US Advice Return Receive of the Canadian advice /

  US Confirmation de l'Avis adressé au Canada  

PUBLIC ADVICE

 From the author
Serge Morel

Addresses the Canadian government and Quebec authorities
I am requesting a non reimbursable net amount of one million dollars (U.S. currency), after any applicable taxes from the united states and Canadian government. In addition the necessary personnel, identified and known by the "American Judiciary authorities" and "U.S. State Department" needs to be mandated in the U.S. by a direct and official legal judiciary  contact from the U.S. government.

The authorized Canadian Federal Justice Ministry needs to contact the "American Judiciary authorities" through the U.S. government proceedings and all of the expenses related with this meeting shall be paid by the Canadian government.

This is to insure and show the Canadian authorities a solvability warranty, capable of covering any and all expenses to make it possible for the authorized Canadian representatives to meet me.

This is public advise "for now".
It will be transmitted by American or international legal processing soon.

This result came by illegally using the "Research, Science and Technology Quebec Ministry", to torment my private webs...and...in addition the illegal actions in the U.S. by the Quebec and Canadian government  from the RRQ, SSQ (FTQ), CDPQ and the Canadian Telecommunication corp. on the American server by using their influential control.   

 
 

 Governor General of Canada Governor General

Copy conforms was sent to all the Provincials Lieutenants Governors

http://www.gg.ca/governor_general/role-crown_e.asp

 Canada is a federal state  (See page 2) Representing the Crown in Canada

Role and Responsibilities

 Representing the Crown in Canada

 •Promoting Canadian Sovereignty

 •Celebrating Excellence

 •Encouraging National Identity, National Unity and Moral Leadership

 

Canada's Parliament has three parts: the Crown represented by the Governor General, an appointed Senate and an elected House of Commons. One of the Governor General's most important responsibilities is to ensure that Canada always has a Prime Minister.

By constitutional convention, the governor general exercises these prerogatives only in accordance with ministerial advice. But by the same conventions, he or she retains special personal authority in times of emergency or in exceptional circumstances; in such cases, he or she may appoint or dismiss a prime minister and may dissolve Parliament
.* ..."conferring emergency powers like it was done illegally by only political suspicions false public information, from the federal  and Quebec provincial Cabinet, in 1970 "Lévesque, René on the CD file: ///F:/A_WebEnglish/Everest_Engl/TrudeauEnglish/Quebec_Politic%20Eng/Quebec Politique_Eng_page_1.htm#Lévesque, René ).
*For an election (Or: the war, criminals governmental activity, a suspention of a government and place a National or international Public Judiciary administrative committee ... )

The Governor General also gives Royal Assent to bills passed by the House of Commons and the Senate, reads the Speech from the Throne, signs State documents, summons, opens and ends sessions of Parliament, and dissolves Parliament. She also presides over the swearing-in of the Prime Minister, the Chief Justice of Canada and cabinet ministers.

The Governor General almost always acts on the advice of her ministers. She has the right to be consulted, to encourage and to warn, and meets regularly with the Prime Minister and senior government officials. There are rare occasions when the Governor General does not agree with his or her ministers. The most famous example occurred when Governor General Lord Byng refused Prime Minister Mackenzie King's request to dissolve Parliament in 1926.

F:\A_WebEnglish\PowerCorporation\Juneau.htm
F:\A_WebEnglish\Everest_Engl\TrudeauEnglish\Quebec_Politic Eng\QuebecPolitique_NewWindow_VallierePierre.htm
F:\A_WebEnglish\Everest_Engl\TrudeauEnglish\Quebec_Politic Eng\QuePolitique_Eng_page_2_GovernorGeneral.htm
.F:\HistoryCanElectronicComputerCrime.htm 

Representing the Crown in Canada

The Governor General almost always acts on the advice of her ministers. She has the right to be consulted, to encourage and to warn, and meets regularly with the Prime Minister and senior government officials. There are rare occasions when the Governor General does not agree with his or her ministers. The most famous example occurred when Governor General Lord Byng refused Prime Minister Mackenzie King's request to dissolve Parliament in 1926. http://www.gg.ca/governor_general/role-crown_e.asp

Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces

“… we in this country need to understand that these sacrifices which are made, and which will continue to be made in the future, are implied in our being in these places, in accepting difficult and dangerous missions. The Canadian Forces are trained and ready to meet those challenges and dangers. We, as Canadians, must expect and support that, since it is we as a nation who asked this of them.

Above all, we must respect the people who choose this way of life. Military history has been part of our story as a people, as a nation. The men and women who choose it as a life know that they are part of Canadian history – in their regiment, in their branch of the service, and in their country.”

Her Excellency the Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson
Memorial Ceremony for the Fallen Soldiers of 3 PPCLI
Edmonton, Sunday, April 28, 2002

Image: Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces

Role and Responsibilities

The Governor General of Canada is also Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces. As such, the Governor General plays a significant role in encouraging excellence and recognition of the military’s place in Canadian life and in Canada’s international responsibilities.

http://www.gg.ca/governor_general/comm-ch_e.asp

 

Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces / Historical background

  • Then, in 1968, following the unification of the three services, the Governor General became Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Armed Forces (now, the Canadian Forces).

http://www.gg.ca/governor_general/comm-ch-bg_e.asp

 
              

 Canada is a federal state where powers are distributed between the federal government and the governments of the provinces and territories. The federal government oversees matters that concern Canada as a whole, such as national defence and criminal law. Provinces and territories are responsible for matters—such as education, hospitals and property—that affect the regions and their people.

The framework within which the Nation operates includes elections, government finances, public administration, criminal and civil justice, correctional services and policing.

 And as per the information given in court hearing which were in 1980 to 1992 under the  public administration, criminal and civil justice, correctional services and policing:

The Canadien national defence, criminal law and civil justice applied in Quebec is, as M. Réal BRASSARD, Chief Commissioner  of "lésion professional" French court register: (Extract French audio tape translated: Anyone in this country, as well the tribunal, his allowed to lied"....." You should know that !!!")

 Original Public French court recording

This information still alive by his new promotion as commissioner in the new  one under the worker ministry.

History of the Canadian International Criminal Story updated

War Measures Act     from TCE Standard

War Measures Act, statute (1914) conferring emergency powers on the federal Cabinet, allowing it to govern by decree when it perceives the existence of "war, invasion or insurrection, real or apprehended."

The Act was proclaimed in force with detailed regulations limiting the freedom of Canadians during both world wars. Its use to imprison Canadians of German, Ukrainian and Slavic descent in WWI and Japanese Canadians during WWII and to confiscate their property was an issue until the 1980s, when compensation packages and formal apologies were made to those affected.

More limited emergency legislation, the offshoot of War Measures, was applied during demobilization after WWII, and during and after the KOREAN WAR in the 1950s.  

Description given by the Former Quebec Premier in 1980 when he was the for the Canadian Patent basic of the new electronic, stealing by the Canadian government and describe in French in the Quebec Almanac

Description given for the Canadian Patent basic of the new electronic, stealing by the Canadian government and describe in French in the Quebec Almanac

French : La description donné par l'almanach, de la copie volé, appelé: Télidon

La description du system visuel de communication bilatéral donné par l'almanach d'une des copies canadienne  identifiant la parties principal de cette nouvelle technologie ACILR-CDRIL qui intègre les différents langages électroniques de communication et communique, en même temps, dans leurs propres langages (respectif ou autre par, computeur ou d'autres) de commande  que l'on a appelé par différent nom tel; Le GPS (incluant le tracking system), le téléphone wireless , l'internet, pour ne nommé que les plus connue et, identifié ici sous le nom: Télidon

Extrait de: "Almanach du Peuple de Beauchemin 1984 Edition;

En 1978, le ministère des communications a lancé le système Télidon. Ce system visuel de communication bilatéral est facile à employer et constitue un produit remarquable de la fusion des techniques d'information et de télécommunication . Au moyen d'un adapteur relié ou intégré à un téléviseur ordinaire, Télidon permet aux utilisateurs d'avoir accès à une gamme de renseignement provenant de réseaux de fichiers informatisé et de voir apparaître à l'écran des textes et des représentation graphiques. Le system (copie du system volé ACILR-CDRIL) est compatible avec la...Voir sur le CD No 1 File: F:\A_Web\A_Web3\TOME_2f.html et History Can Electronic Computer Crime F:\A_Web\A_Web1\1970_2003_InformationHistoriqueDossierACILR_CDRIL12A.htm

History of the Canadian International Criminal Story updated