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People that Trudeau claims to be close friends, turn out to be fake friends, while those who claim that he is their friend, are disavowed by him.

Take the case of the Aga Khan, who Justin Trudeau never met once over 30 years, yet boasted close ties. Canada’s Conflict of Interest Commissioner Mary Dawson stated unambiguously, “Trudeau had no personal or private interactions with the Aga Khan and his family between 1983 and April 2013, when he became Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada,” leading her to conclude that their relationship could not be described as one of friends.

But the same Trudeau disavows friendship with Jaspal Atwal, with whom he has been photographed multiple times long before he was prime minister. Yet despite this evidence, Trudeau claims he knows not the man he apparently addressed as “Jas”, at least according to how Atwal tells it.

This brings me back to Muhammad Ali. Trudeau hasn’t “learned the meaning of friendship,” and thus really hasn’t “learned anything,” certainly not his ability to know what or who is a friend.

Enough has been written about Atwal, but just as a refresher he was convicted of attempting to kill Indian cabinet minister Malkiat Singh Sidhu during the Indian politician’s visit to Vancouver in 1986.

Atwal claims he no longer supports Khalistani organizations and visited India in 1999 and again in 2002. His passport shows that he also visited India twice in 2017, thus rubbishing the unprecedented leaks by Canadian officials claiming Atwal was issued a visa by Indian officials just to embarrass Trudeau.