Canadian Politics

The Black Hole Budget: Canada’s Half-Trillion Dollar Vanishing Act

Something dark is brewing beneath the surface of Canada’s books—and it stinks of deception. The federal government raked in a jaw-dropping $400 billion in taxes last year. That’s nearly half a trillion dollars squeezed from workers, families, small businesses, and retirees. And yet, in 2025, Mark Carney is projected to tack on another $92 billion in spending—over and above that already bloated intake.

Let that sink in.

A government that already takes more than enough to run a nation is about to outspend its earnings by tens of billions. But here’s the real horror: no one can explain where the money is going.

Because it’s not going to you.

The Great Extraction

Every dollar you earn is a dollar they want. From your groceries to your gas tank, from your heating bill to your small side hustle—it’s all fair game for the taxman. And we’ve been told to accept it as the price of civilization.

But if this is what “civilization” looks like, we should all be asking: what exactly are we paying for?

Public services? Crumbling.
Healthcare? Collapsing.
Housing? Unaffordable.
Groceries? Out of control.
National debt? Surging.

Follow the Money—If You Can

Mark Carney, the globalist golden boy being floated as Canada’s next economic saviour, is planning to unleash a spending spree like nothing we’ve seen. But where is the $500 billion really going?

Not into your pocket.
Not into your child’s future.
Not into safe streets or stable jobs or affordable homes.

Instead, this tidal wave of cash is quietly diverted—into climate funds, digital ID infrastructure, DEI bureaucracies, foreign aid, and the same corporate vampires that profited during the pandemic while small businesses died slow, silent deaths.

It’s all done behind closed doors. Hidden in budget line items no one questions. Masked by slogans and distractions. And if you raise your voice? You’re “anti-government.” Or worse—“anti-progress.”

A Dark Future on Credit

The truth is, we are watching a slow-motion economic hostile takeover. The state borrows, spends, and siphons wealth while the average Canadian is stuck rationing food, skipping dental visits, or praying the heating bill doesn’t show up early.

But here’s the kicker: this isn’t mismanagement. It’s design.

Debt is power—just not for you. It means more control, more dependency, more engineered crises. When you can’t pay your bills without government help, they don’t just own the debt—they own you.

Final Thought

We are no longer just being taxed—we’re being bled. And with another $92 billion in phantom spending on the horizon, you have to wonder:

Is this budgeting—or is it looting?

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Chris Wick

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