Garry Clement has been investigating crimes in Canada for half a century. And no one does it better. Now, in his latest book, ""Canada Under Siege: How Prince Edward Island (PEI) became a Forward Operation Base for the CCP,"" he and his co-author Michel Juneau Katsuya, turn a light on what might be the seminal crime of Clément's outstanding career - Chinese infiltration and the threat Beijing poses to Canada's democracy. Their message could not be more clear. This danger is real. And Canadians ignore it at their peril. - Jeffrey Robinson, author of The Laundrymen Canada Under Siege is a must-read for anyone who cares about the sanctity of democracy, religion, and culture. These are pillars of the free world, but, for the Chinese Communist Party, nothing is sacrosanct except the Party itself. Neither religion nor Canada's beloved Anne of Green Gables is shielded from exploitation. This book reveals what happens when those we entrust to defend our institutions and culture fail to do so and then underlines the consequences of their failure on everyday citizens who lose their land, their homes, their prosperity, their freedom to worship, and their values to a foreign adversary."" - Kevin Vuong, Former Canadian Member of Parliament and Senior Fellow at The Macdonald-Laurier Institute My grandparents are Islanders and I've spent every summer of my life on the Island so it is etched in my heart. I found this book very enlightening and also concerning. It seems that the so-called Buddhist organization has flouted the strict land ownership rules by having each monk and nun buy the maximum 5 acres land for foreigners on the east coast of the Island - even though monks are not supposed to own property. Children of PLA officers and CCP officials are being trained in their schools so the parents can buy land. Islanders are being strongarmed with bags of cash to sell property that's been in their families for generations. Why do CCP officials want waterfront property on the east coast of the Island? An inquiry is needed. Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, Senior Fellow, University of Ottawa