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Sunday, September 14, 2025

FUREY: Climate alarmism – will kids be able to step away from it?

BY: ANTHONY FUREY

I heard from a number of parents last week that they were concerned about what their kids were going to be learning at the Global Climate Strike on Friday.

For those kids old enough, school boards sent home permission forms to take them to the rally. For younger kids, schools across the country held assemblies or rallies in the yard.

It seems that middle-of-the-road, non-partisan parents are fine with a bit of talk about protecting the environment but had their concerns about the alarmism that would crop up.

One parent apparently told the principal that when her young child had been taught about Canada’s residential schools system, she became fearful at night that bad men would come and take her away from her parents.

That’s probably not what the teachers told her, but that’s the thing with children: they contextualize information in ways that make sense to their limited worldview and then they let their imaginations run wild.

There is, though, a good reason to believe kids would be told some truly alarming statements at school on the day of the climate strike. Like how “people are dying”, as Greta Thunberg says. Or that we have a decade to save the planet. Or that the earth is literally on fire. All of these statements are false and yet they’re all being recited like mantras by people who should know better.

Children shouldn’t be exposed to this rhetoric. And yet it’s everywhere.

It’s hard to imagine things getting more extreme. Climate alarmists are really standing on the ledge now, calling this a full-blown emergency.

There’s a lot to be said about this phenomenon, but one thing I keep coming back to is how this is just one more form of extremism that children are being tempted to join up with.

It’s only natural for teenagers to have a rebellious phase and take up some sort of cause or subculture. But decades ago it was more likely to be muted and subdued. The James Dean stereotype saw kids taking up smoking, driving too fast and talking back to adults. Then around the 80s and 90s, when I was a kid, it was about becoming a skater or rocker or goth etc.

For those who undertook them, they were embarrassing phrases to go through but for the most part, they’re in the past – really only to be brought back up as pictures to chuckle about at a wedding reception. Some people took their subcultures a step too far and could never turn back, but for most people, they were a passing fancy that only lasted a short time.

Can the same be said now? Now young people are more likely to adopt hard-edged personas and take them to extremes. There’s a whole variety of crazy offerings out there. You can sign up with Antifa, travel abroad to join up with ISIS, march alongside neo-Nazis and – now – you can shriek about how the world is going to end in 12 years. 

One climate zealot got so excited on Friday that he tried to attack Justin Trudeau at a rally. That sort of “activism” comes with a criminal record and marks you for life.

Let’s hope that, like young rebels decades ago, most people joining the more extreme climate alarmist protests are just doing it to get things out of their system for a bit and that they don’t become lifers.

But looking at how frenzied all of these new “causes” have become, how close to the ledge they all are, it looks like once you’re in them they’re harder to walk back.

Birth tourism growing dramatically in Canada

The number of “birth tourists” in Canada has taken a dramatic leap in the last year, with Canadians increasingly concerned about the practice.

According to data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), between March of 2018 and March of 2019, the number of non-resident women giving birth in Canada hospitals has increased by 13%.

Over the last two years, the total number of infants born to birth tourists was 4099 — making up 1.4% of all births in Canada.

“It’s going up faster than immigration rates, faster than the overall population of Canada,” said Andrew Griffith, former director-general of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, who has studied the issue

“The laws were never intended for people to fly in and fly out.”

Birth tourism is the practice of wealthy women, typically from China, Russia, Turkey and Europe, coming to Canada to give birth so that their child is given Canadian citizenship. 

Canada is one of the only countries in the world that allow birthright citizenship, meaning anyone born on Canadian soil — regardless of their immigration status in Canada — is automatically a Canadian citizen. 

After visiting to give birth in Canada, most families return to their home country shortly after getting their child a Canadian passport.

There are currently no laws which can prevent birth tourism.

Birth tourism has grown dramatically in recent years. According to numbers provided by CIHI, the overall number of non-resident births in Canada has increased by 203% since 2008.

British Columbia has been hit the hardest by this trend. In Richmond, B.C., CIHI reports 454 foreign mothers gave birth to anchor babies last year — accounting for 11% of all birth tourism in Canada. 

A total of 23% of all births in Richmond are from birth tourist mothers, up from the hospital’s report of 20% a few months ago.

The situation has been called a crisis by health care workers. Dr. Kathleen Ross, president of Doctors of B.C. says that birth tourism negatively affects the health care system, but there are no rules to stop it.

“We’re at a crisis, a tipping point, so it’s really important that some higher authority takes this on,” she said.

“Hospitals and doctors have no option but to provide service. We can’t turn people away if they are sick, injured or in labour.”

Canadians, particularly British Columbians, oppose the practice of birth tourism, with most saying it takes advantage of Canada’s healthcare system.

More than four in five (82%) British Columbians say birth tourism allows people to unfairly access Canadian healthcare and welfare. The majority (64%) of all Canadians say being born in Canada should not automatically make one a citizen. 

While countries such as the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia have all enacted laws in recent years to combat birth tourism, the Trudeau government opposed a Conservative Party policy proposal to end the practice.

Five times the Liberals have accused others of racism

The Liberals have a long history of accusing their opponents of being racist. It’s one of their favourite go-to lines of attack. 

Justin Trudeau’s embarrassing and racist history of painting himself in blackface, however, shows the hypocrisy of the Liberals name-calling others as being racist. 

Here are five recent examples of Liberals accusing their opponents of being racist for baseless political reasons. 

Trudeau accused an elderly woman of racism then had her dragged from the crowd 

In August 2018, Justin Trudeau had an elderly woman forcefully removed from a crowd of Liberal supporters after she asked him whether Quebecers will be compensated for the costs of housing the influx of refugees into the province. 

In response to her concerns, Trudeau accused the woman of intolerance and racism. 

“Madam, your racism has no place here,” said Trudeau to the woman before RCMP officers grabbed her by the arm and moved her away from the crowd. 

The woman is now suing the prime minister for $95,000 in compensation in claims which include “corporal injury, psychological damage, defamation, and an infringement on her right to freedom of expression.” 

Trudeau accused the Conservatives of Islamophobia for wanting to put ISIS fighters in jail

During Question Period on November 28, 2017, Justin Trudeau suggested that the Conservatives were Islamophobic for wanting to put returning ISIS fighters behind bars.

The response came when Conservative Party Leader Andrew Scheer asked the Prime Minister what his plan was to deal with extremist fighters returning from abroad. 

“The Prime Minister is using a broad spectrum that includes poetry and podcasts, and all kinds of counselling and group hug sessions,” said Scheer. “When will the Prime Minister take the security of Canadians seriously and look for ways to put these ISIS fighters in jail?”

In response to the question, Trudeau accused the opposition leader of spreading fear and Islamophobia for wanting to put terrorists in jail..

“They ran an election on snitch lines against Muslims, they ran an election on Islamophobia and division, and still they play the same games, trying to scare Canadians,” said Trudeau. 

Kathleen Wynne said that criticizing the Liberal refugee plan is “racist”

In 2015 former Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne stated that Canadians who criticize the Liberal plan to let in 25,000 refugees from war-torn Syria on a fast-tracked artificial timeline were racist. 

“That’s the danger and that somehow talking about security allows us to tap into that racist vein, when that isn’t who we are,” said Wynne

According to the latest numbers, a majority of Canadians are actually against allowing more refugees into the country. A poll commissioned by CBC showed that an overwhelming 57 per cent of Canadians claimed that Canada shouldn’t accept any more refugees. 

Even a former Liberal cabinet minister took issue with Wynne’s comments. Ujjal Dosanjh, who once served as the Liberal Minister of Health, took issue with Wynne’s characterization since he too took issue with the timing and speed of the Liberal plan over security screening concerns. 

“Yes. I took it personally on behalf of 67% Canadians who disagree with the year end deadline imposed by the Canadian government to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees into the country …  You tarred a whole lot of fair, just, thoughtful and compassionate Canadians with the brush of xenophobia and racism. That is hurtful and truly Un-Canadian!” said Dosanjh.

Hussen accused Ontario Conservative Minister of being “not Canadian”

Liberal Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen accused Ontario Conservative Cabinet Minister Lisa MacLeod of being “not Canadian” when she expressed concerns about the cost of housing bogus asylum seekers in Toronto. 

In response to her concerns, Hussen said that “it’s divisive, it’s fear mongering and it’s not Canadian, and it’s very dangerous.” 

Just two weeks earlier, the feds had pledged $50 million to the provinces to help cover the cost of housing asylum seekers, including the tens of thousands of migrants who crossed illegally into Canada. This didn’t come close, however, to covering the cost and in the 2019 budget the Liberals earmarked $1.2 billion to deal with the crisis of illegal border crossers and asylum seekers. 

Bob Rae accused Conservatives of blackface for tweeting filtered picture of Justin Trudeau

Former interim leader of the Liberal Party Bob Rae accused the Conservatives of racism and purposefully darkening Justin Trudeau’s face in an ad.. 

The filtered image, which was shared by the Conservative Party’s official account, was a criticism of the prime minister’s failure to address the needs of Canada’s energy sector. 

“Justin Trudeau has made it clear that he wants to phase-out Canada’s oil & gas sector,” claims the ad, which shows Justin Trudeau dressed in an industrial uniform.

Despite the lack of racial connotations in the article and the entire picture being clearly filtered, the former Liberal Party leader accused the conservatives of —  you guessed it — “racism” for the harmless ad. 

“Racism at work. The equivalent of blackface. Media should be all over this. Straight out of a propaganda textbook,” wrote Bob Rae on his official Twitter account. 

Did we miss any? If you know of any other examples of the Liberals baselessly accusing others of racism, let us know [email protected]

LAWTON: Trudeau promises to spend, spend, spend!

Nothing in life is free, and this is especially true when it comes to Liberal promises.

The Trudeau Liberals unveiled their platform yesterday. If Justin Trudeau is re-elected, the federal deficit would increase to $27.4 billion in 2020-2021. This ultimately means more taxes for Canadians.

True North’s Andrew Lawton reports from New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.

FUREY: Climate alarmists don’t have any viable solutions

Thousands participated in the climate marches around the world, including in many major cities in Canada.

Many of the participants echoed teen activist Greta Thunberg’s opinion that the world is going to end and people are dying. However, none of these climate alarmists actually have any viable solutions to solve climate change.

True North’s Anthony Furey has more.

International media reacts to Trudeau blackface scandal

As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s blackface scandal continues to develop, media and influential figures around the world continue to weigh in.

Earlier this month, news broke that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau put on  “blackface” at least three times in the 1990s and early 2000s, and the story continues to make headlines around the world.

After a first instance was reported by TIME magazine, two more instances were soon uncovered, creating a scandal that has been both reported and satirized by global media.

The Trudeau blackface scandal has become so well known that even US President Donald Trump was asked about it.

Trump said he was “surprised” to see that Trudeau had been in blackface.

“And I was more surprised when I saw the number of times.” 

Outlets as diverse as the British BBC and Express, the German Die Welt and Agence France have all covered the developing scandal, creating an international embarrassment for Canada.

While originally claiming to have only donned racist make-up twice, a third instance was uncovered. Trudeau then said he did not specifically remember how many times he used the extremely offensive gag.

“I’m wary of being definitive about this because there are recent pictures that came out I had not remembered. I think the question is how can you not remember that? The fact is I didn’t understand how hurtful it is,” Trudeau said at a press conference.

Headlines like “How damaging is blackface scandal to Trudeau?” from BBC and “Justin Trudeau clean image takes another hit over ‘brownface’ past” from ABC (Australia) make it clear that the global media is now looking at Canada and the implications the blackface scandal will have on our election.

Commentators from around the world also weighed in on the scandal, many focusing on the hypocrisy of the progressive Trudeau engaging in the racist act of blackface.

Influential British pundit Piers Morgan in particular slammed the Prime Minister. 

“For a guy so keen to paint himself as the male Mother Teresa, the revelation that he has literally painted himself to appropriate non-white skin color is a bombshell from which I doubt he will ever recover,” he said

“Until yesterday, this guy was the very epitome of liberal self-righteousness, a caring, sharing bundle of worthy concern. Now he’s been forced to admit he’s the thing his fans despise most – a racist.”

Media personalities such as Tucker Carlson and Don Lemon in United States also commented on their respective shows, each trying to connect Trudeau’s blackface scandal to American politics.

Trudeau’s tarnished reputation may impact Canada’s perception of the world stage if he is re-elected Prime Minister.  

MALCOLM: Why is Trudeau so afraid of independent media?

What is Justin Trudeau afraid of? For over a week now, the Liberal campaign has gone to ridiculous lengths to try to keep a journalist away from Trudeau and to prevent him from asking tough questions.

The journalist, popular broadcaster Andrew Lawton, now works for True North, a public policy and digital journalism organization I founded, as a journalism fellow. We crowd-funded enough money to pay for a seat on the Liberal media bus, and I sent Lawton on assignment to cover Trudeau on the campaign.

To our surprise, the Liberals blocked Lawton from getting on the media bus and stopped him from entering campaign events with Trudeau.

After Lawton was blocked from entering a second event, the Liberals told us that only “accredited” journalists may join the media bus. They referred us to the Parliamentary Press Gallery (PPG) to get accredited but the PPG told us they have no jurisdiction over election campaigns — and that they only provide accreditation to Ottawa-area journalists from Ottawa-based media outlets.

Why were foreign media, regional outlets and even student bloggers being let into Liberal events without credentials from the PPG, but not a veteran journalist now with True North?

Could it have something to do with our editorial position, which leans to the right and is critical of Trudeau’s government?

Despite the ban, Lawton continued to cover Trudeau on the campaign by booking his own travel and following the Liberal bus to its various events across Canada. Time and time again, however, the Liberals blocked him from entering the venue — saying he wasn’t accredited and wasn’t allowed in.

On two separate occasions, the Liberals sent in the police to detain our journalist and prevent him from asking tough questions. The second time, Lawton got ejected from a public event at a public university — despite the fact he had RSVP’d and received a wristband to enter the venue.

In Canada, our prime minister apparently sends the cops to block journalists he doesn’t like. Because it’s 2019?

After an uproar on social media, a Liberal campaign boss called Lawton to apologize. But she told him the Liberals would continue to block him from entering campaign events.

Back in 2015 when Trudeau was running for prime minister, he made a big deal about the fact that Liberal campaign events were open to everyone — even those who disagreed with him.

This was in contrast to Conservative leader and then-prime minister Stephen Harper who reportedly removed a person from a campaign event because they were not a supporter of the party.

Back then, the mainstream media cared about openness and transparency from party leaders. This time around, most members of the mainstream media have turned their nose at Lawton and True North. There’s been no solidarity for the banned journalist.

Just days before the 2015 election, Trudeau scolded some of his own Liberal supporters for booing journalists during a Liberal rally.

“Hey! We have respect for journalists in this country,” Trudeau said to the hecklers behind him. “They ask tough questions and they’re supposed to.”

As recently as November 2018, Trudeau sung the praises of a free press.

“One of the institutions that is most under stress right now is a free-thinking, independent, rigorous, robust, respected media,” said Trudeau, weeks before his government announced a $595-million government bailout for legacy media outlets.

Rather than bribing journalists with taxpayer money, Trudeau could support free-thinking and independent journalists like Lawton and True North by respecting the freedom of the press and our rights as Canadians to access our democratic system.

We shouldn’t need to remind Trudeau about this — it’s written right into the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

KNIGHT: Andrew Lawton banned from attending Liberal campaign events

Andrew Lawton has been repeatedly barred from campaign events, and for what? For asking tough questions and not supporting Liberal talking points?

Throughout this election, the mainstream media has demonstrated just how bias they are. Whether it’s their coverage of Liberal announcements or even their defence of Trudeau wearing blackface.

True North’s Leo Knight says Canadians would have better coverage of the election if Andrew Lawton was able to cover Liberal campaign events.

LAWTON: No Trudeau love at climate march

Trudeau was reprimanded by Greta Thunberg, heckled at a press conference and jeered in the climate march. All on the day he announced a plan to plant two billion trees to affirm the Liberal party’s status as the environmental party.

True North’s Andrew Lawton reports from Montreal.

Hundreds of logging trucks descend on Vancouver to protest government failure in industry

A convoy of over three hundred logging trucks rolled through downtown Vancouver on Wednesday to protest the government’s failure to save the ailing industry. 

Workers and employers in the industry drove to the site of the Union of BC Municipalities Convention (UBCM) taking place near the Waterfront Centre from all over the interior of the province. They demanded that the provincial government take action to prevent the continued closures of logging mills and fix inflated stump fees. 

“We are not asking for money, we didn’t come here for donations or anything. What we want is for our communities to keep their jobs,” said convoy organizer Frank Etchart.

According to official estimates, nearly 700 jobs have been lost in the industry, and the number is expected to grow to 3,000 or more losses in the logging industry. 

“We’re in dire straits right now in many many communities in the interior and we can’t hang on,” said fellow organizer, Jerry Canuel. 

“Our industry is crippled right now. We’re not saying that this is anything illegal to do or anything else, If you let this go through the normal process of coming back down, it’ll take an excess of two years… We can’t wait two years, this guy can’t be out of work for two years,” said Canuel. 

“Our communities, our small communities, this is all we’ve got. And our businesses in our small communities are there because of us.” 

One of the main concerns brought up by the loggers was the issue of stumpage rates, which are seen as exorbitantly high in the province. 

Organizers claimed that stump costs are currently too high for North America and are impeding the industry. 

“Number one, the taxes that we pay, the stump rates that companies have to pay for every tree they cut, are not reflective of true market values right now,” said Canuel. 

Stumpage fees are paid by private companies when they harvest wood from Crown property. In comparison, in the closest province of Alberta, companies pay between $4 and $8 for stumpage fees, whereas British Columbians pay an average of $55 in fees.

In the last year, several convoys have passed through major cities in the country protesting various industries. 

Both in Ottawa and Edmonton pro-pipeline convoys passed through the major cities advocating for further energy development throughout the country.

“They’re not going to lie down and just take it. It’s time for the NDP to wake up and pay attention. Because this is British Columbia coming out to say: this is not acceptable,” said B.C. Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson. 

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