Three individuals of disparate interests, a US senator, a Canadian trucker, and a Canadian civil liberties official, all agree on one thing: Justin Trudeau is an over the top authoritarian more concerned with hysterics than with doing his job.

Senator John Kennedy, Republican of Louisiana, “Let me say a word first about Canada, and I want to make it clear I support peaceful protests. I don’t support breaking the law, but what I think we’re seeing in Canada is the tyranny of the managerial elite over the working-class majority. I don’t know Prime Minister Trudeau. I’m sure he is a warm and loving human being, but his leadership has been underwhelming.”

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Freedom Convoy spokesman Benjamin Dichter, “When I say peacefully protesting, I would call it more of a demonstration because what are we guilty of? Some trucks parked illegally? Okay, I’m not sure that that warrants the response from the government. But one of the things that they did include in this emergency act is it forces tow truck companies under duress to come in and tow the trucks. And if they refuse to tow the trucks, then the government can say, “Fine, we’re canceling your business license and fining you.”

[Trudeau] said in his press conference that he’s not going to call in the military, and we were all laughing because our response was, ‘Yeah, you tried that last week and the military said, ‘Thanks, but no thanks – this is not in within our purview.’ And many of us have families in military and policing, and that’s how we found out. So you know what they say? A general without an army is a fool. Justin Trudeau just hasn’t realized that yet.”

The executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, Noa Mendelsohn Aviv, “Right now, they’ve just gotten started — they just declared an emergency. They’ve just put before parliament the order in council that says this is the emergency that’s happening. But in our view … difficult situations, challenging situations happen all the time. Governments have the tools to deal with them, and the emergency powers are much too large power, that bypasses the democratic process, ]and] too broad.”