Maxime Bernier on Info Wars! My speech to Canada and more

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Public Address: National Security Through Sovereignty and Transparency
By: Dawn Dussault, International Security Analyst
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Good day,
In my career advising on national and international security matters, I have learned that threats to a nation's safety are not always obvious. They don’t always arrive with tanks or drones. Often, they come wrapped in policy, in data, in subtle shifts of power — and in silence.
Today, I speak not only as a security analyst, but as a citizen concerned with the trajectory of our nation — and the forces shaping it without informed public consent.
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[On Sovereignty and Global Influence]
Canada’s sovereignty is increasingly shaped by networks that do not answer to democratic institutions. Organizations like the World Economic Forum, Bilderberg Group, and private transnational interests have embedded themselves into policymaking, economic frameworks, and national infrastructure.
These are not conspiracy theories. These are documented realities — supported by travel records, financial ties, advisory roles, and legislative shifts that reflect “global” agendas, not domestic needs.
Whether it’s the centralization of digital identity systems, the push toward bio-digital convergence, or plans to expand Canada’s population to 100 million under the Century Initiative, the pattern is consistent: massive structural change, initiated by a few, imposed on the many.
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[On National Security & Economic Manipulation]
Our financial system — once a tool for economic stability — has become a lever of control. Figures like Mark Carney, with ties to central banking, multinational corporations, and elite circles, have repeatedly influenced policies that benefit institutions while transferring risk and cost onto the public.
As an analyst, I’ve tracked where these trends lead in other nations: debt crises, dependency on foreign capital, loss of control over energy and agriculture, and increasing social instability.
When you bail out corporations with public money and centralize banking while suppressing local enterprise, you are not safeguarding a nation — you are hollowing it out.
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[On Technocracy and Civil Liberties]
We are also witnessing the rise of technocratic governance, where unelected entities shape health policy, speech regulation, and digital surveillance — often through emergency powers or international “frameworks” that bypass legislative scrutiny.
I say this with the clarity of experience: when liberty is sacrificed for the illusion of control, the result is not security — it is subjugation.
The erosion of civil liberties in the name of safety, from pandemic-era mandates to the militarization of dissent, reflects a growing disconnect between state and citizen.
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[On Solutions and the Path Forward]
What we need now is not revolution, but recalibration. We must:
• Reassert national control over core infrastructure: financial, digital, and agricultural.
• Demand full transparency from all public officials with ties to international advisory bodies.
• Audit our involvement in “global” agendas that bypass public debate.
• Strengthen our capacity to be self-reliant, resilient, and strategically independent.
We must also protect freedom of speech, bodily autonomy, and the right to peaceful dissent, not as privileges — but as security imperatives in a truly democratic society.
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[Closing]
National security is not only about borders and defense — it is about ensuring that the people of a nation remain the rightful stewards of their future.
We must move forward lawfully. Peacefully. But we must move forward with open eyes.
Thank you.

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