Is Canada a “third world sh*hole” now?
You betcha… Massive allegations of Corruption and even posing of Life Risks in Canada have been so rampant that it’s now the ‘New Normal’ all the way from the Prime Minister, the Ontario Primer, and down to the Municipality where Building Officials are openly bragging about taking bribes!
Yes, corrupt regimes of all levels in Canada be bought.. That’s the kind of perverted message low life like Mark Carney, Doug Ford, and Olivia Chow are sending to folks.
Here’s is one such incident involving a junior cop…
RCMP officer charged after allegedly stealing money from vehicle during traffic stop last year
Ben Harder resigned from the force while being investigated for alleged November 2024 theft, Mounties say
A now-resigned Manitoba RCMP constable has been charged with theft and breach of trust after he’s alleged to have stolen roughly $300 from someone’s vehicle during a traffic stop in Portage la Prairie last year.
Ben Harder resigned from the force in January while being investigated for the incident, which is alleged to have happened on Nov. 19, 2024, RCMP said in a news release on Friday.
Mounties said they got a public complaint about the incident just over a week later.
Trust Betrayed: When the Police Become the Criminals, What’s Left of Canada?
We like to tell ourselves a story about Canada. It’s a story of order, integrity, and the “Mountie always getting their man.” It’s a story that sets us apart, we believe, from the corruption and lawlessness often associated with developing nations. It’s a comforting tale, but it’s one that is becoming increasingly difficult to believe.
The recent case out of Manitoba is a sledgehammer to the very foundation of that story. As reported by the CBC, an RCMP officer has been charged with theft after allegedly stealing money from a vehicle during a traffic stop last year.
Let that sink in.
This wasn’t a complex case of white-collar crime or a questionable use of force. This was, allegedly, as crude and simple as a street-level mugging. A person, entrusted with a badge and a gun, sworn to uphold the law, is accused of using the authority of that badge to allegedly pilfer cash from a citizen he was duty-bound to protect. The very mechanism designed for public safety—the traffic stop—was, in this instance, allegedly weaponized for personal gain.
For many Canadians, this incident will feel like a final, stark confirmation of a creeping dread. The sentiment is echoing in coffee shops and comment sections across the country: “We’ve become a third-world banana republic where even the cops are thieves.”
This is hyperbole, of course. Canada still functions with a degree of order and institutional strength that is the envy of many truly struggling nations. Our courts are still independent, and the fact that the officer was charged is a testament to the systems of accountability that do, however imperfectly, exist within the RCMP itself.
But the perception is the poison. The phrase “banana republic” isn’t just about poverty; it’s about the collapse of trust in public institutions. It describes a place where the rules don’t apply to the powerful, where the enforcers of the law are above it, and where the citizenry is left feeling like prey rather than partners in a shared society.
Got dole? You can get these two to even commit MURDER… for real.
While Mark Carney’s infamous corruption eg. Brookfields is an open secret,
The provincial regime and even mere municipality are open committing corruptions as if such crimes are some kind of virtue…
No kidding.
Check this out: Mayor Chow condones Law Violation that compromised Safety of the general Public knowingly and wilfully… Of course sh*t like this is warmly condoned by Doug Ford and Mark Carney as well.
This single case in Manitoba is not an isolated incident. It joins a litany of other controversies plaguing the national police force—from systemic harassment and bullying to mishandling major investigations. Each scandal chips away at the iconic red serge, revealing a tarnished reality beneath.
When a police officer allegedly steals, the damage is exponential. It isn’t just a single crime; it invalidates every single interaction every other officer will have with the public. It gives every lawful citizen a reason to hesitate, to fear, and to question the motives behind the flashing lights in their rearview mirror. It forces us to wonder: is this a guardian coming to my aid, or a predator seeing an opportunity?
The RCMP and all institutions of authority must understand that the greatest threat to their legitimacy is not from external critics, but from within. The “few bad apples” argument withers when the public starts to believe the barrel itself is rotten.
The charging of this officer is a necessary first step. But it is not enough. To rebuild the shattered trust, there must be a visible, relentless, and transparent commitment to rooting out this corrosive behaviour. The old story of Canada is broken. We can no longer coast on a reputation of inherent goodness. We must now, actively and painfully, write a new one—one based not on myth, but on demonstrable integrity. The alternative is a nation where the symbol of justice becomes just another thief in the night.
Take Back Canada From The Corrupt Criminals
Folks, it’s time to take back Canada from the low life scumbags criminal as well as the rats and roaches they brought into the country to decimate Canadians!
Whaddaya Say?