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RDC’s Donald School Of Business Building Awareness Around Entreprenuership

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1 minute read

By Sheldon Spackman

RDC’s Donald School of Business has announced a new partnership with Junior Achievement Southern Alberta that aims to raise awareness around entreprenuership for both students and youth.

This fall, students in the Business Administration diploma program who are taking a marketing communications course, will be putting their theoretical knowledge to work for JA Southern Alberta.

Officials say the RDC business students will develop a marketing communications plan for JA, allowing the students to apply what they have learned and creating recommendations for a real organization.

For JA Southern Alberta, this sharing of expertise and resources is a positive opportunity that will help to instill the entrepreneurial spirit in young people across central Alberta. Currently, JA offers seven different programs for roughly 2,00 students in grades five through 12 each school year.

The curriculum-aligned programs are offered free of charge and they are delivered by business volunteers who are trained for their roles working with students. In addition to the project that the Business Administration diploma students are currently undertaking, future possibilities for students may include volunteerism and other opportunities for practical experience.

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illegal immigration

Hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants coming to US from over 150 countries

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From the Center for Immigration Studies

By Todd Bensman

CIS analyst Todd Bensman traveled August 6-18 for field research on the Colombia and Panama sides of the notorious Darien Gap immigration passageway, through which more than 1.5 million foreign nationals have reached the U.S. southern border over the past three-plus years. On this page, you can find Bensman’s video, photos and reports from his research as they publish and afterward.

Bensman’s purpose for traveling first to Colombia’s immigrant staging towns and then to Panama’s camps and impacted villages is to assess the impacts of a new Panama plan to “close” the passageway – supposedly with pledged U.S. help.

On the Colombia side of the gap, Bensman visited the towns of Turbo, Nicocli, Acandi, and Capurgana – all staging towns where trailheads lead immigrants into Panama. On the Panama side, Bensman spent time in Panama City, then traveled to the Darien Province where he visited three camps where immigrants exit or pass through in buses: Metete, Lajas Blanca, and Boco Chiquito.

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Federal Election 2021

Chinese agents allegedly used illegal tactics to threaten Canadians in 2021 election, documents show

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

Justin Trudeau’s special rapporteur had downplayed the allegations, but a report showed the Royal Canadian Mounted Police was aware of foreign actor threats and interference being carried out.

A memo recently disclosed by a commission looking into foreign interference in Canada’s last two elections shows federal officials knew agents of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) were using illegal methods to threaten Canadian voters.

The information was disclosed from a memo dated August 29, 2023, from a Department of Foreign Affairs meeting, as disclosed by the Commission on Foreign Interference. The meeting acknowledging threats to Canadians via foreign state actors came only weeks after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s special rapporteur tasked with looking into the matter downplayed such interference as “media allegations.”

“The RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) is aware foreign actor threats and interference are being carried out in Canada, including the harassment of individuals or groups exercising their fundamental freedoms guaranteed in the Charter,” reads the memo, as noted by Blacklock’s Reporter.

“Combating and investigating foreign actor interference remains an operational priority for the RCMP,” it said.

According to the memo, the government claimed that it takes “its responsibility to protect Canadians from foreign interference seriously.”

The Commission on Foreign Interference is headed by Justice Marie-Josée Hogue, who had earlier said she and her lawyers will remain “impartial” and will not be influenced by politics. In January, Hogue said that she would “uncover the truth whatever it may be.”

The commission was struck after Trudeau’s special rapporteur, former Governor General David Johnston, failed in an investigation into CCP allegations last year after much delay. That inquiry was not done in public and was headed by Johnston, who is a “family friend” of Trudeau.

Johnston quit as “special rapporteur” after a public outcry following his conclusion that there should not be a public inquiry into the matter. Conservative MPs demanded Johnston be replaced over his ties to both China and the Trudeau family.

The potential meddling in Canada’s elections by agents of the CCP has many Canadians worried as well.

As reported by LifeSiteNews, documents from a federal inquiry looking at meddling in Canada’s past two elections by foreign state actors show CCP agents allegedly worked as Elections Canada poll workers in the 2021 campaign.

As for Trudeau, he has praised China for its “basic dictatorship” and has labeled the authoritarian nation as his favorite country other than his own.

Thus far, the Commission has revealed that there were 13 electoral ridings with suspicious activity. The Commission is currently on break and will resume regular hearings in September.

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