By Biko
When a miner brings a caged canary underground with them to notify them when the air circulation systems fail, it is a signal of an upcoming catastrophe. Unless the miners act swiftly, the entire mine could fail and collapse, potentially causing the death of all those inside. The canary bird has an extreme sensitivity to any change in the composition of the air, due to whatever reason. If it passes away, it’s only a matter of time for any living thing in its proximity. Much like the canary, the independent journalists of Canada are the sensitive measurers of our societies plunge into a totalitarian autocracy under the guise of safetyism. In this instance, on the precipice of the deleterious change, the mine is an ostrich farm out in the boondocks of Edgewood, BC.
If you haven’t been aware, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has seized the farm under the illegitimate guise of public safety. This seizure is accompanied with a direct order to cull the 300 ostriches on the premises. Despite the owners’ best efforts to provide confirmation that there is no legitimate medical or scientific reason to do so, CFIA completely refused to even hear any counterargument to its decision. As such, the owners, and corresponding civil and animal rights organizations, brought the decision to the attention of the incredulous Supreme Court of BC, upon which it was dismissed, another affirmation of CFIA’s decision without even a second look. With no further options available, the bureaucracy’s goons, dressed as a once-admirable police force previously known as the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), besieged the land, banished the owners, and began preparing to act out their murderous intent with the typical smug contempt for the public, and most notably the independent media present since the issue arose.
In the most recent act, the RCMP agents on the site were the intimidation and threats of arrest made against Chris Dacey (from Dacey Media). Accusing him of attempting to dox them because he asked them to show their officer ID numbers (of which they’re legally obliged to have present on their uniform explicitly to identify them). What was most strange about this act of malevolence is that it is now multiple days after the RCMP has killed all the ostriches and cleared the land. Yet, they stay, occupying private property, refusing entrance, harassing neighbours, and now threatening independent journalists with arrest for sheerly videotaping them. A state of provocation usually only seen in the banana republics of drug lords.
Most atrocious of this entire debacle is the seemingly endless supply of government lemmings acting on behalf of the government. Ready and poised to do the irrational, the cruel, no matter how bewildering. They confiscated private property on order from a food regulatory body, upon which the CFIA began herding approximately 300-330 birds into a large enclosure built from stacked hay bales (with tarps added for partial cover, likely to hide their violent treatment and acts to the birds), then using professional marksmen to shoot them under floodlights in what the agency described as a «controlled on-farm setting.» A fancy way of just shooting the birds from an elevated stand. Naturally, the situation devolved further where some birds were hit in the body or legs, requiring multiple shots, followed by decapitations. All this for zero legitimate reasons at all. Without any option contrary to the government’s whim or desire to display power.
If not for Rebel News, Dacey Media, Right Blend, Media Bezirgan, Krayden’s Right News, and Canada’s National Observer, Canadians may have not heard a single word about this. As per usual for the propaganda arm of the government, they have said almost absolutely nothing. If they did, it was in complete agreement and support of the beast’s actions. In lockstep and key to the malevolent machine’s desires. Support independent media, go to their sites, subscribe, watch, and read their great work. God only knows how much longer we’ll have access to it in this once great nation.













