In a sickening act of treason against Canadians, Canada’s elite military police force was called in to investigate how CTV news reporter Bob Fife obtained embarrassing information involving the country’s top general and his spending of more than $1 million using government aircraft to jet to hockey games and to a Caribbean vacation spot.
It turns out though, that the information was all legally obtained through the Access to Information law, raising new questions about the government and military’s use of the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service, known by its acronym as the NIS.
The police report involving CTV is one of several NIS investigations into media outlets that have been engineered by Defense Minister Peter McKay that the news media has discovered using the Access law. The media filed the access request after sources said the military police force was being used inappropriately to investigate journalists who wrote or broadcast embarrassing information about Defence Minister Peter MacKay and the Canadian Forces leadership.
The September 2011 report by CTV reporter Bob Fife on the travel habits of then-chief of the defence staff Gen. Walter Natynczyk infuriated the senior military leadership, according to Defence Department sources. So the general and the minister resorted to high treason against the rights, freedom, way of life and system of values cherished by Canadians and attempted to intimidate the media into silence.
This did not work as We The People stand on guard for our great nation of Canada against terrorists such as General Natynkzyk Minister Peter McKay and now We The People call for their just and appropriate punishment as enemies of the state.