Trudeau Sinks to New Low — Blames Americans For Canadian Freedom Protests

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It appears Canada’s problems are actually America’s fault if you ask Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“This morning, I had a direct call with President Biden to talk about our shared challenges at the border,” Trudeau began. “We discussed the American and indeed global influences on the protest.”

“We talked about the U.S.-based flooding of the 911 phone lines in Ottawa, the presence of U.S. citizens in the blockades, and the impact of foreign money to fund this illegal activity,” the prime minister added.

Despite Trudeau’s desperate attempts to blame America, the truckers’ “Freedom Convoy” was born out of their tyrannical coronavirus-related mandates.

“We are not free anymore,” one trucker explained. Working-class Canadians are undergoing forced drug injections with the coronavirus vaccine.

If they refuse to take the drug, they risk losing their employment and means of living.

Making matters worse, some Canadian politicians are threatening to ban their ability to work or operate a motor vehicle altogether.

CNN analyst and Harvard professor Juliette Kayyem agreed with this sick plan by arguing truckers should be blacklisted from working or even operating a motor vehicle again.

“President Biden and I both agreed that for the security of people and the economy, these blockades cannot continue,” Trudeau said. “So make no mistake: the border cannot, and will not stay closed.”

More from Daily Wire:

Canadian police managed to clear vehicles from the Ambassador Bridge on Saturday. More protesters showed up to the bridge and have continued to lock it down, however, according to reports. According to The Detroit News:

The demonstrators, once vastly outnumbered by the Canadian police on scene, may now have eclipsed them.

At 4 p.m., police began erecting a concrete barrier between the protestors and the foot of the bridge. They also announced for the first time that they would begin towing cars that were parked several blocks away from the span.

But the crowd was undeterred.

Several blocks from the bridge, people milled about a blocked-off street. Despite the freezing temperatures, the atmosphere was festive. They waved signs, chanted “freedom” and a woman sang “O Canada,” the national anthem.

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Dozens of police, forming a line, had begun steadily pushing the protesters away from the bridge and onto nearby streets in the morning. They succeeded in clearing several lanes of traffic but the bridge remained closed. Windsor police said they didn’t know when it might reopen.