Canada Is Funding Its Own Death
There is a story of the Anishinaabe people — who lived across the Great Lakes, in the forests and rivers of what is now Ontario and Quebec- that tells how they once turned against each other. The Great Spirit, Kitchi-Manitou, sent a great flood to purify the Earth. Only one man survived: Nanaboozhoo, floating on a log in an endless sea. He asked the animals to dive to the bottom and bring back a grain of the original earth. One by one they failed. Finally, the muskrat — the smallest, the most unlikely surfaced barely alive, with a single grain of soil in his paw. The turtle swam forward. “Use my back,” he said. “I will bear the weight of the new world.” The soil grew until it formed a continent. The people called it Turtle Island. The rest of the world calls it North America.
This is one of the most beautiful creation stories ever told, but what does a 1,500-year-old creation story about a turtle have to do with Canada funding its own death, the rape of women on Toronto’s streets, the firebombing of synagogues, and Indigenous children drinking contaminated water in 2026?
Everything.
Canada, too, was infected by the progressive mind virus
— the post-colonial narrative that divides the entire world into
oppressors and oppressed, settlers and natives, guilty and innocent.
Canadians were taught — in universities, in schools, in government
training sessions that the land beneath their feet was stolen. That
their country was not a country but an occupation. That the only honest
response to their own existence was shame, so they stopped calling their
country by its name.
Today, Canadian government
documents open with land acknowledgments declaring the territory
“unceded Indigenous land.” The federal Department of Justice refers to
Canada as “Turtle Island” in its official
publications. The University of Toronto, McGill, and dozens of other
institutions list their addresses as Turtle Island in formal
communications. The Toronto Transit Commission published the Anishinaabe
creation story on its website as an act of institutional
reconciliation. City councils from Vancouver to Halifax open every
meeting with a statement declaring that the meeting takes place on
stolen land. Elementary school children across the country are taught,
as curriculum, that Canada is an ongoing colonial crime — and that the
appropriate response is guilt.
So what Canada actually did with all that guilt?
You might think that a country so consumed by guilt over its Indigenous peoples would have spent the last twenty years fixing the actual problem, and you would be wrong. The Anishinaabe and dozens of other Indigenous nations are still there; forty communities have no clean drinking water, some for over two decades.
Neskantaga First Nation has been under a boil water advisory since 2000. In May 2026, Pikangikum First Nation declared a state of emergency over a water crisis the federal government had ignored for a full year. Indigenous youth kill themselves eleven times more than the national average. Canadians’ guilt stayed in the lecture hall; the Anishinaabe stayed in poverty.
The left is a political movement built on guilt and blame; it will always find a new enemy before it fixes the problem it created. So instead of clean water for the Indigenous and safe streets for its citizens, Canada found something more satisfying: a cause that made it feel righteous without requiring anything difficult. White guilt and Qatari money are a perfect combination. One provides the emotional engine. The other provides the direction. And nobody arrived carrying the language of the oppressed more fluently, or more strategically, than the network Qatar had been building for decades.
Canada opened its borders not out of naivety but out of ideology. Immigration reached 500,000 people per year, the highest per-capita rate in the developed world, with screening processes that prioritized diversity metrics over security assessments. The ideology held that border controls were a form of colonial violence, and questioning immigration was racism.
And so Canada was open, and what walked through the door was 6,800 antisemitic incidents a year, women grabbed off the streets of Toronto by men with ties to ISIS, and a prime minister who celebrates Eid with an organization that funds Hamas and calls it inclusion.
On June 1, 2026, Prime Minister Mark Carney stood inside Holy Blossom Temple, Toronto’s oldest synagogue, a building that had required armed SWAT teams outside its doors for weeks so that worshippers could feel safe — and admitted: “Canada’s civic compact is failing Jewish Canadians. Antisemitism in Canada had reached levels not seen since the Second World War. Over two-thirds of all religion-motivated hate crimes in the country were directed at Jewish Canadians — a community that makes up one percent of the population. Bullets had been fired at Jewish schools. Firebombs had been thrown at synagogues. Jewish community centers and Holocaust memorials had been attacked.”
He was right, and in this article, I will show you that his government not only helped build the infrastructure that enabled the death and the antisemitism in Canada but also paid for it.
Canada Is Funding Its Own Death
The Muslim Association of Canada (MAC) was founded in 1997. On its website, it describes itself as a faith-based charity focused on education, community service, and volunteer engagement. What it does not mention is that its own literature celebrates the teachings of Hassan al-Banna — the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood — and Sayyid Qutb, the Brotherhood’s chief ideologue who provided the theological justification for modern jihadist violence. This is the organization that successive Canadian governments have been funding for over two decades.
The numbers are not hidden; they are recorded in official government ledgers, published through departmental disclosures, and listed in the annual filings of Canadian charities. Between 2018 and 2022 alone, MAC received nearly $31 million Canadian from public coffers — $9.7 million federal, $16.5 million provincial, $4.7 million municipal. In 2023, the federal government gave MAC $6 million — roughly 12 percent of its entire declared revenue for that year. Its 2025 budget exceeds $55 million, with nearly $9 million in government funding.
In total, successive Canadian governments have channeled over $51 million in public funds into Muslim Brotherhood-aligned organizations since the early 2000s.
And what did Canada get for its money?
MAC operates mosques, schools, and community centers across the country — and according to the Canada Revenue Agency, it also functioned as “an apparent Hamas support network.” The CRA found that MAC officials were strategizing for Mohamed Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood presidential campaign in Egypt. The organization funneled $300,000 to IRFAN-Canada — a charity Canada itself designated as a terrorist entity after it transferred $14.6 million directly to Hamas. And in May 2025, MAC held its annual convention at a city-owned venue in Toronto, featuring speakers with documented ties to the Cordoba Foundation — an organization banned as a terrorist entity by the United Arab Emirates.
The ideology MAC spreads does not stay in conference halls. At its 2025 national convention — held at a city-owned venue in Toronto, funded in part by Canadian taxpayers — the featured speakers included a man who praised Omar Abdel Rahman, the “Blind Sheikh” convicted of conspiring in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, calling him “a respected scholar.” Another speaker was Ebrahim Rasool, expelled from the United States for his ties to terrorism. A third was Anas Altikriti, founder of the Cordoba Foundation.
This is what Canada’s $9 million buys: a stage for men who celebrate mass murder, in a government-owned building, in the middle of Toronto.
Bais Chaya elementary school — a Jewish day school for girls in Toronto — was shot three times; three shootings targeted the same school for Jewish children. After the third, the Canadian government announced a conference on antisemitism. It did not freeze MAC’s funding. It did not review the charitable status of a single Brotherhood-linked organization. It scheduled a conference, and then, on June 1, 2026, Prime Minister Carney stood inside a synagogue and declared that Canada was failing its Jewish citizens. He said it while his government was still writing the checks to the organizations that made the armed guards necessary in the first place.
Follow the Money — From Ottawa to Hamas
The Canada Revenue Agency’s own 151-page audit — obtained by Global News — found that MAC accepted substantial funding from Qatar Charity, a member of the Union of Good, a global network of Islamic charities formally designated by the U.S. Treasury Department as a Hamas fundraising operation. Qatar Charity’s ties to al-Qaeda financing date back to the 1990s. Israel banned it in 2008. Its founder has been designated by the U.S. government as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist — the highest terrorism classification available under American law.
The chain is now complete — and it is written in official government documents for anyone willing to read them. Canadian taxpayers fund MAC. MAC accepts millions from Qatar Charity. Qatar Charity is part of the Union of Good, designated by the U.S. Treasury as a Hamas fundraising network, with documented ties to al-Qaeda financing since the 1990s.
The Canada Revenue Agency reviewed all of this, put it in a 151-page document, and used the word “troubling.” Its auditors wrote in plain English that MAC’s foreign donors “are known to promote extremist ideology or association with terrorist groups.” Then they left MAC in good standing as a registered charity. The government kept sending the money. And the prime minister kept showing up to MAC’s events, standing on their stage, and giving speeches about inclusion and diversity; this is not a failure of intelligence; this is a choice.
Qatar did not stop at MAC. Leaked documents obtained by the Middle East Forum reveal that Qatar’s Eid Charity — whose founder is also a U.S.-designated global terrorist — financed at least eight Canadian Islamic organizations, including centers in Ontario and British Columbia. One recipient used the money to convert a church into a mosque. Another received funding from a Kuwait-based charity with documented ties to al-Qaeda and the South Asian jihadist group Lashkar-e-Taiba.
Buying the Narrative
While Qatar Charity was funding MAC and MAC was funding Hamas, a parallel operation was running through Canadian universities — quieter, slower, and in many ways more dangerous. The Muslim Students Association has been present on Canadian campuses since the 1960s, founded by Muslim Brotherhood members studying at North American universities and designed from the start to spread Brotherhood ideology through what appeared to be an ordinary student club.
According to ISGAP's report, it has been doing exactly that for six decades. And in the summer of 2024, it organized the campus encampments that shut Jewish students out of their own universities at McGill, Toronto, Concordia, and York — the same ideology, the same funding, the same network, now with tents on the lawn and faculty members walking in to show their support.
Tarek Fatah, founder of the Muslim Canadian Congress, testified before the Canadian Parliament in 2015 that “every office of the MSA is a Muslim Brotherhood office in Canada.” Nobody acted on that testimony.
McGill’s Institute of Islamic Studies received a $1.25 million donation directly from the State of Qatar — announced publicly, with the Qatari ambassador present, celebrated as a “generous gift.” The Islamic Center of Quebec formally requested $24-$30 million from Qatar Charity in 2015.
McGill, Concordia, the University of Toronto, and York University — the same campuses where, in 2024, Jewish students were blockaded from their own libraries and classrooms while faculty members walked through the encampments to express solidarity. The same campuses that received Qatari donations, hosted MSA chapters, and produced the generation of academics, journalists, and policy advisors who now staff the institutions that are supposed to be asking hard questions — but have been trained, at Qatari expense, to call those questions Islamophobia instead.
This is what the money built.
Sexual assaults in York Region nearly doubled between 2016 and 2023. In January 2024, Peel Regional Police dismantled a sex trafficking network operating across the Greater Toronto Area that had been exploiting girls aged 11 to 14 — the suspects used coercion, manipulation, and threats of physical violence to control their victims while financially profiting from their exploitation. Three men with ties to ISIS were arrested in Toronto in 2025 for kidnapping and sexually assaulting women on the street.
Violence against Jewish which make up one percent of the population. In 2024, they were the victims of 68 percent of all religiously motivated hate crimes in Canada — 920 incidents, nearly triple the number recorded in 2020. A Jewish Canadian was 25 times more likely to be the victim of a hate crime. In 2025, B’nai Brith recorded 6,800 antisemitic incidents — 18.6 per day, a 145 percent increase from 2022. Early 2026 data already shows Canada on track for its most violent year against Jewish people in living memory.
Indigenous poverty and suicide: Indigenous youth are killing themselves at eleven times the national average while Neskantaga First Nation enters its twenty-second year without clean drinking water.
Canada’s middle class is being crushed under a fiscal burden estimated at $16-$23 billion annually from non-economic immigration alone — while the country imports 500,000 people a year without the infrastructure to absorb them.
Brain-Drain - The people who built Canada are leaving. Dr. Emmanuel Moss — chief of cardiac surgery at the Jewish General Hospital, one of Canada’s leading robotic heart surgeons — resigned and moved to Atlanta. Professor Gad Saad left Concordia for Mississippi. Jewish doctors across the country are quitting the profession. The community that staffed Canada’s hospitals, built its universities, and contributed to its cultural and economic life for generations has done the math and reached a conclusion: Canada has made its choice, and they are not it.
Mr. Carney,
You stood in a synagogue and told the Jewish community that Canada has failed them. You said it with what looked like remorse; let us talk about what you did not say.
You did not mention that on October 7, 2024 — the one-year anniversary of the massacre — a masked crowd stood on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery with a megaphone and led a crowd of hundreds in chants of “death to Canada, death to the United States, death to Israel” while burning the Canadian flags. organization behind that rally, Samidoun, was led by a Canadian citizen. You designated it a terrorist entity two weeks later — only after the video went viral and the embarrassment became unavoidable.
You did not mention the hundreds of videos circulating on social media showing Muslims in Canadian cities declaring that this land is not Canada — it is occupied territory that belongs to them. You taught them that framework, Mr. Carney. You put it in the school curriculum. You wrote it into government documents. You called Canada Turtle Island and told an entire generation that the country is an illegitimate colonial project.
While you were busy playing your colonial-guilt games, the real Anishinaabe, the Indigenous people of the land, were rotting in communities without clean water. How dare you take their creation story, the story of a people who are displaced, marginalized, and abandoned — and put it on government letterhead to signal your own virtue? They did not ask to become your moral alibi; they asked for running water.
You also never mentioned the other problems your government created. Women were being grabbed off the streets of Toronto, Jewish schools were being shot at, and the middle class was being taxed into exodus — all while you funneled millions to organizations with proven ties to Hamas and al-Qaeda, whose members burn your flag, chant for your death, and then cash your government’s checks.
You are trading cardiac surgeons for terror networks; you are trading neurosurgeons for MAC conventions. You are handing out government grants to organizations that celebrate the murder of Jews and praise the killings of hundreds on 9/11, and calling it inclusion, while the people who built your hospitals pack their bags and leave.
The people you welcome have already taken 57 countries. And you are handing them the keys to the 58th — one grant at a time, one converted church at a time, one unanswered water advisory at a time.
You call your country Turtle Island?
The turtle’s people are dying in it, and you are writing checks to the people who want to bury them. You have the audacity to stand in a synagogue and ask why antisemitism is spiraling out of control.
You funded it, Mr. Carney. You built it. You signed the checks.
And history will not forget that.


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