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A Globalist-Islamic Alliance and the Consequence for Jews

Apr 21, 2025

As Canadians head toward the April 28th election, the nation faces challenges from rising globalist agendas that lie at the heart of recently installed Prime Minister and Liberal leader Mark Carney’s platform. At the same time, Islam is gaining ground, exploiting the very cracks in Western society that globalism widens: the erosion of borders and public order, the collapse of cultural identity, the silencing of dissent, and the normalization of antisemitism.


Europe serves as a cautionary example, where mass immigration and rising Islamic influence—fueled by globalist policies—have eroded national identity and civic order, unleashing a surge in antisemitism. These same patterns are erupting in Canada.


Carney’s leadership has accelerated these trends, raising concerns about Canada’s stability and the undermining of individual freedoms. However, Canada’s trajectory didn’t begin with Carney. It began nearly a decade ago under former Prime Minister Trudeau, whose policies aligned more with the interests of globalist organizations, such as the United Nations (UN), World Health Organization (WHO), and World Economic Forum (WEF), than with the people he was elected to represent.


But Trudeau didn’t implement this agenda alone. Carney was there from the start, quietly shaping the system from behind the scenes. As former Governor of the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, and a leading voice in the UN and WEF, Carney helped shape the very globalist policies Canadians are living under.


From pandemic-era restrictions to digital surveillance, centralized banking, and climate regulation, his influence was clear. During COVID, he served as Trudeau’s unelected economic advisor—a role that accelerated Canada’s shift toward the globalist climate and finance agenda that Carney had long championed.


Add to this Carney’s position as Vice Chairman at Brookfield Asset Management, one of the world’s largest alternative investment firms with deep ties to globalist policies, along with his regular participation in Bilderberg Group meetings where global power brokers meet behind closed doors away from public scrutiny to coordinate globalist policies—and a pattern begins to emerge.


Was Trudeau ever really in charge? Or was Carney guiding Canada’s transformation all along? His official return to politics doesn’t mark a shift, but a continuation, perhaps even a consolidation, of the broader globalist agenda.


But globalism doesn’t operate in isolation. It relies on Islam to create division, instability, and the breakdown of national identity—because Islam refuses to integrate. That refusal stems from Islamic doctrine, which sees borders and nations as artificial constructs. The only true allegiance in Islam is to the Ummah, the global Islamic community.


The Quran teaches that the world ultimately belongs to Allah, and that Muslims are its rightful inheritors—making national borders irrelevant. Globalism views borders much the same way—as obsolete barriers to centralized governance. In both ideologies, national identity is an obstacle, not a goal—and so integration into the host country is fundamentally opposed.


By refusing to integrate, Islam fractures society, forcing governments to accommodate parallel systems with endless cultural concessions instead of enforcing shared values. In this phase, Islam has become globalism’s strategic partner.


When disorder erupts from riots, protests, or rising antisemitism, globalism points to the chaos to justify more centralized control: new laws, tighter restrictions, and selective enforcement. Not to restore order, but to protect Islam and secure its voting bloc. A double standard that treats Muslims with leniency and others with scrutiny—a dynamic only reinforced by Canada’s recent $100 million pledge to the Palestinians, further solidifying the Muslim bloc vote and rewarding silence toward extremism. All this, even as Canadian food banks break record highs and inflation burdens working families.


And much of that funding, of course, will pass through Hamas-controlled channels, with another portion funding the Palestinian Authority (PA), which still rewards families of terrorists who kill Israelis through the PA’s Pay-for-Slay program. In the end, Canadian taxpayers are funding terror. It’s all part of the same political system that protects Islam, secures Muslim voting blocs, and punishes dissent.


And now, this shift toward centralized control is being enforced through government-imposed digital tracking and speech laws (Bills C-11, C-18, C-63) that make it increasingly difficult to question policy decisions—including foreign aid to Palestinian territories. These new laws are designed to control what people can say, manage what they see, and silence anyone who challenges the agenda, including those who criticize, or even question, Islam. Criticism of Islam is off-limits, echoing trends across Europe and drawing dangerously close to the blasphemy laws imposed in many Muslim-majority countries, where even comments about Islam that are perceived as derogatory can carry severe penalties, including death.


These restrictions, from surveillance to speech, aren’t isolated. They’re part of a coordinated shift toward centralized governance, one that reshapes public discourse and silences dissent, justifying itself through the very disorder it helps create.


Look at how the government responds to protest. When truckers held a peaceful protest in Ottawa against vaccine mandates, they were vilified by the media, had their bank accounts frozen, and were violently suppressed under emergency powers. Carney himself labelled the protesters seditious.


Yet, pro-Hamas rallies—openly calling for intifada, the destruction of Israel, and “death to Zionists” (meaning Jews)—are protected, even escorted by police, while disrupting traffic. Carney remains silent. No condemnation. No crackdown. Only complicity.


One protest is grassroots dissent—a threat to government power and overreach.


The other is foreign-aligned extremism, where the openly antisemitic chaos doesn’t threaten the system, but serves it. These protests normalize antisemitism, fracture Western identity, and deepen cultural divisions—exactly what globalism feeds on. As pro-Hamas violence escalates, the more protected the protests become.


Across Europe, the same pattern is clear—and Canada is catching up fast. Since October 7, antisemitism in Canada has surged. Some Jewish schools and synagogues have been vandalized, shot at, and targeted with Molotov cocktails. Jewish-owned businesses and restaurants have also been shot at and vandalized, storefronts defaced, windows smashed. Jewish students face routine harassment. Many families feel unsafe identifying publicly as Jewish. And without decisive action from the Liberal government, these attacks are likely to grow in both frequency and intensity.


Islamic exceptionalism is expanding in Canada, where Islam is treated above the law. The examples are growing, revealing a two-tiered system already operating across much of Europe, especially in the UK, where authorities ignored Muslim grooming gangs for fear of appearing Islamophobic:


Islamic prayer fills streets and shopping malls, uninterrupted.

Sharia norms shape school policy and court rulings.

Criticism of Islam is criminalized under new speech laws.

Gender segregation, halal-only food, prayer rooms, and hijab enforcement are mandated in public spaces.

Hamas protesters openly glorify terrorism, while critics are silenced as Islamophobic and accused of hate speech. Radical clerics preach vile antisemitism and hatred of the West without consequence, while Jewish counter-protesters are shut down. Muslims hold street prayers with loudspeakers, while Christians are arrested for quoting Scripture in public


Canada’s long-term demographic planning reflects this trajectory, using mass immigration to reshape national identity and entrench a two-tiered system, at the expense of economic stability, with Canada now ranked dead last for future economic growth among the 38 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.


Former BlackRock executive Mark Wiseman, a close Carney ally and co-founder of the Century Initiative, has openly proposed raising Canada’s population to 100 million, primarily through mass immigration. This isn’t a conspiracy. It’s public policy. A larger, more diverse, less unified population is more dependent—therefore easier to govern. The goal isn’t integration. It’s the quiet replacement of the nation with something more globally manageable.


This replacement, seen across Europe—especially in Sweden, Germany, and the UK—is now unfolding in Canada, where citizens are struggling under unaffordable housing, rising debt, and a deteriorating healthcare system.


For now, globalism and Islam empower each other. But the two ideologies aren’t truly aligned. Each seeks dominance. Like all rigid systems, they can cooperate temporarily, until their goals collide. Islam is the dangerous passenger, waiting for its moment to seize control when the alliance no longer serves Islam’s goals.


At the center of this growing alliance between globalism and Islam stands Mark Carney—now positioned to turn this alliance into policy. His globalist affiliations raise serious questions about the direction Canada’s heading, all while enabling the rise of Islamic influence at home. His silence on antisemitism is not oversight. It’s a strategy to preserve political support from Muslim voting blocs while advancing a globalist agenda that continues to fracture Canadian society.


Carney is managing the consequences of a demographic shift that began under Trudeau, one that dramatically increased the Muslim population in Canada by importing voters from cultures where antisemitism runs deeply. For Canadian Jews, this is no longer a wave of hatred. It’s an existential threat. The outcome of this election may determine whether Jewish life in Canada can continue at all.


In contrast, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has taken a clear moral stand condemning the pro-Hamas hate marches and supporting Canadian Jews. He reaffirmed Canada’s unwavering support for Israel by issuing an official statement on the October 7 anniversary, condemning Hamas and Hezbollah, and calling for the release of Israeli hostages. His platform—focused on ending inflation, restoring affordability, and defending free speech—rejects globalist policy and reasserts national sovereignty.


Canada’s future does not exist in a vacuum. As the U.S. remains the only Western power actively confronting both globalism and rising Islamic influence, Canadians face a choice: remain controlled and compromised under globalist rule or align with their closest ally to defend the freedoms and values that define Western civilization—and that includes standing against antisemitism.


Stay Awake. Keep Watch.


SOURCE: RAIR Foundation

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