
Canada's Crown Circus: King Charles, Sovereignty, and Shrinking Borders
PM Carney invites King Charles to lecture Parliament while pledging Canadian "sovereignty"—right before cozying up to Trump and outsourcing the economy.
Sane Perspective
When You Say “Sovereignty,” But Act Like a Vassal State
So Mark Carney, the freshly crowned Canadian PM, stood up in front of reporters with a straight face and said that having King Charles—literal monarch of a foreign country—open Canada’s Parliament is a powerful symbol of Canadian sovereignty. That’s like saying you’re the CEO of a company while letting your old boss write your mission statement. This is woke globalist gymnastics: symbolic fealty to the British Crown, economic dependence on the U.S., and lip-service to Indigenous "partnership" all wrapped up in a speech about “unity” and “building bold.” And somehow, magically, that’s supposed to equal national independence. Meanwhile, he’s buddying up to Trump (who’s joked about Canada being the 51st state), pledging to massively intervene in the economy, and pretending that giving $25 billion in taxpayer-backed loans to developers is "free market housing reform." This guy is a Davos-style technocrat using all the buzzwords—sovereignty, safety, diversity—to cover a plan that replaces national strength with performative allegiance and state-managed everything.
[Check out the source press conference video to learn more.]