David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Heres some of my work to check that I have sent you this file many times. Everybody knows I filed this lawsuit in the USA in 2002 on Canada Day EH?
https://www.scribd.com/document/2619437/CROSS-BORDER
David Raymond Amos @DavidRayAmos
Food for thought on Canada Day you may wish is ask your MP about around the barbecues this summer. As Trump and Trudeau battle over tariffs and NAFTA why not Google the following and ask them to explain my work?
http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2018/07/the-cbc-has-yet-to-delete-at-least-one.html
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/grenier-summer-polls-1.4724388
Polls give Justin Trudeau's Liberals little to celebrate this Canada Day
Conservatives in Quebec and the NDP in Ontario put pressure on the Liberals
When I refreshed the page a hour or so before closing time about 5 of the top threads were removed before I saved them but at least have what I had posted within them. However the LIEbranos seemed to have overlooked a few others (for now at least) one thread contains an important comment with words I cut and pasted straight from paragraph 83 of my lawsuit.
Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
David R. Amos
Here is some food for thought
on Canada Day that you may wish is ask your MP or Congressman about
around the many barbecues this summer. As Trump and Trudeau battle over
tariffs and NAFTA why not Google the following and ask them to explain
what i have been talking about in courts, on the soap box while running
for public office all over the Internet since 2002? Methinks it would
be a good thing to do before Trump does something really stupid and the
worldwide economy collapses and he strats another war or two N'esy Pas? Google the following then follow the money
Trump Cohen Bill Morneau NAFTA FATCA TPP
Jennifer Wark
After the way the liberals have been running things under Trudeau I will never again vote liberal.
Gordon MacFarlane
@Virginia Drew
Jennifer didn't say that, you did.
The liberals didn't invent women's rights or pay equity, in fact they don't do much on either file.
Jennifer didn't say that, you did.
The liberals didn't invent women's rights or pay equity, in fact they don't do much on either file.
David R. Amos
@Gordon MacFarlane "in fact they don't do much on either file"
In fact they supported Harper on many files.
Methinks if the leader of the 3rd Party in the House in 2014 or his handlers had a sense of ethical conduct or even two clues between their ears they would have sided with me against Barry Winters of Edmonton Alberta when he published the following words about Trudeau The Younger and I In 2014 N'esy Pas?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/nobody-safe-from-edmonton-blogger-charged-with-hate-crime-1.4161015
'Nobody was safe from it': Edmonton blogger charged with rare hate crime targeted individuals across Canada
Police say Barry Winters, 62, made derogatory remarks about race, gender, politics
Roberta Bell · CBC News · Posted: Jun 14, 2017 5:38 PM MT
Friday, October 3, 2014
Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And
Stupid Justin Trudeau
Canada’s and Canadians free ride is over. Canada can no longer hide
behind Amerka’s and NATO’s skirts.
When I was still in Canadian Forces then Prime Minister Jean Chretien actually committed the Canadian Army to deploy in the second campaign in Iraq, the Coalition of the Willing. This was against or contrary to the wisdom or advice of those of us Canadian officers that were involved in the initial planning phases of that operation. There were significant concern in our planning cell, and NDHQ about of the dearth of concern for operational guidance, direction, and forces for operations after the initial occupation of Iraq.
In fact they supported Harper on many files.
Methinks if the leader of the 3rd Party in the House in 2014 or his handlers had a sense of ethical conduct or even two clues between their ears they would have sided with me against Barry Winters of Edmonton Alberta when he published the following words about Trudeau The Younger and I In 2014 N'esy Pas?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/nobody-safe-from-edmonton-blogger-charged-with-hate-crime-1.4161015
'Nobody was safe from it': Edmonton blogger charged with rare hate crime targeted individuals across Canada
Police say Barry Winters, 62, made derogatory remarks about race, gender, politics
Roberta Bell · CBC News · Posted: Jun 14, 2017 5:38 PM MT
Friday, October 3, 2014
Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And
Stupid Justin Trudeau
Canada’s and Canadians free ride is over. Canada can no longer hide
behind Amerka’s and NATO’s skirts.
When I was still in Canadian Forces then Prime Minister Jean Chretien actually committed the Canadian Army to deploy in the second campaign in Iraq, the Coalition of the Willing. This was against or contrary to the wisdom or advice of those of us Canadian officers that were involved in the initial planning phases of that operation. There were significant concern in our planning cell, and NDHQ about of the dearth of concern for operational guidance, direction, and forces for operations after the initial occupation of Iraq.
Robert Paul
@Jennifer Wark
He has done everything he can to take away from the majority in every way possible in order to give our money and rights to very small minorities who frankly do not need any of it.
He has done everything he can to take away from the majority in every way possible in order to give our money and rights to very small minorities who frankly do not need any of it.
Bill Nazarene
@Robert Paul
Your Tiki-Torch is showing.
Your Tiki-Torch is showing.
David R. Amos
@Bill Nazarene Methinks yours is as well N'esy Pas?
Garry Walton
Sitting cross legged to show off one's socks while spewing gender neutrality, feminism, open borders,
carbon tax, debt is good and diversity is our strength has made Canadians visibly nauseous.
Buying a $4.5 Billion pipeline, cancelling others while pitifully negotiating NAFTA has made Canadian's
lives much more difficult. The savior, pot, will bring all sorts of social problems.
The recession is going to start, layoffs are now happening.
Trump will punish Canadians because of justin.
Has justin made any good decisions?
carbon tax, debt is good and diversity is our strength has made Canadians visibly nauseous.
Buying a $4.5 Billion pipeline, cancelling others while pitifully negotiating NAFTA has made Canadian's
lives much more difficult. The savior, pot, will bring all sorts of social problems.
The recession is going to start, layoffs are now happening.
Trump will punish Canadians because of justin.
Has justin made any good decisions?
David R. Amos
@Jim Palmer Methinks that thou doth jest too much N'esy Pas?
Bill Nazarene
@Garry Walton
One can always tell an Alt-Reich by their trigger words - tolerance, diversity, inclusive, feminism...
Your Tiki-Torch is showing.
One can always tell an Alt-Reich by their trigger words - tolerance, diversity, inclusive, feminism...
Your Tiki-Torch is showing.
Joyce Hope Shortell
Canadians are growing tired
of Trudeaus liberal idealism. Ask yourselves what has he & his
party done for all Canadians since being in power?
ralph jacobs
@Anderson John
You sound a lot like many other Justin groupies. Can't say anything worthwhile, say something nasty.
You sound a lot like many other Justin groupies. Can't say anything worthwhile, say something nasty.
@ralph jacobs YUP
Robert Paul
@Joyce Hope Shortell
Isn't it a hate crime to call him a he? Isn't he a shym instead?
Isn't it a hate crime to call him a he? Isn't he a shym instead?
David R. Amos
@Robert Paul YUP
Bob Lashram
Justin's 60 billion dollar
social reengineering experiment, his post national ideological nonsense,
his lack of transparency and integrity, and his labelling of all
contrary views with derogatory labels is destroying our country...the
39% who voted for this incompetence should be truly embarrassed and
ashamed...
Jason Cabaco
@Michael Larsne Yes......this is where the truth comes out
David R. Amos
@Jason Cabaco "Yes......this is where the truth comes out"
Dream on
Dream on
Margaret Bricknell
@Bob Lashram
Typical talking point- :social engineering". You don't even know what the term means, I would imagine.
If you think that spreading misinformation among your lot is NOT "social engineering", then you had better have a talk with Andrew Scheer,
Typical talking point- :social engineering". You don't even know what the term means, I would imagine.
If you think that spreading misinformation among your lot is NOT "social engineering", then you had better have a talk with Andrew Scheer,
Robert Paul
@Bob Lashram
And there is no way he still commands a 35% support amongst voters. No way!
And there is no way he still commands a 35% support amongst voters. No way!
David R. Amos
@Robert Paul I concur
David R. Amos
@Margaret Bricknell "If you
think that spreading misinformation among your lot is NOT "social
engineering", then you had better have a talk with Andrew Scheer,"
Methinks you should too N'esy Pas?
Methinks you should too N'esy Pas?
Garry Walton
justin will be remembered as the worst p.m. in Canadian history.
Daniel McKay
@Douglas Fowler "The Avro Arrow was a lemon!"
Is that why every high-speed fighter jet has been based on it, since? And the American military & aviation industry mopped up all the recruited all the brains behind it, after the plants were closed?
It's sure be good to have Canadians get back in the game with a clean sheet of paper, instead of being burdened with making anvils like the F35, function. I'd name the new Canadian super-fighter drone the "Diefenbaker", just out of spite LOL.
Is that why every high-speed fighter jet has been based on it, since? And the American military & aviation industry mopped up all the recruited all the brains behind it, after the plants were closed?
It's sure be good to have Canadians get back in the game with a clean sheet of paper, instead of being burdened with making anvils like the F35, function. I'd name the new Canadian super-fighter drone the "Diefenbaker", just out of spite LOL.
Peter Manchak
@Daniel McKay You should know, we can't fix HISTORY..you really should!
David R. Amos
@Daniel McKay Methinks folks should ask themselves why CBC is deleting so many comments N'esy Pas?
Randy Newman
Even if we had thrown a dart
and elected anyone randomly off the street to be our PM two years ago,
Canada would be in a better shape than it is now. Can't think of any
other prime ministers in the history of Canada that did worse than
Trudeau has in the last two years
David R. Amos
True
David R. Amos
@Paul
Miodowski " The average blue collar Canadian is getting tired of having
feminism, diversty,peoplekind propaganda and massive debt shoved down
their throats 24/7...."Methinks you should not mind that I second your remark but many anglophone liberals may protest this simple expression N'esy Pas?
David R. Amos
@mia stalling Yea but of the "Canada has no history of colonialism" issue?
Methinks but he and the other guy share at least one thing in common that has made our leaders seem like mindless ****** to the rest of the world N'esy Pas?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/trudeau-colonialism-comments-1.3549405
Methinks but he and the other guy share at least one thing in common that has made our leaders seem like mindless ****** to the rest of the world N'esy Pas?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/trudeau-colonialism-comments-1.3549405
David R. Amos
@Daryl McBride Methinks his questionable trips, his mindless remarks off the top of his head such as "peoplekind "and the BS about his past has been the undoing of his puppet masters and the polls are proving it N'esy Pas?
Polls give Justin Trudeau's Liberals little to celebrate this Canada Day
Conservatives in Quebec and the NDP in Ontario put pressure on the Liberals
It's their third Canada Day weekend
governing the country — and the Trudeau Liberals have a lot less to
celebrate than they did in previous summers.
With little more than a year to go before the 2019 federal election campaign kicks off, the Liberals are facing a closer race than a first-term majority government might expect. The party's lead in the polls has disappeared and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is facing pressure from both the Conservatives in Quebec and the New Democrats in Ontario.
When Trudeau marked his first Canada Day as prime minister, he was still enjoying his post-election honeymoon. The Liberals held a 16-point lead over the Conservatives and Trudeau's approval rating was 31 points higher than his disapproval score.
The honeymoon was over by the time his second Canada Day rolled around in 2017, but the Liberals were still in a strong position — ahead of the Conservatives by five points and with Trudeau's net approval rating at +11.
The Liberals held good leads in British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada — the same kind of numbers that gave them a majority in 2015.
That's no longer the case.
The CBC Poll Tracker puts the Liberals at just under 35 per cent support, with the Conservatives at just over 34 per cent. The New Democrats, at 19 per cent, are up four to five points over where they stood on Canada Days past.
Of the four pollsters who have reported results in June, two have given the Liberals a narrow lead while the other two have put the Conservatives ahead — a textbook sign of two parties in a tie.
The Liberals are only narrowly ahead in B.C. and trail the Conservatives by five points in Ontario. Their support in Atlantic Canada is still robust and the party retains its wide lead in Quebec — but the Conservatives have made significant gains in that province, showcased by the party's impressive byelection win in Chicoutimi–Le Fjord.
Though some polls have suggested his spat with U.S. President Donald Trump has helped Trudeau, his own approval rating has also tumbled — to a net -11 points over the last five polls.
The result is that the Liberals likely would lose their majority if these numbers were repeated on election day. The odds of a minority government headed up by either Trudeau or Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer would be about three-to-one in favour right now — potentially giving kingmaker powers to Jagmeet Singh and the NDP.
Quebec has long been key to the Liberals' hopes for a re-elected majority government in 2019. While the party has seen its support slip elsewhere in the country, Trudeau remains more popular in Quebec today than he was in 2015 when the Liberals took 40 seats in the province.
Quebec has seen the most significant shifts in support since the last election. Both the Liberals and Conservatives have seen gains while the New Democrats have watched their support crater; the party captured just 8.6 per cent of the vote in Chicoutimi–Le Fjord, down 21 points from its 2015 performance.
The Bloc Québécois is still in the midst of its leadership turmoil. Martine Ouellet was booted out as leader by party members in early June and a few of its dissident MPs have returned to the fold, but it's still not clear what kind of ending this story will have for the sovereigntist party. There are few indications it will be a happy one.
The Conservatives have taken advantage, recruiting former Bloc leader Michel Gauthier to campaign for the party during the recent byelection. This past week, Scheer promised to support Quebec having a single tax form. It's a move that's aimed directly at the nationalist voters who have supported the Bloc in the past and are poised to elect François Legault's conservative Coalition Avenir Québec party to power in October.
But despite the significant swing in support toward the Conservatives in Chicoutimi–Le Fjord — the party gained 36 points — there are signs that the Conservatives could struggle to replicate that success elsewhere in the province.
Former junior hockey coach and newly-elected MP Richard Martel is very well-known in the riding. He was undoubtedly the key factor in the Conservative victory. Recruiting him was a coup, but the party will not be able to find dozens of Martels to run for them in 2019.
Instead, the Conservatives' support in Quebec — now polling at about 20 per cent — puts the party in range of only a few pick-ups in the province. With their current numbers in Quebec, the Conservatives are in play in as many as 18 seats. That's an improvement over the 12 they currently hold, but the party's support remains limited to a few regions of the province in and around Quebec City and in central and eastern Quebec.
A new CROP/Cogeco poll
illustrates the Conservatives' limited potential for new seat gains,
with the party trailing the Liberals by 14 points outside of the two
main urban centres, by 20 points in the Montreal suburbs and by 29
points on the island of Montreal itself. Only in the Quebec City region
do the Conservatives hold a lead — but they already occupy most of the
seats there.
The Liberals are still better positioned to win seats the NDP and Bloc could give up in and around Montreal. The Liberals are still in a position to pick up some 20 seats in the province, making up for some of the losses the Liberals could suffer in the rest of Canada.
Ontario is the province that could deliver the Liberals the most losses if the current polling holds its pattern until next year. The gains the NDP seems to be making in the province should be particularly troubling to Trudeau. Though two of the four pollsters reporting in June found the NDP stagnant in Ontario, Nanos Research and Ipsos have put the New Democrats at 26 and 28 per cent, respectively.
The NDP hasn't consistently polled over 20 per cent in Ontario since before the 2015 federal election — and the Liberals haven't been below 35 per cent since then.
But it's difficult to separate the Ontario NDP's performance under Andrea Horwath in the recent provincial election — and the collapse of Kathleen Wynne's Liberals — from the federal polling numbers.
It may be no coincidence that the last time Trudeau's Liberals registered over 40 per cent in any poll in Ontario was just before the official start of the provincial campaign. And despite the federal NDP's gains, there has been no corresponding improvement in Singh's personal numbers in the province.
It wouldn't be the first time the federal New Democrats have been buoyed by the success of their provincial counterparts. The federal party experienced a boost in Alberta after Rachel Notley's historic win in 2015 and in British Columbia after John Horgan's breakthrough last year.
Even the federal Liberals got a bump in Ontario after Wynne's unexpected majority victory in 2014.
The question for Singh and the NDP is whether the boost the federal party has gotten in Ontario — and the hit the Liberals have suffered — will hold, or will turn out to be mostly the product of voters' confusion between the two levels of government.
Either way, it's an opportunity for Singh's New Democrats to exploit. Ontarians are willing to give the party a hearing, as Canadians were willing to do in 2015 after the party's win in Alberta.
But it's the sort of opportunity the New Democrats have squandered before. If Singh can avoid doing that again — and if Scheer can build on his own opportunity for growth in Quebec — things could get worse for Trudeau's Liberals by the next Canada Day.
With little more than a year to go before the 2019 federal election campaign kicks off, the Liberals are facing a closer race than a first-term majority government might expect. The party's lead in the polls has disappeared and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is facing pressure from both the Conservatives in Quebec and the New Democrats in Ontario.
When Trudeau marked his first Canada Day as prime minister, he was still enjoying his post-election honeymoon. The Liberals held a 16-point lead over the Conservatives and Trudeau's approval rating was 31 points higher than his disapproval score.
The honeymoon was over by the time his second Canada Day rolled around in 2017, but the Liberals were still in a strong position — ahead of the Conservatives by five points and with Trudeau's net approval rating at +11.
The Liberals held good leads in British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada — the same kind of numbers that gave them a majority in 2015.
That's no longer the case.
The CBC Poll Tracker puts the Liberals at just under 35 per cent support, with the Conservatives at just over 34 per cent. The New Democrats, at 19 per cent, are up four to five points over where they stood on Canada Days past.
Of the four pollsters who have reported results in June, two have given the Liberals a narrow lead while the other two have put the Conservatives ahead — a textbook sign of two parties in a tie.
The Liberals are only narrowly ahead in B.C. and trail the Conservatives by five points in Ontario. Their support in Atlantic Canada is still robust and the party retains its wide lead in Quebec — but the Conservatives have made significant gains in that province, showcased by the party's impressive byelection win in Chicoutimi–Le Fjord.
Though some polls have suggested his spat with U.S. President Donald Trump has helped Trudeau, his own approval rating has also tumbled — to a net -11 points over the last five polls.
The result is that the Liberals likely would lose their majority if these numbers were repeated on election day. The odds of a minority government headed up by either Trudeau or Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer would be about three-to-one in favour right now — potentially giving kingmaker powers to Jagmeet Singh and the NDP.
Shifting sands in Quebec
Quebec has long been key to the Liberals' hopes for a re-elected majority government in 2019. While the party has seen its support slip elsewhere in the country, Trudeau remains more popular in Quebec today than he was in 2015 when the Liberals took 40 seats in the province.
Quebec has seen the most significant shifts in support since the last election. Both the Liberals and Conservatives have seen gains while the New Democrats have watched their support crater; the party captured just 8.6 per cent of the vote in Chicoutimi–Le Fjord, down 21 points from its 2015 performance.
The Bloc Québécois is still in the midst of its leadership turmoil. Martine Ouellet was booted out as leader by party members in early June and a few of its dissident MPs have returned to the fold, but it's still not clear what kind of ending this story will have for the sovereigntist party. There are few indications it will be a happy one.
The Conservatives have taken advantage, recruiting former Bloc leader Michel Gauthier to campaign for the party during the recent byelection. This past week, Scheer promised to support Quebec having a single tax form. It's a move that's aimed directly at the nationalist voters who have supported the Bloc in the past and are poised to elect François Legault's conservative Coalition Avenir Québec party to power in October.
Conservative gains in Quebec narrow, not wide
But despite the significant swing in support toward the Conservatives in Chicoutimi–Le Fjord — the party gained 36 points — there are signs that the Conservatives could struggle to replicate that success elsewhere in the province.
Former junior hockey coach and newly-elected MP Richard Martel is very well-known in the riding. He was undoubtedly the key factor in the Conservative victory. Recruiting him was a coup, but the party will not be able to find dozens of Martels to run for them in 2019.
Instead, the Conservatives' support in Quebec — now polling at about 20 per cent — puts the party in range of only a few pick-ups in the province. With their current numbers in Quebec, the Conservatives are in play in as many as 18 seats. That's an improvement over the 12 they currently hold, but the party's support remains limited to a few regions of the province in and around Quebec City and in central and eastern Quebec.
The Liberals are still better positioned to win seats the NDP and Bloc could give up in and around Montreal. The Liberals are still in a position to pick up some 20 seats in the province, making up for some of the losses the Liberals could suffer in the rest of Canada.
Ontario NDP boosts federal party
Ontario is the province that could deliver the Liberals the most losses if the current polling holds its pattern until next year. The gains the NDP seems to be making in the province should be particularly troubling to Trudeau. Though two of the four pollsters reporting in June found the NDP stagnant in Ontario, Nanos Research and Ipsos have put the New Democrats at 26 and 28 per cent, respectively.
The NDP hasn't consistently polled over 20 per cent in Ontario since before the 2015 federal election — and the Liberals haven't been below 35 per cent since then.
It may be no coincidence that the last time Trudeau's Liberals registered over 40 per cent in any poll in Ontario was just before the official start of the provincial campaign. And despite the federal NDP's gains, there has been no corresponding improvement in Singh's personal numbers in the province.
An ephemeral electoral halo?
It wouldn't be the first time the federal New Democrats have been buoyed by the success of their provincial counterparts. The federal party experienced a boost in Alberta after Rachel Notley's historic win in 2015 and in British Columbia after John Horgan's breakthrough last year.
Even the federal Liberals got a bump in Ontario after Wynne's unexpected majority victory in 2014.
The question for Singh and the NDP is whether the boost the federal party has gotten in Ontario — and the hit the Liberals have suffered — will hold, or will turn out to be mostly the product of voters' confusion between the two levels of government.
Either way, it's an opportunity for Singh's New Democrats to exploit. Ontarians are willing to give the party a hearing, as Canadians were willing to do in 2015 after the party's win in Alberta.
But it's the sort of opportunity the New Democrats have squandered before. If Singh can avoid doing that again — and if Scheer can build on his own opportunity for growth in Quebec — things could get worse for Trudeau's Liberals by the next Canada Day.
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