Foreign Affairs re WD UN & C-293
Letter to the Minister and the Pariamentary Secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs
melanie.joly@parl.gc.ca & rob.oliphant@parl.gc.ca
(Don't forget to cc: your own MP)
Minister of Foreign Affairs on UN Withdrawal and Bill C-293
Dear Minister Joly,
I am writing to formally request a detailed response to the concerns
outlined in this letter, particularly regarding Canada's continued
membership in the United Nations and the implications of Bill C-293, which
was recently presented in the Senate.
To ensure that my concerns are addressed fully, I would like to ask: What
specific actions is the Canadian government taking to protect national
sovereignty and personal autonomy in light of the potential influence
of global bodies like the UN and its Agenda 2030?
Thank you for responding to the petition (e-4623) signed by over 90,000
Canadians requesting Canada’s withdrawal from the United Nations and its
associated organizations. (https://www.ourcommons.ca/petitions/en/Petition/Details?Petition=e-4623)
While your response expresses
the perceived benefits of UN membership, it sidesteps serious concerns
raised by Canadians about national sovereignty and individual rights.
This week in the Senate, Senator Marie-François Mégie, explicitly
referenced Yuval Noah Harari while presenting Bill C-293, whose views
on technology, data, and control are increasingly relevant to our concerns
about global governance. Harari has publicly asserted that humans are
“hackable animals,” suggesting that data-driven governance could bypass
individual autonomy. He further claims that concepts like "God" and
"heaven" are fictional, implying that moral rights, including human rights,
can be manipulated or disregarded by those with power. This reference, in
the context of a Canadian bill that may further entrench international
agendas, raises valid concerns about the kind of ideologies influencing our
national policies through frameworks like Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs).
Harari’s perspective—viewing humans as mere components in a global
system of surveillance and control—reflects precisely the type of threat to
personal autonomy and sovereignty that Canadians are increasingly wary
of. Through initiatives like the UN’s Agenda 2030 and its International
Health Regulations (IHR) and One Health framework, we risk embedding
into our national policies an external agenda that encroaches upon
Canadian values, privacy, health autonomy, and even familial and cultural
traditions.
As elected officials, your primary responsibility is to protect the rights
and freedoms of Canadians. Continuing UN involvement—and support
for bills like C-293 that appear to align with globalist ideologies—signals a
departure from Canada’s duty to uphold its own democratic values.
Canadians have fought to protect these values for generations, and it is
clear from this petition and public outcry that they do not consent to policies
that threaten to compromise their rights under the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms.
In light of these serious concerns, I urge you to:
Re-evaluate Canada’s membership in the UN and initiate a formal
debate on the risks of Agenda 2030’s objectives for Canada.
Suspend support for Bill C-293, which aligns too closely with globalist
ideologies that diminish personal autonomy and national sovereignty.
Respect the voices of Canadians who are calling for an organized,
strategic withdrawal from UN organizations whose agendas conflict with
our constitutional rights and values.
This government’s responsibility is to serve the Canadian people, not
to act as an arm of international bodies whose values are misaligned with
Canada’s democratic principles. I look forward to seeing Parliament take
these concerns seriously and act in the best interest of Canadians by
reconsidering our commitments to the UN.
Respectfully,
XXXXXXXX
On behalf of Canadians, and in support of
First Nations communities, advocating for the protection of our
sovereignty and rights on this land