Central Banker Mark Carney: Canada’s New Overlord — A Disaster Worse Than Trudeau! By Charles Taylor (Florida)

Canada, brace yourselves: the Liberal Party has thrust upon you a new prime minister in Mark Carney, a former central banker with no electoral mandate, a globalist pedigree dripping with elitism, and a track record that promises to plunge your nation into a deeper abyss than even socialist Justin Trudeau could muster. If Trudeau was a flamboyant narcissist who cloaked incompetence in sanctimonious platitudes, Carney is a cold, calculating technocrat whose reign threatens to turn Canada into a vassal state of internationalist agendas and economic ruin. Here's why he's not just a continuation of Trudeau's failures—he's a turbocharged nightmare poised to outdo them.

First, let's talk about his coronation—because that's what it was. Carney didn't win a gritty democratic fight; he waltzed into the Liberal leadership with an obscene 85.9 percent of the vote on March 9, 2025, steamrolling rivals like Chrystia Freeland in a contest so lopsided it reeks of a backroom stitch-up. Trudeau at least had the decency to face the electorate three times, however flawed his tenure. Carney? He's never held elected office, never dirtied his hands with the messy business of representing actual Canadians. Instead, he's a parachuted saviour for a flailing Liberal elite, handpicked to manage their Trump-induced panic. This isn't leadership—it's a technocratic coup, and it's an insult to every Canadian who believes in democracy over Davos.

Now, consider his baggage. Trudeau's economic legacy was a bloated federal government—up 40 percent under his watch—skyrocketing housing costs, and a cost-of-living crisis that crushed the middle class. Carney doesn't escape that; he was Trudeau's special economic adviser, whispering in his ear as Canada's economy weakened to the point of begging for Trump's tariffs to finish it off. But where Trudeau stumbled through with charisma and apologies, Carney brings a ruthless edge. His tenure at the Bank of Canada and Bank of England wasn't about empowering people—it was about steering economies through crises for the benefit of the global financial class. He slashed interest rates in 2008 to save banks, not families, and cushioned Brexit's fallout for London's elite, not the British worker. In Canada, expect more of the same: policies that prop up Bay Street while Main Street drowns.

Then there's his Trump obsession. Trudeau sparred with Trump like a peacock flashing feathers—lots of noise, little substance. Carney's already dialled it up to a vendetta, vowing to "keep our tariffs on until the Americans show us respect" and framing Canada as a hockey team ready to brawl. It's a macho flex from a guy who's spent decades in cushy boardrooms, not rinks. Trump's tariffs—25 percent on Canadian goods—could gut your export-driven economy, and Carney's dollar-for-dollar retaliation fetish risks escalating a trade war you can't win. Trudeau's C$30 billion in retaliatory tariffs were reckless enough, but Carney's rhetoric suggests he'll double down, gambling Canadian jobs to prove he's tougher than Trudeau ever pretended to be. Newsflash, Mark: Trump doesn't blink, and Canada's not a superpower. This isn't leadership—it's hubris with a spreadsheet.

Worse still, Carney's a globalist zealot cut from the World Economic Forum cloth—far more dangerous than Trudeau's performative progressivism. Trudeau loved the carbon tax photo ops; Carney's the architect of "climate finance," a euphemism for forcing net-zero austerity on nations while raking in profits for green cronies. Posts on X have screamed it: he's tied to Chinese coal investments while preaching decarbonisation, a hypocrite who'll choke Canada's energy sector—pipelines be damned—to appease his Davos pals. Trudeau's woke agenda was annoying; Carney's degrowth gospel could strangle your resource economy into submission, all while he jets off to G20 summits to lecture us on sacrifice.

And let's not ignore the China stench. X users have flagged Carney's admiration for China-style control—social engineering masked as "sustainability." Trudeau flirted with authoritarian vibes during the trucker protests, but Carney's central banker DNA suggests he'd wield emergency powers with surgical precision, not Trudeau's clumsy drama. A man who thinks Canada needs "more globalism" isn't here to defend sovereignty—he's here to sell it out, whether to Trump's annexation threats or Beijing's playbook.

Finally, his rookie status is a liability Trudeau never had. Trudeau was a seasoned MP by the time he took the helm; Carney's a political virgin who speaks French like a bureaucrat and fumbled explaining why he moved Brookfield Asset Management's HQ from Toronto to New York. He's untested, prone to gaffes, and facing Pierre Poilievre's populist buzzsaw in an election that could come any day. Trudeau clung to power through charm and incumbency; Carney's sterile charisma might not survive the first debate.

In short, Carney's worse than Trudeau because he combines the latter's economic mismanagement with a soulless, globalist efficiency that could hollow out Canada faster than Trudeau's selfies ever did. Trudeau was a clown; Carney's a machine—and machines don't care who they crush. This is the new Canada, where the technocrat's rule, and the people pay, and I will hear the sobs from Canada all the way to Florida.

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2025/03/09/canadian-liberals-select-globalist-technocrat-mark-carney-to-replace-justin-trudeau-as-prime-minister/ 

 

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Monday, 31 March 2025

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