Peloni: The Left have lost there way so badly that they never give us an opportunity to forget just how badly they are lost.
By
Mark Carney. By World Economic Forum – Flickr: Mark Carney – World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2012, CC BY-SA 2.0
Canada’s new Liberal leader, Mark Carney, soon to be sworn in as unelected prime minister, bemoans the plight of Gazans, now without electricity. But he doesn’t even mention the name Israel. Rather, he calls on Canada to “work with our allies to stand up for international law to promote sustainable peace and security in the Middle East and to support full access to humanitarian aid for Palestinian families.” So he’s calling for international allies to put pressure on Israel in a rather sneaky fashion, with no mention whatsoever that it is the fault of Hamas, which continues to use Palestinians as human shields. Carney also does not state why Israel cut electricity. It was to pressure Hamas to release the hostages held in Gaza.
Why would Carney not pressure Hamas to release the hostages and by so doing, help Gazans. As he encourages standing up “for international law to promote sustainable peace and security in the Middle East,” Carney should be advocating for ending the brutality of Hamas and their other jihadist brothers in the Middle East who are murdering Jews, Christians, Alawites and Druze. Instead, in the last paragraph of his message, he calls for “both parties” to work together. Surely Carney should know that there is no working with Hamas. Did he forget the savagery of Hamas on October 7, the goal of Hamas to obliterate the State of Israel, and a ceasefire agreement that saw the release of 25 hostages held by Hamas in Gaza and the bodies of eight more, murdered by Hamas, in exchange for the release of 1,900 Palestinian jihadists in Israeli jails? Carney’s moral equivalence is obscene.
The Western world needs to come together to vehemently oppose the jihad, and stand with Israel and the security of its citizens. Only then can there be any possible solution for “sustainable peace and security in the Middle East.”
The JNS wrote in response to Carney:
“Just 48 hours after his so-called victory, Mark Carney has already proven himself to be nothing more than a carbon copy of Justin Trudeau. Spineless. Predictable. Weak,” wrote Jeremy Levi, the Jewish mayor of Hampstead, in the Montreal area.
“Our community deserves far better than this pathetic, Trudeau-lite nonsense,” he added.
Marty Morantz, a Jewish member of the Canadian Parliament, also denounced Carney’s post.
Carney gets sworn in as prime minister on Friday.
Adam D, most of those vehicles you saw were stolen somewhere and came in through those tunnels the Egyptians know nothing about.
Let’s see – if the Israelis were to invite Hamas to a new rave concert with no security, police or army within 1000 Km, that would probably be full cooperation.
Canada will face an election very shortly and, for a politician, an election means pandering for votes. There is a lot of Moslem votes in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver and Carney wants them. There is also a lot of Jewish votes in these cities, but the Jews, or a majority of them, will continue to vote for Carney and the Liberals. That is the real tragedy.
If Canada and the United States and Canada really wanted to provide humanitarian aid to people in need, they would provide it to Haiti, Somalia, Eritrea, Mozambigue, Equatorial Guinea, and Myanmar where millions of people are starving. Pictures and videos taken by private Christian charities, not funded by any government or the U.N., document this. On the other hand, there is no evidence of widespread starvation or even hunger in Gaza. Photos and videos show sleek, well dressed Gazans shopping in markets well stocked with every kind of food. There is even a thriving market for buying and selling gold. There isn’t relly anything like it in either United States or Israel, except maybe pawnshops, which usually have much less prosperous clints than those photographed at the Gaza gold market.
There are also many private cars and civilian buses on Gaza roads. These are not signs of a humanitarian crisis.