierarchy through naturalization laws and Jim Crow segregation.
While Zionism has unique characteristics, it shares a common thread with these systems. Notable Jewish scholars, such as Zeev Sternhell and Yeshayahu Leibowitz, have warned that this path leads to a "descent into fascism." Leibowitz even utilized the term "Judeo-Nazis" to describe those who prioritize land and ethnicity over fundamental human rights.

The Impact on Canada
Canadians should take note because the logical corollary of "Greater Israel" has been the displacement of Middle Eastern Arab Christians and Muslims. This is achieved through a two-pronged approach: discriminatory property and civil liberty laws and military conflicts that force migration.
As a result, roughly one million people from these conflict zones have settled in Canada. Like many other immigrants, they often carry generations of trauma and animosity toward the Western powers that supported their displacement. Consequently, it has become commonplace in Canada to see regional conflicts—whether Palestinian-Israeli or Sikh-Hindu—spill over into violent domestic protests.
Recently, Canada has shifted its stance, offering mild criticism of illegal Israeli settlements and moving toward the recognition of a Palestinian state. However, the Canadian political establishment remains heavily influenced by wealthy interest groups like CIJA and CJPAC. This influence often results in a "silent" endorsement of unequal treatment under Israeli law, contributing to the unrest seen in Canadian cities today.
The Cost of Double Standards are Civil Liberties
In the United States and Canada, there is growing concern that elected representatives prioritize foreign interests over domestic policy. Furthermore, the rise of global terrorism is largely a byproduct of these policies. By supporting the displacement of Palestinians, Western nations have effectively turned many of their WWI Arab allies into "Radical Islamists" foes.
This shift has direct consequences for our civil liberties. The transition to a surveillance-censorship state—manifested in "no-fly lists," intense airport security, and restricted financial transactions and censorship—is a direct response to the friction created by our Middle Eastern foreign policy. To understand these restrictions, we must look at how our embrace of Zionism transformed a region of friends into a source of perpetual conflict.
Zionism and the Double Standard
Most Canadians strenuously oppose racial-ethnic laws at home as antithetical to Western values, yet many support these same laws in Israel. This is a clear double standard: Canada adopts multiculturalism domestically while supporting an ethno-nationalist state abroad.
Canada was once at the forefront of the campaign against South African Apartheid, using sanctions and expulsion from the Commonwealth to demand change. Yet, regarding Zionism, the West has remained largely silent. The hypocrisy of yesterday has finally caught up to the double standards of today.
Can we find a new Lawrence in Arabia to navigate a more principled path?

3 months ago | [YT] | 32

Randy Hillier

"Freedom of Speech: The True Antidote to Hate and Division
Join me in Ottawa Sunday December 21st
Randy Hillier


Get an early Christmas present this Sunday in Ottawa and join us for a premiere showing of Greg Wycliffes powerful expose and documentary “The Hate Network.:

Tickets are only $10 and space is limited to 200 people you can book online or take your chances at the door.





Following the screening there will be an open mike Q & A with myself, Greg and Mia Highes.

When Sunday December 21st

Where Bikers Church 115 Carillon st Vanier

Time 3:30 p:m

Tickets $10 Tickets






"Freedom of Speech: The True Antidote to Hate and Division"
The Roots of Division in Politics.



Division has always been the sport of kings and politicians. Today’s political parties rely on it to survive. They turn people into members of adversarial teams or tribes to compete.



In Canada and elsewhere, this division has reached a peak. It has now crossed the Rubicon and turned into hate. In 2018, a small group formed the Canadian Anti-Hate Network (CAHN). It included academics, left-wing advocates, bureaucrats, and Zionists. They soon received funding from the Liberal government.



This group aimed to promote hatred against free speech advocates. They targeted those opposed to the government’s cultural and economic policies. Using courts, media, and politicians, they have chilled freedom of expression. They equate dissent with hatred in Canada.



The True Goal: Control by the Elite



At its core, politics seeks authority to control people. This benefits the elite. Tools like censorship, division, and hate help maintain that control. They also enhance the elites’ advantages.



The greatest threat to this control is freedom of expression. That’s why it’s seen as an unalienable right. When people lose this freedom, division escalates to hate. Political control then edges toward tyranny.



Lessons from History: Jesus and the Pharisees



Two thousand years ago, humanity saw the power of free speech. Jesus Christ challenged the Pharisees’ corruption and control over the people. The Pharisees fought back. They used state authority to censor and discredit his truths. In the end, they relied on manipulation, coercion, money, lawfare, and even death to silence their critic.



Modern Pharisees and Their Tools



Today’s corporate and political elites act like modern Pharisees. So do bureaucrats, academics, and jurists. They use the same ancient tools: censorship, coercion, money, division, lawfare, and hate. But now, they have advanced technology on their side. Tech oligarchs like Zuckerberg and Gates fit this role. So do medical experts like Fauci and Tam. They disguise their control through algorithms, content moderation policies, and disinformation campaigns.



What If Free Expression Had Been Silenced?



Would we still be in the Inquisition era without freedom of expression and courage of Martin Luther?



Would we still have enslaved or second-class Black citizens without freedom of expression and the courage of Wilberforce and MLK Jr?



Where would society be had it not been for the common men like Thomas Paine or Jefferson, Lincoln or Churchill, Solzhenitsyn or Walesa to express their words and writings. Would America still be a colony, would the ideology of Nazism be predominate in the West, and would Eastern Europe and Russia still be behind an Iron Curtain? The answer is obvious.



We would still be ignorant of the surveillance state, Panama papers without the likes of Edward Snowden and Julian Assange to be whistleblowers.



The Truckers convoy and their willingness to speak freely ensured the end to the onerous and unlawful state of emergency, lockdowns and vaccine mandates.



Freedom as the Ultimate Defense



Humanity’s most effective tool against control, and Tyranny, is and always will be our freedom of expression and our courage to wield it while opposing authority.



The antidote to Hate, division and censorship is also our defense of freedom of speech and expression. Let’s use it liberally and end the Canadian Hate network and dimmish the political sport of division.



Staying at Scuttlebutt Lodge.



If you are looking for a getaway and would also like to support my efforts, book some time at Scuttlebutt Lodge, my camp in Lanark County. You can book online here or email me info@randyhillier.com






Scuttlebutt Lodge is now available for rent to help you escape the madness we are all living in. Enjoy some peace and quiet in the beautiful Canadian backcountry of Lanark County. Stay in the 200-year-old log homestead with a maximum of four guests, no pets, and delight in the comforts of 1 queen sized bed, 1 double bed, indoor plumbing, hot water, shower, power, internet, and a full kitchen while being surrounded by 600 acres of bush and fields with 100s of lakes easily within reach. Park your car, bring your own food and drink, and enjoy a wonderful bonfire at night.

Eat well, stay healthy and keep informed.



Merry Christmas

Randy Hillier-No More Lockdowns

No More Lockdowns Canada | Randy Hillier is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

3 months ago | [YT] | 41

Randy Hillier

Few politicians will go where others fear to tread!
Join with me & @MaximeBernier @BillboardChris in Ottawa Friday April 25th.
Lets save the children from the globalist Red & Blue teams from their malicious rainbow agenda, puberty blockers and scalpels.
On April 28th will you vote to protect your children and grandchildren?

11 months ago | [YT] | 57

Randy Hillier

Let’s Take Back Ontario
I've joined with @truedereksloan leader of The Ontario party which is the only viable and credible option to prevent Doug Ford from implementing his ruinous plan to engage in a damaging and disastrous trade war.



Premier Doug Ford has called a snap election; not for the benefit of the people but for his benefit. In an effort to protect himself and the political corporate establishment he represents.



Join us at www.ontarioparty.ca to volunteer, help out or to donate. If you want to be a candidate or if you know others, please contact me directly at info@randyhillier.com



We have a powerful and exciting team of candidates and platform to offer all of us an opportunity to reclaim and restore Canada.

Please share this email and our many policies on social media and help us reach more and more people.

1 year ago | [YT] | 152

Randy Hillier

Former Ontario MPP @randyhillier

has penned a follow up letter to President Trump regarding Canada/USA relations
@POTUS

@JDVance

@SenMarcoRubio

@SusieWiles

@LaraLeaTrump

@DonaldJTrumpJr


President of the USA
Donald J Trump
EEOB
1650 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20006
Dear President Trump
Two weeks ago on January 11th 2025, I addressed a letter to you regarding and seeking clarification on your recent commentary on Canada becoming the 51st State.
Since that time the topic has garnered substantial public interest and your actions on inauguration day, the “Day of Liberation,” January 20th has propelled further discussions.

Although our Canadian political establishment is responding in a most incendiary fashion regarding your request to fix our open borders and immigration policies; it is apparent to a great many Canadians that this is for the political gain of our established political parties rather than in the public’s best interest.

The disgraced and outgoing Canadian Prime Minister has created a “Council on Canada-U.S. Relations” to distort, conflate and confuse people to accept their false narrative that this is solely a trade war rather than a border and immigration problem. This council is composed of a handpicked cadre of left-wing union organizers & academics, government regulated & dependent business people, and former politicians.

They will most certainly promote and attempt to legitimize Justin Trudeau’s and the political establishment's duplicitous agenda.

Canada and the USA have had an unrivalled, prosperous and unique relationship for over 200 years and although there has been differences, they have generally been as a result of or for domestic political gain in Canada.

I encourage you to consider the points I raised in my first correspondence as a means to ensure both Canadians and Americans are not economically injured due to this political duplicity by Canada’s political establishment.

The creation of a bilateral commission identified in point 6 of my correspondence potentially named the President's council on Canada-USA relations may be an appropriate vehicle to ensure continued mutually respectful and prosperous American-Canadian relations and assist in making both Canada and America great again.

Respectfully
Randy Hillier
Former MPP Lanark, Frontenac and Kingston

1 year ago | [YT] | 69