Unleashing Canada’s Potential: Axing the Barriers to Land and Prosperity

The current economic turmoil in Canada demands a radical shift in perspective, a departure from the policies that have led us to this precipice. Prime Minister Trudeau’s approach, characterized by increased taxation of farm producers (land workers) and supply chain systems workers (truckers) and centralized control (4 or 5 censorship / centralized control bills), stands in direct opposition and contravention to the economic solution, industrial solution, social solution and technological solution.

True economic resilience lies not in government carbon taxation (multi-national global level taxation) of those that tap the power and the wealth of the land (physical reality humans), but in empowering individuals to harness the untapped potential of the land, the untapped life giving force and eternal value of the land as a supply to the cities and to the citizens of raw energy, resource, wealth and life. (to be authoritative citizens that live and thrive and multiply)

‘We’ve never seen a closer approximation to an anti God figure in existence, in real modern existence (not the cartoons or the historical war films), than what we are seeing as the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada today.’

All the stated solutions by Liberal Party of Canada are opposing life, it’s evolution and it’s multiplication.

The key to unlocking the potential of Earth is to reverse course, to not attack truckers, to not attack farmers, to not attack mineral workers, and to not attack energy workers; to dismantle the barriers that hinder access to and utilization and access to Canada’s vast natural resources and to actually explore and settle on Canada’s vast rural lands.

Instead of simply axing the tax,” let’s axe the regulations, the bureaucratic hurdles, and the misguided policies that stifle innovation and entrepreneurship rooted in the land, and that beyond a shadow of a doubt act as an impenetrable wall for citizens to leave the cities to live on the rural land.

‘Let’s empower a new generation of pioneers to build, create, and contribute to a more prosperous future, as the pioneers that came here did throughout all of our history, grounded in the timeless values of self-reliance and responsible stewardship of our natural heritage.’

Let’s unleashing Canada’s potential by Axing the Barriers to Land and Prosperity!!!

UNITED FOR FREEDOM

 

 

@ABDanielleSmith ‘Well done, Alberta. By staying true to fiscal discipline, Alberta was able to not only balance our budget and pay down debt, but generate a $4.3B surplus. We’ve also seen our provincial credit rating increase, made record investments to health and education, and continued to grow our heritage savings fund to a record high $22.9B!’ Read more: https://www.alberta.ca/release.cfm?xID=90577844A2DF7-F866-2CF6-D1DAC479C9BFC67D

 

Canada’s Hidden Frontier: 99.75%+ Untapped Potential and Unclaimed Wealth

Ok! Great! 99.75%+ of land has no cities or towns in Canada!

Only 0.2% or so is actually occupied by civilization!

This type of growth is what we need in Canadian cities, to realize our national dream and national destiny of launching next generation cities, towns, villages, farms, greenhouses and businesses in Canada!

‘And space cities after that with SGT envisioned and engineered technology!’

Within FOURTY more Danielle Smiths, we can one day, maybe after 100 years of city construction, achieve 0.5% coverage of Canada’s lands with cities and towns!

And then we still have a few thousand years of city construction for the other 99.5% of space!’

Wow. We have enough land to give to people for 3000 years to 10,000 years or more. Maybe much more!

 

Conservative Estimate:

Considering urbanization trends and population density, it’s unlikely that the urban land figure was significantly lower than 15,000 sq km. This represents approximately 0.15% of Canada’s total land area.

Upper Bound: 25,000 sq km seems like a reasonable upper limit, as a much larger figure would likely have been more widely reported or easier to find in official statistics. This represents approximately 0.25% of Canada’s total land area.

 

Calculations:

0.15%: (15,000 sq km / 9,984,670 sq km) * 100%

0.25%: (25,000 sq km / 9,984,670 sq km) * 100%

Not sure if people are familiar with percent.. as a decimal that is 0.0015 or 0.0025

Are you sure Canada this is all yours? It doesn’t seem like it lands in your hands? Is someone fooling you? We know it’s yours, and the Crown Land agreement says they hold it for you, but they are doing something to keep it away from you, so maybe you should take a look.’

The politicians do a good job from hiding this land from people. Really good job. SGT couldn’t pull off such a trick in a million years.

‘The common narrative among tech Milenials and Gen Z suggests that Boomers are both tireless workers and intellectually deficient. Yet, the true critique isn’t about their work ethic, but their misplaced obedience. Instead of pushing harder in the tech Millenials and tech Gen Z that we know, suggest a new direction, and an encouragement for boomers to step back, relax, and listen to the younger generation’s perspectives, especially to the STEM professionals that are innovative and young. The issue lies not in a lack of hard work, but in a lack of strategic INACTION.’

There are many in Canada that seem to walk the street without true hart, as if waiting for the days to pass, until they can go to the grave. This is easy to spot, especially since 2020.’

Boomers, it’s not about tirelessly following orders; it’s about knowing when to pause, to re-evaluate, and to choose a different path.

The younger generation isn’t asking for more effort on the same treadmill; they’re not pushing you to do more; they’re asking for a strategic retreat, for a reclaiming of the fundamentals, of basic logic.

The solution is not complex; the solution doesn’t require financing from a bank or extra resources or a central bank or any bank (that is the antithesis of the solution but the actual problem); it’s about rediscovering the simple act of choosing a path, marking territory, and contributing directly to the worldskills as essential as SIMPLY PLACING A PIECE OF WOOD ON A CHOSEN PLOT OF LAND.

 

Directly Related Content:

Title: “Table 3.4 – Total and urban land area, 1996, 2001 (modified) and 2006” www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/92f0138

Title: “Safeguarding Existence: The Farmer’s Role in an Era of Smart Cities and AI Dominance” skillsgaptrainer.com/safeguarding-e

Title: “Pierre Poilievre’s Stand Against Carbon Taxation: Unveiling Canada’s Fight Against A Shift in Property Ownership and Investment”  https://skillsgaptrainer.com/pierre-poilievres-stand-against-carbon-taxation/

Title: “Blockchain Revolution: Tokenizing Land and Non-Perishable Metals to Secure an Economic Future” https://x.com/SkillsGapTrain/status/1806444549642109296

 

@BezirganMocha
Ontario Farmers Protest Land Expropriation

A convoy of tractors from the Township of Wilmot, Ontario, rolled through the Waterloo Region HQ in protest against the government’s plan, backed by the province, to expropriate 770 acres of farmland for undisclosed purposes.

“These are farms that have often been in the family since the 1800s. To think that you’re going to have your farm, livelihood, home, and everything taken away from you on such short notice… If this can happen to these farmers — it can happen to farmers anywhere,” said Kevin Thomason, Vice Chair of the Grand River Environmental Network.

The farmers are steadfast in their refusal to sell their farmland, despite the threat of government expropriation. https://x.com/BezirganMocha/status/1832158192123703351

 

@SkillsGapTrain @BezirganMocha Since 2015, under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the government has made significant financial commitments to Indigenous communities, with annual spending exceeding $30 billion as of the 2023-2024 fiscal year. This includes funding for programs, reparations, and infrastructure aimed at addressing the longstanding harms of colonialism. The cumulative total of these efforts is estimated to reach $200 billion over several years, reflecting Canada’s commitment to reconciliation and support for Indigenous Peoples’ rights to land, clean water, education, and cultural preservation ​(APTN News)​(Budget Canada).

Now, when it comes to land expropriation in Ontario, this situation feels deeply ironic. For a decade, we’ve placed immense focus on reconciliationapologizing for taking Indigenous land and compensating for these wrongs, such as taking land. But now, we witness the potential expropriation of 770 acres of farmland from Ontario farmers. These are farms that have been in families for generations, since the 1800s. The fact that governments can seize this land, especially after years of advocating for the protection of land rights, sends a mixed and troubling message.

Was the government lying about land rights and compensation for theft of land all this time? Did they just want to take 200 billion from Canadians under false pretense of false value system that they never actually were going to hold to? But was just a political value system to transfer money that seemed convenient? This is what their actions say by logical definition. How can you take 200 billion from people to defend land rights, and them from the same people you take their farms too? Are you thinking this through as a government? These values, something is wrong here because the logic is in conflict.

Are we truly committed to the values we’ve been championing for the last decade? The expropriation of landwhether Indigenous or non-Indigenous undermines the very principle of respecting land ownership and the rights of those who have cultivated it for generations. If we claim to stand against historical injustices, how can we now allow for such blatant disregard of land rights to continue? It begs the question: Was all the talk of land justice genuine, or are we witnessing a double standard where land is once again treated as something governments can take at will?

This protest by Ontario farmers isn’t just about land; it’s a test of our collective values. If the government can take their land today, who’s to say it won’t happen elsewhere, to other groups, under other circumstances? We have to decide if we genuinely care about protecting people’s rights to their landor if those principles are selectively applied depending on the situation.

Title: “Unleashing Canada’s Potential: Axing the Barriers to Land and Prosperity” skillsgaptrainer.com/unleashing-can

Title: “Safeguarding Existence: The Farmer’s Role in an Era of Smart Cities and AI Dominance” https://skillsgaptrainer.com/safeguarding-existence-the-farmers-role/

 

 

@jumpfall11 @SkillsGapTrain @BezirganMocha maybe you should give back the stolen land dumb ass

@SkillsGapTrain @jumpfall11 @SkillsGapTrain @BezirganMocha Our team members do not own land in Canada, so your request is based on a false assumption. Smart individuals first gather relevant information, ask thoughtful questions, and then evaluate before making statements they believe to be valid.

Hypothetically, if we acquired land in Canada, and then proceeded to follow your suggestion of ‘giving it back,’ we’d need to consider the entire chain of ownership. This would involve unwinding transactions through multiple previous owners, potentially dozens or more, potentially back to the monarchy and, ultimately from the monarchy to the Indigenous peoples who originally inhabited the land. But that brings up an important point: hasn’t the government already been addressing Indigenous land rights through extensive financial commitments like the $30 billion annual budget and over $200 billion in reparations and support since 2015?

The irony here is that while advocating for Indigenous land rights, we saw today about the idea of the expropriation of land from Ontario farmers, who is advertised to be families that have cultivated the land since the 1800s. This seems like a double standard. How can a government champion land rights and respect for ownership, while taking farmland from families who’ve stewarded it for generations? So, if we are serious about ‘giving land back,’ shouldn’t we first ensure that all land rights are treated with the same respect whether Indigenous or non-Indigenous? Does that make sense? It might be difficult for you to understand the desire to have standards, a single standard, and a positive value system. Dumbass.

 

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