Article content continued

Her criticisms quickly stretch beyond targeting the film, instead choosing to focus on its subject.

“Justin Trudeau is an incarnation of confusingly well-intentioned, vaguely leftist liberalism, a pretty face that shamelessly shows off his physique and poses for photos in yoga poses,” Gryzinski writes.

Gryzinski sees Trudeau as being “narcissistic” and takes issue with his stance on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Trudeau, she writes will “support any insanity, including terrorism in the name of Islam. She even blasts him for his relationship with the Muslim community.

“He frequently goes to mosques, wears outfits from countries like Pakistan and prays in Islamic fashion,” she writes. “What else can be said about a government leader who is praised by the Islamic State after being elected?”

With a “small population compared to its gigantic dimensions,” Canada is still “the country of dreams for many people who want to change their lives,” Gryzinski writes. Yet, its citizens aren’t immune from her criticisms.

“To have success, evidently, the more ambitious Canadians need to go to the U.S.,” she writes, giving the examples of Justin Bieber, Pamela Anderson and “supreme diva” Celine Dion.

Canada’s greatest evil, however, are its “sycophantic” journalists who she writes treat Trudeau with a “destructive deference.” She doubts even Trudeau, fuelled by the praise of journalists, can “ruin a country so well-organized, though boring.”

But “Trudeau and sycophants will, with certainty, continue to try to worsen it.”