In this webinar by the Committee on Present Danger China, many presenters, including myself, address the topic: UNRESTRICTED WARFARE | Emperor Xi’s Colonial Build-out: The Belt and Road Gambit for Enslaving the World.
The portion that covers “The CCP’s Colonization of Canada” begins 1 hour 30 seconds in. I discuss how Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s ambition regarding China was overtly on the table a decade ago, how it developed; and that it was being cemented even long before that in the key role that Justin Trudeau’s father Pierre Trudeau played in the normalization of China among the international community. In fact, a 1973 report by the New York Times stated:
Among Western nations, Canada was in the forefront of the trend toward diplomatic recognition of the Peking Government and there has been a wide and growing range of trade and other contacts between this country and China for years, long before the United States began normalizing its own relations with the Chinese.
The vision continued with his son Justin, who answered a question in 2013 about which country he admired most by stating that he most admired China’s basic dictatorship.
To view the webinar, click HERE. Canadian portion begins at 1 hour 30 sec.
milo minderbinder says
Let’s keep in mind that the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) have successfully infiltrated our government. Only God knows how many people in Congress the CCP have compromised, in addition to the fraudulent POTUS and, possibly the Pelosi’s.
Not only have they, the CCP, successfully infiltrated the Congress, they have successfully infiltrated the financial sector, the Education system along with Corporations. They the CCP have declared. “Unrestricted warfare” on the world with the United States of America as their primary target.
“Foreign influence is truly the Grecian horse to a republic. We cannot be too careful to exclude its influence.”
– Alexander Hamilton (1755-1804)
kq6kq6kq6 says
Why don’t we do the same to them? Oh, that right. Joe China is in the White House.
Alkflaeda says
I have been trying to avoid buying Chinese products because of their treatment of the Uyghurs – and, apart from food, it is actually very difficult. Things that look British and have British sounding names, turn out to have a tiny “made in PRC” somewhere, If the people who are exploited in China were working on a Barbados sugar plantation, or picking cotton, we’d call them slaves but we associate assembly work with civilised employers, even when it’s an 18 hour day.