New Delhi: According to Counter Signal, a Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) facility is being built in Winnipeg. It has a huge weaponry storage room as well as numerous evidence and interrogation rooms.
The publication shared an image on Tuesday of some of the more alarming labels after claiming to have obtained a leaked copy of the architectural designs created by a Winnipeg company.
The enormous 50,000 square foot structure also houses biological labs, media relations offices, a weather station, and – probably most alarmingly, given the implications – lodging for hundreds of people, including “enforcement officers” employed by the ECCC.
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The Impact Assessment Act
The 2019 Impact Assessment Act, which is supposed to be legislation seeking to lessen the impact of energy, farming, and other major projects on indigenous communities and the environment. It bestows comparable authority on the “enforcement officers” who are essentially climate police.
In order to ensure that the IAA is being followed, they are allowed to enter any property without a warrant. While there, they may take pictures, access computers, phones, and other devices, give orders to anyone operating machinery, or even demand that the property be abandoned and future access be barred.
Canada is hiring climate enforcement personnel
As per Counter Signal, Canada is actively employing these “enforcement personnel” to carry out pollution restrictions, claims a job advertising on Indeed.com. They are provided with handcuffs, a secret security clearance, and restricted weaponry, which they take into whatever environments Ottawa instructs them to check.
This week, ECCC agents were spotted in Saskatchewan on private farms where they claimed to be collecting water samples to check the levels of nitrate. Premier Scott Moe questioned why the agency was taking the samples without the farmers’ consent or knowledge as well as what they intended to utilize them for.
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Trudeau claims to cut fertilizer emission by 30%
Many farmers worry that the PM might imitate his Dutch counterpart, whose proposed fertilizer usage limitations threaten to drive the majority of Dutch farmers off their land. Trudeau’s proposals to cut fertilizer emissions by 30% over the following ten years, which, according to proponents of the fertilizer business, won’t even lower carbon emissions, will not only result in reduced agricultural yields and the inability to continue growing food.
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