SHAW: Canada is one of the most desired countries on Earth — so why are we told it’s systemically racist?

SHAW: Canada is one of the most desired countries on Earth — so why are we told it’s systemically racist?

If Canada is systemically racist — as the political establishment insists — why is it one of the most sought-after destinations on Earth? Year after year, demand to enter this country remains extraordinarily high. Over 400,000 people became permanent residents in 2023, and even after reductions, nearly 395,000 arrived in 2025.

The vast majority of these immigrants come from countries which diaspora lobbies maintain Canada has historically prejudiced. Whether from India, China, or the Middle East, these groups frequently invoke past injustices inflicted by the Canadian state.


It’s desirable to 3rd World benefit seekers as the elites crave a surplus of cheap foreign labour in order to line their pockets.

In the process they virtually criminalize opposition to mass immigration declaring dissent racist.

Carney embraces this position. The Elbow people are very stupid indeed.

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John Carpay: How Many Court Rulings Does It Take to Prove Use of the Emergencies Act Was Wrong?

The federal government is appealing its Emergencies Act losses to the Supreme Court of Canada, in a Notice of Application that runs 503 pages.

After declaring a “national emergency” on Feb. 14, 2022, the federal government unleashed police force on peaceful Freedom Convoy protesters in Ottawa, and froze hundreds of bank accounts of Canadians from coast to coast.

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Randy Hillier’s convoy case back on after stay of charges overturned

The criminal case against former Ontario politician Randy Hillier over his participation in 2022’s convoy protest in Ottawa is back on after the province’s top court overturned a decision to stay the charges.

The charges were stayed in late 2024 after a lower court judge ruled the case had dragged on too long, past the mandatory time limits set by the Supreme Court of Canada.

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Adamson Barbeque owner loses COVID-19 Charter challenge. Shutting restaurant during lockdown not a ‘seizure,’ judge says

Pitmaster Adam Skelly has failed to convince a judge that the government violated his constitutional rights by shutting down his restaurant during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Superior Court Justice Janet Leiper dismissed Skelly’s case this week, writing in her decision that the city and province acted appropriately in order to protect the public from “serious risk of illness, hospitalization, and death.”

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Josh Dehaas: There was no sedition, Mr. Carney

There was never any question what Prime Minister Mark Carney thought about the Freedom Convoy protesters in Ottawa. In a Globe and Mail op-ed published on Feb. 7, 2022, the “Ottawa resident and former governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England” wrote that the convoy was “terrorizing” people, that women were being forced to “flee abuse,” and that the elderly were “afraid to venture outside their homes.” He accused the organizers of “blatant treachery” and “sedition,” and proposed the government respond by “choking off the money.”

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LILLEY: Woman who threatened Mark Carney is no free speech hero

A Toronto woman who made online threats against Prime Minister Mark Carney is being held up as a martyr for freedom of speech when, in reality, she’s a public nuisance and possible danger.

Nicole Pearen Miske, posted about Carney on Feb. 10 and made a threat that police found out about and had to investigate.

It seems a bit overblown to me. A civilian on the receiving end of that nonsense would likely be told the police could do nothing.

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Liberal government appeals ruling against use of Emergencies Act to Supreme Court

OTTAWA — The Liberal government is honking its final horn in its legal battle to validate its use of the Emergencies Act to deal with the 2022 Freedom Convoy protests.

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government filed its application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) on Tuesday in the hopes that the highest court in the land will overturn two earlier decisions that ruled the use of the draconian act was unjustified as a way to stop the protests.

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Is it a crime to mock politicians in Germany?

On 23 February 2026, police in Heilbronn, a city in south-west Germany, opened a criminal investigation into a retired man. His alleged crime? Calling chancellor Freidrich Merz ‘Pinocchio’. No threats. No incitement. Just a blunt, rather amusing suggestion that Germany’s national leader tells lies. Welcome to Germany in 2026, where mocking a politician is now a police matter.

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In the future everyone will be a white supremacist for 15 Minutes

White supremacist rally at city hall a ‘blatant act of hate’

Hamilton Mayor Andrea Horwath is condemning a rally by a white supremacist organization at city hall.

Police were called by city hall security to the protest around 1 p.m. Sunday, said Const. Trevor McKenna.

… While the incident is considered hate-motivated and will be tracked by the police hate crime unit, police said there were no reports of criminal activity.

Photos of the rally show members of the group giving Nazi salutes. The group often protests and shares anti-immigration posts on social media and call for “white men” to “fight back.”


Notice the double standard? Would a BLM or Pallie rally, both genuinely racist and violent groups, receive similar treatment by the “authorities’?

You don’t have to side with the group’s ideology to agree this is really about criminalizing all dissenting views critical of mass immigration. It’s an anti-democratic demonization tactic carried out by our Liberal-Left pols and their fellow travelers in the media since forever. See this TDS driven nonsense in today’s Star for additional proof.

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Former Chilliwack school trustee Barry Neufeld ordered to pay $750K for violating Human Rights Code

Former Chilliwack school trustee Barry Neufeld has been ordered to pay $750,000 by the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal for violating the Human Rights Code with “heated public speech” exposing LGBTQ people to hatred or contempt. The tribunal issued its final decision this week, issuing two sets of costs orders in the matter of the BCTF (on behalf of) the Chilliwack Teachers’ Association v. Neufeld, one ordering the payment of $750,000 in costs to the CTA, and a concurrent order of $10,000 for improper conduct during the lengthy process.

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WARMINGTON: Is Durham Region’s hate reporting program just fancy snitch line?

Durham Region has created its own “hate police” department.

While those on patrol won’t be carrying a badge or a gun, have the power to arrest or charge anyone or have any connection to Durham Regional Police, they seem to be planning to collect, document and store information about residents in the region in their quest to help victims of discrimination or bigotry.

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Police still persist with the hate crime agenda

WHAT did I tell you? In December, Britain’s College of Policing revealed to the Telegraph that it would recommend to Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood that ‘non-crime hate incidents’ (NCHIs) should no longer be recorded (12 years after the same organisation had recommended they should be recorded).

In response I warned that police would continue to record NCHIs while claiming they are just collecting intelligence.

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Ottawa Police Detective Helen Grus will be sentenced for Discreditable Conduct – May 19, 2026

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Emergencies without accountability — how Canada normalized state overreach

Here we go again. Years after the federal government unleashed extraordinary powers against its own citizens during the 2022 Freedom Convoy, Canadians are once more confronted with an uncomfortable truth: the abuse has been legally acknowledged, yet no one in power will be held to account.

(Incognito)

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Update: Federal government loses Emergencies Act appeal, court says use during convoy protest was unreasonable

The Liberal government unreasonably invoked the Emergencies Act to clear the convoy protests that gridlocked the capital city and border points nearly four years ago, the Federal Court of Appeal ruled on Friday.

The court dismissed the government’s appeal of a 2024 ruling which deemed former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s decision to use the legislation unlawful and infringed on protesters’ Charter rights.

“As disturbing and disruptive the blockades and the convoy protests in Ottawa could be, they fell well short of a threat to national security,” wrote the three judges on the appeal court.

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