Originally published by Internationalist 360.
By NATE HOCHMAN
As all eyes were trained on the aggressive police sweep of the Ottawa trucker convoy this week, Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau’s administration was quietly moving to implement a sweeping expansion of surveillance power at the federal level.
The Trudeau government’s financial war against the truckers has been covered at length. But one underreported aspect of this broader assault on Canadian civil liberties is the effort to bring crowdfunding and payment service providers — two of the most prominent routes for financial transactions on the Internet — under the permanent control of a centralized government authority.
In a February 14 news conference, Canadian finance minister Chrystia Freeland said that the government was using the Emergencies Act to broaden “the scope of Canada’s anti-money-laundering and terrorist financing rules so that they cover crowdfunding platforms and the payment service providers they use.” That broadened power requires all forms of digital transactions, including cryptocurrencies, to be reported to the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Center of Canada. (I.e., “Fintrac”). “As of today, all crowdfunding platforms and the payment service providers they use must register with Fintrac, and they must report large and suspicious transactions to Fintrac,” Freeland said. She justified the move as a way to “mitigate the risk” of “illicit funds” and “increase the quality and quantity of intelligence received by Fintrac and make more information available to support investigations by law enforcement.” Trudeau, standing behind Freeland at the press conference, nodded his head in agreement.
Freeland said the trucker convoy, which had assembled to protest coronavirus restrictions, had “highlighted the fact” that digital assets and funding mechanisms “weren’t captured” by the Canadian government’s pre-existing surveillance powers. As a result, she said, “the government will also bring forward legislation to provide these authorities to FinTrac on a permanent basis.”
Trudeau promised that his emergency powers would be temporary. But as all eyes were trained on this week's police sweep of the Ottawa convoy, his government was quietly moving to make its expanded financial surveillance powers permanent.
My latest @NROhttps://t.co/o1SDtqFxk6
— Nate Hochman (@njhochman) February 20, 2022
Freeland reiterated that point in a subsequent press conference this past Friday. “We reviewed very, very carefully the tools at the disposal of the federal government, and we used all the tools that we had prior to the invocation of the Emergencies Act, and we determined that we needed some additional tools,” she said. “Now some of those tools, we will be putting forward measures to put those tools permanently in place. The authorities of FinTrac, I believe, do need to be expanded to cover crowdsourcing platforms and their payment providers.”
We already know what the Canadian government would do with that permanent power. They’re showing us as we speak. As Kevin Williamson wrote earlier this week, Trudeau has promptly weaponized his expanded Emergencies Act powers to “invest himself with the unilateral power to freeze bank accounts and cancel insurance policies, without so much as a court order and with essentially no recourse for those he targets.” That punitive action against political dissidents expands beyond the truckers themselves: On Wednesday, Trudeau’s justice minister suggested that private citizens who donated large sums to the convoy “ought to be worried” about the possibility of a freeze on their bank accounts, too. At least one young woman has already been fired from her job in the Ontario provincial government for making a $100 donation.
All this, of course, flies in the face of Trudeau’s promise that the Emergencies Act powers would be temporary. When he announced his invocation of the order, he promised the Canadian people that his expanded authorities would “be time-limited, geographically targeted, as well as reasonable and proportionate to the threats they are meant to address.” Not a single part of that sentence has proved to be true.
Freeland explains that emergency powers such as “fintrack” i.e the [previously illegal] ability to surveil and collect the financial information of those who contribute to political causes/ fundraisers will now “be made permanent” — (with support from most of the left of course) https://t.co/v57XeRECGe
— Jeremy (@loffredojeremy) February 19, 2022
Trudeau says after Ottawa has been cleared of all convoy protesters and the city still has a heavy police presence: “this state of emergency is not over.”https://t.co/cTm6cKHpsA pic.twitter.com/O0Nmf7zOjJ
— Efron Monsanto 🇨🇦🚜🚛 (@realmonsanto) February 21, 2022
Any politician thinking of voting for @JustinTrudeau’s Emergencies Act declaration: If you think he will not use these powers to go after every political opponent -to track their donations, their calls, & criminalize them- you just might be naïve enough to support these measures
— Viva Frei (@thevivafrei) February 21, 2022
The @ndp – the “working Canadian’s” party – thus far supporting tyrant @JustinTrudeau’s Emergencies Act declaration, which criminalizes protest, authorizes arbitrary freezing of bank accounts & assets, and desecrates the Constitution itself. #TheWorldIsWatching @theJagmeetSingh
— Viva Frei (@thevivafrei) February 21, 2022
Originally published by Internationalist 360.

Author: Internationalist 360
Internationalist 360 provides a forum for authors to publish posts regarding current events in nations around the world, especially in South American, Middle Eastern and African nations.