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The bizarre spat with Canada shows Mohammed bin Salman’s true colours – August 12, 2018

Posted on August 12, 2018August 12, 2018 by RichInWriters

The bizarre spat with Canada shows Mohammed bin Salman’s true colours – August 12, 2018

It’s very odd to read from Canadian writers who are working for established reputable newspapers spewing out propaganda pieces. Nesrine Malik wrote a very interesting piece in The Guardian which you can read by clicking the link below:

 

The bizarre spat with Canada shows Mohammed bin Salman’s true colours

 

It’s interesting that the basis of Nesrine Malik’s article revolves around a Canadian political figure making a tweet that the entire planet can react too and her not being able to comprehend the correlation of why the Saudi government reacted the way it did. Politics is only simple when it revolves around trade. Economics is simple when it revolves around barter and trade. What complicates transactions and interactions are often the intermediaries or the middlemen who often don’t interpret or articulate themselves in a manner both sides can appreciate.

There are times in history where 2 nations, 2 groups, 2 tribes simply go to war because they don’t like each other. But then there are wars or feuds that are caused by 1 group trying to grandstand another group. Saudi Arabia has been in violation of several human rights for a long time now, but a lot of other nations including Canada are still willing to do business with them. Why does Canada do business with nations that it considers corrupt? Why is it that a human rights abuser like Saudi Arabia has a long waiting list of immigrants who are begging to work and live there?

The reason Canada and other developed nations do business with nations it deems not so perfect is because of trade, bartering interacting often leads to other nations wanting to mimic the successes of the nations doing economically better than they are. What destroys these relationships are political figures who want to rush the process, political figures who aren’t as powerful as they’d like to believe, political figures who take principled stances with the expectations that their big sister or brother will defend them no matter what they do or say.

That’s the decision Chrystia Freeland and/or her representative(s) made when she/they decided to make a public statement about Saudi Arabia. This is a topic that’s usually done behind closed doors. In China, for example, Canada knows best not to patronize the Chinese Communist party, Canada knows not to patronize the Russians. Canadian stances towards China and Russia to the best of knowledge don’t end up on Twitter. America rarely if ever makes tweets condemning Saudi Arabia and America has a much more powerful military than does Canada.

In Canada, a lot of these social justice warriors need to be reminded of the size of our military and our current place in the world. If Canada wants to start behaving like the United States we’re going to have to spend more on our Military spending. It’s never a good idea to walk into a not so perfect friends house play nice with the friend, then leave the friends house, go back home, pick up a megaphone and then tell everyone who will listen that you and that friend are having a private disagreement right now and you want everybody you know to be forced to join you in condemning this supposed friend of yours.

Justin Trudeau’s cabinet has been trying to push their social justice narrative all over the world. Maybe that’s what some Canadians voted for, but understand that when you try and push your personal beliefs on other people that there will be pushback. People hate change, we all hate immediate change and if Canada wants Saudi Arabia to immediately change its laws, Canada better be prepared for the potential of a war.

Bush wanted Iraq to change, Bush demanded that Iraq disarm and when Iraq didn’t George Bush sent in the American Troops. Was it right for George Bush to do that? Who cares? The bottom line is; he had the military power to do it. Now Canada should ask itself if it has the military power to topple the Saudi regime. Because currently most of Canada’s allies don’t have a problem with Mohammed bin Salman or Saudi Arabia.

So if Canada wants ‘s to force its will on Saudi Arabia it better start begging its allies to conform to its social justice political narrative or build up it’s military, because Saudi Arabia doesn’t have to change just to join some club, it has to want to change and based on what I’ve been reading about Saudi Arabia, although the change is slow, Saudi Arabia is at the very least making an attempt to be better.

Personally, I think there are too many feminists in Trudeau’s cabinet who think that Saudi Arabia is an easy or soft target. Trudeau’s Liberals have been doing this since he took office. Because things have relatively been going smoothly I personally feel that Trudeau’s cabinet have been feeling emboldened lately if you’re picking fights and nobodies knocked you out yet, why shouldn’t you poke the bear right?

Well, in my opinion, I just think Trudeau’s Liberals and many Leftist in Canada simply haven’t figured it out yet. They may never figure it out, because quite simply the coming economic collapse in Canada may happen soon after the next election and if Trudeau loses the collapse might happen on the Conservative watch. Brian Mulrooney got stuck inheriting Pierre Trudeau’s economic mess, could history repeat itself. We shall see.

Interesting times ahead






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