Sunday, January 25, 2026

SHOAH: THE GENOCIDE OF JEWS BY THE NAZIS ..... NEVER AGAIN?

The Shoah is already here

The warning signs that preceded the Holocaust are visible again, this time on a global scale and cloaked in modern language. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein
 
JNS
Jan 25, 2026
 
 
No photo description available.
 

“Never again” has become a ritual phrase, repeated solemnly on Holocaust Remembrance Day and then set aside, like a relic from a distant and incomprehensible past. But the Shoah is not behind us. It is already among us. And today, only the existence of the State of Israel stands as a barrier against a renewed and global attempt to eliminate the Jewish people.

Holocaust historian Saul Friedländer once warned that the extermination of the Jews was almost beyond language. That fear has come true in a different way. The words remain, but their meaning has drained away.

“Never again” is spoken while Jews are silenced, expelled, attacked, boycotted and murdered—often with the quiet acquiescence of the societies around them. Those who speak most earnestly about the importance of remembrance are not the ones shaping the present. History is being shaped by those who fight now.

Friedländer showed that Nazi antisemitism did not begin with gas chambers. It began with silence, with polite detachment, with neighbors looking away.

German-Jewish scholar Victor Klemperer described meeting a once-friendly policeman in December 1938 who passed him without acknowledgment, staring straight ahead. “That man,” Klemperer wrote, “represented 79 million Germans.”

Today, that look—cold, distant, complicit—has multiplied into the billions. A Jew meets an old acquaintance, sits at a table with longtime friends, and enters a shop in Rome, Vicenza, Paris, New York or Toronto.

The world averts its eyes. Newspapers report Jewish murders in Manchester or Bondi, the hunting of Israeli athletes in Amsterdam, expulsions from universities, assaults in the streets. Among friends and colleagues, there is silence. A barely concealed distance. Antisemitism is understood, excused and normalized.

Are you Jewish? Be quiet. You know how it is. You’re a Zionist. A genocidaire.

Since Oct. 7, 2023, social environments, institutions and the media have been mobilized. Victims have been transformed into executioners. Jews are called “Nazis.” A red-green-Islamist alliance has deployed a wealthy, sophisticated propaganda machine that has poured billions into spreading hatred of Jews. Its goal is not ambiguity. It is elimination.

“Kill the Jews.” “Death to the Jews.” “From the river to the sea.” The language is explicit.

This is not carried out today by a centralized, scientific machinery issuing orders from above. It proceeds from below, through society itself, through a pervasive international network of indoctrination. Human rights are weaponized to justify madness: Israeli actors assaulted in the street; police explaining that shouting threats is protected speech; violence excused by a doctrine that divides the world into oppressors and oppressed, where revenge is not only permitted but morally required.

Gays persecuted by Islamist regimes are told they must hate Israel, the only state in the region that protects their equality. Women are excluded from feminist movements. Scientists are barred from research centers. Artists are expelled from theaters. A vast mass of Jews and Israelis is erased. This is a Shoah.

The siege is global. Once, Jews fled Nazi Europe to America. Today, the United States itself is a theater of antisemitic violence. In the Middle East, the war is fought with terrorism. Elsewhere, it is fought socially, culturally and institutionally. You can only fight to defend yourself.

This did not happen overnight. Mein Kampf was not written in a day. Years of preparation preceded the Holocaust. Today, documentation shows how international operations, coordinated with vast resources, mobilized institutions—from the United Nations to courts, universities, film festivals and trade unions—to transform the “Palestinian cause” into a human-rights banner, despite its explicit negation of human rights.

Hollywood, Venice, Princeton, Turin, La Sapienza, and even a pizzeria in Naples expelling Israelis. All are nodes in a network that has trapped the world in the lie of genocide, a lie disproved in seconds by the most basic facts.

As with the Nazis, this phase begins with expulsions, isolated murders and economic and cultural persecution. It aims not yet at industrial extermination from above, but at disappearance from below: frightened communities withdrawing, emigrating, silenced into submission. Synagogues are attacked. Cemeteries desecrated. Jewish neighborhoods invaded.

From Rome to Berlin, Melbourne to Lakewood, Obninsk to Rouen, arson, threats and violence have become routine. Think twice before praying, antisemitism warns. Death waits around the corner—knives, bullets, cars.

Israel fights on one front; Jews everywhere fight on another. The attack targets soldiers and singers, athletes and students, workers and worshippers. Jews are eliminated from campuses, from professions, from politics, from public life. Children tell their parents not to speak Hebrew. Wearing a kippah is dangerous. A Star of David invites assault.

Remembering Auschwitz is no longer enough. Wake up. We are in the phase of mass antisemitic attack. The explosion of “incidents” is not only a Jewish problem; it is a European and American catastrophe. In France, attacks rose by 1,000 percent after Oct. 7. In the United States, they reached 10,000 in a year. Canada and Australia are engulfed. Murder follows rhetoric.

This is the most profitable algorithm in the West: antisemitism gains votes, sells papers, recruits followers. Trade unions strike for Hamas. Universities host courses on “genocide” while expelling Jewish students. Politicians dismantle antisemitism laws. The Oscars reward anti-Israel propaganda. A woman in New York screams, “I’m gonna kill you Jews,” as a car plows into Orthodox pedestrians.

This is the new Shoah: to confine Jews, one by one, into fear and isolation. It was in a discussion with American-Israeli journalist Elli Wohlgelernter that I first understood how this Shoah is advancing from below, through society itself, unlike the Nazi extermination plan imposed from above.

I have spent my life writing about antisemitism. Warning about it. Describing it. It was not enough. Do not say “never again” this Holocaust Remembrance Day on Jan. 27. It has become empty. Say instead: I will fight for Israel. That has meaning now.

Iran’s ayatollahs, like Hitler’s Germany, reveal antisemitism for what it is: an obsessive system of thought, a simplification of reality, a worldview that defines existence as violence. Destroy Israel. Destroy the Jews. This is Iran’s declared aim and that of Islamist terror, allied in the West with radical leftist movements.

Israel, however, fights back. Every time Jews stood at the edge of annihilation, an inner force compelled them to resist. Even in the Warsaw Ghetto, facing certain death, young people fought, laying the foundations for Zionist resurrection. Israel’s strength today is not only Jewish self-defense; it is a pillar in the global struggle against autocracy, terror and the collapse of democratic civilization.

The war against Jews is always a war against civilization. The Canadian scholar, Ruth Wisse, was right. Jews have learned to fight. And since Oct. 7, not only Jews but their allies must remember: the Shoah did not destroy only the Jewish people. It devastated the entire world.

TURKEY HAS BEEN A STRONG ALLY OF HAMAS AND ITS MILITARY BUTCHERED THE CIVILIANS OF AMERICA'S KURDISH ALLIES, WHILE QATAR HAS INVESTED $20 BILLION IN AMERICAN SCHOOLS AND UNIVERSITIES AS PART OF A STRATEGY TO PROMOTE ISLAMIST IDEOLOGIES

Trump’s unsavory Middle Eastern friends

Turkey and Qatar run counter to U.S. interests and cannot be trusted. 

 

By Joseph Puder 

 

JNS

Jan 25, 2026

 

 

Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani (L)  and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

 

U.S. President Donald Trump has achieved major domestic economic gains, including drastically reducing the number of illegal immigrants entering the United States and bringing energy costs and the inflation rate down.

In 2021, under President Joe Biden, inflation stood at 7.003%, while in 2025, under Trump, the rate was 2.68%. With other factors at play, the cost of living has risen, and tariffs imposed by the Trump administration have affected consumer prices. However, there has been an appreciable decline in recent weeks in dairy products, including milk, eggs, cheese, and gasoline.

The relative success of Trump’s domestic policies, notwithstanding his current foreign “friends,” is worrisome. During his previous term in office, he scored major triumphs, such as the 2020 Abraham Accords that brought about normalization of relations between Israel and four Arab-Muslim states, including Bahrain, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, and partially with Sudan. He also moved the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in May 2018, a pledge made by previous administrations but never realized.

Trump’s present foreign policy in the Middle East is problematic because he is pandering to some of his more unsavory “friends”: the president of Turkey, the emir of Qatar and the president of Syria, Ahmed al-Sharaa. Ostensibly, his romance with al-Sharaa, a jihadist, is meant to please Erdoğan and the Saudis at the expense of the Syrian Kurds, the staunch U.S. allies engaged in the fight against ISIS. It is apparent that Trump is ignoring the quest for self-determination of the Kurdish people and the plight of the besieged Syrian minorities, including the Alawites, Christians and Druze.

On a number of occasions, Trump has referred to Erdoğan as his “close friend” or “good friend,” saying they have a “great relationship.” The U.S. president has emphasized their strong bonds and mutual respect even during periods of significant U.S.-Turkey policy disagreements, as with Turkey’s purchase of Russian missiles, and actions in Syria, including the butchering of Kurdish civilians in northeastern Syria by Turkish military and proxy forces. Strains in their relationship have not deterred Trump from praising Erdoğan’s leadership and seeing him as a key regional partner.

The truth, however, is being obfuscated. Erdoğan is both a dictator and leading antisemite whose strong Muslim Brotherhood ideological leanings pose a threat to Israel and the West.

His megalomaniacal ambitions to expand Turkey’s influence in the hopes of dominating areas where the Ottoman Empire once ruled and beyond is a risky scenario for Israel and the West. Turkey’s expanding relationship with Russia, its actions in Syria and its assertive foreign policy are seen as a challenge to Western interests and have been creating friction with NATO members, some of whom regard Turkey as pursuing an independent, multipolar agenda.

Additionally, its increased trade with Iran—a key adversary of the West—signals a shift away from traditional Western alliances. As of January 2026, Ankara is reportedly in talks with Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to form an Islamic NATO pact. Critics warn this “Islamic NATO” could undermine nonproliferation efforts by bringing Turkey closer to Pakistan’s nuclear capabilities.

Jerusalem and foreign security officials view Turkey as an immediate threat that may eventually surpass the risks posed by Iran. Turkey has established a dominant military presence in Syria, propping up al-Sharaa, and directing him against Israel and the Kurds.

Trump has refrained from supporting America’s Kurdish allies (Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF) in Syria, who are being subjugated by Erdoğan, whose proxy jihadist forces of al-Sharaa’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) have now been integrated into the Syrian army and the Syrian National Army (SNA), both instruments of Erdoğan’s terror.

Turkey’s actions have further diverged from NATO goals regarding counterterrorism (hindering missions against ISIS) and the promotion of democracy. Its “double game” of balancing NATO membership with Russian military purchases and BRICS interest is making a mockery of the alliance’s founding principles. The Muslim Brotherhood ideology within Turkey has been described by analysts as a “systemic, long-term penetration” of Western societies, both culturally and educationally.

Qatar, the financier of the Muslim Brotherhood and a supporter of Hamas, has perverted American higher education while spreading antisemitic, anti-Israel and anti-Western propaganda on U.S. college campuses and beyond with impunity.

An explosive report by the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP), cited by the New York Post, claims that Qatar has invested roughly $20 billion in American schools and universities as part of a strategy to promote Islamist ideologies. ISGAP notes that the funding aligns with the objectives of the Muslim Brotherhood and represents a deliberate influence campaign on U.S. campuses. The report also points to the support by the Qatar Foundation for campus organizations such as the Muslim Students Association (MSA) and Students for Justice in Palestine, described by ISGAP as being particularly effective in spreading the goals of the Muslim Brotherhood among university students.

In 2017, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, along with the other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), boycotted and expelled Qatar due to its support for Islamic terrorism and close ties with Iran.

Last week, Trump unveiled a Gaza Executive Board to oversee the postwar management of the Gaza Strip, which includes representatives from Turkey and Qatar—choices Israel bitterly opposes. Those two nations are wholly committed to having the terrorist group Hamas remain in control in Gaza, which contradicts Trump’s stated commitment to disarm and end Hamas hegemony in the Strip.

The U.S. president recently learned a lesson about his “friends” Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey when they lobbied Washington against attacking Iran and communicated to Tehran that their territories would not be used as launching pads against the ayatollahs. The question begs to be asked: Why hasn’t Trump learned, by now, that when the chips are down, Israel is the only ally America can rely on in the region?

A JERK TRIES TO JUSTIFY THE UNJUSTIFIABLE

David J Harris Jr.'s Post

 

Facebook

Jan 24, 2026

 

May be an image of text that says 'น 로 SfE o OPTIC,'
Country's top expert in the law of self defense weighs in. The firearm matters—and the media is hiding it. At the Minneapolis Border Patrol shooting, the suspect was armed with a SIG Sauer P320 AXG Combat, a high-capacity 9mm pistol with a threaded barrel, extended 20–21 round magazine, and a SIG Romeo optic—a setup costing $1,500–$2,000. This was not a cheap carry gun.
 
Officers were in a physical struggle with an armed suspect when a gun was perceived and the word “gun” was shouted. Under settled self-defense law, officers are entitled to rely on fellow officers’ reasonable perceptions. They do not have to personally confirm the threat.
 
Once a firearm appears during active resistance, the legal standard is simple: reasonable perception of imminent deadly force. That standard was met here. Freeze-frame activism doesn’t override real-time dynamics, and the law does not require officers to wait to be shot. This was a tragic—but lawful—use of force.
 
EDITOR'S NOTE: Nice try, but Harris forgot one very important detail. Video footage shows that an agent disarmed Pretti before he was shot. That nullifies everything his "top expert" said. Gun rights advocate Rob Doar, senior vice president of the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus, analyzed the video and believes the shooting was unwarranted. 
 
That's the trouble with Facebook. It's the very last place to look for the truth about controversial news events. 

AFTER 2,234 DAYS IN PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL?

Santa Fe Shooter’s Competency Restoration Reviewed by Galveston County Officials

 

KGTX 7 News 

Jan 22, 2026

 


This photo provided by the Galveston County Sheriff's Office shows Dimitrios Pagourtzis, who law enforcement officials took into custody Friday, May 18, 2018, and identified as the suspect in the deadly school shooting in Santa Fe, Texas, near Houston. (Galveston County Sheriff's Office via AP)
                                                 Dimitrios Pagourtzis

GALVESTON COUNTY – Officials recently visited North Texas State Hospital to assess the status of Dimitrios Pagourtzis, the former Santa Fe High School student charged in the May 18, 2018 mass shooting that killed 10 people and wounded more than a dozen others.

The visit involved Interim Galveston County District Attorney Kenneth Cusick, defense attorney Nick Poehl, and visiting Judge Lonnie Cox, who met with medical staff at the hospital’s Vernon campus, where Pagourtzis has been undergoing treatment after being declared incompetent to stand trial in 2019. Judge Cox is expected to sign an order recommitting Pagourtzis to the facility for up to another year. Details of the visit and the officials’ statements were first reported by KPRC 2 Investigates.

Pagourtzis faces capital murder and aggravated assault charges related to the deaths of students Chris Stone, Aaron McLeod, Angelique Ramirez, Jared Black, Kimberly Vaughan, Sabika Sheikh, Christian Garcia, and Shana Fisher, as well as educators Cynthia Tisdale and Ann Perkins. The criminal case remains paused unless doctors determine his competency has been restored.

Cusick, speaking to KPRC 2 following the visit, said he does not plan to challenge the recommitment order. He added that if Pagourtzis’ competency is not restored after the next two-to-three-month treatment cycle, he may seek an independent psychiatric evaluation. He also acknowledged uncertainty about whether Pagourtzis’ symptoms could be exaggerated, though medical professionals currently do not believe malingering is occurring. Cusick said doctors reported progress in treatment and expressed hope that competency restoration could occur soon, while noting he would pursue additional expert opinions if necessary.

Defense attorney Nick Poehl, who accompanied Cusick and Judge Cox during the hospital visit, told KPRC 2 that doctors described Pagourtzis as the most severely mentally ill patient at the Vernon facility, which houses more than 200 individuals. He said medical staff indicated the likelihood of restoring competency is low and emphasized that multiple evaluations over several years have consistently found Pagourtzis incompetent to stand trial. Poehl noted that Pagourtzis currently works in the hospital’s library but said such duties do not indicate legal competency. He explained that competency requires a defendant to rationally understand the charges, assist legal counsel, and meaningfully participate in their defense.

State records show Pagourtzis has been hospitalized for 2,234 days, far exceeding the average 158 days it took North Texas State Hospital patients to regain competency in 2025. He is one of 11 patients statewide who have remained at the facility for five years or longer. The average daily cost of treatment at the hospital was reported as $949 in 2025.

State law requires hospital doctors to inform the court annually whether competency restoration appears imminent or whether continued treatment is necessary.

Cusick also said that if Pagourtzis is ultimately found competent, he will seek to move the trial back to Galveston County. Prior to the incompetency ruling, a judge had granted the defense a change of venue, relocating the trial to Fort Bend County.

INTERESTING PRESS CONFERENCE

By Bob Walsh

 

Pretti is seen on the ground during his final moments. His killing comes weeks after an DHS agent shot and killed 38-year-old Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis

Several agents wrestle Alex Jeffrey Pretti to the ground during his final moments.

 


I just finished watching Jacob Frey, the mayor of Minneapolis, give a press conference.  I took some pretty decent notes so here is what he said about the shooting in his fair city this morning.

Federal Agents pummeled to the ground and then shot to death a local resident who MAY have been a U. S. citizen.  Frey seems to have ignored the fact that he was armed and was possibly-maybe trying to shoot the federal agents.

Donald Trump is a big meanie.

Wah.  Wah.  Wah.  Wah.   Wah.   Wah.

The feds should go away and then everything here will be all sweetness and light an unicorns and puppy dogs.

Donald Trump is still a big meanie.

Wah.  Wah.  Wah.  Wah.  Wah.  Wah.

The Chief of Police spoke before the mayor.  He said that somebody is dead and the cops have very, very little information as to exactly what happened or why.  He might be a liberal idiot.  He almost certainly is if he works for the city of Minneapolis.  But he isn't a psychotic liberal idiot.  At least this time.

THE FIRST OF MANY TO COME ??

By Bob Walsh

 

Alexander Soofer
Alexander Soofer


The feds starting their move against the massive fraud occurring with government programs supported by federal money in the formerly great state of California.

The first guy to bite the big weenie is Alexander Scofer, charged with wire fraud.  The feds seized his mansion and a very nice Range Rover.  

Scofer had a contract to feed and house up to 600 people on a county and city contract in L.A.  Instead he ripped off $23 million and fed the people ramen noodles and beans.  Literally.

Governor Newsom, who is running full speed for the Democrat-Socialist nomination for President in 2028, is trying very hard to pretend that the state is effectively investigating this massive fraud.  Nobody but hard-core Trump haters and kool-aid drinking Demo syncophants believes him, and even they don't BELIEVE him, they just pretend to.

V. P. Vance is asserting that there was about $7 BILLION dollars worth of fraud that they know of and expect more to show up as they dig deeper.

Somebody get a rope. 

THINGS GETTING INTERESTING IN MINNEAPOLIS

By Bob Walsh

 

A law enforcement officer retrieves what appears to be a gun from Alex Pretti before he is shot and killed by ICE agents in Minneapolis

A law enforcement officer retrieves what appears to be a gun from Alex Pretti before he is shot and killed by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis

 

Saturday morning there was another shooting involving a federal officer in Minneapolis.  This time an armed bad guy was involved.  I have virtually no info on it other than the fact that it occurred.  The mob is not screaming about the shooting itself so I am guessing that it appears to be a good shoot.  But the mob is still there.  Also Tampon Tim is calling out the State Police and sending them to Minneapolis.  

I get the feeling that he REALLY doesn't want Trump to enact the Insurrection Act on his ass but it appears on the surface of the situation that he now has pretty good legal cause to do so.  

Also just maybe the investigations into the massive fraud involving federal funds is getting very, very close to home for little Timmy.  Last week the feds sent two additional U S Attorney's there just to help out with the workload.

I admit I am surprised the AWFULs   (Angry White Female Urban Liberal) are still turning out in such large numbers in the shitty weather.  I guess if you are a true believer you go with the flow.

I noted that one of those arrested in the church invasion was a member of the local school board.  I wonder how that is playing there?  The school board will probably vote to canonize her.  
 
EDITOR'S NOTE: Be careful what you say without having the facts. 

Saturday, January 24, 2026

TRUMP LIKEENED TO A DOG EATING ITS OWN THROW-UP

Bill Maher unleashes tirade against Trump over Greenland and compares him to a 'dog eating its own throw-up'

 

By Alexa Cimino 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 24, 2025

 

 

Bill Maher delivered a blistering opening monologue during the Season 24 premiere of Real Time on HBO

Bill Maher delivered a blistering opening monologue by comparing Donald Trump to a dog 'throwing up on the rug' and then eating it during the Season 24 premiere of Real Time on HBO

 

Bill Maher kicked off the 24th season of Real Time with Bill Maher by comparing Donald Trump to a dog 'throwing up on the rug' and then eating it, in a blistering opening monologue targeting the president's revived fixation on Greenland. 

The remark came within the opening minutes of Maher's first episode of 2026, which aired Friday night on HBO.

Maher said Trump manufactured a foreign-policy crisis only to later declare victory over it, likening the reversal to a dog making a mess and then consuming it.

'It's a little like when the dog throws up on the rug, and then he eats it,' Maher said.

From there, Maher rewound the saga, joking that Trump's obsession with Greenland appeared to have disappeared earlier in his term before suddenly resurfacing.

'I thought he forgot about it,' Maher said, adding that at the beginning of the term, 'sometimes the brain farts pass.' 

Maher blasted Trump's rhetoric this past week which has included floating the idea of taking Greenland 'by force.' He mocked Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in the process, joking that he got 'so excited, he droned a dog sled.'

He then turned to Trump's appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where global leaders and business elites gather annually, and said Trump repeatedly confused Greenland with Iceland during his speech.

 

Greenland, the world¿s largest Arctic island, has been coveted by Donald Trump for its strategic value in monitoring Russian and Chinese military activity and expanding US defense reach in the Arctic

Greenland, the world’s largest Arctic island, has been coveted by Donald Trump for its strategic value in monitoring Russian and Chinese military activity and expanding US defense reach in the Arctic

 

'He kept saying Iceland when he meant Greenland,' Maher said, comparing the mix‑up to calling out the wrong name during an intimate moment. 

Maher noted that Trump ultimately backed away from both the threat of force and proposed tariffs, framing the reversal as a self‑congratulatory win over a problem Trump created himself. 

'We are declaring victory for a problem that wasn't there until he made it,' Maher said.

He went on to say Trump claimed a new Greenland agreement exists, calling it a vague 'framework' with no details written down, and joked that it was modeled after Trump's long‑promised health care plan. 

According to Maher, Trump boasted that the US would gain new military bases, mining access, and protection against Russian influence in Greenland - benefits Maher said the US already had. 

'All of which we had anyway,' Maher said. 'But now everybody hates us.'

He closed the segment by mocking conservative praise for Trump's approach, calling it what Fox News likes to label 'the art of the deal.'

Friday night's episode featured Paul Eaton, a retired US Army major general and senior advisor for VoteVets and the Vet Voice Foundation, as the interview guest. 

 

President Donald Trump has recently reignited debate over Greenland, drawing criticism from late-night host Bill Maher

President Donald Trump has recently reignited debate over Greenland, drawing criticism from late-night host Bill Maher

 

The panel included John Kennedy, the Republican senator from Louisiana and author of the No. 1 New York Times bestseller How to Test Negative For Stupid: And Why Washington Never Will, alongside Kasie Hunt, anchor of CNN's The Arena with Kasie Hunt.

Trump announced a preliminary 'framework' deal for US access to Greenland at Davos on Wednesday, pausing tariff threats against Denmark and NATO allies after weeks of escalating rhetoric.

The president has repeatedly argued that Greenland is critical to US national security because of its strategic location in the Arctic, which sits between North America and Europe and offers a vantage point for monitoring Russian and Chinese military activity

The island is also rich in untapped natural resources, including rare earth minerals vital for modern technology and defense industries -  a combination Trump has cited as essential to maintaining American global power. 

Trump calls it essential for NATO security, while Denmark has resisted a full sale. 

VIDEO FOOTAGE OF THE PRETTI SHOOTING LEADS GUN RIGHTS ADVOCATE TO BELIEVE THE SHOOTING WAS NOT JUSTIFIED

Gun rights advocate says DHS shooting of Alex Jeffrey Pretti 'does not appear justified' amid claims protester was disarmed seconds before he was killed

 

By Jack Toledo and Josh Boswell 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 24, 2026

 

 

Rob Doar, senior vice president of the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus, anaylzed one of the several angles of footage of the killing of 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti in Minneapolis and believed that it showed, 'an agent remove a firearm from the holster of the 37-Y/O man (Pretti), prior to the shooting'

Rob Doar, senior vice president of the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus, anaylzed one of the several angles of footage of the killing of 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti in Minneapolis and believed that it showed, 'an agent remove a firearm from the holster of the 37-Y/O man (Pretti), prior to the shooting'

 

A gun rights advocate says he has major concerns about the legality of the shooting Minneapolis protester Alex Pretti after watching footage of his killing. 

Rob Doar, senior vice president of the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus, analyzed one of the several videos taken of the shooting of Pretti on Saturday and shared his damming opinion that the killing was unwarranted on social media.

Pretti, who was a US citizen and an intensive care nurse who treated critically ill military veterans, was killed shortly after 9am on January 24, after an altercation involving multiple federal officers.

Video footage showed he was wrestled to the ground before one federal agent fired multiple shots into his chest, after which the agents scattered. The Department of Homeland Security told the Daily Mail that the suspect was armed with two magazines, and the gun was later recovered by federal authorities.

However, Doar noted that the gun may have been found moments before the altercation turned deadly: 'This video appears to show an agent remove a firearm from the holster of the 37-Y/O man (Pretti), prior to the shooting.'

'I never see the man touch his firearm, and it looks like he's disarmed before being shot, said the gun rights advocate in another post.

Doar told Star Tribune that he concluded that, 'If Mr. Pretti was disarmed — absent any other evidence of any risk to an officer —I don’t see how deadly force would be justified.'

The footage, which Doar analyzed, shows several masked agents wrestling Pretti while he is on his knees. An officer dressed in a grey coat and cap appears to pull an item from the protestor's waistline, which seems to be a pistol-shaped object; however, no evidence has confirmed the contents of the object at the time of this report.

 

Pretti, who was a US and an intensive care nurse who treated critically ill military veterans, was killed shortly after 9am on January 24, after an altercation involving multiple federal officers

Pretti, who was a US citizen and an intensive care nurse who treated critically ill military veterans, was killed shortly after 9am on January 24, after an altercation involving multiple federal officers

'This video appears to show an agent remove a firearm from the holster of the 37-Y/O man (Pretti), prior to the shooting,' noted Doar in a post on X

'This video appears to show an agent remove a firearm from the holster of the 37-Y/O man (Pretti), prior to the shooting,' noted Doar in a post on X

 

The gun rights advocate's account was echoed by David Bier, Director of Immigration Studies at the Cato Institute.

Bier told the Daily Mail that the agent in the grey coat, 'doesn’t have any gun, doesn’t pull a weapon from his body, and then he emerges from the group with a gun in his hands.'

’There are so many agents in there,’ Bier added, ‘It’s not impossible that it was one of the other agents’ guns that got mixed up in all of it. But it certainly seems like it was the victim’s gun, and it was removed by the agent right away.'

The director noted that if the object in question were a gun, his behavior in the video would make sense since he appears to step away to 'presumably to dispose of the victim’s weapon.’

Bier said that he believed the killing was wrong, and that it was ‘much less ambiguous’ than previous DHS officer-involved shootings.

'There’s no real ambiguity in this case. They’re pumping so many bullets into a person lying on the ground, who’s been disarmed, and was never a threat in the first place,’ he said.

'But the administration has been clear. They’ve already exonerated (the shooter) before an investigation. They’re refusing the state’s attempt to investigate.

'The coverup is happening and I certainly expect we’ll see more, if this is what they’re saying is good training and proper procedure.’

The killing set off protests in the city, with large military-style vehicles surrounding demonstrators who blocked streets with dumpsters and restaurant furniture, while federal agents fired tear gas and pepper balls in response.

Protests have picked up in Minneapolis in recent weeks as federal agents from the DHS and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) continue to occupy the city following the death of Renee Good, who was shot and killed by an agent on January 7 and the non-fatal shooting of another man last week.

 

An officer dressed in a grey coat and cap appears to pull an object from the protestor's waistline, which seems to be a pistol-shaped object; however, no evidence has confirmed the contents of the object at the time of this report

An officer dressed in a grey coat and cap appears to pull an object from the protestor's waistline, which seems to be a pistol-shaped object; however, no evidence has confirmed the contents of the object at the time of this report

David Bier, Director of Immigration Studies at the Cato Institute also believed that shooting was unjustified and concluded that Pretti was disarmed as well

David Bier, Director of Immigration Studies at the Cato Institute also believed that shooting was unjustified and concluded that Pretti was disarmed as well

Pretti is seen facing off with federal agents before he was shot dead

Pretti is seen facing off with federal agents before he was shot dead

Protests have picked up in Minneapolis in recent weeks as ICE continues to occupy the city following the death of Renee Good, who was shot and killed by an agent on January 7 and the shooting of another man last week

Protests have picked up in Minneapolis in recent weeks as ICE continues to occupy the city following the death of Renee Good, who was shot and killed by an agent on January 7 and the shooting of another man last week

 

The city’s police department is also on scene and working to keep more than 100 observers and protesters separated from the federal agents, the Star Tribune reported.

Several witnesses were transported to the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building as ICE agents tried to order local police to leave the scene, but Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara refused.

O'Hara called the display an 'unlawful assembly' and urged people to leave the area.

'We recognize that there is a lot of anger and a lot of questions around what has happened, but we need people to remain peaceful,' he said at a press conference Saturday.

A command post has been set up by local law enforcement at the scene near Glam Doll Donuts at 26th Street and Nicollet Avenue.

It is unclear how many protesters have been detained at the scene.

In a press conference Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino said the officer who shot the man had been serving with the Border Patrol for the past eight years.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told the Daily Mail that agents were in the area attempting to apprehend, ‘an illegal alien wanted for violent assault’ when they were approached by Pretti.

 

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told the Daily Mail that the suspect was armed with two magazines, and that the gun has since been recovered by federal authorities

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told the Daily Mail that the suspect was armed with two magazines, and that the gun has since been recovered by federal authorities

Pretti was pronounced dead at the scene.

Pretti was pronounced dead at the scene.

 

Federal authorities identified the man they were initially seeking as Jose Huerta‑Chuma, an Ecuadorian national. Border Patrol Bovino said Huerta‑Chuma has a criminal history that includes domestic assault, disorderly conduct and driving without a license, though federal court records did not list any cases under his name.

According to DHS, Pretti was armed and carrying a gun with two magazines at the time he was detained. The agency later released a photograph of a nine‑millimeter semi‑automatic handgun it said was recovered during the clash.

Officials claimed officers attempted to disarm Pretti but that he ‘violently resisted’ before a Border Patrol agent fired the fatal shot.

Pretti was pronounced dead at the scene. DHS said he did not have identification on him at the time.

Minneapolis Police Chief O’Hara said Pretti had no serious criminal history, with records showing only minor parking violations. O’Hara added that he was a lawful gun owner with a valid permit.

DHS has since shared its account of the shooting on X, saying the deadly incident began as a 'targeted operation against an illegal alien wanted for violent assault.'

'An individual approached US Border Patrol officers with a 9 mm semi-automatic handgun,' the department wrote. 'The officers attempted to disarm the suspect but the armed suspect violently resisted.'

'Fearing for his life and the lives and safety of fellow officers, an agent fired defensive shots. Medics on scene immediately delivered medical aid to the subject but was pronounced dead at the scene,' the statement added.

 

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told the Daily Mail that agents were in the area attempting to apprehend, ‘an illegal alien wanted for violent assault’ when they were approached by Pretti

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told the Daily Mail that agents were in the area attempting to apprehend, ‘an illegal alien wanted for violent assault’ when they were approached by Pretti

 

'The suspect also had 2 magazines and no ID - this looks like a situation where an individual wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.'

Records show that Pretti attended the University of Minnesota. State records show Pretti was issued a nursing license in 2021, and it remains active through March 2026.

Pretti's friends have since confirmed his identity to the Daily Mail as they paid tribute to the 'good, kind' who they say was 'executed' by a Border Patrol agent.

The University of Minnesota alumnus most recently listed himself as a ‘junior scientist’ on LinkedIn.

He worked as a nurse for the Veterans Health Administration at the Minneapolis VA hospital and earned a reported $90,783 in 2023, according to public records.

‘I worked with him daily for years at the VA hospital,’ Ruth Anway, a Minneapolis‑based nurse, told the Daily Mail.

‘He was an ICU nurse. He worked with veterans. He was a really good guy. He definitely did not deserve to get killed.’

Anway said Pretti was politically engaged and deeply informed.

Saturday’s shooting sparked immediate protests, with bystanders yelling profanities at federal officers and telling them to leave the city.

Minneapolis has faced rising tensions amid the federal enforcement presence and ongoing protests - a backdrop shaped by prior high‑profile police killings, including the death of George Floyd in 2020.

NO MATER WHO IS TELLING THE TRUTH, THIS SHOOTING LOOKS BAD

Dispute over gun at center of deadly shooting breaks out as feds claim weapon was 'brandished'.. but they appeared to remove it from victim well before opening fire

 

By James Gordon

 

Daily Mail

Jan 24, 2026

 

 

A law enforcement officer retrieves what appears to be a gun from Alex Pretti before he is shot and killed by ICE agents in Minneapolis

A law enforcement officer retrieves what appears to be a gun from Alex Pretti before he is shot and killed by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis

 

Fierce debate has erupted over the killing of Minneapolis nurse Alex Jeffrey Pretti and whether he posed any real threat to Department of Homeland Security officers.

Federal officials including Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem insist Pretti, 37, 'brandished' his legally-owned handgun at officers trying to detain an illegal migrant on Saturday morning. 

A spokesperson said the 37-year-old nurse was killed after he 'approached US border patrol officers with a 9 mm semi-automatic handgun.' 

But videos recorded by multiple bystanders cast serious doubts on those claims, as footage appears to show one agent disarming Pretti a few seconds before any shots were fired.

They showed Pretti standing in the street filming a Border Patrol operation as a small group of anti-ICE protestors blew whistles and shouted.

He filmed with a phone held in his right hand; his left hand appeared to be empty.

Two women were filmed being forcefully pushed backward by an agent wearing a brown beanie.

It is unclear what prompted that altercation.

 

Alex Jeffrey Pretti, 37, could be seen the street filming with his phone while a small group confronts a federal agent. His other hand appeared to be empty

Alex Jeffrey Pretti, 37, could be seen the street filming with his phone while a small group confronts a federal agent. His other hand appeared to be empty 

Pretti is seen holding his phone and appearing to speak or film as he engages with federal agents

Pretti is seen holding his phone and appearing to speak or film as he engages with federal agents

Pretti can be seen holding a bright, shiny object during a struggle with federal agents

Pretti can be seen holding a bright, shiny object during a struggle with federal agents

 

Pretti put his arm around one woman as the agent shoved the other to the floor.

He moved to confront the agent, who pushed Pretti away with his left hand and pepper sprayed him with his right, as another agent arrived.

Pretti used his left hand to try to block the pepper spray and his right to grab the woman on the floor. 

Pretti could be seen holding a shiny object aloft in the air. It is unclear if this was his phone or something else, but the officer he was engaging with did not shout 'gun' or brandish his own weapon at the sight of it.

A chaotic tussle broke out as around six more agents arrived. Pretti was face down on his knees, resisting as the agents pinned him down. The agent wearing a brown beanie struck him in the head with his pepper spray canister.

The two women scrambled away, one seemingly unable to stand.

Then comes the most crucial moment that has raised questions over whether Noem and the DHS have got their facts right. 

An agent wearing blue jeans and a light gray hat and jacket could be seen apparently removing a gun from Pretti's waistband or holster, then moving away.

That gun resembled the firearm DHS later identified as belonging to Pretti.

Moments after, an agent wearing a black beanie appeared to shoot Pretti at close range, from the side or behind.

He backed away and continued to fire.

The agent wearing a brown beanie also appeared to fire at Pretti. Roughly 10-12 shots are fired within five seconds.

 

Pretti is seen on the ground during his final moments. His killing comes weeks after an DHS agent shot and killed 38-year-old Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis

Pretti is seen on the ground during his final moments. His killing comes weeks after an DHS agent shot and killed 38-year-old Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis 

Several agents wrestle Pretti down, forcing him to the ground and pin him down

Several agents wrestle Pretti down, forcing him to the ground and pin him down

The Border Patrol Union appeared to put forward their own justification as to how events unfolded without hours of the shooting taking place

The Border Patrol Union appeared to put forward their own justification as to how events unfolded without hours of the shooting taking place

 

Department of Homeland Security officials have sought to blame Pretti for his own death. 

But Democrats and civil-liberties advocates point out that Minnesota is an open-carry state, meaning it is generally legal to carry a firearm without a permit, and argue that the videos raise serious questions about whether Pretti posed an immediate threat at the time force was used.

Federal officials have not publicly explained why multiple shots were fired after Pretti was pinned to the ground or clarified when officers first became aware that he was armed.

 Nevertheless, federal officials have stood firmly by their account.

 

The man killed was identified by his parents as Alex Jeffrey Pretti, 37, an intensive care unit nurse

The man killed was identified by his parents as Alex Jeffrey Pretti, 37, an intensive care unit nurse

Pretti was an avid outdoorsman who enjoyed outdoor pursuits including mountain biking

Pretti was an avid outdoorsman who enjoyed outdoor pursuits including mountain biking 

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem claims DHS shooting victim Alex Jeffrey Pretti 'reacted violently' before he was killed

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem defended the agents' actions, repeatedly insisting at a press conference that Pretti had 'brandished' a weapon, as video of the encounter continues to draw scrutiny

 

At a press conference, a journalist asked Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem directly: 'Did he brandish a gun? At what point did law enforcement retrieve the gun and magazines from him?'

Noem responded, 'This individual showed up to impede a law enforcement operation and assaulted our officers. They responded according to their training and took action to defend the officer's life and those of the public around him.'

'I don't know of any peaceful protester that shows up with a gun and ammunition rather than a sign. This is a violent riot when you have someone showing up with weapons and are using them to assault law enforcement officers,' she added.

Pressed again by a reporter who noted that video 'appears to show him disarmed before shots were fired,' and asked who was leading the federal investigation, Noem declined to address the timing shown in the footage.

'We're continuing to follow the exact same protocols that we always have. This investigation is ongoing, we are continuing to gather the facts as they unfold… we will continue to release information as it becomes available.' 

Noem then broadened her remarks, saying she did not want to 'distract from the facts of this situation,' before adding new details about the underlying operation. 

'Our law enforcement officers were there doing a targeted operation against an individual who was in this country illegally and had a criminal conviction for domestic assault with intent to do bodily harm,' she said.

'This individual went and impeded their law enforcement operations, attacked those officers, had a weapon on him and multiple, dozens of rounds of ammunition.'

She concluded by repeating the administration's central claim: 'Wishing to inflict harm on those officers coming brandishing like that and impeding the work they were doing.'

THE DISCOMBOBULATOR

Trump reveals his new secret weapon nicknamed 'The Discombobulator' used to take down America's enemies: 'I'm not allowed to talk about it'

 

By Wilko Martinez-Cachero 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 24, 2026

 


President Donald Trump, alongside Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth (R), during a cabinet meeting on April 10, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
US President Donald Trump revealed a new weapon that he dubbed 'The Discombobulator.' He told the New York Post that he was 'not allowed to talk about it'
 

US President Donald Trump has revealed details of a mystery weapon he has coined 'The Discombobulator,' that was used in the capture of Venezuela's former leader Nicolás Maduro.

In an interview with the New York Post he revealed the tool's name just days after he gave hints about the sonic weapon that 'nobody else' had.  

Trump has suggested that the debilitating device could be used against America's enemies after proving successful in the January 3 capture of Maduro.

'I'm not allowed to talk about it,' Trump told the New York Post from the Oval Office. 'I would love to.'

He offered that the weapon 'made [enemy] equipment not work' and lauded its effectiveness.

'They never got their rockets off,' Trump said. 'They had Russian and Chinese rockets, and they never got one off.'

He added: 'We came in, they pressed buttons and nothing worked. They were all set for us.'

Venezuelan officials said more than 83 people, including 47 soldiers, were killed during the successful capture mission.

 

However, Trump said the mystery weapon 'made [enemy] equipment not work' and praised how effective it was

However, Trump said the mystery weapon 'made [enemy] equipment not work' and praised how effective it was

 

One US service member was injured by return fire but there were no American fatalities. 

Earlier this week, Trump demurred while lavishing the strength of the US military during an interview with NewsNation anchor Katie Pavlich on Tuesday.

He said that only the US military has access to the sonic weapons by noting, 'It's something I don't wanna… nobody else has it.'

When Trump was asked if Americans should be 'afraid' of the secret weapon, he responded: 'Well, yeah.'

'But we have weapons nobody else knows about.' Trump added. 'I say it's probably good not to talk about it, but we have some amazing weapons.'

An account previously shared by White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on January 10 also claimed that a 'very intense sound wave' disabled Venezuelan forces and Cuban bodyguards on the night of Maduro's arrest.

'Stop what you are doing and read this…' Leavitt wrote on X, alongside five emojis of the American flag.

The 'absolutely chilling' testimony was attributed to an unnamed 'Venezuelan security guard loyal to Nicolás Maduro.' 

 

Trump has claimed that the US military has 'weapons nobody else knows about,' but did not give more details

Trump has claimed that the US military has 'weapons nobody else knows about,' but did not give more details

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shared an account from an unnamed Venezuelan security guard saying the weapon used in Maduro's capture caused nosebleeds and vomiting

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shared an account from an unnamed Venezuelan security guard saying the weapon used in Maduro's capture caused nosebleeds and vomiting

 

He claimed that his own weapons were rendered useless by the American military's new weapon.

'Suddenly I felt like my head was exploding from the inside,' the account said.

It added: 'We all started bleeding from the nose. Some were vomiting blood. We fell to the ground, unable to move.'

The guard supposedly said that he had 'never seen anything like it.'

'We couldn't even stand up after that sonic weapon or whatever it was,' he added.

The soldier's remarks reposted by Leavitt described the capture mission as a 'massacre.'

Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores were captured and then taken by helicopter to the USS Iwo Jima warship.

The former Venezuelan leader is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn awaiting trial on federal charges. 

 

Maduro has pleaded not guilty to narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machine guns and conspiracy to possess machine guns and destructive devices

 

He has been charged with narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machine guns and destructive devices and conspiracy to possess machine guns and destructive devices.

Maduro's indictment alleged that he allowed 'cocaine-fueled corruption to flourish for his own benefit, for the benefit of members of his ruling regime, and for the benefit of his family members.' 

He has pleaded not guilty, as has his wife.

Kremlin officials have demanded that the US provide more information about the sonic weapon used in the raid to capture Maduro.

Putin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said his government would begin investigating Trump's comments regarding the device.

TRUMP ALL BUT DECLARES WAR ON CANADA AFTER HE HAS DRIVEN OUR NORTHERN NEIGHBOR INTO A STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP WITH CHINA

Trump threatens Canada with ONE HUNDRED per cent tariffs and warns nation will be 'eaten alive' in deal with China

 

By Kelly Garino 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 24, 2026

 

 

 af586fe954095257a4c6fa2f831606ccc5ad3762f3c6b59811b79e8509301da0 

A picture of Prime Minister Mark Carney shaking hands with President of China Xi Jinping is seen on the cover of the weekend edition of the China Daily newspaper in Beijing, China on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026

 

President Donald Trump has warned Canada it would be 'eaten alive' if it strikes a deal with China, threatening 100 per cent tariffs on all Canadian goods entering the US.

On Saturday, Trump launched a sharp warning on Truth Social to Canada and Prime Minister Mark Carney over plans to make the country a 'Drop Off Port' for Chinese imports into the United States, saying they are 'sorely mistaken'. 

'China will eat Canada alive, completely devour it, including the destruction of their businesses, social fabric and general way of life,' the president wrote.

'If Canada makes a deal with China, it will immediately be hit with a 100 percent Tariff against all Canadian goods and products coming into the USA,' he added.

Trump's latest threat comes days after Carney's speech to global leaders at Davos, Switzerland, where he warned that the post–World War II 'rules-based order' led by the US and its allies is 'fading'. 

'Every day we're reminded that we live in an era of great-power rivalry. That the rules-based order is fading. That the strong can do what they can, and the weak must suffer what they must,' the Canadian Prime Minister said.

Trump has previously talked about making Canada the 51st state and posted this week an altered image of a map of the US that included Canada, Greenland, Venezuela and Cuba as part of its territory.

The president said at Davos that Canada gets many 'freebies' from the US and 'should be grateful,' but added that Carney's speech showed he 'wasn't so grateful'. 

 

President Donald Trump warned Canada it would be 'eaten alive' if it strikes a deal with China and threatened 100 per cent tariffs on all Canadian goods entering the US

President Donald Trump warned Canada it would be 'eaten alive' if it strikes a deal with China and threatened 100 per cent tariffs on all Canadian goods entering the US

The threat comes a week after Carney travelled to China and secured a new 'strategic partnership' with the Communist regime, aimed at boosting trade and investment

The threat comes a week after Carney travelled to China and secured a new 'strategic partnership' with the Communist regime, aimed at boosting trade and investment

Additionally, Trump's threat comes days after Carney's speech to global leaders at Davos, Switzerland, where he warned that the post–World War II 'rules-based order' led by the US and its allies is 'fading'

Additionally, Trump's threat comes days after Carney's speech to global leaders at Davos, Switzerland, where he warned that the post–World War II 'rules-based order' led by the US and its allies is 'fading'

 

The Canadian Prime Minister condemned coercion by great powers against smaller nations during his 15-minute speech - without once mentioning Trump by name. 

Carney told Davos attendees that smaller powers should build a 'dense web of connections' through multilateral cooperation, offering a counterbalance to Trump's Greenland strategy. 

'Great powers can afford for now to go it alone. They have the market size, the military capacity, and the leverage to dictate terms. Middle powers do not,' Carney said.

'In a world of great power rivalry, the countries in between have a choice: compete with each other for favor or to combine to create a third path with impact,' he added.

'(We) argue the middle powers must act together because if we're not at the table, we're on the menu.'

Carney's historic comments followed a trip to China last week, during which he secured a new 'strategic partnership' with the Communist regime, aimed at boosting trade and investment. 

This marked the first visit to China by a Canadian prime minister in six years. 

'As the world's second-largest economy, China presents enormous opportunities for Canada in this mission,' according to the Canadian Prime Minister's website.

 

'China will eat Canada alive, completely devour it, including the destruction of their businesses, social fabric and general way of life,' the president wrote to Truth Social on Saturday

'China will eat Canada alive, completely devour it, including the destruction of their businesses, social fabric and general way of life,' the president wrote to Truth Social on Saturday

Carney said that the move to meet with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang, and Zhao Leji -  the chairman of China's National People's Congress Standing Committee - represented Canada 'recalibrating' its ties with China

Carney said that the move to meet with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang, and Zhao Leji -  the chairman of China's National People's Congress Standing Committee - represented Canada 'recalibrating' its ties with China

Trump has previously talked about making Canada the 51st state and posted this week an altered image of a map of the US that included Canada, Greenland, Venezuela and Cuba as part of its territory

Trump has previously talked about making Canada the 51st state and posted this week an altered image of a map of the US that included Canada, Greenland, Venezuela and Cuba as part of its territory

 

'Central to this new partnership is an agreement to collaborate in energy, clean technology, and climate competitiveness,' the announcement added.

'Canada and China are both energy superpowers focused on expanding two-way energy cooperation – reducing emissions and scaling up investments in batteries, solar, wind, and energy storage.'

While in Beijing, Carney held meetings with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang, and Zhao Leji, the chairman of China's National People's Congress Standing Committee. 

The Canadian Liberal didn't mince words, revealing the meeting represented Canada 'recalibrating' its ties with China. 

Carney explained that the move would position Canada for a 'new world order,' one in which it begins distancing itself from its longtime southern ally. 

He said the partnership will also tackle 'global governance' - a field Carney said Trump has completely walked away from. 

'At its best, the Canada-China relationship has created massive opportunities for both our peoples,' the Prime Minister said following the meeting.

'By leveraging our strengths and focusing on trade, energy, agri-food, and areas where we can make huge gains, we are forging a new strategic partnership that builds on the best of our past, reflects the world as it is today, and benefits the people of both our nations,' he added.

 

Carney told Davos attendees that smaller powers should build a 'dense web of connections' through multilateral cooperation, offering a counterbalance to Trump's Greenland strategy

Carney told Davos attendees that smaller powers should build a 'dense web of connections' through multilateral cooperation, offering a counterbalance to Trump's Greenland strategy

Carney said the partnership with China will also tackle 'global governance' - a field the PM said Trump has completely walked away from

Carney said the partnership with China will also tackle 'global governance' - a field the PM said Trump has completely walked away from

The president said at Davos that Canada gets many 'freebies' from the US and 'should be grateful,' but added that Carney's speech showed he 'wasn't so grateful'

The president said at Davos that Canada gets many 'freebies' from the US and 'should be grateful,' but added that Carney's speech showed he 'wasn't so grateful'

 

Together, they pledged to collaborate on law enforcement - targeting drug trafficking, cybercrime and money laundering - as well as expanding cultural exchanges. 

'They will also explore further opportunities for cultural exchanges and partnerships - including supporting museums, digital content creators and visual artists – to increase travel exchanges and cultural ties,' the Prime Minister's website said.

Carney also approved an agreement between Destination Canada - Canada's tourism board - and China Media Group to encourage more Chinese tourists to visit the northern country. 

According to the Prime Minister, the agreement comes at a crucial time as Canada prepares to host the FIFA World Cup 26™, expected to draw hundreds of international visitors. 

He also welcomed President Xi's commitment to grant Canadians visa-free travel to China, making trips easier and likely boosting tourism between the two countries.

'Finally, to build on this momentum, Canada has set an ambitious goal to increase exports to China by 50 percent by 2030,' according to Carney's website.

'To achieve this outcome, Prime Minister Carney and President Xi discussed increasing two-way investment in clean energy and technology, agri-food, wood products, and other sectors,' it added.

Carney and Trump traded jabs at Davos, culminating in Carney's public rejection of Trump's remark that 'Canada lives because of the United States'. 

'Canada doesn't live because of the United States. Canada thrives because we are Canadian,' Carney responded after leaving the elite forum. 

He said that Canada and the US have built a remarkable partnership in the areas of economy, security and rich cultural exchange, but said 'we are masters in our home, this is our own country, it's our future, the choice is up to us.' 

Carney also left Davos before Trump inaugurated the Board of Peace, which aims to 'support efforts to maintain a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas.'

However, Trump subsequently disinvited Carney from his board, posting to Truth Social and writing to the PM: 'Please let this Letter serve to represent that the Board of Peace is withdrawing its invitation to you regarding Canada's joining, what will be, the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time.'

Carney had already spoken about the invitation earlier this week, admitting that Canada had 'preconditions' before paying the $1billion membership fee to 'help rebuild Gaza'.

In a speech before a cabinet retreat in Quebec City, Carney said staying true to Canada's values is key to maintaining its sovereignty.

'We can show that another way is possible, that the arc of history isn't destined to be warped toward authoritarianism and exclusion; it can still bend toward progress and justice,' Carney said.

Carney said 'Canada must be a beacon - an example to a world at sea.'

He added that in a time of rising populism and ethnic nationalism, Canada can show how diversity is a strength - not a weakness.

'There are billions of people who aspire to what we have built: a pluralistic society that works,' Carney said.

The Prime Minister said Canada delivers shared prosperity and has a democracy that chooses to protect the vulnerable against the powerful.

'It's a great country for everyone. It is the greatest country in the world to be a regular person. You don't have to be born rich, or to a landed family. You don't have to be a certain color or worship a certain god,' he said.