🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown
10 videos
Updated 17 days ago
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CCJ Civic Explainer — PART 4: What This Means for Citizens and Taxpayers
Canadian Citizens JournalWhen accountability weakens, the effects don’t stay inside Parliament. In Part 4, we focus on what structural power shifts mean for citizens and taxpayers — including faster decision-making, less explanation, large spending commitments, and reduced public consent. Democracy doesn’t vanish in moments like this. It becomes distant. And distance is where frustration grows. #CivicExplainer #CanadianPolitics #Democracy #Accountability #PublicInterest #CCJ #CitizenJournalism #Parliament31 views -
CCJ Civic Explainer — PART 3: How Whistleblowers Are Silenced Without Censorship
Canadian Citizens JournalWhen people hear the word “silencing,” they often imagine bans or arrests. In democratic systems, whistleblowers are more often silenced politically — through credibility attacks, procedural barriers, lack of protection, and narrative control. In Part 3, we explain how this happens without censorship, and why the cost of speaking up often discourages future disclosures. The issue isn’t whether truth exists — it’s whether it’s allowed to reach the public record. #CivicExplainer #CanadianPolitics #Democracy #Accountability #PublicInterest #CCJ #CitizenJournalism #Parliament22 views -
CCJ Civic Explainer — PART 2: How Accountability Changes
Canadian Citizens JournalMost people think accountability disappears all at once. In reality, it weakens quietly — through process, control of committees, and limits on scrutiny. In Part 2 of this CCJ Civic Explainer series, we look at how accountability mechanisms function inside Parliament, and how those mechanisms change when one party controls the system meant to oversee itself. This is not about intent. It’s about structure — and why structure matters. #CivicExplainer #CanadianPolitics #Democracy #Accountability #PublicInterest #CCJ #CitizenJournalism #Parliament21 views -
CCJ Civic Explainer — PART 1: What Changes With a Majority
Canadian Citizens JournalA lot of Canadians are feeling uneasy — not because of one policy or one headline, but because decision-making is starting to feel more distant and harder to question. This civic explainer is not about accusations or party politics. It’s about understanding how power works inside Parliament — and why people are right to pay attention when that power shifts. In Part 1, we explain the structural difference between minority and majority governments, and why the removal of parliamentary friction matters when trust is already low. Democracy doesn’t disappear overnight. It changes through process — and understanding that process is essential for informed citizens. #CivicExplainer #CanadianPolitics #Democracy #Accountability #PublicInterest #CCJ #CitizenJournalism #Parliament25 views -
🧭 CCJ Citizen Toolkit — Series Closing
Canadian Citizens Journal🧭 CCJ Citizen Toolkit — Series Closing This is the Canadian Citizens Journal. A lot of Canadians feel overwhelmed trying to understand government, policy, and the news. I do too. That’s why I use artificial intelligence as a learning tool — not as a source of truth, but as a way to understand original documents. Artificial intelligence should not replace reading government sources. It should help explain them. When I use AI, I give it primary sources. Parliament transcripts. Government press releases. Court decisions. Official documents. Then I ask it to explain what is being said in plain language. That’s the difference. AI works properly when it helps translate information — not when it decides what to believe. If it repeats talking points, avoids key questions, or dismisses concerns, that is a signal to pause and go back to the source. Artificial intelligence should help people think more clearly, not think for them. Always compare what AI explains with the original document. Ask follow-up questions. Ask what is missing. Ask who benefits. You do not need to agree with any conclusion. You just need to understand what is actually being said. This is how I learn as I go. And I encourage others to do the same if they want to. You don’t need to be an expert. You just need access to the source and the confidence to ask questions. This is the Canadian Citizens Journal.22 views -
🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown — House of Commons — An emergency today on Parliament Hill
Canadian Citizens Journal🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown — House of Commons An emergency unfolded today on Parliament Hill. The Liberal government moved to shut down debate in the House of Commons by invoking a parliamentary procedure known as closure. Closure is a tool that cuts off debate, limits discussion, and forces legislation toward a rapid vote. While legal, it is highly controversial — especially when used on bills that affect speech, media, and the internet. The bill at issue expands federal oversight of online content and increases the authority of the CRTC, Canada’s broadcasting regulator. Critics warn this gives unelected bureaucrats the power to influence what Canadians see, share, and monetize online. Canadian author Margaret Atwood has previously described this type of government control as “creeping totalitarianism” — not through sudden force, but through gradual regulatory expansion. Conservatives were the only party to oppose the use of closure, arguing that Parliament exists to debate laws — not to silence discussion on matters that directly affect Canadians’ freedoms. By shutting down debate, the government prevented full parliamentary scrutiny and limited the ability of Members of Parliament to challenge or amend the legislation. This is not about partisan politics. This is about process. When governments restrict debate on laws that regulate speech, transparency is lost, accountability weakens, and public trust erodes. Canadians deserve open debate, full disclosure, and the right to decide for themselves what they see and say online. Parliamentary procedure should protect democracy — not bypass it. This is the Canadian Citizens Journal.57 views -
🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown (House of Commons, December 10, 2025)
Canadian Citizens Journal🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown (House of Commons, December 10, 2025) This is the Canadian Citizens Journal. Unfiltered Canadian truth. “Today we examine the Parliamentary record for December tenth, twenty twenty-five. The Order Paper for this date continues a clear and escalating pattern in how federal business is being managed and advanced. One of the most notable features of this day’s agenda is the continued reliance on procedural control rather than open legislative debate. Government business is being organized in a way that limits visibility, compresses timelines, and reduces opportunities for meaningful scrutiny by both Members of Parliament and the public. Committee activity again plays a central role. Reports from standing committees are positioned for concurrence, allowing recommendations to be adopted without full debate in the House. These committees oversee areas such as ethics, privacy, government operations, public safety, and finance. When their findings are moved forward through concurrence rather than debate, Canadians are denied transparency on decisions that directly affect oversight and accountability. The Order Paper also reflects the stacking of government priorities without clear sequencing. Multiple items are listed for potential advancement, but Canadians are given no indication which legislation will be prioritized or how quickly it will move. This uncertainty is not accidental. It makes public engagement difficult and limits the ability of citizens to respond before decisions are finalized. Another concerning pattern is the normalization of administrative governance. Instead of Parliament functioning as a forum for debate and accountability, it is increasingly being used as a processing mechanism. Decisions are moved efficiently, but quietly. Process replaces discussion, and procedure replaces democratic scrutiny. At a time when Canadians are facing economic pressure, declining trust in institutions, and growing concern about government overreach, Parliament’s approach on December tenth reflects a deliberate choice. Efficiency is being prioritized over transparency, and control is being prioritized over consent. These Order Papers are not neutral documents. They reveal intent. And the intent shown on December tenth is a government that prefers managed outcomes over open accountability. This is the Canadian Citizens Journal.”52 views -
🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown — 🗓️December 8, 2025
Canadian Citizens Journal🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown (House of Commons, December 8, 2025) This is the Canadian Citizens Journal. Unfiltered Canadian truth. “Today we examine the Parliamentary record for December eighth, twenty twenty-five. The Order Paper for this date shows an expanding pattern: more government motions, more attempts to consolidate authority, and more legislation designed to reshape Canada quietly, without public awareness. The first concern is the continued use of unanimous consent motions to bypass debate. When Parliament increasingly relies on procedural shortcuts, Canadians lose transparency. Laws and decisions that should require scrutiny are being pushed through with minimal public visibility. Another item on this Order Paper involves committee reports being brought back for concurrence. Concurrence motions allow the House to adopt committee recommendations without full examination. These committees handle critical issues such as ethics, privacy, transportation, public safety, and government operations. When their reports are rushed through, Canadians lose the right to understand how decisions are being made. A further concern is the stacking of government orders, where the House lists multiple bills for potential advancement without indicating which ones the government intends to push. This tactic keeps Canadians unfocused and unprepared. It prevents the public from knowing which legislation is about to move and when, making accountability difficult. The pattern emerging across these Order Papers is clear. Parliament is moving more business through procedural efficiency and less through public debate. Canadians are witnessing a shift from open governance to administrative governance, where decisions are processed quickly but not transparently. As economic pressure rises, as social trust declines, and as Canadians demand clarity, the federal government is choosing the opposite direction: speed over scrutiny, tactics over truth, and procedure over democracy. Canadians deserve to know what their government is advancing and why. And this is why these breakdowns matter. They reveal the decisions that are not being announced, not being debated, and not being openly explained. This is the Canadian Citizens Journal.26 views 2 comments -
🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown — House of Commons, December 5, 2025
Canadian Citizens Journal🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown House of Commons, December 5, 2025 This is the Canadian Citizens Journal. Unfiltered Canadian truth. On December fifth, twenty twenty-five, the federal government revealed its priorities through the Order Paper. What Parliament chose to advance tells Canadians far more than the political messaging we hear in public. The first item was a bill to establish a Somali Heritage Month. Symbolic gestures like this have become routine in Ottawa. They do not address affordability, crime, healthcare shortages, or national instability. These are political branding exercises at a time when Canadians need real solutions. The second item was a proposal to change the federal voting age. This is not about youth empowerment. It is about electoral math. Lowering the voting age benefits certain parties, not the country. While Canadians struggle with rising costs, eroding services, and increased insecurity, Parliament is focused on rewriting election rules. Next was the Canada Pharmacare Act. While Canadians desperately need access to care, the bill raises concerns about centralization, federal overreach, and long-term affordability. Instead of fixing the existing system, the government is proposing another massive national program without addressing the failures already harming Canadians. Another bill introduced a national strategy to protect seniors from coercive control and violence. The intent is serious, but Canadians have seen these strategies before. Ottawa releases frameworks and action plans that sound important but rarely materialize into real protection. Seniors remain vulnerable while government claims progress on paper. The final concern on this Order Paper was a proposal to amend the Criminal Code on the promotion of hatred or antisemitism. This category of legislation must always be examined carefully. Expanding federal authority over speech, redefining key terms, or removing long-standing safeguards is one of the most concerning patterns in this Parliament. The issue is not preventing genuine hate. The issue is how easily vague laws can be used to silence dissent or suppress difficult conversations. Taken together, the December fifth Order Paper shows a government focused on symbolism, political advantage, and expanding its own control, while avoiding the urgent realities facing Canadians. These are not the priorities of a country in crisis. These are the priorities of a government protecting itself. This is the Canadian Citizens51 views -
🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown — (House of Commons, December 9, 2025)
Canadian Citizens Journal🇨🇦🏛️ CCJ Parliamentary Breakdown (House of Commons, December 9, 2025) This is the Canadian Citizens Journal. Unfiltered Canadian truth. Yesterday’s House of Commons transcript — the Hansard — quietly exposed major red flags the mainstream media ignored. When MPs speak freely inside Parliament, they reveal what they would never say in a press conference. Here is what they admitted. ⸻ 🔹 1. Canadians Warn Parliament: Bill C-9 Could Criminalize Scripture Multiple petitions tabled yesterday raised a serious warning: Canadians fear that amendments to Bill C-9 could create a pathway to criminalize passages from the Bible, the Quran, the Torah, and other sacred texts. One petition referenced public statements from the new Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture suggesting prosecutors should “press charges” against people quoting scripture the government interprets as harmful. This is now part of the official parliamentary record. Petitioners asked the House of Commons to: • protect freedom of religion • protect freedom of expression • reject any legislation that can be used to punish belief Parliament moved on without debate. ⸻ 🔹 2. Canadians Demand Protection of Health Freedom Another petition warned that federal regulation is threatening Canadians’ ability to: • choose natural health products • prevent illness in their preferred ways • decide on personal treatments without government interference Petitioners urged Parliament to adopt the Charter of Health Freedom, drafted in 2008, which would protect Canadians’ right to natural therapies and nutritional medicine. Ottawa ignored the petition. ⸻ 🔹 3. MPs Celebrate Sending Billions Overseas While Canadians Rely on Food Banks Hansard shows MPs proudly acknowledging that Canada has contributed over $22 billion to Ukraine since 2022. This includes: • $6.5 billion in weapons and military aid • nearly $7 billion in International Monetary Fund loans • over $5 billion in Group of Seven financing • additional financial support On the same day, MPs admitted that: • food banks are setting new records • grocery bills have tripled for many families • Canadians who once donated are now relying on food aid The contrast speaks for itself. ⸻ 🔹 4. Energy Policy: Contradictions in Real Time Debate revealed Canada may roll back certain clean electricity rules — while still raising the industrial carbon tax. This increase is passed directly to Canadians through: • food prices • transportation • home heating • manufacturing • supply chain costs Members also acknowledged: • over $500 billion in lost private investment • that Bill C-69 and Bill C-48 drove companies out of Canada • that Bill C-5 gives the Prime Minister power to push certain projects through federal exemptions None of this was highlighted by mainstream media. ⸻ 🔹 5. Executive Bonuses Amid a National Crisis The transcript confirmed: • 100% of Via Rail executives received bonuses • 99% of Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation executives received bonuses Meanwhile: • Canada faces the worst housing crisis in modern history • renters and homeowners are drowning • food insecurity is exploding Executives are rewarded. Canadians struggle. ⸻ 🧭 What This Means The December 9 transcript reveals: • growing concerns around religious censorship • increased regulation threatening health freedom • troubling government spending priorities • massive hidden energy policy shifts • and self-congratulation at a time of national hardship None of it made mainstream headlines. But it is all documented in the official record. And that’s why CCJ reads it — and exposes it. ⸻ 🕊️ FINAL WORD Canada isn’t undone in one dramatic moment. It is rewritten quietly inside the House of Commons, paragraph by paragraph, when Canadians are not watching. This is the Canadian Citizens Journal.47 views