Calling Pierre Poilievre a 'populist' is a lazy scare tactic used by elites

I’m not a fan of terms/words like populist, right leaning, left leaning and a host of other words. To me, this is all part of the divide and conquer strategy and very easy for my little pea brain to understand. Anyways, here’s a Canadian example of the use of the word populist and apparently the author’s belief thereof. For clarity’s sake, I do like and respect the word nationalism. Poilievre is running for the leadership of the Conservative Party of Canada, formerly known as the Progressive Conservative party. I used to wonder how one could be progressive and conservative at the same time without becoming a liberal.

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This guy’s heart might be in the right place but he’s appears more than a little naive in the federal arena, unfortunately. Everything is connected…like it or not. Its the same battles over and over again. This so called liberal agenda is the most tenacious by far in my opinion. It simply uses words with their new definitions to reinvent itself whenever it gets knocked down. Slogans and new organizations are just words to them. The old ideologies never change…world dominance through eugenics of any stripe.

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“This reversal is mainly an illustration of the political disorientation of the Liberal Party of Quebec. There was the nationalist turn, the progressive turn, the green turn. All these are beautiful slogans, but I have news for Dominique Anglade, no poll in life replaces the convictions.” Indeed."

One must remember that Quebec’s separatist idea was actually a cover/distraction from the real goal of establishishing city states by eliminating all boundary lines. That might help in the use of the term “sovereignty association” used by separatists until lately. This was a part of Pierre Trudeau’s (former prime minister) and René Levesque’s (former Quebec premier) education through the Fabian Society and British Intelligence.

“Little could the writers of the Chicago Tribune then know that during the very summer of their writing, a young Fabian, having just returned home from his conditioning under Harold Laski’s mentorship at the London School of Economics was working at his first job in the Privy Council Office (PCO) under the watch of Rhodes Scholar and Privy Council Clerk Norman Robertson. That young Fabian went by the name Pierre Elliot Trudeau.”

" Another personality whose celebrity was being created in tandem with Trudeau’s during the 1950s included Trudeau`s schoolboy chum, and British Intelligence asset René Lévesque, whose popular CBC radio show Point de Mire served to rally public opinion against the Duplessis regime and prepare the culture for the radically liberalizing reforms of the Quiet Revolution."

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