Canada’s New Governor General
Canada’s New Governor General
One of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s clearest signals of supporting the Holy Roman Empire was his selection of Canada’s new governor general.
The governor general, appointed by the prime minister for a five-year term, is the official representative of the British monarchy, the head of state over Canada. On May 5, Carney selected Louise Arbour, the champion of every liberal cause you can imagine: prisoners’ voting, “lgbtq+ rights,” illegal immigrants’ rights and so on. In 2022, she led an independent review into allegations of sexual misconduct in Canada’s Armed Forces, which the Trudeau government used to purge leadership in favor of inexperienced leaders who wanted to radically transform the military.
Yet where Arbour found international notoriety, and why her appointment as governor general is important to Germany, was her role as chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia.
On May 22, 1999, Arbour indicted Slobodan Milosevic for war crimes during the Yugoslav Wars (1990 to 2001), particularly for events in Kosovo in 1991, between Serbians and Croatians. This remains a controversial subject and may seem like ancient history, but it is vital to understanding the developing relationship between Canada and Germany.
Arbour was hailed as a champion of human rights and international law for serving justice to a genocidal leader. To this day, she remains a hero in Europe for her role in this affair. The problem is, the indictment was based on lies—lies fabricated by Germany.
Germany actually incited the Yugoslav Wars as a crucial strategic step toward rebuilding its empire. This vital history is explained in Mr. Flurry’s booklet Germany’s Conquest of the Balkans, which exposes why Germany defied the whole world in recognizing Croatia and breaking up Yugoslavia—so it could have a client state on the Mediterranean Sea.
While Milosevic was on trial at The Hague in 2004, Mr. Flurry wrote in “The Scary Truth Behind the Milosevic Trial”: “We have said from the beginning of the Balkans war that Germany, aided by the Vatican, led nato into that war. And it did it with blatantly deceptive intelligence. … German leaders started and sustained the intelligence reports about genocide being committed by Slobodan Milosevic in the Balkans. … All kinds of lies were told to justify the Balkans war! That has now been abundantly proved. Slobodan’s sin is simply that he was an enemy of Germany and the Vatican—the Holy Roman Empire.”
Milosevic died of a heart attack in 2006 before he was sentenced at The Hague, even though the prosecution was unable to bring any real evidence that he had committed any crimes. The factual evidence shows Milosevic never ordered or advocated any criminal actions, despite German claims that he organized mass killings in the Kosovo area. Arbour’s 1999 indictment was founded on these falsified reports from Germany. She probably acted on these reports in good faith but was a pawn of the Holy Roman Empire.
Carney’s selection of Arbour as the governor general is a clear declaration of Carney’s loyalties to Germany.