Today is Canada’s federal election. Canadians will vote in a government.

I will vote today. I don’t vote as a matter of principle. The last time I voted was in 2015 when Trudeau promised that, if his party won, it would be the last first-past-the-post federal election. He said that the Liberals would institute an all-party committee to study different electoral practices, including ranked voting and proportional representation. He pledged that, within eighteen months of being elected, his government would introduce legislation that would change Canada’s electoral system.

Neither ranked voting nor proportional representation are democratic; they are still systems of representation. However, I saw that they could be important steps away from authoritarian, unaccountable rule. Anyway, Trudeau and the Liberals shut down the committee before it could pursue its mandate. That was one of many betrayals.

In defending his broken promise, Trudeau rationalized, “Anything a prime minister or a government must do must be in the interest of Canada and all Canadians, particularly when it comes to transforming our electoral system. … But there is no consensus, there is no sense of how to do this. And, quite frankly, a divisive referendum, an augmentation of extremist voices in this House, is not what is in the best interests of Canada.”

It is the job of the prime minister to exclude extremist views from the House of Commons. It is the job of the government and prime minister to decide what is in the best interests of Canada.

I am an extremist Canadian in that I do not want to be turned into a biodigital thing. I was born a living, human Canadian and I want to die a human Canadian. Hopefully in the distant future, although that is looking less and less likely.

In any case, Trudeau defeated democracy and, now, the country is bordering on full authoritarian rule.

In both Canada and the United States, power has been consolidated in the executive branches; in Canada, the PMO (prime minister’s office) and, in the States, the presidency. You only have to look at the two specimens currently occupying those offices to see that they are controlled from outside. The same is true throughout Europe.

People have been trained to accept that. In Canada, people vote for the head of the party, knowing that their member of parliament will have no legislative power. In fact, if members of parliament dare to think for themselves, they are ejected from caucus and must sit as independents. I would prefer that all members of parliament be independent. I want people who can argue their case from the facts. I want all people, including the electors, to argue their position from the facts and not cower to party diktats. Or be loyal to a party in the same way that they are loyal to a sporting franchise.

Until we do that, we will all be steamrolled by this great-reset, new-world-order, transhumanist, tech-driven agenda. A great awakening of all populations will be necessary. That’s why this particular election is only a step along the way to Armageddon or enlightenment … or both.

The media cartel always sets the agenda for elections. They tell us what the election issues are and then they tell us how we are supposed to judge the candidates. They tell us whom to hate, whom to take seriously, and so on. This time round, covid madness was not identified as an election issue. But it is the only issue. If lockdowns, mask and vaccine mandates continue unchallenged, then no other issue will matter.