Listen up, fellow Canadians (and Canamericans alike): Prime Minister Mark Carney is on a roll, and it’s not just maple syrup this time. Nope, Canada’s taking things up a notch by dangling the possibility of sending actual boots on the ground — real soldiers — into Ukraine's no-win war against Russia. Yep, the same country famous for friendly peacekeepers might now be sending troops to fight a foreign war that has zero to do with us. But first a word from today’s sponsor:
How 433 Investors Unlocked 400X Return Potential
Institutional investors back startups to unlock outsized returns. Regular investors have to wait. But not anymore. Thanks to regulatory updates, some companies are doing things differently.
Take Revolut. In 2016, 433 regular people invested an average of $2,730. Today? They got a 400X buyout offer from the company, as Revolut’s valuation increased 89,900% in the same timeframe.
Founded by a former Zillow exec, Pacaso’s co-ownership tech reshapes the $1.3T vacation home market. They’ve earned $110M+ in gross profit to date, including 41% YoY growth in 2024 alone. They even reserved the Nasdaq ticker PCSO.
The same institutional investors behind Uber, Venmo, and eBay backed Pacaso. And you can join them. But not for long. Pacaso’s investment opportunity ends September 18.
Paid advertisement for Pacaso’s Regulation A offering. Read the offering circular at invest.pacaso.com. Reserving a ticker symbol is not a guarantee that the company will go public. Listing on the NASDAQ is subject to approvals.
Carney just pledged a whopping $2 billion in military aid for Ukraine—think drones, armored vehicles, and ammunition — and openly admitted he wouldn’t rule out Canadian troops being deployed there someday. No, this isn’t some sci-fi plot. It’s happening right now, while many Canadians are battling homelessness, opioid crises, and a housing crunch that’d make your head spin.
And here’s the kicker: Canada isn’t exactly rolling in spare cash, people. We’re funneling billions overseas while our own infrastructure crumbles and social problems skyrocket. You’d think helping our own citizens would come first, right? But no, Carney and pals want to fight Russia’s battles for them, because apparently international "solidarity" means risking Canadian lives thousands of miles from home.
Now, if that doesn’t make you scratch your head, consider this: President Donald Trump has been trying to nudge Putin and Zelenskyy towards peace talks — while Carney’s busy gearing up for war. Plus, Canada’s new alliance with Ukraine includes joint drone production and military agreements that sound more like Canada’s becoming an arms dealer than a peacekeeper.
Maybe the biggest irony? Canada was once known globally as a peace-loving nation that sent medics and trainers, not frontline fighters. Now, we’re dancing dangerously close to real combat overseas. And who gets to decide if and when our sons and daughters go to war? Spoiler: it’s not you, the taxpayers who foot the bill and carry the risk.
If this sounds like a bad deal (spoiler: it is), then it’s time to shout it from the rooftops. We need real debate, real democracy, and most importantly, a real focus on fixing problems right here at home before sending our troops into a distant conflict.
So, what can you do? First, stay informed. Subscribe to the Canamerica News newsletter for no-nonsense updates that cut through the political fog. Demand transparency, question pointless foreign interventions, and remind our leaders that Canadian lives and livelihoods come first.
Because at the end of the day, Canada’s future should be about peace, prosperity, and putting our own house in order — not sending our young men and women to fight wars that don’t belong to us.
Subscribe now to Canamerica News — the voice of reason in a world gone mad. Because someone’s got to speak up for common sense.