Thursday, March 31, 2016

Tortured, drugged & sexually abused: Canadian woman talks about her childhood as “Duplessis Orphan”



  Also medical experimentation on Canadian children for a long time has been practiced especially in government and private institutions. Physicians and psychiatrists enjoy complete freedom to act without regard to basic medical ethics, without any consideration; to accept that destroying the mental and physical health of children for rest of their lives.
Tortured, drugged & sexually abused: Canadian woman talks about her childhood as “Duplessis Orphan”
                                                                                     
      #DOjustice: A horrendous crime against children that almost no-one knows about. It reportedly took place in Canada and lasted for 2 decades starting in the 1940's. The atrocity bears the name of Maurice Duplessis -the governor of Quebec at the time. His apparent corrupt deal with the Catholic Church opened a gruesome chapter in history- Canada still refuses to acknowledge. 300 thousand children became victims - babies taken from young mothers or kids taken mainly from poor families by Catholic institutions. The majority of them were sold to childless families or on the black market - the price varied from 40 dollars per baby-up to 25 thousand. The rest - who bear the name “Duplessis Orphans” - were sent to psychiatric hospitals. Quebec authorities and Catholic Orders apparently received government funding for each child treated in a psychiatric facility. Torture, slave labor, electroshock, beatings, drugs, sex abuse, lobotomies - these children were subjected to the worst things imaginable - while it seems the government and church made money. A lot of children died - and the way they were treated after death was no better. In 1999, a mass grave was discovered - 6 Boxes with over 2,000 Human Remains. It was dubbed "Pigsty cemetery", located next to a pig farm, which raised horrific speculation that pigs might have eaten some of the orphans' remains. Reports suggest dead children were also sold to medical schools for autopsies-at 10 dollars per body. A survivor of this shocking policy- Duplessis Orphan Clarina Duguay and her husband Rod Vienneau

“THE CANADIAN NAZIS AND THEIR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY”
Canada is a country of heinous crimes of grief and mourning, a land of human misery without any hope. “An ocean of human tragedy that their fierce waves drag millions of shattered lives.”   - Nadir Siguencia
shared this untold story.  


                                                                                     
                                                                  

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

"Reviewing the Causes and Consequences of the Actual Great Depression in Canada"




Reviewing the Causes and Consequences of the Great Depression
America had gone through hard times before: a bank panic and depression in the early 1820s, and other economic hard times in the late 1830s, the mid-1870s, and the early and mid-1890s. But never did it suffer an economic illness so deep and so long as the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Economists have argued ever since as to just what caused it. But it’s safe to say that a bunch of intertwined factors contributed. Among them were:
  • The stock market crash. The stock market soared throughout most of the 1920s, and the more it grew, the more people were eager to pour money into it. Many people bought on margin, which meant they paid only part of a stock’s worth when they bought it and the rest when they sold it. That worked fine as long as stock prices kept going up.
But when the market crashed in late October 1929, they were forced to pay up on stocks that were worth far less than what they had paid for them. Many had borrowed to buy stock, and when the stock market went belly-up, they couldn’t repay their loans and the lenders were left holding the empty bag.
  • Bank failures. Many small banks, particularly in rural areas, had overextended credit to farmers who, for the most part, had not shared in the prosperity of the 1920s and often could not repay the loans. Big banks, meanwhile, had foolishly made huge loans to foreign countries. Why? So the foreign countries could repay their earlier debts from World War I.
When times got tough and U.S. banks stopped lending, European nations simply defaulted on their outstanding loans. As a result, many banks went bankrupt. Others were forced out of business when depositors panicked and withdrew their money. The closings and panics almost completely shut down the country’s banking system.
  • Too many poor people. That may sound sort of goofy, but it’s a real reason. While the overall economy had soared in the 1920s, most of the wealth was enjoyed by relatively few Americans. In 1929, 40 percent of the families in the country were still living at or below the poverty level.
That made them too poor to buy goods and services and too poor to pay their debts. With no markets for their goods, manufacturers had to lay off tens of thousands of workers, which, of course, just created more poor people.
  • Farm failures. Many American farmers were already having a hard time before the Depression, mostly because they were producing too much and farm product prices were too low. The situation was so bad in some areas that farmers burned corn for fuel rather than sell it.
  • Environmental disasters. The production of vast crops during World War I and the decade that followed resulted in over-plowing of much of America’s farmland. The prairie grasses that held topsoil in place were stripped.
Coupled with one of the worst droughts in recorded history, the unprotected soil turned the Great Plains into what would become known as the “Dust Bowl.” Dry winds picked up tons of topsoil and blew it across the prairies, creating huge, suffocating clouds of dirt that buried towns and turned farms into deserts.
  • Government inaction. Rather than try to jumpstart the economy by pushing the Federal Reserve System to lend money to banks at low interest rates and pumping money into the economy through federal public works projects, the Hoover Administration did nothing at first, then took small and tentative actions that weren’t enough to head things off.
Whatever the causes, the consequences of the Great Depression were staggering. In the cities, thousands of jobless men roamed the streets looking for work. It wasn’t unusual for 2,000 or 3,000 applicants to show up for one or two job openings. If they weren’t looking for work, they were looking for food.
Bread lines were established to prevent people from starving. And more than a million families lost their houses and took up residence in shantytowns made up of tents, packing crates, and the hulks of old cars. They were called “Hoovervilles,” a mocking reference to President Hoover, whom many blamed (somewhat unfairly) for the mess the country was experiencing.
Americans weren’t sure what to do. In the summer of 1932, about 20,000 desperate World War I veterans marched on Washington D.C. to claim $1,000 bonuses they had been promised they would get, starting in 1946. When Congress refused to move up the payment schedules, several thousand members of the “Bonus Army” built a camp of tents and shacks on the banks of the Potomac River and refused to leave.
Under orders of President Hoover, federal troops commanded by Gen. Douglas MacArthur used bayonets and gas bombs to rout the squatters. The camp was burned. No one was killed, but the episode left a bad taste in the mouths of many Americans.
Thousands of farmers left their homes in states like Oklahoma and Arkansas and headed for the promise of better days in the West, especially California. What they found there, however, was most often a backbreaking existence as migrant laborers, living in squalid camps and picking fruit for starvation wages.

Monday, March 28, 2016

Are Canadians Really this Loonie? Canadian DOLLAR $ COLLAPSING


Canada Inflation Rate at 14-Month High
Consumer prices in Canada increased by 2.0 percent year-on-year in January 2016, following a 1.6 percent growth in the previous month and above market expectations of 1.7 percent. It was the highest reading since November 2014, as food cost rose at a faster pace and gasoline prices went up for the first time since October 2014.
Published on 2016-02-19


Published on Jan 19, 2016
In 2014 Canadian Oil Sands's operating cost per barrel was $49 per barrel.
Will Canadian Oil Sands Ltd. Survive $40 Oil? Aug 14, 2015
Aug 20, 2015 - Syncrude pegs losses at up to $10/barrel as oil prices collapse ..
Aug 12, 2015 - This latest oil price plunge is piling fresh misery on Canadian oil ... the outright price of Canadian heavy crude to around $22.50 a barrel..
TODAY - Some Canadian oil is selling at $8 a barrel...

After oil comes the collapse in natural gas prices.
Dec 21, 2015 - If you think the fall in the oil price is dramatic and disruptive, take a moment to consider the natural gas market.
Nov 11, 2015 - The steady collapse of international natural gas prices has been one of the most important -- but least reported -- commodities stories.

Dec 14, 2015 - Price for natural gas on Monday plunged to its lowest since January 2002

When you see gold at $1,085 an ounce, that's US dollars, it's closer to $1,600 C an ounce.
Job losses continue and the TPP which we hear very little about from our media will cost thousands of jobs...
No light at the end of the tunnel for a Canadian economy in crisis...