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Indian Residential School denialism is a tool to silence dissent

 
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Close to 2000 people wearing orange shirts joined a walk in Sydney this past Canada Day to show support for residential school survivors and victims. FILE Photo by Ardelle Reynolds /Ardelle Reynolds

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By James Pew

The villainous leader of the British Columbia conservatives, John Rustad, has struck again. Readers of this newsletter will remember last March when he ousted then conservative critic to the attorney general, Dallas Brodie, after she stood up for lawyer Jim Heller and mocked the alternate truths of social justice activists (i.e. your truth, my truth). Rustad, not wanting to defend free speech or broadly held conservative views, claimed disingenuously that Brodie’s words and tone were offensive to “survivors” of Indian residential schools, and removed her from the conservative caucus. Brodie has since launched a new provincial party called OneBC.

This time around, Rustad the Regrettable has fired Lindsay Shepherd from her communications staffer role following a post she published to X regarding Orange Shirt Day, from her personal profile on her personal time:

The orange shirt and the orange flag perpetuate untruths about Canadian history, such as the grandest lie of all that 215 children’s graves were unearthed in Kamloops.

It is a disgrace that this fake flag flies in front of the provincial parliament buildings, and it is a disgrace to see the shirt of lies framed prominently and permanently beside the coat of arms so that locals and tourists cannot view our insignia without having their eye drawn and redirected to the orange shirt.

I could not agree more with this sentiment! And I commend Lindsay Shepherd for having the principles, courage, and intelligence to express it publicly!

Although, in Canada, speaking ones conservative or Christian principles can be extremely costly. Shepherd is 32 weeks pregnant and was expecting to go on maternity leave in a few weeks. The callousness and apparent tone deaf quality of Rustad’s actions has made many conservatives furious across the country. Aren’t conservatives supposed to be the ones who support families?

But even if Shepherd wasn’t expecting a child and reliant on mat-leave benefits now denied her, Rustad so rapidly folding under political pressure, and throwing another strong intelligent conservative woman under the bus, is outrageous and unforgivable. Conservatives must have strength and principles and clearly Rustad has neither.

I included Shepherd’s story from 2017 involving Wilfrid Laurier University in my book-in-progress, What Happened To Canada? (section not yet published). A source I drew from was Shepherd’s own book written about what ended up being a national controversy. Diversity and Exclusion: Confronting the Campus Free Speech Crisis is an excellent examination of the excesses of woke authoritarianism happening at Canadian universities. In a nutshell, Shepherd, who at the time was a teaching assistant, showed a brief video clip of a Steve Paikin interview of controversial public figure Jordan Peterson. They were discussing the gender identity issue of pronouns, which was at the time a fairly new, and for most people, perplexing issue. The Diversity department at the university manufactured a complaint in order to censure Shepherd and enforce social justice orthodoxy — which doesn’t like outspoken figures like Jordan Peterson, or allow for debate on pronouns or any other social justice tenets.

In Canada, one area where the excesses of the social justice paradigm are obvious on the surface, and substantiated by evidence underneath, is all things First Nations. The country is going crazy over Truth and Reconciliation. The entire thing has been tainted by the Kamloops mass grave hoax. If what is called “reconciliation” is ever going to have a chance at achieving anything positive, the 215 so-called unmarked graves, or more recently “soil anomalies,” in the Kamloops apple orchard must be excavated. And that is just a start. For reconciliation to work, Canadians, including the Left, the media, political leaders, aboriginal leaders, and regular aboriginal people, must stop acting like they can talk over or dismiss people who disagree with them.

And further, the concept of Indian Residential School denialism needs to be rolled up into a tight cone-like shape and launched into outer space. Preferably, in the direction of the sun. It needs to disappear forever, and people who bring it up need to be scorned caustically. No one can or should have monopolistic control over historiography or historical research of any kind. So sit down you self-anointed equity-deserving clowns, because no lasting knowledge or history is ever going to be produced in the fashion you would like. Be good little Leftists and start participating in a non-revolutionary democratic society with liberal values like free-speech and freedom of intellectual/historical inquiry.

Readers of this newsletter know that I am contributing authour to the best-selling book, Grave Error: How the Media Misled Us (and the Truth about Residential Schools). On Tuesday, Michelle Good, the author of the fiction novel “Five Little Indians,” wrote an op-ed for the Toronto Star in which she claimed Grave Error was a “vitriolic and hateful diatribe denying the truth about residential schools and the intergenerational harms they caused, was self-published by a gaggle of hard-core denialists, determined to shore up the myth that residential schools were well-intentioned, abuses suffered there exaggerated or fabricated and that intergenerational harms do not exist.”

One of the books co-editors, Professor Tom Flanagan (the other is Chris Champion) was interviewed by journalist Clayton DeMaine, giving him the opportunity to set the record straight. In a piece for True North Wire, DeMaine describes the work as “a scholarly book debunking media claims about supposed unmarked mass graves.”

Professor Flanagan has challenged Good to a debate. She is welcomed to point out where there may be flaws in the evidence or reasoning used by the more than dozen authors who contributed to Grave Error. Further, Professor Flanagan explained that,

Grave Error is fully documented, with 800 footnotes. The book was published by True North; it was not self-published, nor was it rejected by the publishing industry. We chose True North because we wanted to release it quickly to counter what we saw as misinformation. As for the claim that it is a ‘vitriolic and hateful diatribe’—I’d like to see examples of what she considers vitriolic and hateful. It’s difficult to comment without specifics. Many readers and reviewers have said the book’s tone is measured and factual.

Conservatives, and intelligent principled Canadians, are going to continue challenging the Kamloops claim and the premise of Truth and Reconciliation. We just are! If it is made criminal to do this, a greater desire to do more of it will emerge. The truth cannot be suppressed. Not the truth of Canadian history and cultural heritage, including the truth of fruitful cooperative relations between settlers and aboriginals over more than a century of fur-trading in early Canada, nor the truth of Indian Residential Schools and colonialism. It is not denialism to argue that many of the claims associated with Indian Residential Schools, claims which are parroted by media and political leaders, are false or exaggerated. And it is not denialism to argue that colonialism was a net-benefit to both aboriginal and non-aboriginal Canadians. These are valid opinions supported by research, if you don’t like these opinions because there is something wrong with the research, then point it out. Otherwise, you are going to need to learn to STFU, there is nothing else left for you or anyone else when it comes to truth and free speech and being decent by not dehumanizing those whose opinions cause anger (warranted or otherwise).

There is also nothing nefarious, racist, fascist, bigoted, wrong-headed, silly, misguided, or disingenuous about white Anglo or Franco Canadians who know history, and consult with others who also know history, and conclude that the mainstream narrative surrounding Orange Shirts and residential schools doesn’t add up. Debate them, don’t hate them. Don’t call them denialists and try to silence them. Look in the mirror, look inside yourselves Rosie, examine the evidence brought forward which challenges convention. Don’t gaslight, don’t call others denialists, while you deny their evidence, arguments and humanity.

Turning to Professor Frances Widdowson who was recently assaulted while trying to discuss the veracity of the Kamloops claim with students and the public at the University of Winnipeg. Thankfully many reels of video footage were captured so the extent of the breakdown of civilization that took place on campus has been well documented. During the chaos the police were called but never came. Disgracefully, one of the activists who assaulted Professor Widdowson was later seen smiling with Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew. There had been calls on social media for Kinew to apologize to Professor Widdowson for what happened at the University of Winnipeg, however, the photo below illustrates an apology from Kinew is unlikely, as is one from the Chief of the Winnipeg police.

To echo the words of Professor Widdowson, “Wake Up” people. Canada is really going through it. It is obvious where the source of the division and animosity is coming from. Obvious, that is, to anyone not yet riddled with the guilt-virus of Truth and Reconciliation or manipulative tear-jerking Orange Shirt and Red Dress propaganda. The source of all of this nonsense is the Left and everything that is Leftism, including everything that concerns Orange shirts and (un)Truth and Reconciliation.

To be clear, what is dividing Canadians operates under the broad banner of social justice. It is a Leftist social revolution that is upending social cohesion. Where aboriginal issues are concerned, we see it in Land Acknowledgements and “Land Back,” the illiberal Universal Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People (or DRIPA as it is expressed in B.C. law), Gladue Sentencing guidelines (giving lesser sentences to aboriginal criminals because they are aboriginal), aboriginal gangs and repeat offenders out on bail, unending aboriginal dependence, misappropriation of Canadian taxpayer funds by the billions to service unsustainable, totally dependent, isolated, often dangerous aboriginal reserves, and so much more.

Hearing over and over again about historical wrongs committed by European land-thieving settlers against peaceful, honest, blameless aboriginals, is enough to drive any Canadian who isn’t a historically illiterate unprincipled twit up the wall. Why is there never any thanks extended for the benefits of civilization? Every single aboriginal person in Canada benefits from Western civilization, yet I have never heard a word of awe expressed by an aboriginal about the achievements of the West, or about how aboriginals now live much longer, more fruitful, and peaceful lives then they ever did before contact with Europeans. They no longer get hacked to death by warring tribes, they no longer die from communicable diseases with no vaccines, they no longer starve. There is little appreciation shown for what Westerners have done to lift them out of forms of suffering associated with primitive cultures. And there is no appreciation of the achievement of Western civilization, and never a good or positive word spoken about how aboriginals have benefited from it.

It’s all blame and resentment. The onus is entirely on the side of the non-aboriginals — the “settlers” who pays the bills for a dependent aboriginal population— to adjust, appease, reconcile and accommodate. There is never any talk of aboriginal responsibility. Aboriginals are not blamed for anything, their present circumstances are entirely the fault of the other. What a sad and twisted state of affairs, one that is sure to keep aboriginals dependent, despairing, angry at the majority of Canadians, marginalized, and disconnected from the modern world. Just keep feeding them Truth and Reconciliation agit-prop, and donning the ridiculous orange shirts, and the suffering of the aboriginals, the suffering used by the grifters to extract and misappropriate tax dollars, will perpetuate and expand indefinitely.

A final comment on the lack of political leaders in Canada who criticized Orange Shirt Day. Dallas Brodie as usual has been excellent. She is a force to be reckoned with. She really deserves her own post, so I will wait until then to expand. But in short, she is a warrior who is highly critical of what she calls the “Truth and Reconciliation industry.”

Maxime Bernier, leader of the Peoples Party of Canada, was blunt and honest in his comments regarding Orange Shirt Day. This was not the first time Maxime Bernier has been the soul leader of a federal party to openly criticize the aboriginal industry. He is, quite simply, the only leader of a national party who dares stand up to the dreaded aboriginal lobby. How is that even possible? Canadian conservative leaders across the board have failed the country in this regard. Hopefully some of them will read this, and follow Bernier’s example. This is how it’s done. From X:

On this “National Day for Truth and Reconciliation,” let’s remember that no bodies were found, that the residential schools “genocide” is a hoax, and that reconciliation requires an end to the bs, the victim mentality, the fake white guilt, and the grifting based on it.

Why is that so hard? My best guess is that there are several reasons, lack of principles and cowardice being the big ones. Not surprisingly, Bernier could not escape persecution from the authoritarian Orange Shirts. Assembly of First Nations (AFN) Chief Woodhouse-Nepinak called the cops on him. She wants Bernier arrested for Indian residential school denialism.

I could not approve more of the manner in which Bernier has responded to this obvious attempt to silence his dissenting views. From X:

Chief Woodhouse-Nepinak reacts like typical petty tyrants who think they can use state coercion to shut down political opponents and people they disagree with.

Nothing I wrote can be considered hate crime under current Canadian law — at least until new censorship laws are adopted by the Carney government.

Everything I wrote is true. No bodies were actually found in Kamloops since the 2021 announcement that the remains of 215 “missing children” had been found. There was no genocide.

And does the chief really believe the police can arrest me because I mentioned the bs surrounding this issue, the fake white guilt and the grifting based on it?! Is she against freedom of expression? She’s clearly not fit to be a national leader.

It’s obvious that chief Woodhouse-Nepinak doesn’t care about truth and reconciliation. What she wants is to ban *any* questioning of the narrative that would threaten the flow of billions of tax dollars from Ottawa.”

Bold. Truthful. And correct, especially about the billions of tax dollars. Truth and Reconciliation is a parasitic rent-seeking grift, that is meant to endlessly extract tax-payer funds from the government, while distracting from the very real and serious problems of the poorest and most isolated aboriginal Canadians. From the perspective of those who profit, they have found the perfect grift. The distraction away from the real problems faced by marginalized aboriginals ensures that those problems are never addressed. If they were addressed the source of the grift would disappear.

So suffer on and long, perhaps forever, you most poor and powerless aboriginal people of Canada. Your leaders need bigger mansions and their universities need entirely new buildings constructed for privileged aboriginal students. Not you though, you poor and isolated ones. These mansions and aboriginal student centers are quite lavish and expensive and the neo-tribal elites have big plans to build more of them. You can sit on your reserves, and eek out your simple lives. They will speak often of your suffering at committee meetings where influential decision makers will be so moved as to grant generous bursaries to fuel more construction, orange shirts and Truth and Reconciliation. And of course expenses related to all the things being indigenized will need to be covered. And don’t forget we have unmarked graves to find with our ground penetrating radar machines, all very important and costly work that I’m sure you would agree, or perhaps not, is worth the price of your misery.

Wake up people, civilization in Canada is on the brink of disaster, marginalized aboriginals are left to languish in poverty while others grift off their despair. It is nothing short of third world level corruption and cruelty. Tax payers foot the bill. It’s theft of billions annually from the public purse. Everyone loses except for the grifting rent-seekers of the aboriginal industry. Maxime Bernier and Dallas Brodie cannot be the only Canadian politicians who are getting things right on this. Where are the principled leaders with back-bone and boldness?

I leave you with an image for your nightmares:

Image
Social Justice Indoctrination of children is accomplished in a variety of ways. On Truth and Reconciliation day they all where orange shirts. Also notice the Black Lives Matter and Pride Flags displayed prominently at the front of the indoctrination center. Image via Chanel Pfahl

Woman Who Called Her Assailant A “Faggot” Dragged From Bathtub & Charged By Woke British Cops

International

11 UK cops storm home, drag naked woman from bath— her crime? One text calling her attacker a slur

Merseyside Police defended deploying 11 officers as ‘proportionate’ for public protection

A woman in UK being arrested for a supposed hate crime

A woman in UK being arrested for a supposed hate crimeGrok

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Elizabeth Kinney, a 34-year-old single mother of four from Tranmere, Merseyside, was dragged naked from her bathtub last month when 11 police officers – ten men and one woman – burst into her home to arrest her.

Her crime? While recovering in hospital from a fractured skull and serious injuries inflicted by a male acquaintance, Kinney sent private text messages to a former friend that included the word “faggot” to describe her attacker.

The recipient reported the messages as “grossly offensive.”

On 20 November, Kinney pleaded guilty at Sefton Magistrates’ Court to sending a malicious communication aggravated by homophobic hate. She was fined £364, given a community order and forced to apologise in open court.

No charges have been brought against the man who assaulted her. Appearing on Piers Morgan Uncensored, Kinney described the raid as “terrifying and humiliating.”

Merseyside Police defended deploying 11 officers as “proportionate” for public protection.

MUST WATCH: FREE SPEECH TRAMPLED BY STUDENT RED GUARDS & ADMIN AT UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA

MUST WATCH: FREE SPEECH TRAMPLED BY STUDENT RED GUARDS & ADMIN AT UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA

* Rebel news reports Prof. Frances Widdowson arrested for trying to speak in campus quad for questioning the 215 Kamloops graves story

* Blonde student who supports free speech has mike seized from her and is shoved away

* Smoke bomb thrown at blind man

* Middle aged free speech supporter assaulted by masked thug; cops do nothing

* Red guards blow smoke in free speech supporters’ faces

Legal Witchcraft and Victimhood Inversion

Legal Witchcraft and Victimhood Inversion

December 6, 2025/0 Comments/in Featured ArticlesFree Speech/by Tom Sunic, Ph.D.

Honoré Daumier (1808–1879), Two Lawyers Conversing

Despite the commendable efforts of President Donald Trump and Secretary Marco Rubio to alert the American public to the rising tide of free-speech suppression in the EU, Soviet-style legal practices in certain segments of the EU judiciary remain very much alive and kicking. Let us be clear: The Second World War has never really ended; it has merely entered a prolonged verbal conflict, potentially on track to assume again violent and war-like dimensions.

The latest case is that of Martin Pfeiffer, former Austrian editor of the now defunct literary magazine Die Aula, who was sentenced on December 3 of this year to four years in prison for “re-engagement in National Socialist activities” under Paragraph 3g of the Prohibition Act (Verbotsgesetz). The magazine  rarely dealt with ideological subjects, focusing instead on cultural themes and the idea of empire—topics closely associated with the conservative party in Austria, the FPÖ.

What is striking is that the laws under which Pfeiffer was indicted—particularly Paragraph 3g of the Prohibition Act (Verbotsgesetz), enacted in 1947—date from the period when Austria was still under the joint occupation of the four Allied powers: the Soviet Union, United States, United Kingdom, and France. Moreover, Pfeiffer was prosecuted retroactively for articles he had published between 2005 and 2018—in some cases more than fifteen years earlier. The judiciary in the city  of Graz  simply brushed aside both the statute of limitations and the principle of nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege (“no crime, no punishment without prior law”). The highly abstract, almost untranslatable compound nouns of German/Austrian legal jargon—Wiederbetätigung (“re-engagement”), Volksverhetzung (“incitement to hatred of the people”), etc., defy precise rendering into English, which only adds to their opacity when viewed through the lens of an American lawyer.

Pfeiffer’s case demonstrates that any dissident author—regardless of his political persuasion or nationality—can be subjected to ex post facto prosecution if the ruling class deems him a nuisance. This tactic of selectively targeting “enemies of the people” was a standard tool of the judiciary throughout former communist Eastern Europe.

In passing, it is worth noting that Pfeiffer’s trial bears a striking resemblance to the many show trials of communist Yugoslavia. In 1984, my late father, a Catholic conservative and former attorney, was sentenced to four years in prison for “hostile propaganda” under Article 133 of the Yugoslav Criminal Code (neprijateljska propaganda, YU-KZ). He had written anonymous critical articles for the London-based Croatian émigré bi-weekly Nova Hrvatska, exposing the communist regime’s harsh repression of the Croatian Catholic Church and culture. He was subsequently adopted as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International and championed by U.S. Congressman Tom Lantos, Senator Bob Dole, and several other conservative politicians and journalists, among them Pat Buchanan.

There is a far more scary dimension to Pfeiffer’s story. After 1945, both the United States and the nations of Europe were compelled to adopt the model of the “proposition nation”—an abstract political community defined not by historical continuity, race or shared culture, but by universalist, immigrant-welcoming, open-entry-for-all principles. The mass influx of non-European migrants into the EU over the past decade was therefore entirely predictable: it was the logical, even deliberate, outcome of the post-war Allied strategy to suppress Europe’s historic interethnic tensions by diluting the cultural and racial homogeneity of its peoples. Likewise, the introduction of the Schengen open-border regime in 1985 (fully implemented in the 1990s) was perfectly in accordance  with the liberal-capitalist dogma of the “free movement of people and capital.”

Germany was particularly affected by these capitalist open-border policies. As the late German legal scholar Günther Maschke observed, “The German people had to adapt to the constitution, instead of the constitution being adapted to the German people.” German constitutionalism, he continued, has become a kind of “civil religion” in which multiculturalism has replaced traditional national identity with a purely legal construct—what Maschke called an imaginary “Basic Law country.” When this is combined with the quasi-sacralized, unquestionable historical narrative of the Holocaust, the result is a birth of a political entity that should be seen as a “secular theocracy.” Within this framework, the only form of patriotism still tolerated in Germany and Austria is Verfassungspatriotismus—constitutional patriotism.(1)

Victimhood Inversion

Today, core elements of the German and Austrian Criminal Code function in some ways reminiscent of former Soviet criminal law. Germany and Austria must demonstrate, daily, that they can meet their “self-re-education tasks” even more rigorously than its post-WWII mentors. Comparable dynamics exist in other EU member states, where semantic drifts have turned the charges of fascism into an all-purpose label of the ultimate cosmic evil.

Despite the phenomenal rise of right-wing parties across the EU, many judicial institutions—both in Europe and in the United States—remain largely staffed by judges and prosecutors from the post-1968 Marxist-inspired “boomer” generation, along with various former left-wing Antifa activists, modern SJWs and virtue-signalers (2). These judges and prosecutors make little effort to conceal their hatred (and fear) of Trump, while also displaying open hostility toward right-wing populist movements and parties such as the growing AfD in Germany or the FPÖ in Austria. In addition, a network of influential and wealthy non-governmental organizations across Europe, such as the CRIF and LICRA in France, the Amadeu Antonio Stiftung in Germany, and the hard-left DÖW in Austria—operate in a manner comparable to U.S. advocacy groups such as the  ADL or the SPLC. Their primary function, very similar to that of the old Soviet people’s commissariats, is to monitor academics, journalists, and public figures suspected of non-liberal ideological transgressions. German nationalists derisively label such snitching NGO outfits Gutmenschen (“do-gooders”); their French counterparts are called bien-pensants. In plain English, these so-called NGOs represent the academic thought police.

Most worrisome, however, is the climate of fear-induced self-censorship among European academics. Many believe that by remaining apolitical, silent and not rocking the boat they will best safeguard their careers and perks—a grave illusion long disproven by dissidents in the former communist countries of East Europe.  Sooner or later the thought police will show up on their doorstep regardless of how mute they were in their former political activities.

In the contemporary West, there is no need for gulags or firing squads given that more sophisticated methods of repression have become far more effective: deplatforming, debanking, or even worse, what the French call l’inversion accusatoire—the “reversal of the accusation.” Broadly speaking, this means “victimhood inversion”, a technique once common in the communist judiciary of East Europe: to cover up one’s own mega crimes, one accuses the opposing side of even greater crimes. The dynamic of mutual victimhood inversion is visible today in the conflict between the Hamas and IDF with many more to come shortly.

Many of the legal and rhetorical tactics recently deployed against President Trump were pioneered decades ago in the multi-ethnic Soviet Union and throughout the formerly communist Eastern Europe. Consequently, European prosecutors and media outlets eagerly reach for the same communist shut-up nouns—“Nazi,” “Ustasha,” “antisemite,” “white supremacist,” “racist”—in order to dehumanize political dissenters, while almost never mentioning the millions who perished under communist regimes between 1945 and 1950. President Trump is surely well aware of these legal and semantic shifts having himself endured similar “lawfare” waged and  staged by his domestic enemies. The long-term outcome of this judicial parody in both the EU and the United States is entirely predictable: growing mutual distrust, escalating interracial and interethnic conflict, institutional breakdown, and, ultimately, the collapse of the System.


Notes:

  1. Günther Maschke, Das bewaffnete Wort (Wien und Leipzig: Karolinger Verlag, 1997), p.74.
  2. Alain de Benoist, “Die Methoden der Neuen Inquisition,” in Schöne vernetzte Welt (Tübingen: Hohenrain Verlag, 2001), p. 190–205.

Canada’s Two-Tier Justice System

Canada’s Two-Tier Justice System

Why are Law-Abiding Canadians Punished While Actual Criminals Walk Free

Michael Bator
 
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Canada is not simply “off track.”
It is developing a two-tier justice system — one harshly punishing the peaceful, law-abiding citizen, while turning a blind eye to violent criminals and politically inconvenient offenders.

The government’s priorities are not your safety.
Their priorities are control, optics, and narrative management.

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And every new incident — every headline — confirms it.


Part I — The Government’s War on Law-Abiding Canadians

While crime rises across the country, the Trudeau government is laser-focused on one group:

legal gun owners.

Bill C-21 — The Handgun Freeze

Bill C-21 froze the sale, purchase, and transfer of handguns.
Overnight, millions of responsible, vetted Canadians were told:

“You may never buy or sell a handgun again. Your property is now trapped.”

Only existing owners can possess them.
No new generations can enter the sport.
The culture is being choked out intentionally.

The Arbitrary Rifle Bans

First, the AR-15.
Then hundreds of other rifles and shotguns.

Now the Liberals are openly rumbling about banning the SKS and other common hunting rifles relied on by farmers, rural communities, and northern families.

This wasn’t about crime.
It was about disarmament.

The most vetted people in the country — PAL holders — are treated as ticking time bombs, while real criminals laugh at Ottawa’s theatrics.


Part II — When Criminals Do It, Government Looks Away

Here is where Canada’s justice system breaks down entirely.

When ordinary Canadians make a mistake, enforcement is instant.

But when actual criminals put the public in danger, enforcement is slow, hesitant, or nonexistent.


Case 1 — Illegal Shooting on a Public Bridge (Huntsville / Georgian Bay)

Videos circulated widely showing a group of men firing rifles from a snowmobile trail bridge:

  • multiple shots into the water
  • bridge rails struck
  • property damage
  • dangerous discharge near trails

The OPP appealed for help.
The videos are clear.
The faces are clear.
The actions are reckless.

And yet — weeks passed with no swift arrests, no press conferences, no national outrage.

The media had no problem plastering the faces of peaceful protesters across the country for honking horns —
but actual gunfire off a public bridge barely got a shrug.

If a licensed hunter or sport shooter fired a single round illegally, he’d lose his PAL, his property, and maybe his freedom.

But this?
Silence — except from the public.


Case 2 — Caught With a Loaded Handgun… and the Charges Vanish

In one recent high-profile case, a man

was found in possession of a loaded handgun — the kind of offence that, for any ordinary Canadian gun owner, would mean:

  • years in prison,
  • a lifetime firearms ban,
  • and their name smeared across the media.

Instead, something very different happened.

Crown prosecutors withdrew all the gun charges after a self-defense narrative was raised. The Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights (CCFR) highlighted the case publicly, pointing out how astonishing it is that someone caught with a loaded illegal handgun can walk away with no firearms conviction at all, while licensed owners are destroyed over paperwork and technicalities. instagram.com+1

Ask yourself:

  • Would a licensed PAL holder ever get that kind of mercy?
  • Would a farmer, hunter, or sport shooter caught with a loaded restricted firearm get charges dropped like that?
  • Or would they be thrown under the bus as an example, to “send a message”?

This is exactly what a two-tier justice system looks like:

  • If you are a vetted, law-abiding gun owner: mandatory minimums, seizures, lifetime bans.
  • If you’re in a politically sensitive situation with an illegal loaded handgun: the state suddenly discovers “nuance” and “context.”

The government calls C-21 and their bans “common sense gun control.”
What we’re actually seeing is selective gun enforcement — brutal on the peaceful, strangely gentle on the truly dangerous.


Case 3 — Homeowner Defends Against Crossbow Intruder… and HE Gets Charged

A homeowner is confronted by an armed intruder wielding a crossbow.
In his own home.
On his own property.
Defending his own life.

A fight breaks out.
The intruder is injured.

And guess who stands trial?

Not the attacker.
Not the armed criminal.

The homeowner.

Canada’s justice system now treats self-defense as more suspicious than criminal aggression.


Case 4 — Antifa Rampages in Montreal, No Consequences

Businesses smashed.
Downtown vandalized.
Streets blocked.
Police assaulted.

Arrests? Minimal.
Charges? Rare.
Political outrage? None.

But peaceful protesters in Ottawa?
They were beaten, trampled by horses, and financially crippled through account freezes.

Two-tier justice.


Case 5 — Single Mothers Had Bank Accounts Frozen for Donating $20

During the Convoy, the Trudeau government weaponized financial institutions:

  • seized bank accounts
  • froze insurance
  • threatened employment
  • blacklisted donors

Meanwhile, officials openly admit they’ve “given up” trying to recover billions in CERB and COVID fraud because it would be too hard.

The state hunts the innocent and ignores the guilty.


Case 6 — Daniel Senecal: Raped and Nearly Murdered a 3-Year-Old Girl

After Serving Only 12 Months for Sexually Assaulting a 12-Year-Old BoyIn March 2024, Daniel Senecal was sentenced to just 18 months in jail for sexually assaulting a sleeping 12-year-old boy and choking him. He walked free after only 12 months thanks to Canada’s automatic statutory release rules.Five months later — August 30–31, 2025 — the registered sex offender broke into a Welland home through a bedroom window and committed a horrific, hours-long sexual assault on a 3-year-old girl. He choked her unconscious to silence her screams and used a screwdriver in the attack. The toddler required emergency reconstructive surgery and will carry lifelong physical and psychological scars.Senecal now faces six charges including aggravated sexual assault on a child under 16, sexual interference, break-and-enter, and assault by choking. He is finally being held without bail — but only after irreversibly destroying another innocent child’s life.Contrast with Tamara Lich and Chris Barber (“mischief” case

)

  • Tamara Lich (a Métis grandmother) and Chris Barber (a Saskatchewan trucker) organized peaceful protests against vaccine mandates in Ottawa in 2022.
  • Their alleged crime: “mischief” and “counselling mischief” for blocking streets with trucks and bouncy castles.
  • Crown prosecutors demanded a combined 18+ years in prison — 8–10 years each — more time than many child rapists receive in Canada.
  • The trial has dragged on for over two years, cost taxpayers tens of millions, and still has no verdict as of December 2025.
  • Justice demands:
    → Peaceful honking and dancing = up to a decade in federal prison
    → Violently raping a toddler months after early release for raping another child = 12 months actually served

One is treated as the most dangerous threat to Canadian society imaginable.
The other was released early to prey again. This is not justice.
This is a system that punishes citizens for speaking while protecting monsters who destroy children.


**Part III — Self-Defense for Canadians? Illegal.

Weapons for Criminals? Accommodated.**

Canadians are prohibited from carrying:

  • pepper spray
  • bear spray for protection
  • any defensive tool whatsoever

A Canadian woman walking to her car at night has fewer rights than the criminals she fears.

Meanwhile, certain groups retain exemptions for ceremonial blades and other items — and the justice system appears terrified of enforcing laws evenly when “optics” might be uncomfortable.

This isn’t equality.
It’s political cowardice disguised as tolerance.


Freedom Doesn’t Disappear Overnight — It Erodes Piece by Piece

Every collapsing nation follows the same pattern:

  • criminal justice loses neutrality
  • enforcement becomes political
  • law-abiding citizens become scapegoats
  • criminals sense weakness and flourish
  • property rights crumble
  • self-defence becomes forbidden
  • speech is controlled
  • government power fills the vacuum

Canada is deep into this cycle already.

Our rights are not being taken in one dramatic moment.
They’re being eroded slowly, until nothing remains.

And once the foundation collapses, it’s too late to rebuild.


Now Is the Time to Say NO

No to arbitrary gun bans.
No to selective enforcement.
No to political prosecutions.
No to a government that fears its citizens but excuses criminals.

We must speak up now —
before the final blow lands
and our rights to Life, Liberty, and Property collapse with it.

Christine Van Geyn: Changes to Bill C-9 aren’t combating hate — they’re criminalizing faith

Christine Van Geyn: Changes to Bill C-9 aren’t combating hate — they’re criminalizing faith

The Bible is the most banned book in history, precisely because it is powerful and points to an authority beyond the reach of government

Author of the article:

By Christine Van Geyn, Special to National Post

Book burning
Photo by iStock/Getty Images Plus

To secure Bloc Québécois support for its censorious Bill C-9, the Liberals have reportedly agreed to a troubling trade: removing the long-standing religious defence from Canada’s hate-speech laws. This would be a mistake.

Bill C-9, the Carney government’s combating hate act, would expand criminal prohibitions on expression and increase penalties for speech offences, including online speech. Now, the bill may also gut the defence that protects good-faith religious opinion or speech rooted in religious texts.

Throughout the justice committee’s hearings, Bloc MPs fixated on this defence. Their central example, repeated to nearly every witness, was a group prayer delivered by controversial imam Adil Charkaoui at a Quebec pro-Palestinian rally in 2023. In that prayer, Charkaoui asked God to “kill the enemies of the people of Gaza” and take care of the “Zionist aggressors.”

Those comments were rightly condemned. They are grotesque. Complaints about them were investigated, and the RCMP prepared a report. It was reviewed by three Crown prosecutors, who concluded that no charges were warranted.

As Quebec’s director of criminal and penal prosecutions put it, “The evidence does not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the words spoken constitute incitement to hatred against an identifiable group” under Sec. 319 of the Criminal Code.

One may argue that “Zionist” was just code for “Jews.” One may also believe that praying for death is morally abhorrent. But the decision not to charge Charkaoui turned on the basic threshold of incitement to hatred, not on the religious defence.

And even if it had involved the defence, one inflammatory prayer at a political rally is not a justification for dismantling a safeguard that protects millions of Canadians from state intrusion into matters of faith.

The religious defence has also been essential to the constitutionality of the hate-speech prohibition itself. In R v Keegstra, the Supreme Court wrote that the offence is a minimal impairment on the right to freedom of expression, in part because of “the presence of the Sec. 319(3) defences.” The courts upheld the law because the religious exemption exists. Remove it, and the constitutional floor collapses.

But even beyond constitutional risk, removing the defence is a profound moral and civil liberties mistake. We should not want, let alone empower, prosecutors to criminalize any form of prayer.

Religious texts across traditions contain pleas for justice against enemies, metaphors for divine retribution and expressions of anguish, symbolism and cosmic struggle. This is not the realm of the police. If the state begins parsing Psalms or Hadiths line-by-line in a courtroom, then we have forgotten why the Charter exists at all.

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In practice, the defence is already exceedingly narrow. It has rarely been invoked and, based on my case law search, has never succeeded. Courts have also rejected attempts to cloak hateful speech in religious language.

In R v Harding, for example, the Court of Appeal for Ontario affirmed a lower court’s finding that the defence does not shield speech that wilfully promotes hatred merely because it is embedded with religious language, because then “religious opinion could be used with impunity as a Trojan horse to carry the intended message of hate forbidden by Sec. 319.”

Religious expression is messy, symbolic and deeply human. It concerns the nature of justice, suffering, good and evil — the most intimate dimensions of identity and conscience. These are precisely the areas where the criminal law must not tread. We do not want the government parsing religious texts, or religious speech, especially given that most of our political leaders are absolutely ignorant of religion, including, in some cases, their own religion.

For example, in a shocking display at the justice committee, Liberal committee chair Marc Miller claimed to Derek Ross, executive director of the Christian Legal Fellowship, that portions of the Bible are “hateful.” Miller then doubled down on X, writing, “I say this, in particular because I am a Christian,” which is in itself mind-boggling.

It’s dangerous for politicians to believe they can use statutes to sanitize scripture they don’t even properly understand. Criminal law is the state’s most violent instrument. It should not be swung at the human soul.

The Bible is the most banned book in history, precisely because it is powerful and points to an authority beyond the reach of government. A government that fears religious speech is not fighting extremism — it’s fighting competition.

The proposed amendment to Bill C-9 would take Canada down a dark path. We should never have criminalized belief in the first place. Strip away the religious defence, and Canada will not be combating hate, it will be criminalizing faith. The defence must be maintained. (National Post, December 4, 2025)

Waterloo School Board Challenged for Imposing ‘Land Acknowledgement” At Meetings

Ontario school board facing constitutional challenge over mandated land acknowledgements

Plaintiff father says his concerns began after the council started opening meetings with land acknowledgements with no debate or vote

Author of the article:

By Stewart Lewis

Published Nov 27, 2025

324 Comments

school
The Alberta-based Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms has filed a legal challenge to the Waterloo Region District School Board’s decision to mandate the reading of land acknowledgements at school council meetings. Photo by recep-bg /Photo: Submitted

The Alberta-based Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms has filed a legal challenge over what it alleges was a Waterloo Region District School Board’s decision to mandate the reading of land acknowledgements at school council meetings, while prohibiting debate on the issue.

The application has been brought on behalf of Geoffrey Horsman, a biochemistry professor and member of the Kitchener-Waterloo Collegiate and Vocational School Council as the father of three children attending district schools.

Horsman’s concerns began, says the JCCF, when the council started opening its meetings with land acknowledgements despite the fact that no vote or debate had ever been held on the practice. In the spring of 2025, he sought to have the matter placed on the agenda for discussion. However, the council chair declined and referred him to the school principal.

On May 9, says JCCF, the principal informed Horsman that the board requires land acknowledgements at all school council meetings and that the topic could not be debated.

The judicial review challenges the Board’s conduct on three grounds:

  • mandating land acknowledgements compels Horsman to sit through a statement that contradicts his belief in the inherent dignity and equality of all people;

  • prohibiting any discussion of land acknowledgements at school council meetings suppresses his ability to raise or challenge the issue;

  • the Board has no statutory power under the Ontario Education Act or Regulation 612/00 to dictate school council practices or impose ideological recitations.

The dispute follows a related instance that arose in September, when another parent, Cristina Bairos Fernandes, raised an objection to opening parent involvement committee meetings with a land acknowledgement, reports Juno News.

Article content

The chair of the committee agreed to “note” her objection but Scott Miller, the board’s director of education, intervened stating that: “I think we’ve been pretty clear as a district school board what we believe, our commitment to Truth and Reconciliation, call to action. And that’s across the province.”

The committee ultimately voted to record the objection, but exclude mention of the director’s interference. Horseman was one of a few parent-committee members who requested the minutes include the director’s interference “rather than (leaving it out) as though it never happened.”

It wasn’t the first time a parent faced roadblocks for objecting to land acknowledgements at parent-run meeting, says the JCCF. In April, Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board parent Catherine Kronas raised concerns about imposing political speech in government settings. In response, she was suspended from attending council meetings. However, she was later reinstated following legal intervention from the JCCF.

Constitutional lawyer Hatim Kheir stated that Kronas’ comments “were a reasonable and measured expression of a viewpoint held by many Canadians.”

Further, he said: “The Board’s decision to suspend her from the Council, which she has a right to sit on as an elected parent member, is an act of censorship that offends the right to freedom of expression.”

In both instances, the parents expressed concern that reciting land acknowledgements is a form of political speech and questioned their appropriateness in government institutions. (National Post, November 27, 2025)

                                                             Throne, Altar, Liberty

Taking Offence and Denying Defence

The Canadian Red Ensign

The Canadian Red Ensign

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Taking Offence and Denying Defence

The late Sir Roger Scruton had much to say about the difference between “giving offence” and “taking offence.”  In an interview with Douglas Murray for The Spectator about a half a year before his death, for example, he said:

Remember though, that there’s this great distinction between giving offence and taking offence and we’re living in a culture where people become experts in taking offence even when it hasn’t been given.  And that’s what is taught in gender studies. It teaches young women to take offence at every remark a man might make or even his being there, you know. It’s a wonderful theatrical thing to take offence but it doesn’t lead to any lasting relationships. (1)

The importance of this distinction has to do with more than just gender.  Every form of “identity politics” majors in taking offence.  Identity politics is informed and underlain by the contemporary “morality” that has supplanted traditional moralities, including both the older traditional morality informed by classical ethics and Christian moral theology and the more recent morality of classical liberalism, in the civilization formerly known as Christendom in the post-World War II era.  This is one of the key distinguishing feature between the contemporary “morality” and traditional moralities.  Traditional morality taught you to moderate your speech and behaviour so as to avoid giving offence.  Contemporary morality teaches you to take offence and to moderate your speech and behaviour so as to minimize the likelihood of others taking offence.

The distinction is quite simple.  Allow me to illustrate.  If I were to go up to you and say something to the effect of “You dirty rotten so-and-so, you are ugly and stupid, a bum and a loser, and the biggest jerk who ever lived.  Now listen to me you miserable punk, you dress like a clown and smell like a skunk, your mother is a whore and your father is a drunk” then I would be giving offence.  If, on the other hand, I were to say to you “I listened to your lecture on this-or-that historical event and I don’t like your take on what happened because I think it portrays such-and-such a group in a poor light, bolstering unfair stereotypes, and although I am not a member of that group per se, I am deeply offended by your micro-aggression and think you need to be cancelled” or some such blithering nonsense, I would be taking offence.

Ordinarily, when someone gives offence the offence is intentional, he is deliberately trying to hurt the feelings of the person to whom he is speaking.  To the person who takes offence, however, the intentions of the person from whom he takes offence are irrelevant. 

With regards to the importance of intent it is worth observing that the cultural shift from the traditional morality of avoiding giving offence to the contemporary morality of taking offence, occurred simultaneously with the rise of technocratic managers in both government and private business. (2) Traditionally, in the Westminster system, the laws by which we are governed are subject to King-in-Parliament acting through legislation.  While the form remains in Canada, in the post-World War II era, the Prime Minister and Cabinet have increasingly by-passed the constraints the traditional system placed on their ability to impose new rules on Canadians, by relying more-and-more on civil service agencies acting through regulation instead.  The counterpart to this in the private sector is the increased control of middle level managers operating through Human Resource departments.

The reason this is worth pointing out here is because the traditional Westminster system of legislating by King-in-Parliament was closely allied with the Common Law tradition which includes the principle with regards to criminal culpability that actus reus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea (a guilty act does not make guilty unless the mind is guilty), that is to say, there needs to be criminal intent for there to be criminal culpability.  HR departments, by contrast, seldom if ever regard intent as an essential component of any of the myriad of made-up offences in the rule books through which they micromanage their employees.  While the parallel is not perfect it is notable.

The other factor that distinguishes giving offence from taking offence is objectivity.  If you give offence to someone by, for example, calling him a horse’s patoot, the offence is objective because it is reasonable to assume that anyone called this would be offended by it.  When someone takes offence that has not been given, however, the offence is largely if not entirely, subjective.  In Biblical hermeneutics, we distinguish between exegesis and eisegesis.  In both of these words the basic verb means to guide or to lead.  Exegesis adds the prefix for “out” and means to bring out of the text the meaning that is already there in it.  This, of course, is the approved hermeneutical method.  The other one, eisegesis, substitutes the prefix for “in” and means to read into the text the meaning you wish to find there.   Taking offence that has not been given is similar to eisegesis in this regards.

In this, as in so many other areas, contemporary morality is a poor substitute for traditional morality.  Morality informs law and when an inferior morality replaces a superior morality the result will be the introduction and multiplication of bad laws. 

The news media recently learned that the Liberal government led by Prime Minister Blofeld has come to an agreement with the Lower Canadian separatists. (3)   The separatists agreed to support the Liberal Bill C-9, a proposed series of amendments to the section of the Criminal Code pertaining to “hate.”  Over the past couple of years, Canadians have become increasingly disturbed and disgusted at a particular type of “protest” that has been popping up all over our country and the wider civilization.  Ostensibly about the Israel-Palestine conflict in the Middle East, these protests openly embrace not merely the cause of the Palestinians but the organization Hamas, glorify its worst actions, and are filled with violent, revolutionary, rhetoric directed not only against Israel but against our country and Western Civilization as a whole.  Bill C-9 is the Liberals’ proposed “solution” to this problem.  It is typical of the “solutions” put forward by politicians, especially Liberals, to problems that are largely of their own creation, in that it creates new statutory offences and laws where the already existing laws are more than sufficient to handle the situation if they would only be followed and enforced.  Bill C-9 would make preventing access to a place of worship or community centre by means of intimidation – which already violates more than one law – into a distinct “hate” offence.  It would also criminalize the public display of certain symbols.  To gain the support of the separatists, the Liberals agreed to include a further amendment in the bill that would remove the existing provision in Section 319 of the Criminal Code that exempts speech that expresses what the speaker holds in “good faith” based on “a belief in a religious text” from criminal culpability.

To do this would be to make a bad law worse.  What I said about bill C-9’s making of new statutory offences in the previous paragraph applies to all laws about “hate speech.”  Anything prohibited by “hate speech” laws that warrants being prohibited by law was already prohibited by law before there were any “hate” laws.  The most defensible limitation on speech in “hate speech” legislation is the prohibition of incitement.  Incitement is the urging or encouraging of others to commit a criminal act.  If the other person(s) actually commit the criminal act, the person who did the inciting shares in their responsibility and therefore criminal culpability for the act.  It is reasonable, therefore, that criminal incitement be prohibited by law, at least if the incitement is acted on.  Criminal incitement, however, was already against the law before “hate speech” laws were thought up. All “hate speech” laws did was single out a specific type of incitement, as if telling people to commit a crime against person X was much worse than telling people to commit the same crime against person Y, if when telling them to commit the crime against person X, you give the person’s race, sex, religion, whatever, as part of the reason. 

Worse, they expanded the prohibited speech beyond actual incitement.  Actual incitement is explicit.  It involves someone saying, in so many words, that such-and-such a criminal act should be committed.  The concept of “hate speech”, however, treats as the equivalent of actual incitement, speech that portrays groups that supporters of “hate speech” laws think should be protected in such a negative light that someone might be inspired to act criminally against that group.   It is interesting, isn’t it, how the progressive supporters of these kind of laws think that in the case of groups to which they think the law should extend special protection, negative portrayals will inspire people to commit crimes who were not already inclined to do so, whereas in the case of groups they do not think should be specially protected by the law – Christians, rather than Jews or Muslims, whites rather than any other race, men rather than women, heterosexuals rather than homosexuals, actual men and women rather than transsexuals – the non-stop stream of negative rhetoric on the part of progressives themselves, usually far more full of expressions of hate in the literal sense of the word than that which they seek to ban, will have no such effect.  Basically, “hate speech” laws in effect protect groups that progressives feel are entitled to special protection from having their feelings hurt.  Here, the thinking of the contemporary morality with regards to taking offence finds its legal manifestation.

The old laws against actual incitement were justifiable limitations on freedom of speech because they were not there to prevent the circulation of ideas but rather to prevent the encouraging of criminal acts.  “Hate speech” laws are not similarly justifiable.  Narrowing the range of ideas that can be circulated is precisely what those who introduce such legislation have in mind.  Moreover, good laws are few in number, clear and easy to understand, protect people and their property from objective, quantifiable, harm and not from subjective hurt feelings and extend this protection to everyone in the realm and not just to certain groups that progressive political parties think need special protection.  “Hate speech” laws do not meet any of those qualifications but are rather the opposite.  They are the textbook example of bad laws.

After the news was leaked about the deal between the Grits and the Bloc, the apologists for removing the exemption came crawling out of the woodworks.  Unsurprisingly, foremost among them was Marc Miller, (4) whom Blofeld just named Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture, replacing Steven Guilbeault who resigned from Cabinet last weekend over Blofeld’s pipeline deal with Alberta.  It was difficult, prior to last weekend, to imagine that replacing eco-extremist Guilbeault could be anything but an improvement, but lo and behold, Blofeld managed the unthinkable.  Miller, a childhood friend of Captain Airhead, belongs to the former prime minister’s innermost circle.  If Blofeld really wants to move his party and the government he leads away from the blighted legacy of his predecessor, replacing one Trudeau-insider with another is not the way to go about it.  To the point at hand, however, Miller has been shooting his mouth off for months about how he considers certain Biblical texts “hateful” and wants to see the religious text exemption for “hate speech” eliminated. (5) 

In a meeting of the House of Commons’ Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, of which he was at the time the chair, just prior to All Hallows, Miller said “In Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Romans — there’s other passages — there’s clear hatred towards, for example, homosexuals.”  This is a nonsensical statement.  The Bible identifies many different acts as sins.  This is not ordinarily interpreted as “hatred”, clear or otherwise, towards those who commit such acts, the late Fred Phelps notwithstanding.  When the Ten Commandments say “thou shalt not commit adultery”, which act carried the penalty of death under the Mosaic Law, do we understand this to be hatred against adulterers? When the Ten Commandments say “thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour”, do we interpret this to be hatred against perjurers?    If identifying someone’s behaviour as sinful is expressing “hatred” against that person, then the Bible could be interpreted as expressing hatred against all mankind when it says “For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.”  That it would be absurd to interpret it this way, however, is generally understood because the text, St. Paul’s epistle to the Romans, goes immediately on to say “Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.”  Far from an expression of hatred towards those who sin, the Scriptures are a message of God’s redeeming love to sinners.  The thought contained in the verse from St. Paul just quoted is also expressed in what is undoubtedly the best-known verse in the Bible “For God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life.’

When his words were immediately understood by several commentators, members of His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition, and provincial ministers as calling for these Scriptural texts, their being read as Scripture lessons in church, and preached on from the pulpit, to be criminalized, Mr. Miller took offence.  All he intended, he maintained, was to say that these texts should not be allowed as defences, in cases of public incitement.  This is how he is now defending the proposed removal of the religious exemption from Section 319.  Note, however, the sleight-of-hand that is at play.  He hopes that those whose suspicions he wishes to allay will understand the public incitement, to which he says sincere belief in these Scriptural texts should not be a defence, to mean someone telling other people that they should commit some kind of violent crime.  If, however, interpreting these Scriptural texts in accordance with traditional Christian orthodoxy as identifying same-sex sexual activity as sinful is itself regarded as an expression of hate, then removing the religious exemption from Section 319 would have precisely the effect that Miller’s opponents say it would have, of opening the door for criminal prosecutions of Christian ministers who faithfully preach on these portions of Scripture.

All one has to do is look at the track record of the Liberal Party since Miller’s lifelong intimate friend Captain Airhead took over as leader in 2013 to realize that Miller should not be trusted to mean merely that the religious defence should be removed from cases of actual, explicit, incitement to violent crime.  One of the first things that Captain Airhead did upon becoming Liberal leader was to ban anyone who held the orthodox Christian view of abortion from running for a seat in the House as a member of the Liberal party.  During Captain Airhead’s premiership, the Liberal government made a lot of noise about combatting Islamophobia and anti-Semitism at the same time that a wave of arson and other vandalism directed against Christian churches was underway.  Arguably, the Liberal government itself had a hand in inciting that wave.   One of Miller’s Liberal colleagues, John-Paul Danko described the factual reporting of the over 120 churches so attacked as a “conspiracy theory.”  Repeatedly, over the course of the Airhead premiership, the Liberal government promoted as “Canadian values” ideas that were contrary to orthodox Christian moral theology – and, as they discovered to their discomfort, contrary to the traditional morality of other religions as well – and sought through various measures to coerce Christian churches into changing their moral theology to align with progressive values.

So no, we should not believe Mr. Miller that the removal of the religious defence will not lead to a wave of litigation and even criminal charges against churches unwilling to change their orthodox moral theology or to muzzle themselves.

Instead of doing what the Liberals and the Bloc are planning on doing, I propose that the government do the right thing instead.  It should strike Section 319 from the Criminal Code in its entirety and abandon its plans on reintroducing legislation similar to the notorious Section 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act, the bill repealing which had gone into effect the year after it received royal assent and the year before the Liberals resumed government.  It is the right thing to do because “hate speech” legislation is by its very nature, fundamentally bad law.  (6) 

Since morality informs law, we will also need to repeal the contemporary new morality that encourages people to take offence over every perceived slight to their identity, real or self-chosen, and reinstate the traditional morality that merely encourages people not to give offence.  This will be more difficult to do because it cannot be accomplished simply by passing or repealing a bill, but it is here at the cultural level rather than at the political and legislative, that the real battle must be waged.

 (1)   https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/ full-transcript-douglas-murray-in-conversation-with-roger-scruton/

(2)   Today, due to decades of speculative fiction and the current state of AI development, “technocratic”, probably suggests to most people the idea of machines taking over.  That is not how I am using it here.  I am referring to the fact that the professional managers – government bureaucrats and HR types in the corporate world – considered as a class, are distinguished by the use of language that is “technical” in the sense employed by Michael Oakeshott in the title essay of his Rationalism in Politics and Other Essays (London: Methuen, 1962) in which he distinguishes “technical” from “traditional” knowledge.

(3)   https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/liberals-bloc-hate-speech-laws-religious-exemptions

(4)   https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/religion-is-no-excuse-for-hate-carneys-newest-minister-says-of-proposed-removal-of-hate-speech-defence

(5)   https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/canadian-mp-reciting-hateful-bible-verses-about-homosexuality-in-public-should-be-illegal/

(6)    Earlier this week, paleo-libertarian editor Lew Rockwell published an article entitled “Why Banning Hate Speech is Evil.” I agree with the premise entirely although I would employ a different line of reasoning to argue for it.  Bans on “hate speech” are attempts to legislate what is in the human heart.  The civil government that attempts to do this, however, exceeds its own jurisdiction and intrudes into that which belongs to God alone.  This is the root of the evil the ancients called tyranny and that is often called totalitarianism in our own day. https://www.lewrockwell.com/ 2025/12/lew-rockwell/why-banning-hate-speech-is-evil.  — Gerry T. Neal

                                                             Throne, Altar, Liberty

The Canadian Red Ensign

The Canadian Red Ensign

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Taking Offence and Denying Defence

The late Sir Roger Scruton had much to say about the difference between “giving offence” and “taking offence.”  In an interview with Douglas Murray for The Spectator about a half a year before his death, for example, he said:

Remember though, that there’s this great distinction between giving offence and taking offence and we’re living in a culture where people become experts in taking offence even when it hasn’t been given.  And that’s what is taught in gender studies. It teaches young women to take offence at every remark a man might make or even his being there, you know. It’s a wonderful theatrical thing to take offence but it doesn’t lead to any lasting relationships. (1)

The importance of this distinction has to do with more than just gender.  Every form of “identity politics” majors in taking offence.  Identity politics is informed and underlain by the contemporary “morality” that has supplanted traditional moralities, including both the older traditional morality informed by classical ethics and Christian moral theology and the more recent morality of classical liberalism, in the civilization formerly known as Christendom in the post-World War II era.  This is one of the key distinguishing feature between the contemporary “morality” and traditional moralities.  Traditional morality taught you to moderate your speech and behaviour so as to avoid giving offence.  Contemporary morality teaches you to take offence and to moderate your speech and behaviour so as to minimize the likelihood of others taking offence.

The distinction is quite simple.  Allow me to illustrate.  If I were to go up to you and say something to the effect of “You dirty rotten so-and-so, you are ugly and stupid, a bum and a loser, and the biggest jerk who ever lived.  Now listen to me you miserable punk, you dress like a clown and smell like a skunk, your mother is a whore and your father is a drunk” then I would be giving offence.  If, on the other hand, I were to say to you “I listened to your lecture on this-or-that historical event and I don’t like your take on what happened because I think it portrays such-and-such a group in a poor light, bolstering unfair stereotypes, and although I am not a member of that group per se, I am deeply offended by your micro-aggression and think you need to be cancelled” or some such blithering nonsense, I would be taking offence.

Ordinarily, when someone gives offence the offence is intentional, he is deliberately trying to hurt the feelings of the person to whom he is speaking.  To the person who takes offence, however, the intentions of the person from whom he takes offence are irrelevant. 

With regards to the importance of intent it is worth observing that the cultural shift from the traditional morality of avoiding giving offence to the contemporary morality of taking offence, occurred simultaneously with the rise of technocratic managers in both government and private business. (2) Traditionally, in the Westminster system, the laws by which we are governed are subject to King-in-Parliament acting through legislation.  While the form remains in Canada, in the post-World War II era, the Prime Minister and Cabinet have increasingly by-passed the constraints the traditional system placed on their ability to impose new rules on Canadians, by relying more-and-more on civil service agencies acting through regulation instead.  The counterpart to this in the private sector is the increased control of middle level managers operating through Human Resource departments.

The reason this is worth pointing out here is because the traditional Westminster system of legislating by King-in-Parliament was closely allied with the Common Law tradition which includes the principle with regards to criminal culpability that actus reus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea (a guilty act does not make guilty unless the mind is guilty), that is to say, there needs to be criminal intent for there to be criminal culpability.  HR departments, by contrast, seldom if ever regard intent as an essential component of any of the myriad of made-up offences in the rule books through which they micromanage their employees.  While the parallel is not perfect it is notable.

The other factor that distinguishes giving offence from taking offence is objectivity.  If you give offence to someone by, for example, calling him a horse’s patoot, the offence is objective because it is reasonable to assume that anyone called this would be offended by it.  When someone takes offence that has not been given, however, the offence is largely if not entirely, subjective.  In Biblical hermeneutics, we distinguish between exegesis and eisegesis.  In both of these words the basic verb means to guide or to lead.  Exegesis adds the prefix for “out” and means to bring out of the text the meaning that is already there in it.  This, of course, is the approved hermeneutical method.  The other one, eisegesis, substitutes the prefix for “in” and means to read into the text the meaning you wish to find there.   Taking offence that has not been given is similar to eisegesis in this regards.

In this, as in so many other areas, contemporary morality is a poor substitute for traditional morality.  Morality informs law and when an inferior morality replaces a superior morality the result will be the introduction and multiplication of bad laws. 

The news media recently learned that the Liberal government led by Prime Minister Blofeld has come to an agreement with the Lower Canadian separatists. (3)   The separatists agreed to support the Liberal Bill C-9, a proposed series of amendments to the section of the Criminal Code pertaining to “hate.”  Over the past couple of years, Canadians have become increasingly disturbed and disgusted at a particular type of “protest” that has been popping up all over our country and the wider civilization.  Ostensibly about the Israel-Palestine conflict in the Middle East, these protests openly embrace not merely the cause of the Palestinians but the organization Hamas, glorify its worst actions, and are filled with violent, revolutionary, rhetoric directed not only against Israel but against our country and Western Civilization as a whole.  Bill C-9 is the Liberals’ proposed “solution” to this problem.  It is typical of the “solutions” put forward by politicians, especially Liberals, to problems that are largely of their own creation, in that it creates new statutory offences and laws where the already existing laws are more than sufficient to handle the situation if they would only be followed and enforced.  Bill C-9 would make preventing access to a place of worship or community centre by means of intimidation – which already violates more than one law – into a distinct “hate” offence.  It would also criminalize the public display of certain symbols.  To gain the support of the separatists, the Liberals agreed to include a further amendment in the bill that would remove the existing provision in Section 319 of the Criminal Code that exempts speech that expresses what the speaker holds in “good faith” based on “a belief in a religious text” from criminal culpability.

To do this would be to make a bad law worse.  What I said about bill C-9’s making of new statutory offences in the previous paragraph applies to all laws about “hate speech.”  Anything prohibited by “hate speech” laws that warrants being prohibited by law was already prohibited by law before there were any “hate” laws.  The most defensible limitation on speech in “hate speech” legislation is the prohibition of incitement.  Incitement is the urging or encouraging of others to commit a criminal act.  If the other person(s) actually commit the criminal act, the person who did the inciting shares in their responsibility and therefore criminal culpability for the act.  It is reasonable, therefore, that criminal incitement be prohibited by law, at least if the incitement is acted on.  Criminal incitement, however, was already against the law before “hate speech” laws were thought up. All “hate speech” laws did was single out a specific type of incitement, as if telling people to commit a crime against person X was much worse than telling people to commit the same crime against person Y, if when telling them to commit the crime against person X, you give the person’s race, sex, religion, whatever, as part of the reason. 

Worse, they expanded the prohibited speech beyond actual incitement.  Actual incitement is explicit.  It involves someone saying, in so many words, that such-and-such a criminal act should be committed.  The concept of “hate speech”, however, treats as the equivalent of actual incitement, speech that portrays groups that supporters of “hate speech” laws think should be protected in such a negative light that someone might be inspired to act criminally against that group.   It is interesting, isn’t it, how the progressive supporters of these kind of laws think that in the case of groups to which they think the law should extend special protection, negative portrayals will inspire people to commit crimes who were not already inclined to do so, whereas in the case of groups they do not think should be specially protected by the law – Christians, rather than Jews or Muslims, whites rather than any other race, men rather than women, heterosexuals rather than homosexuals, actual men and women rather than transsexuals – the non-stop stream of negative rhetoric on the part of progressives themselves, usually far more full of expressions of hate in the literal sense of the word than that which they seek to ban, will have no such effect.  Basically, “hate speech” laws in effect protect groups that progressives feel are entitled to special protection from having their feelings hurt.  Here, the thinking of the contemporary morality with regards to taking offence finds its legal manifestation.

The old laws against actual incitement were justifiable limitations on freedom of speech because they were not there to prevent the circulation of ideas but rather to prevent the encouraging of criminal acts.  “Hate speech” laws are not similarly justifiable.  Narrowing the range of ideas that can be circulated is precisely what those who introduce such legislation have in mind.  Moreover, good laws are few in number, clear and easy to understand, protect people and their property from objective, quantifiable, harm and not from subjective hurt feelings and extend this protection to everyone in the realm and not just to certain groups that progressive political parties think need special protection.  “Hate speech” laws do not meet any of those qualifications but are rather the opposite.  They are the textbook example of bad laws.

After the news was leaked about the deal between the Grits and the Bloc, the apologists for removing the exemption came crawling out of the woodworks.  Unsurprisingly, foremost among them was Marc Miller, (4) whom Blofeld just named Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture, replacing Steven Guilbeault who resigned from Cabinet last weekend over Blofeld’s pipeline deal with Alberta.  It was difficult, prior to last weekend, to imagine that replacing eco-extremist Guilbeault could be anything but an improvement, but lo and behold, Blofeld managed the unthinkable.  Miller, a childhood friend of Captain Airhead, belongs to the former prime minister’s innermost circle.  If Blofeld really wants to move his party and the government he leads away from the blighted legacy of his predecessor, replacing one Trudeau-insider with another is not the way to go about it.  To the point at hand, however, Miller has been shooting his mouth off for months about how he considers certain Biblical texts “hateful” and wants to see the religious text exemption for “hate speech” eliminated. (5) 

In a meeting of the House of Commons’ Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, of which he was at the time the chair, just prior to All Hallows, Miller said “In Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Romans — there’s other passages — there’s clear hatred towards, for example, homosexuals.”  This is a nonsensical statement.  The Bible identifies many different acts as sins.  This is not ordinarily interpreted as “hatred”, clear or otherwise, towards those who commit such acts, the late Fred Phelps notwithstanding.  When the Ten Commandments say “thou shalt not commit adultery”, which act carried the penalty of death under the Mosaic Law, do we understand this to be hatred against adulterers? When the Ten Commandments say “thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour”, do we interpret this to be hatred against perjurers?    If identifying someone’s behaviour as sinful is expressing “hatred” against that person, then the Bible could be interpreted as expressing hatred against all mankind when it says “For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.”  That it would be absurd to interpret it this way, however, is generally understood because the text, St. Paul’s epistle to the Romans, goes immediately on to say “Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.”  Far from an expression of hatred towards those who sin, the Scriptures are a message of God’s redeeming love to sinners.  The thought contained in the verse from St. Paul just quoted is also expressed in what is undoubtedly the best-known verse in the Bible “For God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life.’

When his words were immediately understood by several commentators, members of His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition, and provincial ministers as calling for these Scriptural texts, their being read as Scripture lessons in church, and preached on from the pulpit, to be criminalized, Mr. Miller took offence.  All he intended, he maintained, was to say that these texts should not be allowed as defences, in cases of public incitement.  This is how he is now defending the proposed removal of the religious exemption from Section 319.  Note, however, the sleight-of-hand that is at play.  He hopes that those whose suspicions he wishes to allay will understand the public incitement, to which he says sincere belief in these Scriptural texts should not be a defence, to mean someone telling other people that they should commit some kind of violent crime.  If, however, interpreting these Scriptural texts in accordance with traditional Christian orthodoxy as identifying same-sex sexual activity as sinful is itself regarded as an expression of hate, then removing the religious exemption from Section 319 would have precisely the effect that Miller’s opponents say it would have, of opening the door for criminal prosecutions of Christian ministers who faithfully preach on these portions of Scripture.

All one has to do is look at the track record of the Liberal Party since Miller’s lifelong intimate friend Captain Airhead took over as leader in 2013 to realize that Miller should not be trusted to mean merely that the religious defence should be removed from cases of actual, explicit, incitement to violent crime.  One of the first things that Captain Airhead did upon becoming Liberal leader was to ban anyone who held the orthodox Christian view of abortion from running for a seat in the House as a member of the Liberal party.  During Captain Airhead’s premiership, the Liberal government made a lot of noise about combatting Islamophobia and anti-Semitism at the same time that a wave of arson and other vandalism directed against Christian churches was underway.  Arguably, the Liberal government itself had a hand in inciting that wave.   One of Miller’s Liberal colleagues, John-Paul Danko described the factual reporting of the over 120 churches so attacked as a “conspiracy theory.”  Repeatedly, over the course of the Airhead premiership, the Liberal government promoted as “Canadian values” ideas that were contrary to orthodox Christian moral theology – and, as they discovered to their discomfort, contrary to the traditional morality of other religions as well – and sought through various measures to coerce Christian churches into changing their moral theology to align with progressive values.

So no, we should not believe Mr. Miller that the removal of the religious defence will not lead to a wave of litigation and even criminal charges against churches unwilling to change their orthodox moral theology or to muzzle themselves.

Instead of doing what the Liberals and the Bloc are planning on doing, I propose that the government do the right thing instead.  It should strike Section 319 from the Criminal Code in its entirety and abandon its plans on reintroducing legislation similar to the notorious Section 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act, the bill repealing which had gone into effect the year after it received royal assent and the year before the Liberals resumed government.  It is the right thing to do because “hate speech” legislation is by its very nature, fundamentally bad law.  (6) 

Since morality informs law, we will also need to repeal the contemporary new morality that encourages people to take offence over every perceived slight to their identity, real or self-chosen, and reinstate the traditional morality that merely encourages people not to give offence.  This will be more difficult to do because it cannot be accomplished simply by passing or repealing a bill, but it is here at the cultural level rather than at the political and legislative, that the real battle must be waged.

 (1)   https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/ full-transcript-douglas-murray-in-conversation-with-roger-scruton/

(2)   Today, due to decades of speculative fiction and the current state of AI development, “technocratic”, probably suggests to most people the idea of machines taking over.  That is not how I am using it here.  I am referring to the fact that the professional managers – government bureaucrats and HR types in the corporate world – considered as a class, are distinguished by the use of language that is “technical” in the sense employed by Michael Oakeshott in the title essay of his Rationalism in Politics and Other Essays (London: Methuen, 1962) in which he distinguishes “technical” from “traditional” knowledge.

(3)   https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/liberals-bloc-hate-speech-laws-religious-exemptions

(4)   https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/religion-is-no-excuse-for-hate-carneys-newest-minister-says-of-proposed-removal-of-hate-speech-defence

(5)   https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/canadian-mp-reciting-hateful-bible-verses-about-homosexuality-in-public-should-be-illegal/

(6)    Earlier this week, paleo-libertarian editor Lew Rockwell published an article entitled “Why Banning Hate Speech is Evil.” I agree with the premise entirely although I would employ a different line of reasoning to argue for it.  Bans on “hate speech” are attempts to legislate what is in the human heart.  The civil government that attempts to do this, however, exceeds its own jurisdiction and intrudes into that which belongs to God alone.  This is the root of the evil the ancients called tyranny and that is often called totalitarianism in our own day. https://www.lewrockwell.com/ 2025/12/lew-rockwell/why-banning-hate-speech-is-evil.  — Gerry T. Neal

Professor & Author Frances Widdowson & OneBC MLA Arrested for “Trespass” At UVIC

eBREAKING: Frances Widdowson arrested at University of Victoria Frances Widdowson, a Mount Royal University professor and author of Dead Wrong, was arrested at the University of Victoria on Tuesday after being told that she was not welcome on the campus. Frances Widdowson, a Mount Royal University professor and author of Dead Wrong, was arrested at the University of Victoria on Tuesday after being told that she, OneBC interim party leader Dallas Brodie, and former schoolteacher Jim McMurtry were not welcome on the university’s campus.Widdowson, Brodie, McMurtry and others planned to attend the campus for a peaceful discussion with students, faculty, media and the public about the widely disseminated — and disputed — 2018 claim that the remains of 215 children were discovered in unmarked graves at the Kamloops Residential School.

The group held a similar free-speech event at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops just weeks earlier, which ended in largely productive and civil discourse.

A livestream posted on X by Kris Eriksen showed the group being trespassed from the campus by what appeared to be members of the Saanich Police Department.Shortly afterwards, multiple posts and images showed Widdowson being directed into a police vehicle.A letter sent to the group ahead of the event noted that Widdowson, Brodie and McMurtry specifically were not welcome because they had not gone through the “booking process,” and on the grounds that there was not enough time to “ensure adequate safety planning is in place.”Wyatt Claypool, a OneBC staffer who attended the event, told True North multiple assaults occurred and that one individual suffered damage to their property.He added that Widdowson remains held at the Saanich police station.