The Dark Side of 15-Minute Cities

The Dark Side of 15-Minute CitiesJordan McKenzie – The concept of 15-minute cities has been marketed as a modern utopia, promising to revolutionize urban living by ensuring that residents have access to all their needs within a mere 15-minute walk or bike ride from their homes.

This vision, championed by certain globalist entities, paints a picture of green, equitable, and connected communities where happiness and health are supposedly within everyone’s reach. However, beneath this appealing façade lies a troubling reality, raising significant concerns about the erosion of personal freedoms and the imposition of hidden agendas. Continue reading

’15-Minute City’ Statement Read At City Council Meeting

Joel Sussman statement at the Aurora, ON City Council meeting

'15-Minute City' Statement Read At City Council Meeting“Good evening. Restructuring of Canadian mayors and municipalities under the auspices of the United Nations began in 1992. PM Mulroney signed Canada onto UN Agenda 21. Canada thus became a UN member nation-state. 178 countries signed on, lured by the promise of big money to go green.

By 2000, countries, including Canada, were being governed by directions of the UN G7 G20 World Economic Forum and World Health Organization, to name some.

Every organization named is a foreign-based NGO, non-governmental organization, and every member of all these organizations is unelected. Parliamentary procedures for law changes weren’t followed. In 1994, a municipal primer was issued to all local towns, outlining how they were to restructure their governments. Continue reading

‘Royally Screwed’ by Government: Hawaii Victims ‘Getting Desperate’

‘Literally being arrested for visiting their own homes’

‘Royally Screwed’ by Government: Hawaii Victims ‘Getting Desperate’Joe Kovacs – Nearly a month after catastrophic wildfires devastated the Hawaiian paradise of Maui, a disturbing mystery remains as hundreds of people, including an unknown number of children, are still missing, while a journalist on the island says local residents are being “royally screwed” by all governments, with some victims arrested for trying to visit their own homes.

At least 115 people were killed in the Aug. 8 blaze that razed the tourist town of Lahaina, making it the deadliest wildfire in the U.S. in more than a century. Continue reading