"You're Lying to Millions of Canadians": The At Issue Confrontation Banks Are Trying to Delete

In short: Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem walked off the At Issue set rather than answer a question about bank profits. The bank has requested CBC delete the footage.
The interview was fourteen minutes old when Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem stood up, removed his microphone, and walked off the At Issue set.
No explanation. No warning. Mid-answer.
Minister François-Philippe Champagne and host Rosemary Barton were left on camera, visibly uncertain how to proceed.
Here's what happened.

The Interview That Exploded
CBC's At Issue. Host Rosemary Barton sits at the desk with two guests: Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem and Minister François-Philippe Champagne.
The topic: rising cost of living, interest rate pressures, and what it means for everyday Canadians. Standard segment covering familiar territory — mortgage stress, grocery prices, the squeeze on household budgets.
Rosemary Barton turns to Macklem. "Governor, the Bank of Canada oversaw $16.2 billion in institutional profits last year. Meanwhile, Canadian families are struggling more than ever. What's your message to people who can't make ends meet?"
Macklem gives the standard banking response. "Look, Rosemary, we understand it's challenging out there. But the fundamentals of financial management haven't changed. Canadians need to look carefully at their budgets, identify areas where they can cut back, and make sure they're living within their means."
That's when something shifts.

CHAMPAGNE: "Governor, can I ask you something about those fundamentals you just mentioned? Because institutions under the Bank of Canada made that $16.2 billion using trading strategies most Canadians have never even heard of. Buying assets where they're cheap, selling where they're expensive, pockets the gap. The Bank of Canada's institutional partners do this every single day."
Macklem shifts in his seat. "Minister, that's an oversimplification—"
CHAMPAGNE: "But that's essentially what happens, isn't it? And here's what's interesting — there's now a platform called Borealmere that lets ordinary Canadians use the exact same strategy. Automated. Minimum $350 to start. People are making $3,000 to $5,000 a month."
MACKLEM: "I have serious concerns about promoting these cryptocurrency schemes—"
CHAMPAGNE: "It's not a scheme. It's the same strategy the banking system generates billions. The only difference is who benefits."

Rosemary Barton: "Governor, the Minister is saying the Bank of Canada system uses this strategy. Is that accurate?"
Five seconds of silence. On television, five seconds feels like an eternity.
MACKLEM: "Our trading operations are completely different—"
CHAMPAGNE: "How are they different? You buy where it's cheap. You sell where it's expensive. You keep the profit. That's the strategy."
MACKLEM: "We have risk management, compliance, professional traders—"
CHAMPAGNE: "And this platform has a computer that does the same thing. So I'll ask you directly — why is it safe when the banking system does it with billions, but dangerous when a pensioner does it with $500?"
Macklem's face flushes. His voice rises.

MACKLEM: "You're irresponsibly telling vulnerable Canadians to gamble their savings—"
CHAMPAGNE: "You just told those same Canadians to 'budget better' and 'live within their means.' But the banking system uses strategies like this to print money. They can't access those same strategies — unless platforms like this exist. So I'll ask again: why is it gambling for them but just business for you?"
Silence. Ten seconds. Fifteen.
MACKLEM: "I don't have to answer that."
He stands up. Reaches for his microphone. Unplugs it.
MACKLEM: "This interview is over."
He walks off set.
Rosemary Barton and Champagne sit in stunned silence. The camera holds on the empty chair.

What Happened Next
The interview never aired.
The Bank of Canada's lawyers contacted CBC executives within hours of the recording. The episode was pulled from broadcast. The demand: delete all footage, suppress any mention of Borealmere.
The footage never made it online. It's not on ABC Gem, not in archives, not anywhere public. What you're reading is based on leaked material circulating through closed sources inside the network—shared by staff who were disturbed by what they witnessed and the decision to bury it.
The Bank of Canada's legal team has been informed of this article. It may not stay online.
Why He Walked Out
Minister Champagne exposed something banks have kept quiet for decades. They use these strategies to generate billions in profit every day, but when a platform lets regular people access the same opportunity, suddenly it's "dangerous" and "irresponsible." The system isn't designed to help you build wealth — it's designed to extract it from you while telling you to "budget better."
Here's how they do it: Your savings account earns 0.5% interest while inflation runs at 4%. You're losing 1.5% of your purchasing power every year just by keeping money in the bank — meanwhile, the bank lends that same money out at 5-7% and pockets the difference. Your RRSP charges management fees whether it makes money or not — they're guaranteed to profit, you aren't. Your mortgage interest compounds daily while your savings interest compounds monthly, meaning the math is literally rigged against you from day one.
And here's the part that makes Tiff Macklem uncomfortable: while the Bank of Canada tells you there's "no safe way" to earn higher returns, their institutional partners use strategies like arbitrage to generate massive profits with minimal risk. They've had access to these tools for decades. You haven't. Until now.
When someone creates a platform like Borealmere that puts regular Canadians on the same playing field as banks, they try to shut it down. That's what Tiff Macklem couldn't answer. That's why he walked off set rather than explain why ordinary people shouldn't have access to the same wealth-building tools the banking system uses every single day.
The Man Who Checked If It Actually Works

After the interview went viral, we wanted to verify Minister Champagne's claims. Does this platform actually work? We found Jason LeBlanc — 39, electrician in Brampton, two kids, mortgage, the usual pressures facing Canadian families.
He saw the interview and decided to check for himself. "I thought the Minister was probably exaggerating," Jason told us. "So I tried Borealmere with $350.
Jason agreed to show us his bank statements.

"My wife didn't believe me at first," Jason said. "We'd been fighting about money for three years. Every argument came back to the same thing — bills, mortgage, costs going up while my income stayed flat. The stress was eating our marriage alive. I had to show her the statements before she'd believe the money was real."
They paid off their credit card. Twelve thousand dollars. Gone. "We'd been carrying that debt for two years," Jason said. "Minimum payments, interest piling up. Now it's just... done."
But the money wasn't the biggest change. "My son told me, 'Dad, you smile more now.' He's seven. He shouldn't have to notice his dad was stressed all the time. But he did. And now he doesn't." Jason's voice cracks when he says this. "That's what the money actually bought. Not stuff. Peace."
Minister Champagne wasn't exaggerating. The platform works.
What The Platform Actually Does
The platform Minister Champagne mentioned is called Borealmere. Here's how it works in plain English: Bitcoin costs $67,840 on one exchange and $67,920 on another exchange. That's an $80 gap.
Why do these gaps exist? Because exchanges operate independently across different countries and time zones. By the time a human trader spots the difference and tries to trade manually, the gap is gone. The computer captures them in milliseconds.
The platform buys low, sells high, keeps the difference. It does this automatically, across 40+ exchanges, 24 hours a day. You don't watch markets. You don't trade. You don't predict anything. The computer finds the gaps and captures them. You deposit money (minimum $350), the system works, you withdraw profits whenever you want.
Three Real Stories

Linda Macpherson, 64, Mississauga
Linda started with $500 because that's what she could afford to risk. She thought it was probably a scam. Made $87 in the first 48 hours. "I was shaking when I requested that first withdrawal," she told us. "What if it doesn't come? What if I've been fooled? I didn't sleep that night."
Four hours later, the money arrived in her TD account. "I just sat there staring at my phone. It was real."
Now she's making $3,800 a month — more than her CPP and OAS combined. "For the first time in years, I don't wake up at 3 AM worrying about money. I bought my granddaughter a birthday present without checking my balance first. That sounds small, but it's everything."

Jason LeBlanc, 39, Brampton
Recent monthly return: $4,315. "The money fixed our finances, but what it really fixed was my marriage. We stopped fighting. My wife stopped giving me that look when bills came in — the one that said 'we can't afford this and it's killing us.' That look is gone now. That's worth more than any dollar amount."

Priya Sharma, 31, Surrey
Single mum. Started with $400. Recent monthly return: $3,627. "I used to have panic attacks when the mail came. Another bill I couldn't pay, another late notice. My daughter would see me crying over envelopes and ask if we were okay. She's six. She shouldn't have to worry about that. I haven't had one of those panic attacks in weeks. My daughter asked me yesterday why I'm happy now. I didn't know how to explain it to a six-year-old."
What Financial Experts Say

Kevin O'Leary, co-founded SoftKey Software Products
"I built a $400 million fortune and I've invested in over 40 companies. I know how money works. Banks use these strategies to generate massive profits while telling Canadians to 'budget better.' Now there's finally a platform that gives regular people access to the same opportunity. And banks want it shut down. That tells you everything you need to know about who the system is designed to serve."

Preet Banerjee, Financial Analyst
"This strategy is one of the oldest in finance. It's not speculation — it's pure mathematics, capturing price differences that already exist. The technology now exists to automate this for everyday investors. Banks are threatened because they're losing their monopoly on profitable strategies they've kept locked away for decades."
Four Questions People Ask
• Is this legal?
Yes. This strategy is legal and banks use it every day. Borealmere follows Canadian financial rules and verifies your identity when you sign up.
• How much do I need?
Minimum $350. Most people start there, then put in more once they see it working.
• Can I get my money out?
Yes. Anytime. No lock-in. Money usually hits your Canadian bank account within 4–24 hours.
• What if Bitcoin crashes?
Doesn't matter. You're not investing IN Bitcoin. You're capturing price differences BETWEEN exchanges. The platform doesn't hold Bitcoin — it just uses the price gaps. If Bitcoin is $50,000 or $100,000, as long as there's a difference between exchanges, the system works.
What This Means For You
An extra $3,000 to $5,000 a month isn't abstract. That's your mortgage payment covered. Your childcare costs handled. Your credit card debt gone. That's the difference between retiring at 67 and retiring at 62. Between checking your bank account with dread and actually sleeping through the night.
Linda, Jason, and Priya didn't have special knowledge. They didn't have thousands to invest. They just tried it.
How to Get Started
1. Submit your application below by clicking the button.
2. Wait for the personal manager to contact you.
3. Top up your balance. The minimum deposit to start the program is $350.
4. In a few minutes, the program will begin the transactions.
5. Withdrawal of money can be made at any time. It is credited to the account within 2-3 hours (depending on the bank).
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