John Carpay: If These 3 Bills Pass, Canada Could Be a Police State by Christmas

Canada will be a police state by Christmas if Parliament passes Bills C-2, C-8, and C-9 in their current form, and even more so if the federal government reintroduces the former Bill C-63.

If Bill C-63, the Online Harms Act, had become law prior to the April 2025 election, it would have given new censorship powers to the Canadian Human Rights Commission, with penalties up to $50,000, plus up to $20,000 payable to complainants, for offensive but non-criminal speech. A new army of bureaucrats working for the newly created Digital Safety Commission would now be enforcing censorship regulations passed by the federal cabinet. Canadians could be punished pre-emptively with house arrest, ankle bracelets, and curfews for speech crimes they might commit in the future. The maximum penalty for speech crimes would be life imprisonment.

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Conservatives warn bill could let Liberals cut off Canadians’ internet

Conservative MPs are sounding the alarm over a new federal cybersecurity bill, warning it could give cabinet sweeping powers to target ordinary Canadians online without due process.

Blacklock’s Reporter says Bill C-8, An Act Respecting Cybersecurity, would allow cabinet to order telecom providers to cut services to individuals it deems a threat to Canada’s telecommunications system — with orders kept secret and no court oversight.

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Premier Ford wants to make Ontario a surveillance state

Premier Ford wants to introduce surveillance cameras in Ontario communities to catch suspects in home invasions, car thefts

Premier Doug Ford says he is looking to expand the use of surveillance cameras in municipalities across the province to help catch suspects in car thefts and home invasions, but he is providing few details about exactly how such an initiative would work.

Ford made the comments at an unrelated transit news conference in Hamilton on Monday morning.

“I was asking the mayor (of Hamilton) about crime as well because I want to start introducing cameras on crime, if approved by residents,” Ford said.


It’s always for our own good.

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Digital ID Can Only End Badly

It’s finally happening—after decades of successive governments threatening Brits with a mandatory ID scheme, the UK is set to at last impose the ‘BritCard.’ Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer is planning to reheat the Blair-era plan to make national identification compulsory in the UK. The government intends to complete the rollout of these cards by the end of 2029—before the next, presumably non-Labour, government can stop it.

The idea is that anyone with the right to work in the UK will be issued one of these digital ID cards, stored on your smartphone. This would contain a passport-style photo, as well as information like your full name, nationality, date of birth, and residency status. They would be issued not just to Brits but also to those born abroad, so long as they have permission to work in the UK.

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The sinister arrest of my autistic son over a Hamas tweet

THE evil Starmer has been writing in the Telegraph, confessing that the Left ‘ignored immigration fears for too long’.

His response is to offer a plan for ‘patriotic renewal’ (whatever that is) which he asserts is the only thing that will counter ‘the rise of the populist right’. Towards the conclusion of his piece, he writes: ‘For Labour, we are clear that we must absolutely respond to the reasonable concerns about immigration.’

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Digital ID: we must resist this technocratic tyranny

So digital ID, the tyrannical policy that just won’t flush, has bobbed up into the Armitage Shanks bowl that is Keir Starmer’s Labour government. Out of ideas and with all the authority of an embattled supply teacher, the prime minister is falling back – yet again – on Continuity Blairism, on the great unfinished business of New Labour. Somewhere, in a lair under a dormant volcano, Tony Blair is stroking a cat and cackling incessantly.


At the press of a key you’re de-personed.

I believe we are much further along the road to dystopia than we realize.

A gulag is being built silently piece by piece. 

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Andrew Coyne Fell & Hit His Head

Photo radar does not belong in a free society

Years ago I received a letter informing me that, some months before, I had run a red light, and would have to pay a fine. It included a series of pictures of the rear of my car, captured by photo radar.

There must be some mistake, I thought. I’ve never run a red light in my life. Sure enough, closer inspection of the images revealed that I had in fact turned right on a red, a perfectly legal act. I took the letter to the address indicated for inquiries. The lady behind the desk glanced at it, and said: “Yeah, you didn’t wait the required three seconds before turning.”

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EVERY adult in Britain will need a Government-issued ID card despite backlash at Starmer’s plan for a ‘dystopian nightmare’

Every working adult in Britain will require a Government-issued digital ID card under a ‘dystopian’ plan set to be announced by Sir Keir Starmer.

The idea of a mandatory identification system has long been advocated by Labour as a way to tackle illegal migration.

But the proposal is fiercely opposed by civil rights campaigners, who warn it will erode civil liberties and turn the UK into a ‘papers please’ society.

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Doug Ford will outlaw municipal speed cameras this fall: sources

Premier Doug Ford is set to ban the speed cameras that he has denounced as a municipal “cash grab,” the Star has learned.

Sources, speaking confidentially in order to discuss internal deliberations, say Ford’s Progressive Conservatives will table legislation later this fall to outlaw the controversial “automated speed enforcement” devices.

“We’re looking at all options on how to slow down traffic without the use of speed cameras,” a senior government official said.

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CSIS, RCMP face ‘significant challenges’ obtaining private data: Intelligence watchdog

Canada’s security and intelligence organizations face “significant challenges” detecting and responding to security threats because of legislative gaps and outdated resources limiting when and how they can access private messages, one of the country’s intelligence watchdogs warns.

A recently tabled report from the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP) examined the fiercely contested issue of lawful access — court-approved interception of electronic communications.

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Proposed unneeded anti-hate legislation could help police not apply existing laws more efficiently: analyst

Proposed anti-hate legislation could help police in ‘cloudy areas’: analyst

A proposed anti-hate legislation could help police during protesting amid rise in hate crimes in Canada, a public safety analyst says.

Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to introduce a bill this week that will prohibit people from restricting access to places of worship, religious or cultural buildings, and schools.

The bill is also slated to include three new hate-related Criminal Code offences: willful intimidation, obstruction, and standalone hate occurring near places of worship.

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Anthony Furey: Doug Ford is right, every cash-grabbing speed camera must go

A funny thing happened earlier this year when many residents of the City of Vaughan complained about speed cameras and one of them was even knocked down shortly after 10 cameras were installed this spring.

Before the cameras were installed, Vaughan Councillor Gila Martow anticipated the backlash and proposed a number of revisions to make the system less punishing. The rest of council didn’t support her on it, but they soon learned the hard way after complaints came flooding in. To their credit though, council then voted for a complete pause to issuing fines until this fall when they’d reassess the issue.

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