Climatism lockdown: woods ban anti-human
Wildfire restrictions turn into backyard lockdowns across Atlantic Canada.
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I personally do not advocate any process or procedure contained in any of my Blogs. Information presented here is not intended to provide legal or lawful advice, nor medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, cure, or prevent any disease. Views expressed are for educational purposes only.
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Veteran FINED $28k For DARING TO ENTER THE WOODS
Aug 08, 2025
Jeff Evely, a military veteran, went viral for a video mocking Nova Scotia's ban. He was fined $28,872.50 for entering the woods last week. 06:38 mins https://x.com/JeffEvely/status/1953971918312251707
Constitutional test
His $28,870.50 ticket could become a constitutional test of whether punishing a harmless walk with life-altering penalties violates Section 12’s protection against cruel and unusual punishment. https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/watch-canadian-man-fined-rs-18-lakh-for-venturing-into-forest-9055882
Woods ban
Walid Tamtam, True North
Aug 11, 2025
Newfoundland and Labrador’s government is threatening fines of up to $150,000 and six months in jail for violating wildfire-related restrictions, as three major blazes continue to burn.
At a Saturday press conference, Premier Andrew Furey said the penalties, which include minimum fines of $50,000, apply to anyone who ignores evacuation orders, enters restricted zones or otherwise obstructs firefighting efforts.
“Effective today, new fines will range from $50,000 to $150,000 for a first offence. When a ticket is issued, fines will increase from $75 to $50,000, and imprisonment in default of payment will increase from three days to up to six months,” he said.
The province has also launched a $5,000 Crime Stoppers reward for tips leading to the arrest of anyone suspected of deliberately starting a fire.
“These fines are not theoretical,” Furey said. “If you violate these orders, you will be prosecuted.” https://www.junonews.com/p/nl-sets-150k-fines-6-months-jail
From Fire Bans to Backyard Lockdowns: Atlantic Canada’s New Crackdown
Two months to flatten the wildfire curve? Across Atlantic Canada, sweeping bans are locking people out of the outdoors—sometimes even their own backyards—in the name of fire prevention. What started as “burn bans” in past years has now expanded into outright restrictions on movement, recreation, and private property use.
Fire bans themselves are not the problem. Under certain conditions—prolonged drought, high winds, and tinder-dry forests—they’re both rational and necessary. But stopping people from hiking, fishing, or simply interacting with nature—activities that pose no realistic fire risk—is arbitrary authoritarianism.
New Brunswick has closed all Crown land trails to ATVs, hikers, campers (outside campgrounds), and fishers, citing “unprecedented” dry conditions and an out-of-control 240-hectare wildfire near Miramichi. Private land remains open, though landowners are urged to be cautious. Forestry operations are halted.
Nova Scotia has gone much further. The Houston government has banned hiking, camping, fishing, and vehicle use in any forested area—public or private. Landowners can use their wooded property but cannot host others. Violators face a $25,000 fine, inflated to nearly $29,000 with taxes and surcharges. The ban could last until October 15. Critics, including the Canadian Constitution Foundation and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, call the rules “draconian” and “grossly disproportionate.”
Newfoundland and Labrador has taken a targeted but severe penalty approach, increasing fines for breaching the fire ban from $50,000 to $150,000, with possible jail time of up to a year.
Prince Edward Island has revoked burn permits but still allows fires for warmth or cooking. In national parks, fines can reach $25,000. Continues at https://www.blendrnews.com/p/stay-out-of-the-woods
What Nova Scotia’s snitch line # spells
To report a wildfire or violations of the fire restrictions, call 1-800-565-2224 or 911. https://novascotia.ca/burnsafe/
Open letter to Nova Scotia Premier
By A concerned citizen
Excerpt
Arsonists—whose acts are confirmed, not suspected—continue to set fires across the province. Their motives remain unexamined, their identities curiously unknown, and their impact catastrophic. Your response to this very real and very intentional destruction? Lock down the trails. Punish hikers. Issue fines of $25,000 to citizens whose only crime is having the gall to step outside without state permission. Meanwhile, the arsonists roam free, and your government appears to shrug with either helplessness or disinterest.
It's nothing short of inspiring to watch a government capable of tracing a five-dollar convoy donation in 90 seconds suddenly become unable to identify serial firebugs burning down entire regions of the province. It seems the same technology that tracked 33 million cellphones without consent has mysteriously failed to function when actual crimes are being committed. But sure, tell us again how this is all about safety! https://substack.com/@brendabroleycook/note/c-143155605
Wildfires As A Weapon, US Military Exposed
Aug 11, 2022
Dane Wigginton reviews a formerly classified U.S military report providing in-depth detail on methods the military uses to prepare vast swaths of forests for extremely intense wildfire incinerations. The Report includes specific data outlining the best engineered wildfire incineration timing for various regions in the U.S and other nations thought to be U.S allies.
08:20 mins Page 20: In most situations, burning of shrub types is not successful unless the amount of dead material has been increased by killing and desiccating the plants. For the record. Climate engineering elements [chemtrails discharged from planes 24/7 world-wide] are desiccants starting with aluminum, which also kills the soil’s root systems and thus forests. 17:39 mins
Saskatchewan volunteer firefighter who set 30 fires in a month sentenced for arson
Logan Sieben sentenced to 18 months of probation, 200 hours of community service.
Judge Ian Mokoruk released his decision during a hearing in Unity provincial court. Mokoruk declined to impose a restitution order, despite Crown attorneys arguing during sentencing submissions that Sieben should pay $76,650, or the amount associated with the department's response to the fires.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/logan-sieben-sentencing-1.7590359
Without prejudice and without recourse
Doreen Agostino
Our Greater Destiny Blog
fire
Just added 2 min video: July 22, 2025 Former volunteer firefighter who pleaded guilty to setting hay bales on fire in western Saskatchewan last summer has been sentenced to probation and community service.
I just added a video Wildfires As A Weapon, US Military Exposed.