ACROSS the western world, governments are imposing new dictatorial powers of control over the people they are supposed to serve.
As stated in our featured video with Canadian lawyer John Carpay, Canada will be a police by December if the government of globalist Prime Minister Mark Carney passes three particular pieces of legislation.
- The Strong Borders Act empowers Canada Post to open mail without a warrant, allows warrantless searches of Canadians’ phones and computers and criminalizes use of cash in amounts greater than $10,000.
- The Combatting Hate Act will increase surveillance and prosecution of so-called hate speech on social media while increasing sentences for such offences.
- Online Harms Act – if reintroduced will give the Canadian Human Rights Commission massively increased powers to prosecute “non-criminal offensive speech”; set up a Digital Safety Commission to police online behaviour and allow pre-emptive punishment for people suspected of being able to commit a hate speech crime in future. (Sound familiar?)
It’s the same in the UK where Carney’s widely despised globalist comrade Keir Starmer has declared everyone will be given digital ID in order to work, allegedly to end employment of illegal immigrants who have been allowed to flood into the country.
UK police, according to The Times (4 April 2025) make more than 30 arrests a day for ‘offensive online communications” under vague laws criminalising messages that cause ‘annoyance’, ‘inconvenience’ or ‘anxiety’.
More than 12,000 such arrests occurred in 2023 alone, and civil liberties groups have warned of a chilling effect on free speech. Most cases do not result in conviction, yet individuals are subjected to police detention and reputational damage merely for expressing controversial views online, an EU report stated.
And here in Australia we will shortly have the “world leading” social media ban for under-16s and concurrently the (at this stage) voluntary Digital ID Act.
Then there were the recent notorious raids by West Australian police against so-called sovereign citizen firearm owners. This was the thin edge of the wedge in Australia. Mainstream media has shown little interest in this unlawful and disturbing sweep of “pre-crime” prosecution.
But are Britons, Australians and Canadians in revolt over this totalitarianism that is now happening real time? There are certainly signs of a national uprising in the UK, with massive numbers taking the the streets of London.
Europe is also dealing with unrest, with French PM Macron under fire from the popular but politically isolated nationalists who are demanding his resignation over his inability to hold his leftist-centrist coalition governments together, censorship laws and talk of going to war in Ukraine. The French are calling for a “Frexit” – a return to national sovereignty.
Meanwhile the EU’s push for global censorship laws has struck a snag in Germany.
Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig says “unprovoked chat control must be taboo in a constitutional state” and personal conversations should not be treated as inherently suspicious. She insisted that the state must never compel companies to pre-screen messages.
“Germany will not agree to such proposals at EU level,” she said, confirming the stance of Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s centrist administration after weeks of speculation.
The controversial EU plan, first proposed in 2022, would have granted authorities the ability to intercept and inspect messages and images shared through encrypted platforms like Signal and WhatsApp.
As for the Aussies, they’ve been out marching on the streets over open-door immigration – but hardly on the scale of a national uprising. Some question of value of street protests, and say more practical action is needed, for instance, at the polls.
However, at the last election over a third of Australians voted Labor – especially in the major cities, where Labor has gerrymandered electorates to its advantage and signed hundreds of thousands of recent immigrants on to electoral rolls after mass citizenship ceremonies.
It’s going to take a massive national awakening to shift the opinions of mainstream Aussies away from their habitual major-party voting.