Bryan Brulotte

Bryan Brulotte Philanthropist, Military Officer, Entrepreneur, Community Builder, Husband, and Father.

06/08/2026

Truth must accompany reconciliation.

For years, Canadians were told that a mass grave had been discovered in Kamloops. What was actually identified were ground-penetrating radar anomalies requiring further investigation. Too often, assumptions were treated as facts and questions were discouraged.

Reconciliation requires honesty. We must distinguish between what is known, what is suspected, and what remains unproven. A free and democratic society depends on evidence, open inquiry, and the courage to follow the truth wherever it leads.

06/07/2026

On D-Day, we remember the Canadians who landed on Juno Beach and helped liberate Europe.

Their courage, sacrifice, and sense of duty shaped the country we know today. As we honour their legacy, we should also remember the lesson they left behind: Canada is strongest when united by purpose, confidence, and a commitment to something greater than ourselves.

Lest we forget.

06/04/2026

Canada’s unity cannot survive on slogans alone.

Most Albertans are not separatists, and most Canadians — regardless of province — still believe in the country. But growing regional frustration, declining institutional trust, and years of political polarization have created divisions that many believe Ottawa can no longer afford to ignore.

Western alienation did not emerge overnight. Concerns surrounding energy policy, economic fairness, federal centralization, immigration pressures, government spending, and the treatment of dissent have gradually contributed to a broader feeling of disconnection among some Canadians.

Rejecting separatism does not mean dismissing the frustrations behind it. A durable federation requires mutual respect between regions, stronger national cohesion, and leadership willing to listen rather than simply condemn.

Canada remains one of the world’s most successful democracies and is absolutely worth preserving. But preserving it will require rebuilding trust, restoring balance, and ensuring Canadians across every region continue to feel heard within Confederation.

06/02/2026

Canada’s environmental policy should be guided by a simple principle: reduce emissions while strengthening Canada’s economy.

We can protect the environment, support good-paying jobs, maintain affordable energy, and strengthen our national security at the same time. Climate policy should be measured not only by targets and mandates, but by results.

Canada already has major advantages: a clean electricity system, world-leading hydroelectric resources, critical minerals, nuclear potential, and a highly skilled workforce. By investing in innovation, infrastructure, carbon capture, methane reduction, and next-generation energy technologies, we can lower emissions without sacrificing prosperity.

A strong environmental policy is one that helps Canadians succeed while building a cleaner, more competitive future. 🇨🇦

CanadaFirst Innovation Jobs BryanBrulotte

Canada’s environmental policy should be guided by a simple principle: reduce emissions while strengthening Canada’s econ...
06/02/2026

Canada’s environmental policy should be guided by a simple principle: reduce emissions while strengthening Canada’s economy.

We can protect the environment, support good-paying jobs, maintain affordable energy, and strengthen our national security at the same time. Climate policy should be measured not only by targets and mandates, but by results.

Canada already has major advantages: a clean electricity system, world-leading hydroelectric resources, critical minerals, nuclear potential, and a highly skilled workforce. By investing in innovation, infrastructure, carbon capture, methane reduction, and next-generation energy technologies, we can lower emissions without sacrificing prosperity.

A strong environmental policy is one that helps Canadians succeed while building a cleaner, more competitive future. 🇨🇦

Canada is facing a real and measurable rise in antisemitism.Thousands of incidents. Synagogues targeted. Jewish schools ...
05/28/2026

Canada is facing a real and measurable rise in antisemitism.

Thousands of incidents. Synagogues targeted. Jewish schools threatened. Open intimidation becoming increasingly normalized in public life.

Criticizing governments and political decisions is legitimate in a democracy. Targeting Jewish Canadians is not.

A country that claims to defend pluralism cannot stay silent while one of its most targeted minorities faces escalating hatred. Leadership means enforcing standards consistently, protecting communities equally, and confronting extremism before it becomes normalized.

The issue is no longer awareness. It is whether Canada has the political resolve to act.

Canada’s unity cannot survive on slogans alone.Most Albertans are not separatists, and most Canadians — regardless of pr...
05/27/2026

Canada’s unity cannot survive on slogans alone.

Most Albertans are not separatists, and most Canadians — regardless of province — still believe in the country. But growing regional frustration, declining institutional trust, and years of political polarization have created divisions that many believe Ottawa can no longer afford to ignore.

Western alienation did not emerge overnight. Concerns surrounding energy policy, economic fairness, federal centralization, immigration pressures, government spending, and the treatment of dissent have gradually contributed to a broader feeling of disconnection among some Canadians.

Rejecting separatism does not mean dismissing the frustrations behind it. A durable federation requires mutual respect between regions, stronger national cohesion, and leadership willing to listen rather than simply condemn.

Canada remains one of the world’s most successful democracies and is absolutely worth preserving. But preserving it will require rebuilding trust, restoring balance, and ensuring Canadians across every region continue to feel heard within Confederation.

Canada’s Army Reserve plays a critical role in recruitment, leadership development, and maintaining military presence in...
05/27/2026

Canada’s Army Reserve plays a critical role in recruitment, leadership development, and maintaining military presence in communities across the country.

As discussions continue around modernization and restructuring within the Canadian Armed Forces, many reservists are raising concerns about the growing use of “tactical groupings” and the consolidation of units under fewer command teams.

If Canada is serious about significantly expanding the Reserve in the years ahead, strengthening local regiments and preserving independent leadership structures will be essential. Modernization should reinforce the Reserve, not weaken the foundations that sustain it.

At the Canada Strong and Free conference in Ottawa, former CIA Director Mike Pompeo delivered a blunt warning: the threa...
05/14/2026

At the Canada Strong and Free conference in Ottawa, former CIA Director Mike Pompeo delivered a blunt warning: the threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party is no longer distant or theoretical.

Canada has already faced credible allegations of foreign interference targeting elections, political figures, universities, and diaspora communities.

This is not about hysteria. It is about strategic clarity and protecting Canadian sovereignty.

This week in Ottawa, I attended the Canada Strong and Free Network conference alongside hundreds of Canadians from diffe...
05/08/2026

This week in Ottawa, I attended the Canada Strong and Free Network conference alongside hundreds of Canadians from different backgrounds and sectors who came together to discuss the country's future.

What stood out most was not outrage or pessimism, but a serious conversation about how Canada can regain momentum at a time when many Canadians feel the country has become economically and institutionally stagnant.

Across the conference, discussions focused on some of the defining challenges facing the country today: declining productivity, housing affordability, delayed infrastructure, military recruitment shortages, energy security, and the need to strengthen Canada's long term economic capacity.

What I saw this week was not a movement in decline. I saw a growing coalition focused on competence, ex*****on, economic growth, and restoring confidence in Canadian institutions and national

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