THEY’RE called the Canadian Food Inspection Authority, but the CFIA might as well be known as the Government Terrorism Unit.
These bureaucrats presume the power to condemn an entire flock of farmed ostriches to death because of an outbreak of something believed to be “bird flu”.
Drone footage showing the aftermath of the CFIA’s overnight cull at Universal Ostrich Farms in British Columbia was received with anguish, anger, and disgust by the farm’s owners. “My God, it’s a massacre,” said farm co-owner Dave Bilinski, after viewing the footage.
Bilinski described the the CFIA’s rationale for the massacre as “bullshit”. “These birds are going to be martyrs because with the law written the way it is, where a bureaucrat or anyone from CFIA can come on to your farm, have a suspicion that you have a disease in your animals and order the slaughter of them, is not Canada. We gotta take Canada back.
“And everybody has got to get excited about this and get rid of the bullshit that goes on in Ottawa and get some realism back into our Canadian lifestyle,” said Bilinski.
Katie Pasitney, another farm co-owner, said through tears “They didn’t need to die. They didn’t need to die; this was all ego,” she said. “They died a torturous death, too… Canada fell hard yesterday. Canada fell very hard yesterday.”
Bilinski and Pasitney might well be speaking of Australian bureaucrats who ordered the culling of hundreds of thousands of poultry birds in Victoria over the past few years, also because of the alleged discovery of “bird flu”.
The Canadian ostrich farm owners took the Canadian government to court in an attempt to stop the culling. They wanted better proof of the “bird flu” virus than a PCR test, and asked for a tissue sample, but were refused. The courts sided with the government.
Last week the Supreme Court of Canada unanimously dismissed an appeal by the ostrich farm owners, allowing the government’s cull order from last year to stand, and the CFIA to proceed with killing the ostriches to allegedly prevent an avian flu outbreak.
The owners presented evidence that the birds were developing immunity after 70 of the flock died from a virus. It was rejected by the court.
“The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) will be moving forward to complete depopulation and disposal measures as authorized by the Health of Animals Act and guided by the stamping out policy for highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI),” a CFIA statement said following the court’s decision.
In early December 2024, an outbreak of avian influenza virus hit the farm, resulting in the deaths of nearly 70 of 300 birds within a few weeks. The CFIA described the outbreak as “unprecedented” and warned it could have a significant impact on Canada’s poultry industry.
However, some people question both the motive and method of avian flu detection, suggesting it’s more about reducing and controlling food production, that is already concentrated in the hands of a few global companies.
These companies are purely profit motivated and their representatives are likely to show up at WEF forums and other globalist gatherings to get centralised policy proclamations working in their favour.
The Guardian reports that “the size and influence of these mega-companies enables them to largely dictate what America’s 2 million farmers grow and how much they are paid, as well as what consumers eat and how much our groceries cost”.










