The Martyrdom of Gloria Lemay

As I compose this,  Gloria Lemay is sitting in gaol in Nanaimo : reason why is explained   at the URL and in the text below.

https://yolandenorrisclark.substack.com/p/the-attempted-martyrdom-of-gloria?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email&utm_content=share

I’m sending  this link to folks whom I know already understand what-the-hell really went on with the Covid19 HOAX

Gloria Lemay and midwives in B. C. who carry on like her, outside the deathcare Establishment,  are very skeptical about  automatic vaxxxsinashun of newborns.  The recent attacks on her from several angles, all of a sudden, tell me that  they’re calculated to vilify her so as to head off people thinking about adverse results from the quack-zeeen injections into which pregnant women are being tricked

Get the facts. Think for thyself

Gordon S Watson
Metchosin British Columbia

On January 7th, traditional birth attendant Gloria Lemay was arrested and charged with manslaughter on Vancouver Island.

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I met Gloria in the year 2000 when I was 19 years old, and pregnant with my first child. She attended the birth of my first baby, and my second baby.

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Helio, me, and Gloria in September 2024.

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Gloria is one the most inspiring midwifery teachers—and people—on the planet. I consider her to be one of my primary mentors, and a dear friend. She has been immensely supportive to me over the years, especially when I was beginning my own career in birth-work.

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I loved Gloria from the moment she welcomed me into her sunny South Granville apartment. Her wisdom, her respect, her love for birth, mothers, and babies, and her steadfast devotion to me as a young pregnant mother altered the course of my life. She introduced me to my power, and to the very idea of self-ownership.

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Throughout my 50-hour long first birth (at almost 44 weeks’ gestation), Gloria sat quietly by my side and mopped my brow while I screamed, wept, begged for mercy, then finally, after 8 hours of pushing, roared my beautiful boy into the world. In doing the nothing that was necessary during my initiation into motherhood, Gloria gave me everything.

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In late July of 2002, fifteen months after my first son’s tempestuous arrival, I stood shoulder-to-shoulder with a crowd of other mothers, fathers, and children outside the Vancouver courthouse in support of Gloria as she was sentenced to five months in jail and twelve months’ probation for supposedly violating a court injunction prohibiting her from practicing midwifery without a license.

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I had travelled with my toddler that morning from the Sunshine Coast across the Georgia Strait on a ferry, and taken two public buses to join over a hundred people in support of this woman who had witnessed and held so many of us during the spiritual transformation of birth that had created our families.

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The atmosphere at Robson Square was celebratory and defiant. We knew exactly what this was.

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It was a witch-hunt.

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And like most witch-hunts, there was no witch—only a woman whose true power and courage represented an immense threat to the repressive, tyrannical cult of medicine.

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During the court proceedings, Gloria was referred to as “incorrigible.” She responded by saying “I hope I am incorrigible. I hope that until the day I die, I fight for women’s freedom to have who they want in their own bedroom to help them give birth to their baby.”

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It was reported that soon after arriving in prison, Gloria was threatened with solitary confinement “after she offered comfort to a pregnant woman” who was serving time alongside her.

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When I spoke with Gloria six months later, after her release, she told me that jail had been a wonderful opportunity to continue right along with the work to which she had committed her life.

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Incorrigible indeed.

I had met Gloria initially through word of mouth, soon after I fired the legal, licensed, midwife that the newly minted BC College of Nurses and Midwives had assigned to me during my first pregnancy. This was only a couple of years after midwifery had “finally” been regulated in my home-province of British Columbia, and as a clueless, broke, naive young mother, I was eager, at first, to take advantage of the “privilege” of socialized healthcare (lol).

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But during my first encounter with the registered midwife, I knew something was off. Her attempts to coerce me into submitting to an ultrasound were unwelcome (to say the least). I had already decided I would not be subjecting any of my pre-born children to non-ionizing sound waves which are known—even within the scientific community—to objectively damage mammalian cells and tissue, yet the midwife seemed deeply uncomfortable with this boundary.

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I quickly realized that the fact that the medical system signed her paycheque meant that she was beholden to the interests and values of that institution, which happened to be in direct conflict with my own values and priorities. This was unacceptable to me (as it would be to any individuated, sovereign woman).

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Furthermore, she seemed timid and terrified. At our second appointment, I brought with me a printed copy of the BC Midwifery Act and her practice guidelines, which I had painstakingly researched and annotated by hand, delineating the hundreds of reasons why I sadly had to let her go. She then confessed that she understood exactly why I was firing her, and that she would have done the same in my position.

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This woman, like so many others, had elected to undergo the hazing process that was now required of all the formerly “independent” midwives in BC who wanted to be “grandmothered” into the new regulated system. These women had been recruited throughout the 1980s and 1990s and successfully indoctrinated to believe that regulation would offer them job security, the protection of the state, and social legitimacy. They had sadly bought the deception that by uniting under the banner of the medical complex they were going to “change the system from the inside,” and “re-humanize birth.”

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This was, of course, a farce. There is no “changing the system from the inside.” Instead, as all the hopeful, tired, deluded midwives who decided to crawl under the obstetric system’s umbrella soon discovered, the system will only contort you, subsume you, and condition you into believing that your collaboration is radicalism, when in fact, you are being used as a puppet and a tool.

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As I have pointed out thousands of times, the industrial obstetric system was never broken. It has been deliberately designed to *break us*. And when I describe the medical industrial complex as a cult (and obstetrics as one of its most fundamental cornerstones) this isn’t hyperbole. More explicitly than any other organization, obstetrics and its ceremonial rites of industrial birth exhibit all the hallmarks of a satanic cult ritual (which happens to be the subject of my upcoming book—subscribe here to stay in the loop).

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The regulation of midwifery, and in particular, the slandering of independent traditional birth-attendants, is a back-handed attempt to indirectly dominate birthing women, which, in the end, is in service to the long-term project of controlling population, sentience, and human life entirely. The objective of the state appropriation and medical usurpation of midwifery all over the world is totalitarian control, architected as part of the techno-feudalist movement to homogenize medicine, healthcare, and biology itself.

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This isn’t a new phenomenon—these cycles of institutional crackdowns on birth and birth-work have been playing out for ages. But during the 1980s and 1990s, a new and more subtle disciplinary strategy emerged. Instead of stamping out midwifery completely, the medical cartel would simply assimilate it. This was aided by harnessing the enthusiasm for midwifery and homebirth that had fomented within the counterculture movement, using the iconic Ina May Gaskin to great effect as an advocate for regulation. Thus midwifery was re-branded.

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The new, “official” sanctioned midwifery, was midwifery in name only. In reality, it resembled….wait for it…obstetrics! What a surprise! Many of the independent midwives who had been working in BC (and throughout Canada) prior to regulation acquiesced, and entered into these re-education programs eager to reap the promised benefits of the endorsement and protection of the system, but most of these women were filtered out, intimidated and dismayed by the hoops they were made to jump through, the humiliations they were made to endure, and the disorientation of having to completely re-vamp their practices and perspectives to align with a highly medicalized, bureaucratic, regimented approach to birth.

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A few women, however, held out, and politely declined to comply with the medical commandeering of a sacred vocation which many view as antithetical to state control.

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Gloria Lemay was one of them.

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Gloria saw from the very beginning, that regulation was a trojan horse; a form of ideological subversion. A trap.

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The simple, inarguable truth—and a truth that Gloria saw clearly—is that it is not possible to serve two masters, let alone those whose interests may potentially be in conflict. If a midwife’s “scope or practice” is being dictated (ie: regulated) by any external entity other than the mother herself, whether that’s a medical organization, a state organization or an insurance company—if a midwife has any tether to an institutional framework that could even theoretically have interests that depart from, or are in contradiction to the interests of the mother—then that midwife’s loyalties are divided and compromised.

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Does this matter to most women? Clearly not. If you’re looking for a medicalized birth experience with a near-guarantee that your birth will be sabotaged by unnecessary interference, or you enjoy having random people stick their fingers in your vagina, and/or you have no problem submitting to industrial medical authority, or to continuous invasive digital surveillance, then birth with a regulated midwife might be ideal for you.

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But I didn’t want that as a 20-year old giving birth to my first baby, and I don’t want that now, as an almost-44 year old woman who may indeed become pregnant again with my eleventh child (God willing!).

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Furthermore, as a human being, I have (as does every biological woman on this planet) an intrinsic, God-given right to give birth where, how, and with whom I choose.

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And I chose Gloria Lemay.

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From the very beginning of our relationship, Gloria was utterly transparent with me about her level of formal education in birth and medicine (none), her degrees (none), her status within the system (none), and her life experience (extensive). She spoke to me openly about her prior legal issues, and about the fact that she had indeed been present during two births (at that time, 24 years ago) that had resulted in tragic losses.

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I invited Gloria to my birth with full knowledge of every potential variable, including the possibility of death—my own, and that of my child.

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I chose Gloria because I loved her, and because her values were aligned with mine, and because I trusted her to support my autonomous choice to embrace spontaneous birth and all the risks and rewards that could potentially arise from that choice, in whatever measure. I also saw and felt that she believed me, and believed *in* me, and that she knew that I had the power to give birth to myself and my child (as every woman does).

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I also chose Gloria Lemay precisely because she was unlicensed, unregulated, and totally unaffiliated with the medical industrial complex, the obstetric system, or the BC College of Nurses and Midwives. The latter organization, I wanted nothing to do with ever again, especially given that after I fired the licensed midwife, she reported me to the regulatory college. From that point on, the registrar and director of the BC College of Nurses and Midwives proceeded to harass me with phone calls on a regular basis throughout the duration of my pregnancy, hysterically informing me that by declining regulated midwifery, I was recklessly endangering my child and that I would be going to jail when I ended up with a dead baby.

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How’s that for “informed consent”? “Informed consent,” is, of course, one of the favourite mantras of the midwifery world, but interestingly, it only seems to apply to women who are “consenting” to the correct things.

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Indeed, if “informed choice” or ‘informed consent” were anything but a coercive applied linguistics tactic, there would be no reason to criminalize women who attend each other’s births independently.

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Wouldn’t it be logical for independent birth-work to co-exist alongside regulated midwifery and for women to simply choose who they wanted to attend them during birth, in the spirit of “informed consent”?

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The fact is, though, there is no truly “informed consent” within the system—there are only bounded choices that lead to either approval or punishment. “Informed consent” is double-speak. “Consent” culture within the medical paradigm is a form of psychological warfare.

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The only way “consent” can truly be valid is in the context of a relationship of equal power, or one in which the power lies with the party to whom the procedure or treatment is being offered, in which case, the very idea of “informed consent” is meaningless anyway.

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What those who argue for the prohibition of independent midwifery don’t seem to realize (or don’t care about), is that they are necessarily contradicting the doctrine of informed consent.

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Thankfully, I was not subjected to a single stilted, condescending conversation with Gloria Lemay about “informed consent.” Why? Because I was, and am the only authority over my body, my baby, and my birth. And from my first encounter with Gloria, and every encounter since, my authority as The Mother was honoured and implicit. As such, I had no need to “consent” to anything.

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Leaders and authorities do not “consent.” We decree and decide. The invitation to “consent” is a commandment to submit to a limited array of choices that have been pre-ordained. Consent is a totally meaningless concept in a system in which force and coercion have been normalized.

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Within the regulated midwifery system, midwives operate according to a hierarchical structure in which they are subordinate to obstetricians and hospital administrators, and subject to the rigid standard protocols of their “scope.” If they fail to engineer compliance from their patients, they may face disciplinary measures themselves, which creates an often unconscious dynamic of tenuous and inferred incentivization and self-governance.

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This is at the very crux of it all. The regulation of birth goes hand-in-hand with the suppression of the inherent, natural rights that every human being has to *life.* Birth is the most rudimentary expression of our biology, but it’s also the most powerful and transformative spiritual journey available to us as human beings (which is the subject of my bestselling book, PORTAL: The Art of Choosing Orgasmic, Pain-Free, Blissful Birth).

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The very idea of regulating birth is an example of perhaps the most dangerous, most morally repugnant violation of natural law and of our sacred connection to source that has yet to be conceived (ha). And exponential numbers of women (and men) are waking up to this profound truth.

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This is precisely why Gloria Lemay has so much support.

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Yes, I am aware that Gloria was present at five births during which a baby died, and that one of those deaths happened a year ago, according to media reports.

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And I am so very sorry for those families—and for the mothers, especially. As a mother myself, I have only ever experienced loss during my pregnancies (I have had 4 losses before 14 weeks). Those experiences were heartbreaking enough, and yet I know the pain of miscarriage cannot compare to losing a baby at term, or during or after birth.

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I can only imagine the unfathomable grief these families are carrying.

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But what I know, after having worked with thousands of families as they have prepared for birth and processed death and loss at various stages of their children’s lives, in various contexts, is that there is no risk-free option for any of us, ever.

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And as much as this may sound wrong, or unbearable, not one of us deserves, or is guaranteed, a healthy child, or a child who lives to see adulthood.

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Likewise, it simply is not the case that choosing hospital birth can guarantee safety, nor can any midwife (regardless of her training or credentials or lack thereof), or doctor, promise or deliver a particular outcome.

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Sometimes babies die. At home, at birth-centres, and in the hospital. As I wrote in my earlier article “Freebirth and Death: The Shadow Side of Motherhood”,Every birth experience, no matter the milieu or the situation, whether at home or in the hospital, whether “natural” or highly technologically mediated, could ostensibly result in death.”

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The difference, of course, between a death that occurs at home vs. a death that occurs in the hospital, is that when death is the outcome within the institution, the assumption will almost always be that everyone did everything they could, that the doctors tried their best, and that *thanks to* technology, intervention, and medical attention and expertise, the death was therefore inevitable.

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This is despite the fact that approximately 300,000 people die every year in the US alone from medical error—according, again, to the system’s own statistics. Yet physicians and medical professionals in general, are nonetheless protected by liability insurance, plausible deniability, and moral superiority.

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When a baby dies at home, however, the automatic assumption is almost always be that there was some element of recklessness, irresponsibility, or stupidity involved, and there will be an attempt, at least, to lay blame.

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In the context of freebirth, the mother herself will likely be held culpable.

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But in the case of attended homebirth, the obvious scapegoat is the birth attendant—especially one who is unlicensed, un-registered, and operating outside the system.

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Is it possible that Gloria Lemay has made mistakes? No, it’s not possible. It is a guarantee. Because Gloria is a human being, and we all make mistakes.

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What I know beyond the shadow of a doubt, however, is that Gloria has only ever had the best interests of mothers, babies, and fathers at heart, that her intentions have always been pure, and that she has never lied about who she is.

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I also know that she has attended well over 2500 births. Though life and death are, I maintain, God’s business, my strong suspicion is that there are very few, if any, obstetricians whose statistics could rival hers.

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Yet we don’t tend to read in the legacy media about all the babies who die under the care of obstetricians, or the many many more babies who are tortured, maimed, and traumatized within the walls of the institution (and, sadly, by the hands of well-meaning regulated midwives, which are among the most common stories that are brought to me consistently by mothers in my birth-related trauma coaching practice).

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We also don’t tend to hear about the immense risks to our their families that women take on, when they agree to support their sisters in birth outside the system.

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Gloria’s arrest comes right on the heels my own recent decision to retire indefinitely from in-person birth-witnessing. Luckily, I don’t live in Canada or in the US, and I have always been very careful not to ever break any laws, but I have experienced the sudden turn that can take place, when a birth results in an unfortunate or unexpected outcome.

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One of the rarest, most precious virtues is self-responsibility. But while most of us like to believe that we embrace the value of self-responsibility, true self-responsibility is only ever proven when things fall apart.

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Everyone loves the idea of accountability and true responsibility until the very moment things don’t go our way. Then we scramble to point the finger.

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This impulse to condemn permeates the public social media post written by the father of the baby who died a year ago, during the birth that Gloria apparently attended. I won’t share the text here (it’s readily searchable), but it’s full of rage, conspicuous contradictions and above all, a wholesale abdication of any personal responsibility as a parent.

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This man describes being “victimized” by Gloria Lemay, and his post implies that Gloria maliciously convinced him and his wife to invite her to attend their child’s birth. He also blatantly states that she is responsible for the fact that his child tragically died. — Yolande Norris-Clark

What “Hate” Will Manitoba’s New Hate Crimes Unit Find

It has come to the attention of Manitobans that a special hate crime working unit has been commissioned to undertake investigating “hate” within the province.  See Manitoba News Bulletin text down below.

It will be interesting to observe what transpires from and replicated within Manitoba concerning this new and trendy initiative that other jurisdictions elsewhere have adopted.  Maybe Manitoba will be a novel first in discovering the whole range of behaviors that may be considered hate.  Will this pogrom also consider prosecuting individuals for maybe, possibly, thinking what  the government  thinks they are thinking?

The process for arriving at what constitutes “hate”.  

Who gets to decide what constitutes “hate”?  Special interest groups funded by the government whose claims would not have been thoroughly vetted for accuracy, similar to a previous government funded special interest group from the last 40 years?  Will special interest groups influence government to examine only what they believe would be considered “hate”, and cancel any attempt at identifying other sources of “hate”?

Will the government of Manitoba investigate the lounge at the University of Winnipeg that excludes white people?  Or will the government claim that alleged past grievances – not thoroughly vetted for accuracy – should trump the present and be a deciding factor in allowing this particular brand of hate at the U of W to continue?  

Another example of hate in some Manitoba schools, and some in Winnipeg.  See graphic below.  It is currently considered a joke among individuals influenced by a long-standing government funded special interest group not vetted for accuracy.

Here it is:  “Boys Are Stupid.  Throw Rocks At Them”

Item preview, Boys are stupid throw rocks at them  designed and sold by FCAbel.

An image above was displayed on bulletin boards in a Winnipeg school.  This is considered proper?  “Equality” groups from the past have over time influenced the acceptance of what you see above.  Since when does “equality” mean disparaging half the school and other populations?  Equality was originally meant as “Equality before the law”.  Will the 40 year government funded special interest group be investigated for their hate?  Or will the personnel in a WINNIPEG school be under investigation for promoting hate?  Or retroactively holding Winnipeg organizers of Black Lives Matter responsible for inciting hated? 

You think this attitude from the image above is fitting for your boys?  Or are you requiring or asking 6 to 12 year old boys in elementary school to “man up” by accepting this ridiculous attempt at “equality”, or humour.  If so, what the hell is the matter with you?  The following would likely never have occurred in the schools of western culture if the sexes were reversed – “Girls are stupid.  Throw rocks at them”.   This is yet another example of what occurs in the real world when special interest group claims are not vetted for their veracity – one in particular for the last 40 years costing Canadians billions of dollars, and forced upon us by government.  You two are OK with this as well?

We do not need another special grievance or special interest group to decide the fate of what constitutes proper thought or behavior, considering their own thought and behavior may be in more need of examination.

Not counting on a reply from the  NDP  administration regarding this letter – if it isn’t trashed before arriving in your inbox.

The Leslie Bory Story Explained https://cafe.nfshost.com/?p=10323


THE LESLIE BORY TRIAL: The Obliteration of Free Speech in Canada

Paul Fromm of Canadians for Free Expression (CAFE) and I (the Red-Pilled Philosopher) attended the first session of Leslie Bory’s trial regarding free speech. We discuss our views regarding it. We also look at how this trial may impact all Canadians who believe in free speech.

https://old.bitchute.com/channel/tAdmccgMYOSD/

Bill C-63 — Internet Censorship is Dead With Proroguing of Parliament

Jamie Sarkonak: Good riddance to all the Liberal bills that Trudeau just culled

The purgatory prime minister has put Canada in a precarious position, but at least no more of his bad ideas can be churned out of Parliament

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Author of the article:

Jamie Sarkonak

Published Jan 07, 2025  •  Last updated 1 day ago  •  4 minute read

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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a news conference at Rideau Cottage in Ottawa, Canada on January 6, 2025. Trudeau announced his resignation, saying he will leave office as soon as the ruling Liberal party chooses a new leader.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a news conference at Rideau Cottage in Ottawa, Canada on January 6, 2025. Trudeau announced his resignation, saying he will leave office as soon as the ruling Liberal party chooses a new leader. Photo by DAVE CHAN/AFP via Getty Images

By proroguing Parliament on Monday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau may have just sabotaged the fate of our relationship with the United States. But this, at very least, came with a happy side-effect: he also sabotaged the progressive legislative agenda that’s overtaken both houses of government.

In other words, a whole bunch of bad bills just died. Good riddance.

The online harms (censorship) bill? Dead.

The Liberals were already backing off Bill C-63, having announced in early December that the hulking piece of legislation would be split in two in hopes of making at least parts of it into law. Now, the whole thing is off the table. It’s mostly good news: the draft online harms law would have subjected social media companies operating in Canada to a new government bureaucracy in the name of “safety.” Moreover, it would have introduced the vague crime of “hate crime” and tasked the Canadian Human Rights Commission with regulating comments online.

Now, this also means the death of the parts of C-63 that worked to crack down on child sexual abuse online, but even that had its flaws.

Also dead is that bill that would have made thousands of people around the world eligible for Canadian citizenship.

Bill C-71, if you remember, would give the children of Canadians born abroad citizenship through descent, as long as the parents can establish a “substantial connection” to Canada. The guardrail wouldn’t be a secure one, since some judges don’t believe that there are any citizens who lack a connection to the country.

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The bill’s proponents marketed it as a remedy to a rare problem that sometimes afflicts Canadian families who live abroad, such as military families. However, in trying to solve their problems, the bill would have made it much easier for citizenship to be obtained by the grandchildren of birth tourists (people who travel to Canada to give birth, which secures Canadian citizenship for their child).

Lesser-known Senate bills of grave consequence are in the grave, too, including a bill that would have allowed every minority group to establish its own healing lodges (that is, low-security incarceration facilities for prisoners).

Bill S-230 would have required a lot worse, too. If passed, the law would require the Correctional Service of Canada to approve all requests by prisoners to transfer to their respective healing lodges, unless a court were to decide that such a transfer was “not to be in the interests of justice.”

Introduced by the same senator jockeying for identity-based healing lodges, was Bill S-233, which is also now dead. It would have required the government to create a Universal Basic Income framework that would cover anyone in Canada over the age of 17 — even non-Canadians like temporary foreign workers, permanent residents and asylum seekers. Though it was more a concept of a plan and didn’t set out any dollar figures, the bill would have opened the door to even more unproductive spending.

And finally, the Senate bill that would have commandeered Canadian banks to regulate the climate impact of its clients has met its timely end as well.

The draconian Bill S-243, which was midway through the Senate, would have allowed the federal financial regulator to mandate banks to increase the amount of capital clients need to finance loans related to the fossil fuel industry. The bill would have also mandated that corporate directors in the finance industry uphold the federal government’s climate commitments, violating the public-private boundary that free countries are supposed to respect.

“The bill would effectively discourage — in some cases probably even block — financing of pipeline operators, natural gas distributors and fuel companies,” wrote Financial Post columnist Joe Oliver in 2023.

Though these troubling Senate bills weren’t introduced by the Liberals, they might as well have been. Their sponsors are members of the Independent Senators Group, which is the heir to the Liberal senate caucus, and their work certainly aligns with the Liberal government’s agenda.

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Also dead is the capital gains inclusion rate hike, which, for the Liberals to even get on the order paper as a bill, required a successful notice of means and ways motion. Though, this one’s still twitching: the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) is still applying the new rules that were announced by the Liberals, and is thus asking people to prepare to pay them in their next filing. This isn’t a radical new change on the CRA’s part, however: convention (backed by law) holds that tax changes are applied as they’re announced, under the assumption the legislation will pass. If legislation ends up not passing (which is looking to be the case here), taxpayers can expect a refund instead.

Not all bills before Parliament will die, unfortunately.

Private members’ bills that start in the House of Commons are immune to prorogation, according to House rules. That means that the jurisdiction-defying school food program bill (which comes with all sorts of cultural restraints), Bill C-322, will live to see another session.

As will C-332, which would criminalize “coercive control” — that is, behaviour that makes a person’s spouse or partner that makes the other person feel unsafe. The latter is an honourable goal, but the way it’s drafted is so broad that it risks capturing relationships that, though toxic, aren’t dangerous.

Realistically, though, private progressive bills that don’t offer much benefit probably don’t have much to look forward to in the new session. With new governments come new priorities …

It’s a relief that the age of messy Liberal legislation is coming to a close. The purgatory prime minister will cause us a lot of problems in the coming weeks — but sloppy new laws cranked out of Parliament won’t be one of them.

Outspoken Councillor Has Had Pay Docked Four Times for Expressing Controversial Views; Now Timid Pickering Council Will Meet Virtually

Councillor fires back at public ban at Pickering council, saying colleagues trying to ‘suppress the truth’

[Representative government is against under attack. In boards of education and city councils in many parts of Canada, if a representative is too outspoken or “right wing,” especially on LGBTQ privileges, other councillors vote to silence the offender by suspending them and docking their pay. It’s happened four times to Pickering Councillor Lisa Robinson. The latest gambit by Pickering City Council is to hold their meetings online, not in public.

The threats to democracy are two-fold. Virtual meetings are remote and secretive. The taxpayers’ business should be public! Secondly, there is a sacred bond between the electorate and the person they elect. No one should limit the elected representative, in this case Councillor Lisa Robinson in the performance of her duties.

Earlier, she was punished for introducing motions to ban the gay pride flag from city property, limiting drag queen library readings to persons over 18 (not innocent children), and eliminating gender neutral washrooms are City Hall. The democratic way would have been for Council to vote on these proposals and support or reject them, not sanction her and steal her pay for even daring to make the motion. Woke is a menace to representative government.

The Mayor’s pathetic bleating about safety is a copout. If there’s a real apprehension of violence, as opposed to spirited public participation, that’s what a police force is for.– Paul Fromm]

By Glenn Hendry

Published January 2, 2025 at 8:45 am

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Lisa Robinson

Pickering Councillors Lisa Robinson and Maurice Brenner and Mayor Kevin Ashe in better days. Photo Glenn Hendry

Embattled Pickering councillor Lisa Robinson said council’s decision to go virtual for their meetings in 2025 to “protect the safety, security and well-being of council, staff, and residents” is nothing more than an “all-out attack” on her ability to do her job for her constituents.

“They want to suppress the truth, manipulate the narrative and control the voices that challenge their power,” Robinson said on one of several rambling tirades on her regular YouTube video to her supporters, where she called out fellow councillor Maurice Brenner and Pickering CAO Marisa Carpino for their efforts to “suppress the truth.”

Robinson claimed Brenner was “actively working to silence me” by trying to prevent her from using her office at City Hall to record her often hate-filled podcasts, claiming she learned this through a Freedom of Information Request on redacted emails.

“It’s clear that Councillor Brenner is actively working to undermine me,” she said, adding that Brenner also tried to get her charged with a hate crime.

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Robinson also singled out Carpino in her attack, saying the CAO threatened to stop her from using her office or city property for her videos, “if I don’t remain silent about the corruption and collusion that is happening at the City of Pickering.”

Robinson, who didn’t elaborate on the alleged corruption, called it a “blatant abuse of authority.”

“The Pickering CAO’s attempt to extort me an elected official, is an insult to democracy and in my opinion, criminal,” she said in a follow-up video released New Year’s Day.

Pickering Councillor Lisa Robinson

Mayor Kevin Ashe released a video Monday afternoon explaining the decision to bar the public from attending future meetings, saying the city needs to take measures to “enhance the personal safety for all” after two years of violence, threats and intimidation from Robinson’s alt-right supporters.

“Over the past two years the City of Pickering has witnessed a growing infiltration of alt-right individuals, ideologies and influences that has created an atmosphere of uncertainty over our council, our staff, our residents and indeed the broader community,” he said at the outset of the video, which provided context for the decision and also came with a warning label of “threats and extreme violence.”

The video provided a playback of Robinson’s first term in office, including:

  • an appearance on a podcast with notorious fugitive Kevin Johnstone, with the host calling Ashe and his councillors “pedophiles, nazis and fascists” and suggesting “70s biker gangs” be brought in to “remove these guys by force” while Robinson smiled and nodded
  • a show of support for German far-right politician Christine Anderson
  • a series of “increasingly erratic and angry” messages on social media, including a cryptic poem referencing Guy Fawkes, an Englishman who tried to blow up the British Parliament in 1605, which she said serves as a “reminder” of the “value of violence against corruption”
  • allowing far-right groups to organize (and run security) for her Town Hall meeting in November
  • the revoking of her invitation to the Remembrance Day Veterans Dinner hosted by the local Legion the same month

But while the councillor’s conduct has led to multiple sanctions from council and the city’s Integrity Commissioner (she has seen her pay docked four times, including the last two for 90-day periods) Ashe said in his video address it is the behaviour of her supporters which has led to the decision to hold council meetings virtually going forward.

Her followers have regularly left a series of threats, text, voice mails and e-mails for council and staff to peruse, have distributed flyers in the community filled with conspiracy theories and have made a practice of disrupting council meetings to voice their displeasure with their perceived unfair treatment of Robinson.

Her online supporters became “increasingly angry” and prone to suggesting “violent action,” such as “They need to be taken down” (‘Larry’) and “Where’s Rambo when you need him?” (‘Jim’).

The video noted that communities across North America have been infiltrated by far-right groups trying to “control, sow dissent and intimidate” residents “in order to influence municipal government.”

Ashe the decision to go virtual needed to be done.

“This decision was not taken lightly but the threats to our safety demand action,” he said. “We will not expose ourselves to these external actors nor allow them to disrupt our work any longer.”

Robinson, however, saw it as a personal attack on her and a “direct insult” to the “peaceful protesters” who make up her support group.

“This is a calculated effort by the City of Pickering’s administration and council to silence me, an outspoken representative who is determined to uncover corruption, collusion, and misconduct. This is a rallying cry for integrity, accountability, and the protection of democratic freedoms. I have now been locked out of accessing staff, using my office for meetings or recording videos, and hosting my city council meetings on city property! Why? because they do not approve of the content.”

Political Prisoner Les Bory Heads to Court Monday, Denied Disclosure & A Laptop to Prep

Political Prisoner Les Bory Heads to Court Monday, Denied Disclosure & A Laptop to Prep


REXDALE, January 2, 2025. Political prisoner Les Bory made a rare call from prison today. Monday he heads to Court in Brantford in a landmark free speech trial which sees the state trying to curb online dissent.


    “They’ve scheduled a two week jury trial,” Mr. Bory told CAFE. Sixteen videos Les Bory recorded online are at issue. “I still haven’t seen the disclosure from my lawyer. I was never provided with a computer to help prepare my defence,” he adds.


    “I was supposed to have a bail review every 90 days,  but I have had no such reviews,” he says. Meanwhile the nation’s streets are awash with villains charged with murder or brutal assault out on easy bail. The highly politicized Canadian justice system punishes dissident thought or speech harshly, but shrugs at brutal deeds. Mr. Bory has been in prison since February 14, 2023 — nearly two years.

    Mr. Bory, who has no criminal record, is charged with three counts of uttering threats, specifically against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, police and Jews. Far more seriously, he is charged under Sec. 319 of Canada’s notorious “hate law” for wilfully promoting hatred against a legally privileged group, in this case Jews. For this he could get two years in prison. Most seriously he is charged under Sec. 318 of the “hate law” with promoting genocide, against Jews.

    This is the first time Sec. 318 has been used. It required the consent, Mr. Bory states, of the federal Attorney-General. For this, Mr. Bory could receive up to five years in prison.
    Conditions at Maplehurst Detention Centre are crowded and violent. “I have one of the shittiest jobs, cleaning out segregation cells. Some of these prisoners make a horrible mess,” Mr. Bory explains. “But it gets me out of my cell and moving about.”

    Mr. Bory’s trial will be held in Ontario Superior Court at 70 Wellington Street in Brantford and commences at 9:30 a.m. on Monday, January 6,

Elon Musk calls for release of British activist Tommy Robinson

Elon Musk calls for release of British right-wing activist

Tommy Robinson should be freed while Keir Starmer should face charges for his mishandling of a mass-rape scandal, the billionaire has declared

Elon Musk calls for release of British right-wing activist

Tommy Robinson speaks at a demonstration in London, England, April 23, 2024 ©  Getty Images / Peter Nicholls

Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk has called for the release of Tommy Robinson, a controversial British right-wing activist jailed in October for airing a documentary containing libelous claims about a Syrian refugee.

Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for claiming in a documentary that a Syrian teenager who was attacked at a Yorkshire secondary school in 2018 had a lengthy record of attacking female students.

”Free Tommy Robinson!” Musk declared in a post on X on Thursday, before posting a link to the libellous documentary.

Robinson is an ardent critic of mass immigration and Islam, and was one of the leading voices on the right condemning the ‘grooming gangs’ scandal, in which groups of Asian men raped and tortured thousands of underage girls in towns across northern England over the last two decades. Almost all of the perpetrators were Pakistani men, and the victims white British girls.

Successive British governments have declined to investigate the scandal, while the police mishandled cases, arrested victims and covered up the existence of the gangs, official inquiries later found.

In a slew of posts on Thursday and Friday, Musk drew attention to some of the most egregious cases of police mishandling of the scandal, including one incident in Rotherham where officers arrested a father who attempted to rescue his daughter from a house where she was being raped, and another where they arrested a rape victim without questioning the alleged perpetrators.

The scandal was a case of “state-sponsored evil,” Musk wrote in one post.

Musk shared posts condemning Lord Ahmed, the Muslim mayor of Rotherham who was later found to have sexually assaulted two children, and Prime MInister Keir Starmer, who led the Crown Prosecutorial Service between 2008 and 2013.

“In the UK, serious crimes such as rape require the Crown Prosecution Service’s approval for the police to charge suspects,” the billionaire wrote. “Who was the head of the CPS when rape gangs were allowed to exploit young girls without facing justice? Keir Starmer, 2008 -2013.”

“Starmer was complicit in the RAPE OF BRITAIN,” he continued in another post, adding that the prime minister “must go and he must face charges for his complicity in the worst mass crime in the history of Britain.”

Musk also shared a poll showing widespread discontent with Starmer’s government, declaring that “a new election should be called in Britain.” The Tesla tycoon – who has previously clashed with Starmer over the PM’s crackdown on online dissent following a spate of riots this summer – described Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party as “the only way to save” the UK.

Musk earlier met with Farage at US President-elect Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, with some media outlets claiming he had pledged as much as $100 million in support for the British party. Musk, however, denied the reports.

A Red(neck) Tory

Throne, Altar, Liberty

The Canadian Red Ensign

The Canadian Red Ensign

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

A Red(neck) Tory

 The Kalends of January  is upon us once again.  Kalends, from which our word calendar is derived, was the day of the new moon and hence the first day of the month, for the ancient Romans like the ancient Hebrews followed a calendar in which the months lined up with the lunar cycles they represent.  We have gotten off that so the first of the calendar month no longer always lines up with the beginning of the lunar cycle.  The Kalends of January is a significant day in the Church Kalendar because as Hippolytus of Rome wrote in the second century, our Saviour was born eight days before.  Yes, the 25th of December was the acknowledged birthday of our Lord from far earlier in Church history than Modern gainsayers would have you believe and can in fact be deduced from St. Luke’s Gospel.  The eighth day after the birth of an ancient Israelite male was, in accordance with the Abrahamic Covenant, the day he was circumcised and so the Kalends of January has long been the Feast of the Circumcision of Christ.  Far more recently it became New Year’s Day on the civil calendar.

This is the day each year when, in accordance with a custom I picked up from Charley Reese of the Orlando Sentinel, I write about myself and where I stand.  I very much miss Reese’s column, and for those who are unfamiliar with him, archives of his last few years can be found on Lew Rockwell’s website.  If you are interested in his earlier columns and can get your hands on copies at least two collections were published as books, Great Gods of the Potomac and Common Sense for the Eighties.

Lets start with the basics.  I am a Canadian.  I was born a Canadian and I will die a Canadian.  Donald the Orange can take his obnoxious rhetoric about the “51st state” and insert it into a place that is proverbially bereft of sunshine.  I have lived in the province of Manitoba in the Dominion of Canada all my life.  I am a loyal subject of King Charles III as I was a loyal subject of his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II of blessed memory before him.  I grew up in rural southwestern Manitoba, on a farm near the village of Oak River and the town of Rivers, did my first five years of higher education at what is now Providence University College in Otterbourne, about a half hour south of the provincial capital of Winnipeg, to which I then moved where I have lived and worked for a quarter of a century since.  

I often use T. S. Eliot’s famous description of himself as a “royalist in politics, Anglo-Catholic in religion, and classicist in literature” to summarize my own political-religious convictions and what I mean when I call myself a Tory. Tory is usually used to indicate a Conservative Party supporter.  I don’t apply it to myself in this partisan sense and seldom use the word conservative even in the small-c sense anymore as that term has been co-opted for people whose political ideals of democracy and capitalism come from nineteenth century liberalism, although twisted beyond what an actual nineteenth century liberal would recognize as his own, and whose main political thought seems to be that the United States should be imposing democracy and capitalism in their evolving meanings on the world with bullets and bombs and boots on the grounds.  When I say I am a Tory, I don’t mean anything like that, but rather that my convictions are those of Eliot’s triad.

Before saying a bit more about these things, I should explain the adjective in the title.  In Canada, traditional Tories like the economist and humourist Stephen Leacock, the philosopher George Grant, and the historian Donald Creighton,  basically the people who Charles Taylor wrote about in Radical Tories, have sometimes been called “Red” due to their criticisms of capitalism having been perceived as indicating a sympathy with socialism.  This perception is based on a false dichotomy, that capitalism and socialism are each the only option to the other.  In Grant’s case he sometimes said things that suggested he accepted this dichotomy. I don’t.  Nor do I have any sympathy for socialism which I utterly detest.  I have said before and will say again, that socialism is essentially the second worst of the Seven Deadly Sins, Envy, practiced under the pretense of the greatest of the Theological Virtues, Charity or Christian Love.  I put  “Red” in the title of this essay to indicate that it is Leacock, Grant, Creighton, Eugene Forsey et al., who represent the tradition of Toryism that I claim as my own rather than the neoconservatives who think that this tradition  should be replaced by what is called “conservatism” in the United States (see previous paragraph).  The “neck” is added to indicate that I don’t have any sympathy with socialism  nor with anything else that could be called progressive and leftist, but rather hold the anti-progressive attitude often associated with the word “redneck.”  Think of the lyrics to Charlie Daniel’s “Simple Man” for a picture of what that means.

As a Tory I am no republican big or little r but a “royalist in politics” as Eliot put it.  The entire universe is the kingdom of its Creator, God, the King of Kings.  The most basic unit of social organization, the family, traditionally reflects the order of the universe.  The husband-father is king, wife-mother is queen, and the children are subjects.  That is the way the family works best, despite all attempts by “experts” in the social pseudosciences, the progressive brainwashers who have taken over the schools, and the seditious anti-family revolutionaries who dominate the entertainment media to depict this model as disfunctional and fascist and to try and sell us on alternative models.  The state traditionally reflected the order of the universe as well, and like the family, it functions best when it continues to do so, under the reign of a king.  The totalitarian movements of the last century hated kings.  Every Communist country was a republic and so was Nazi Germany.  By contrast, “Freedom”, as the title of a Canadian Tory classic by John Farthing that I would like to see back in print and in the hands of all my countrymen says “Wears a Crown”.  I respect Parliament, precisely because it is an ancient institution that is a traditional part of a king’s government and not because it conforms to the Modern ideal or idol of democracy.

Turning to  “Anglo-Catholic in religion,” the first thing I should say is that while Anglo-Catholicism does accurately denote what my theology has matured into, it does not mean that I think that the English Reformation was a mistake that should be forgotten or undone.  I think that the things which the Anglican Church shares with not just the Roman Catholic Church, but the Eastern Orthodox and all the ancient Churches, especially the Catholic faith confessed in the ancient Creeds, but also the episcopal polity, the priestly ministry, and Sacramental worship are more important than the things that identify us with the Lutherans, Reformed, and other Protestants.   This does not mean that I think the latter to be unimportant, quite the contrary.  When it comes to the two most important things the Reformers fought for, the supremacy of the Scriptures and the freeness of the salvation proclaimed in the Gospel, I am firmly a Protestant.  I have come to see, however, the importance of qualifying these with Catholic truths.  We must indeed hold the Scriptures supeme as the infallible written Word of God (with the Authorized Bible as published in 1611 with the deuterocanon included between the Testaments as the definitive English Bible)but as Hans Boersma and Ron Dart have frequently reminded us the way to listen to them is at the feet of the Church Fathers.  The Gospel does indeed proclaim a salvation that is freely given in Jesus Christ to all who receive it by faith, but the Gospel is the message of Jesus Christ, His death for us and His Resurrection, confessed in faith in each of the ancient Creeds and not the doctrine of justification which, important as it is, is a doctrine about the Gospel, rather than the Gospel itself, and while faith is the appointed means whereby we receive the saving grace of God, the ordinary means by which that saving grace is brought to us that we may so receive it is the Church’s two-fold Gospel ministry of proclaimed Word and administered Sacrament.  I can very much do without most other things associated with Protestantism, especially the iconoclasm and the inclination to write off the Church prior to the Reformation.

I was raised culturally Christian in the sense that we celebrated Christmas and Easter and I was made aquainted with the stories of the Bible if not their theological significance.  My mother attended the United Church in Oak River, my father’s family had been affiliated with the Anglican Church in Bradwardine which closed around the time I was born.  My paternal grandmother, received the Anglican Journal and the newspaper of the Diocese of Brandon and I would read these whenever I visited her in Rivers.  It was through reading  Christian books from the library that I became aware of the significance of the events celebrated at Christmas and Easter.  In Bethleham, the Son of God, Who with His Father and the Holy Ghost was and is and ever shall be, God, was born as a baby boy, having become man by uniting a true human nature to His eternal Person.  He did so, that He might save mankind from the bondage to the devil, sin, and death into which we had fallen in the infancy of our race by dying on the Cross for us, the innocent Lamb of God Who “taketh away the sin of the world” and rising again from the grave triumphant over His enemies and ours.  The summer before I entered high school I became a Christian in the sense of a believer who trusts and confesses Jesus Christ as Saviour and Lord.

At the time I had a rather low view of the Church as an institution.  Liberalism, in the religious sense of minimizing, explaining away, or outright rejecting such basic Christian truths as the deity and bodily Resurrection of Jesus Christ in order to accomodate Modern notions, had made heavy inroads into the Anglican Church and all but completely taken over the United  which at somepoint around that time had elected an openly atheist moderator.  I had nothing but contempt for religious liberalism before becoming a believer and  had even less respect for it after.   For the first fifteen years of my walk as an active believer I attended non-conformist, mostly Baptist, evangelical and fundamentalist services, and thought that such things as church government were adiophora and the only thing about the organized  Church that mattered was the faithfulness of the sermon to the truths of the Christian faith.

When I joined and was confirmed in the Anglican Church, this was not because I had come to tolerate religious liberalism.  I remain firmly of the conviction that liberalism is not a defective form of Christianity but an entirely different religion altogether as J. Greshem Machen demonstrated in his Christianity and Liberalism a century ago.  Nor was it because the Anglican Church had expunged liberalism which sadly she has not, but because I had come to see that my earlier attitude towards  the institution of the Church was neither Scriptural nor supported by history.

Church government, I had come to see, is not adiophora.  The episcopal polity is not only the polity of the Roman Catholic Church, but of all ancient Churches that predate the Reformation, and furthermore, is clearly present in the Scriptures as the polity established by the Apostles themselves, the first bishops in the sense later attached to the word.  Nor was the soundness of the sermon the only thing that mattered.  Until the Reformation, the Sacrament of the Eucharist had been the central focal point of the service, at least as important as the sermon, and this was true not just of Rome but of all the ancient Churches.  

As for the soundness of what was preached and taught, I had come to appreciate that the best and fullest summary of the truths essential to the Christian faith was not the minimalist list of “five fundamentals” drawn up in controversy with liberals in the early twentieth century, or the Protestant confessions which are too narrow doctrinal statements to be considered the basic faith, but the ancient Creeds, especially the Nicene confessed by all the ancient Churches.  When I joined the  Anglican Church I joined a parish where I knew the teaching and preaching to be sound, but  I joined the Anglican Church because she had come out of the Reformatation with her episcopal polity and its Apostolic Succession intact, confessed the ancient and Catholic Creeds as her basic faith, and had recovered the centrality of the Eucharist.  This is how I would say that I am “Anglo-Catholic in religion”, although such things as the Coverdale Psalter sung to Anglican plainchant, crucifer led processionals and recessionals, clergy and choir in vestments, and candles and bells and incense all strike me as more appropriate to coming before a holy God than “praise and worship” songs in which the most used words are “me” “myself” and “I”, which sentiment is what is more commonly associated with Anglo-Catholicism today. 

I would probably replace “literature” with “culture” in Eliot’s “classicist in literature.”    Classicism is the position that man’s creativity as expressed in arts, literature and culture was given him to serve a higher good, that rules govern the exercise of that creativity and the achievement of the good of culture depends on those rules,  and the output is therefore susceptible to objective and not merely subjective evaluation. Classicism, of course, requires that there be such things as classics in works of art. literature and music.  That which is “classic” is regarded by those with Modern, progressive, forward-looking ideas as “old”, but this is because in the shallow following of fad-and-fashion that passes for thinking amongst them they cannot distinguish between what is old and what is timeless.  Timelessness is the distinguishing quality of a classic and that is true in music, the visual arts, architecture and the stage as well as literature proper.  Of course it is the passing of time that in most cases reveals a work to have this quality and most often when a new work is instantly proclaimed a classic it is simply a publicity gimmick into which little to no thought has been placed into the meaning of the word.  Still, it is not impossible to recognize a work that will prove to be enduring when it is new.  If care, skill, and knowledge of the craft or art have gone into the making of it these are good indicators.  Better indicators are that the message in the book, song, painting or what have you is addressed to more than just those of the present moment, although it may make reference to the present moment as a medium for conveying the message.  War, for example, is an enduring theme because its danger is ever present even in times of peace.  A work may speak only to a specific war, in which case it will become dated and bound to its own period.  It can, however, by addressing the reality of an immediate conflict speak beyond it to the enduring theme.  The poem “In Flanders’ Field” was written in World War I and this is the war of which it immediately speaks but the truths it speaks are enduring and when the poem is recited every Remembrance Day we understand the words to apply to the fallen of all past conflicts.  The best indicator is when the work says something important about the transcendentals, the qualities of Goodness, Beauty and Truth that the thoughtful and reflective have held important in societies and civilizations in all places and all times because they are the ends of created being, and about God in Whom these must ultimately be sought if man is to fulfil the end for which he is created.  Note that the views expressed in this paragraph are not a judgement of popular culture from the standpoint of highbrow culture.  Picasso’s paintings and Schoenberg’s music are highbrow but utterly devoid of aesthetic value, whereas popular culture, which is not to be  confused with “pop” culture the distinguishing characterstic of which is that it is factory produced for mass consumption, contains much that is good and has produced many classics.   The truths asserted in this paragraph apply to popular culture as well as to highbrow culture.  

These are the essence of my Toryism.  In the case of royalism I have been a royalist all my life, at first instinctually, later in a more informed manner.  I arrived at Anglocatholicism through a long spiritual journey that started with an evangelical acceptance of Jesus Christ combined with a fundamentalist rejection of liberalism in religion, and while it may not seem obvious to others to me it is evident that the destination was set from the beginning for the acceptance of Christ implies acceptance of His Church and to fully reject religious liberalism one must reject its seeds in all reforms of the sixteenth century except those that were absolutely necessary.  As for classicism, I can say that I have instinctually loathed the opposite of it all my life, having despised non-metrical verse, avant garde art, atonal music and the like from the moment I first encountered it, although active pursuit of the higher and elevating in culture came later, after much resistance of those who encouraged  me in that direction, and in part out of sheer cussedness such as when having encountered Mark Twain’s remark that “everyone wants to have read the classics but nobody wants to read them” I responded with “Sez you, Sam Clemens” and set out to read them.

Clearly my Toryism is not what calls  itself “conservatism” these days.  I am closest to today’s conservatives when it comes to what they are against.  I oppose abortion and what is now called “Medical Assistance in Dying” because they are murder (as opposed to killing in self-defence, in defence of others and property, capital punishment, and for one’s country in war, which are not).  That, however, may be something I have more in common with the conservatives of yesterday than those of today. I detest the courts turning violent offenders out onto the streets almost the moment they are arrested and making the public provide a supposedly safe supply of hard narcotics to drug addicts in the idea that this will reduce the harm they inflict upon themselves.  Ending “catch and release” is not enough, however, over a century’s worth of progressive reforms to the idea of criminal justice needs to be undone and we need to get back to thinking of criminal justice in terms of making the offender pay his debt to society rather than helping the offender recover from the illness of crime.  As for drug policy, we need to fish or cut bait as the polite version of the saying goes.  Either go back to trusting people to make their own self-medication choices or eliminate the supply of illegal narcotics in a real, rather than half-ass, war on drugs.  Either approach would be a vast improvement to the public not-for-profit drug dealing that is the harms reduction model.

 I oppose illegal immigration, but unlike most conservatives go further and say that legal immigration is in need of serious reform as well, and the problems are not merely those of the last ten or twenty years or so, but go back to the sixties.   I think that the late French Catholic, monarchist Jean Raspail hit the nail on the head in his novel The Camp of the Saints which depicted post-World War II liberalism as leading the civilization formerly known as Christendom to an existential crisis in its enthusiastic preference of “the other” at the expense of its own as reflected in its enthusiastic embrace of immigrants and refugees in numbers too large to be absorbed without endangering the continuity of the civilization.  The point is not that racial or cultural “otherness” is an insurmountable roadblock to someone’s becoming a true member of the community, society, country, and civilization they move to, that it is not is also illustrated in Raspail’s book.  As Enoch Powell put it “it is a matter of numbers.”

I detest radical feminism, the racial hatred of white people that goes under the name of “anti-racism”, the Year Zero attempts to erase the past that go under the names of “anti-imperialism” and “anti-colonialism,” the movement that in the name of “rights” is now demanding in the most totalitarian way possible that everybody not merely tolerate, not merely accept, but practically worship everyone who is other than cisgender and heterosexual and which insists that everyone pretend that someone who thinks he is a gender other than his biological sex, whether an actual gender or a make believe one, is what he says he is, and basically everything that the word “wokeness” has come to denote.  Where I would differ from conservatives is that their opposition to wokeness does not go much further or deeper than criticizing it for deviating from 1950’s and 1960’s, American liberalism.  My rejection of the vile race hatred of Ibraham X. Kendi does not mean that I am about to start pretending that Martin Luther King Jr. was a saint rather than a charlatan.   I  cannot stand the kind of idiot who in the name of feminism tells a neighbouring country that they should have voted otherwise in their last election because they owed it to the other candidate because she is a woman.  This is not because I think feminism to be a good thing of which he is a false representative.  Each successive wave of “feminism” has gotten crazier and crazier, because its real enemy from the first wave onward has not been the conspiracy of all men to oppress all women that has only ever existed in the fevered brains of those attached to this delusional movement but the reality of human nature that some people are men, others are women, that men and women are different, that these differences are not trivial but fundamental, “vive la différence” as the French say, and that trying to prevent this difference from expressing itself in social organization will inevitably increase rather than decrease the misery and unhappiness of both sexes.  “The personal is the political” was the motto of its second wave, a chilling statement that to these harridans there is no aspect of life that should escape the power of the state to remold it to their wishes.  For the best takes on feminism I refer you to Stephen Leacock’s “The Woman Question” and to Dr. Johnson’s observation  that “nature has given women so much power that the law has very wisely given her very little.”

I am much further from “conservatives” when it comes to the things they are for.  I explained above the things that I as a Tory am for and these things, royal monarchy, Christ’s One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church in its reformed Anglican expression, and classicism are all deep-rooted and ancient.  The things that “conservatives” say they are for are all Modern with roots no deeper than liberalism.  They are constantly changing because liberalism is constantly changing and to be a “conservative” today means little more than to be a defender of yesterday’s liberalism against the changes proposed by today’s. 

The most consistent things today’s “conservatives” are for are capitalism and technological progress. With regards to technological progress while there have been undeniable benefits to developing newer and fancier tools that can do increasingly more things for us there are obvious detriments as well.  That we have given ourselves the ability to destroy ourselves and our world stands out.  Having technology do for us what we should be doing for ourselves is another downside that is becoming an increasing problem as technology advances into the AI stage.  Thinking is not something we should be outsourcing to machines.  The earlier stage in which computers took over the task of doing all calculations in economic transactions had the result that when the computers were down many of the people manning the tills in stores were unable to do the simple math required to make change.  A repeat  of that with other cognitive functions is most undesirable.   I regard the idea that we will eventually solve all our problems by technological advancement with the utmost skepticism.  The Scriptures say that idolaters, those who worship the works of their hands come to resemble their false gods (Psalm 135:18).  Faith in technological progress is a form of idolatry and it inevitably makes men and their societies resemble machines.  

Technological progress is an inseparable part of capitalism.  Capitalism is often confused with economic freedom but the two are not the same.  Economic freedom is a simple concept and a basic good that is far to be preferred to the universal slavery that is socialism, whereas capitalism is a complex system that developed by removing traditional restrictions on usury, applying technological progress to the production of industrial goods, and expanding international trade.  I talked about the downside to technological progress in the previous paragraph.  That large-scale international trade has its disadvantages as well as its advantages (comparative and absolute, in economic jargon) is obvious and until the 1980s, the element of liberal economic theory that conservatives rejected was that such trade should be unrestricted.  American conservatives have of late abandoned the free trade fetish they picked up in that decade.  Canadian conservatives would be wise to follow suit as the disadvantage of being too dependent upon trade with one’s neighbour has become glaringly obvious.  Nevermind that the threat of crippling tariffs is attached to demands that we fix problems that we ought to be fixing any way, we should not be so dependent upon trade with the United States that its incoming leader can bully us around like that.  Add David Orchard’s The Fight for Canada to the mandatory reading list.  As for usury, it undergirds and runs through the entire capitalist system, which is why that system is incompatible with a sound currency.  Sound money, is money that retains its purchasing power so that people can use it to save for the future, a quality that requires that the currency represents actual wealth, that is, real goods already produced.  Usury, however, turns a country’s monetary system into a Ponzi scheme where the currency is backed by debt, wealth that has not yet been produced.  Since usury, like technological progress and international trade, is an essential element of capitalism, capitalism cannot escape this outcome.

Capitalism has been accused of evils of which it is not guilty, such as lowering the standard of living of workers (it raised it) and impoverishing the third world (the incompetent kleptocratic governments brought in by the decolonization and anti-imperialism that leftists love so much did that) but there are plenty of evils of which it can be justly accused. These include the uprooting of families, the decimation of rural communities, the disappearance of the family farm, urbanization and the accompanying evils of increased crime and erosion of trust and social capital that go along with it, the uglification of the countryside which is the real evil that those who claim to care for the earth and the environment ought to be fighting rather than the bogeyman of climate change, the reorganization of society so as to operate like an extended business rather than an extended family, a culture of throwing away and replacing rather than preserving and passing on, and dozens of others of a similar nature to these.  That socialism is an utterly unacceptable evil and economic freedom a good I have always held and always will maintain but this will not stop me from decrying these evils of which capitalism has been the engine and which conservatives, if they stopped for a second to think about what their chosen label implies, ought to realize that they should oppose too. 

The matter that probably best illustrates how I am closest to conservatives in what they oppose and furthest from them in what they are for is education.  Conservatives are opposed to the way schools from the earliest grades to universities have become indoctrination camps for pushing hatred of white people, hatred of Christianity, and hatred of Western countries and their history onto children and for exposing them to sexuality, and especially its more perverse forms, way too early.  I oppose this too.  Most conservatives promote STEM-centred education (science, technology, engineering, mathematics).  That these fields are immune to being turned into vessels for wokeness has of late been proven false, but were that not the case I would dissent from the idea of STEM-centric education because it is based on the idea that the purpose of education is to train children to be more successful cogs in the capitalist machine.  The purpose of education is to civilize children, for we are all essentially born savages and barbarians, so that they might be fit to be free subjects of the king and citizens of the state and for this there is no better education than the kind that starts with the basic trivium (grammar – Latin, Greek and first language, logic, and rhetoric), and builds on these with the quadrivium (arithmetic, geometry, music and astronomy).  See Dorothy L. Sayers’ “The Lost Tools of Learning.”  Along with these, the seven classical liberal arts, history should be taught in a way that neither demonizes the builders of civilization and its institutions like “Woke” history, nor interprets the past as one long march towards liberal democracy in the present day like what Herbert Butterfield dubbed “the Whig Interpretation of History” but as John Lukacks’ “remembered past” that contains the good and the bad, in which the builders of civilization are presented as they were, a mixture of both, and leaves us free to honour them for their accomplishments and the legacy they have bequeathed us and simply because it is the debt we owe to those who have gone before us, without conscripting them posthumously into the service of Francis Fukuyama’s “end of history.”  It is best if this is taught in a religious context, preferably with the Church in charge of education rather than the government. — Gerry T. Neal

Happy New Year

God Save the King!