Manitoba Burns While Ottawa Sleeps: Military Deployed to Clean Up Another Predictable Climate Disaster
Share
Behold the new Canadian summer ritual: huddle inside, choke on smoke, and watch another province burn to the ground. This week's main attraction is northern Manitoba, where out-of-control wildfires are swallowing forests whole and forcing entire communities to flee for their lives. And right on cue, like a pathetic, reactive reflex, the federal government has deployed the Canadian Armed Forces. Don't mistake this for a show of strength; it's a frantic admission of utter failure. Our soldiers are not a proactive solution; they are a last-ditch cleanup crew for a disaster our leaders saw coming a decade away and did absolutely nothing to prevent.
For years, scientists have been screaming that climate change would lead to longer, hotter, and more explosive wildfire seasons. They handed the government a blueprint of the coming apocalypse. And what did our political class do? They held conferences, issued empty climate targets they had no intention of meeting, and continued to underfund the very frontline firefighting services needed to protect us. They gambled with our lives and lost.
Now, as Manitobans lose their homes and their livelihoods, Ottawa sends in the military for a heroic photo-op. They want you to see soldiers filling sandbags and feel a swell of patriotic pride. But what you should feel is rage. We are now using our national defence force to fight a predictable environmental catastrophe because our government was too incompetent, too complacent, and too cowardly to do the hard work of actual prevention. This isn't a natural disaster; it's a man-made crisis of political negligence.