It starts with a headline.
“Mark Carney says he wants to make Canada the strongest economy in the G7.”
Sounds good, right? Who wouldn’t want that?
But something doesn’t sit right. Something cold settles in your gut when you hear those words. Because if you’ve been paying attention, really paying attention, you’ll remember what Mark Carney said in his book—not on a podium, not in a soundbite—but in writing. Plain and simple. He blamed free market capitalism for the instability of our world. He said it was broken. Dangerous. Outdated.
And now? Now he wants to run the show.
The only way to make Canada the strongest in the G7—outpacing giants like the U.S., Germany, and Japan—is to go full-throttle into that very same system he once condemned. A system that chews up the working class, inflates the cost of living, and paves over everything that made this country worth living in.
The hypocrisy isn’t just insulting. It’s terrifying.
You don’t get to break something and then pretend you’re the one who can fix it. But that’s exactly what’s happening. They’ve dressed him up as the savior. The sensible choice. The banker-turned-leader who can stabilize us in “uncertain times.”
But that’s the trap.
If Mark Carney wins the next election, Canada as we know it will not survive. That’s not hyperbole. That’s the natural consequence of letting the machine run unchecked with a technocrat at the wheel. Because the Canada most of us remember—the quiet resilience, the wild beauty, the freedom to live without choking on bureaucracy or bowing to global banks—that version of Canada is already bleeding out.
Under Carney, it will be finished.
It won’t happen all at once. It never does. First come the policies that seem “reasonable.” Then come the shifts in tone, the centralization of power, the consolidation of wealth. Bit by bit, the land you thought you lived in becomes something else. Something colder. More rigid. More corporate.
They won’t call it a collapse. They’ll call it progress.
And you’ll be expected to clap along.
This isn’t about politics anymore. It’s about survival. It’s about recognizing when the foundations are being quietly ripped out from under you—and having the courage to call it what it is.
Mark Carney isn’t here to save Canada.
He’s here to replace it.
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