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Friday, October 10, 2025

Ottawa police launch hate speech investigation after anti-Israel protest

Source: Facebook

Ottawa police are investigating a hate speech allegation following a pro-Palestine protest in front of Parliament Hill on the weekend.

The Ottawa Police Service announced Monday that its Hate and Bias Crime Unit was spearheading a probe after video circulated of a rally speaker justifying Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

In a video posted to X by Dacey Media,  a crowd of protesters marching in front of the Canadian parliament building could be heard cheering after the speaker said, “Oct. 7 proves we’re almost free!”

The video, which had over 2.5 million views as of Monday afternoon, has been seen as glorifying the terror group’s attack that killed over 1,200  men, women and children.

Hamas also took more than 250 hostages, and according to Israel, almost 130 of those are still being held captive.

“When I say from the river to the sea, you reply with ‘Palestine is almost free,’” a man can be heard telling the crowd as they march past Parliament Hill. “Our resistance attacks are proof that we are almost free.”

He continued shouting through a megaphone to the crowd, some waving Palestinian flags, others showing their support for the Iranian regime. At least four Revolutionary Communist Party flags can be seen waving in the video with the Marxist hammer and sickle displayed.

“Oct. 7 is proof that we are almost free!” he said. “Long live Oct. 7! Long live the resistance! Long live the intifada! Long live every form of resistance!”

According to B’nai Brith, a Jewish rights group in Canada, calls for intifada are synonymous with violent attacks on Israeli Jews.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned the pro-Hamas statements on X.

“There is a difference between peaceful protest and hateful intimidation,” Trudeau said. “It is unconscionable to glorify the antisemitic violence and murder perpetrated by Hamas on October 7th. This rhetoric has no place in Canada. None.”

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre denounced the crowd as well.

“I condemn these pro-genocide, anti-semitic chants.” he said on X. “We stand with Jews in Canada and around the world against these malicious words and deeds.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh responded to incident with a defence of the right to protest while being clear that incitements to violence are not okay.

“Canadians have a right to protest and show solidarity with those whose human rights are being violated. But let’s be clear: hate, antisemitism and inciting violence is never ok.” Singh wrote on X. “I unequivocally condemn those who chant things that are incendiary, hateful, and that glorify October 7th’s terror and death.”

The NDP leader said he’ll continue to stand with “millions of Canadians peacefully advocating for peace and justice.”

Liberal MP Marco Mendicino, who served as the minister of public safety until last summer, called out the speaker in the video, saying this crossed the line from free speech to promoting terrorism.

“Hamas are terrorists. They murder, rape and torture. They instigate martyrdom. They brazenly admit they will keep terrorizing until Israel and the Jewish people are no more.” Mendicino said. “Shouting “long live October 7” is not free speech. It’s promoting terrorism. And it must not be tolerated.”

Zionist advocacy group Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs said this sort of rhetoric must be denounced by everyone.

“Open glorification of terrorism & the deadliest day for Jewish people since the Holocaust. In Ottawa,” the CIJA said on X. “It has NO place in Canada & must be condemned by all.”

This comes at the end of a week with incidents of anti-Israel blockades in Canada and major cities around the world and a surge of what Jewish rights organizers have called antisemitic hate speech following Iran’s attack on Israel.

Ottawa police ask anyone with information to contact the Hate and Bias Crime Unit at (613) 236-1222, ext. 5015.

Singh spreads false claim that Poilievre wants to dump “toxic waste” into waterways

Source: Facebook

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh has been spreading a false claim that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre wants to allow polluters to dump toxic waste into Canadian waters.

Singh uttered the claim on multiple occasions last week, insisting to Canadians that Poilievre “thinks it’s okay to dump toxic waste into rivers.”

The NDP leader first made the erroneous statement while speaking to reporters at the 2024 Progress Summit. The conference is run by the Broadbent Institute, which has close ties to the federal NDP. 

“(He) has spent a lot of time making it very clear that Pierre Poilievre’s approach is to have no climate plan and really his plan is to let big polluters dump toxic waste into our rivers without any regulations,” said Singh on Apr. 11.

“That’s what’s going to happen, cloud our air, pollute the land and I think that is absolutely wrong.” 

A few days later, on Apr. 15, Singh repeated the claim during a press conference outside the House of Commons. 

“What we’re concerned about is that Pierre Poilievre has absolutely no plan. He thinks it’s okay to dump toxic waste into rivers, he wants big polluters to do whatever the want. He wants no rules for big polluters, that is a serious problem,” claimed Singh.

True North reached out to the NDP to request comment and ask what evidence Singh had to back up his statement but did not receive a response from the party. 

Although Poilievre has been adamantly opposed to the Liberal government’s approach on climate, including by recently campaigning to scrap the federal carbon tax, the Conservative leader has never proposed that polluters should be free to dump toxic waste into Canadian waters. 

Poilievre also wants to repeal the Impact Assessment Act, which further regulates which energy developments can receive approval in Canada. 

While speaking to the Association of Mineral Exploration last year, Poilievre said that his government would reduce emissions without carbon taxing via technology like carbon capture. 

“I believe the answer is to lower the cost of carbon-free alternatives, by speeding up approvals for electric dams, for car battery mineral production and carbon capture and storage and nuclear,” said Poilievre. 

“But what we say, very clearly, is that we need technology rather than taxes in order to fight climate change, and that includes carbon capture, nuclear or hydro dams. I will unleash the production of more clean, green carbon-free energy by removing gatekeepers, cutting red tape, and incentivizing through financial instruments.”

In an email to True North, Conservative spokesperson Sebastian Skamski pointed to the fact that the Liberals and NDP, in fact, voted to kill a bill introduced by the Conservatives in 2021 that proposed to prohibit the dumping of toxic sewage into Canadian waters. 

Bill C-269 was introduced by Conservative MP Andrew Scheer.

“After nine years of Trudeau, all the NDP-Liberal government has is a tax plan that has raised the cost of gas, groceries, and home heating for Canadians, all the while failing to meet a single solitary climate target,” said Skamski. 

“Common sense Conservatives introduced and championed legislation to prevent toxic waste from being poured into our waterways and both the NDP and Liberals voted to kill it. Meanwhile, Trudeau jetsets around the world on lavish vacations with his billionaire friends, burning up thousands of litres of jet fuel.”

No excuse to block critical infrastructure, Danielle Smith says after Coutts 3 verdict 

Source: Unsplash

As three men await sentencing following guilty verdicts for their role in the Coutts border blockade, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says people can’t block critical infrastructure to protest — no matter their political ideology. 

After a few hours of deliberation Tuesday night, Marco Van Huigenbos, Alex Van Herk and George Janzen were found guilty of mischief over $5,000 by a jury. They face up to 10 years in jail and the judge’s sentencing is expected this summer. 

In an exclusive interview with True North released Saturday, Smith said the Critical Infrastructure Act means protesters cannot block bridges, railways or highways no matter whether they’re on the left or the right. 

“I think that this is a caution,” she said. “There’s a way to be able to make your point known, there’s a way to be able to advocate, but you can’t block critical infrastructure.” 

Van Huigenbos responded on X telling Smith that the trio wasn’t charged under the Infrastructure Defense Act, but was charged with mischief. He also said that Coutts protesters weren’t there because of a political ideology.

“Tens of thousands of albertans (including members of YOUR  @UCPCaucus) went to Coutts because government had lost their %#$& minds,” he wrote.

The Coutts border protest was a two-week blockade on Highway 4 at Coutts, a village on the Canada-U.S. border.

It emerged alongside the Freedom Convoy, which saw truckers plug up the streets around Parliament Hill in Ottawa for three weeks in January and February of 2022. Protesters there were forcibly removed by police and some organizers had their bank accounts frozen following the federal government’s invocation of the Emergencies Act. 

Just after Smith won the United Conservative Party leadership and became premier in October 2022, she said she was seeking legal advice on granting amnesty to individuals and businesses fined for violating Alberta’s Covid restrictions.

“I think it can be a political decision to make amends and apologize for them and eliminate them,” Smith told the media at the UCP annual general meeting at the time. 

In January, Smith said she wouldn’t be able to offer amnesty to those prosecuted for Covid restrictions because Canada’s judicial system is separate from the legislative branch of government. 

The Coutts Three are separate from the Coutts Four, referring to men charged with conspiracy to commit murder. In February, two of those men pleaded guilty to lesser offences. A trial for the other two is scheduled for May.

CAMPUS WATCH: York politics department condemned for linking Israel’s existence to white supremacy

Source: Facebook

A leaked document from York University’s politics department claims that supporting Israel’s existence “upholds global white supremacy.”

The statement in question was first shared online by Quillette journalist Jonathan Kay.

“Zionism is a settler colonial project and ethno-religious ideology in service of a system of Western imperialism that upholds global white supremacy,” claims the document.

Zionism is typically defined as “the movement for the self-determination and statehood for the Jewish people in their ancestral homeland, the land of Israel.”

Most of Israel’s population is not of European descent: Israeli Arabs make up between 20-25% of the population, while Mizrahi Jews, who originate from the Middle East, make up 40-45% of the population.  Ashkenazi Jews, whose ancestry can be traced back to Europe, make up 30% of the population.

The document also discusses the department’s “Palestine Solidarity Committee” as well as “anti-Palestinian racism.”

“On Nov. 14, 2023 the Palestine Solidarity Committee was approved by the department of politics faculty council at York University,” reads the department’s document. The committee was given a mandate to “develop departmental policy/protocol to define and address anti-Palestinian, Islamophobic, and anti-Arab racism.”

The York University department of politics did not respond to a request for comment.

York University’s administration distanced itself from the document.

“The views expressed in the report are those of the authors and do not represent the views of the university,” said York, adding that it “continues to value our relationship with our international academic partners in the Middle East including those in Israel.”

The university also noted that it “stands firmly behind our commitment to support and uphold academic freedom, and freedom of expression within the limits of the law, including the principles established in the President’s Initiative on Open and Respectful Dialogue.”

“These protections affirm the right of individual community members to express political views including pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel views,” the university noted.

York also said that “hate and racism of any kind are not tolerated, and this includes both anti-Palestinian racism and antisemitism.”

The document went on to define “anti-Palestinian racism” as “the beliefs, attitudes, actions, practices, and behaviors of individuals and institutions that devalue, minimize, and marginalize the full humanity and dignity of Palestinians.”

“It is the systematic and structural denial of the Palestinian right to self-determination and national liberation, and the collective existence of the Palestinian people, while upholding Zionism,” it adds.

The document also says that disciplinary measures against those who speak out against Israel are racist.

“Anti-Palestinian racism also includes censoring those standing in solidarity with Palestine and Palestinians,” the document reads.

In response to the ordeal, the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs said on X that it appreciated the York University administration “confirming that the harmful views of a committee report in one of their academic departments do not represent those of the university.”

This is just the latest in a string of concerning incidents at York following Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

In the days following Oct. 7, York University student unions said the attacks against “so-called Israel” were “justified and necessary.” They also shared calls for intifada (armed rebellion).

A York University instructor also made the news for boycotting classes to protest school’s condemnation of Hamas, and a York CUPE union issued a toolkit telling its members they have an “intellectual imperative” to stand up for Palestine.

As previously reported by True North’s Sue-Ann Levy, the toolkit contended that Palestine is a “human issue,” an “arts issue,” a “society issue,” a “cultural issue,” and a “feminist issue.”

The Andrew Lawton Show | Pro-Hamas protesters are openly glorifying October 7 murders

Source: Wikimedia

Footage from a weekend anti-Israel rally shows protesters openly cheering for Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, referring to it as a sign that Palestinians are almost free and calling for Oct. 7 to become “every day” for Israelis. Antisemitic protesters feel safe enough in their views that they no longer feel the need to mask their Jew hatred with terms like “anti-Zionist,” True North’s Andrew Lawton points out, noting that calls for dead Jews should terrify, but not surprise, us.

The federal government spent $2.2 million in legal fees trying to defend its use of the Emergencies Act in Federal Court, only to get a decision that broke the law in doing so. Also, CBC is getting tens of millions of dollars more from the feds but the president of the state broadcaster won’t even do an interview with a CBC journalist. Kris Sims from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation joins to weigh in.

Plus, a United Nations summit taking on plastic is starting up in Ottawa this week. What does this mean for Canadian consumers and businesses? Vinyl Institute president Aiñe Curran joins to discuss.

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The Daily Brief | Liberals force banks to participate in carbon tax theatrics

Source: Facebook

The Liberals will force Canadian banks to identify the carbon rebate by name when issuing direct deposits to Canadians.

Plus, BC Premier David Eby defends drug decriminalization as the federal Liberals and Conservatives raise concerns over his province’s approach.

And a new study reveals there is no evidence to suggest that extreme weather events are on the rise despite the assertions of climate activists and Canada’s government.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Lindsay Shepherd and William McBeath!

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SHEPHERD: B.C. woman at center of residential school book firestorm speaks out

Source: Lindsay Shepherd

A 74-year old tax expert with a passion for civic involvement, community affairs, and empowering local youth has bewilderingly become the most notorious woman in the small city of Quesnel, B.C.

“I’m really afraid to go out right now,” Pat Morton said in an exclusive interview with True North.

“When I come to work in the morning, I used to park out back, and now I park right beside the door so I can get right in. At home at night, I’m afraid. I’m afraid for my safety.”

Morton has been facing fervour online and in the Quesnel city council chambers for the apparently heinous act of recommending a bestselling book.

Morton, the wife of Quesnel mayor Ron Paull and herself a former city councillor, was surfing Amazon for books to read and came across Grave Error: How the Media Misled Us (and the Truth about Residential Schools).

Morton ordered Grave Error, a collection of essays debunking the mainstream narrative that the Indian residential schools of the 1870s to 1990s were institutions of genocide. (Grave Error, edited by C.P. Champion and Tom Flanagan, was published by True North). 

As author Tom Flanagan notes, “Grave Error certainly does not deny that the residential school experience was difficult for many native children, or that abuses and neglect occurred,” but it does contend that there is no evidence any students from these schools went missing or were buried in “unmarked graves.”

In fact, attendance at residential schools was almost entirely voluntary and students had better health outcomes than those living on reserves.

To gain a variety of perspectives, Morton also ordered Rez Rules: My Indictment of Canada’s and America’s Systemic Racism Against Indigenous Peoples, by Chief Clarence Louie.

Morton, who grew up on Vancouver Island – including at a logging camp north of Campbell River – has always been interested in the topic of Indigenous relations.

“I’ve always been interested because I talk to the kids and the people when they come into the office about how things are, and I get a little disturbed about how the things on the reserves are affecting the kids,” she said. 

“I hear about the kids that are mistreated. I hear that the young girls have no rights.”

In 1966, as a teenage girl, Morton was invited to and attended a school dance at the Port Alberni residential school, and knew that these schools held many activities, events, and sporting matches for the students. 

She read some of the essays in Grave Error, and being the civically-engaged citizen that she is, donated some copies to the local school district and passed along a copy to a fellow community member, Connie Goulet, whom she had known for over 30 years. Morton wanted Goulet’s thoughts on the book.

Connie is the mother of Tony Goulet, a city councillor who identifies as Métis. 

During a Mar. 19 council meeting, Tony Goulet appeared to be choking back tears as he claimed that it was “very, very, very traumatizing” and “very, very, very disrespectful to an Indigenous community” for Morton to have handed out the book to her acquaintances.

Council, including Morton’s husband, Mayor Ron Paull, condemned the book, which they admitted they hadn’t read. The Quesnel board of education also denounced the book.

At a subsequent Apr. 2 meeting, the chambers were full of protesters, many of them First Nations, who booed and hollered at Morton when she appeared to give a statement. Local media reported that hundreds of people came out to protest. 

The chiefs of the Lhtako and Nazko First Nations stated at the meeting they would no longer do business with the City of Quesnel with Paull at the helm.

Morton said during that meeting that she was “rattled.”

“I really don’t like being in the spotlight. I absolutely hate it. And I look at it now and say, this is terrible,” she told True North.

“I like being in the background – I’ll work and make things happen. But if I have to, I step forward.”

“You can come after me, but leave my family out of it”

Part of the fallout for Morton has been that her son Kevin Christieson’s tax firm, Qtax, lost a major contract doing tax returns for members of the Nazko band, which the firm has done for years.

“When this happened, the day after the (council) meeting, an accounting firm phoned and said they’re taking over the contract. They didn’t even phone Kevin, they didn’t say anything to him, they just decided to go elsewhere.”

Christieson defended his mother early on.

“She is one of the kindest, most giving people I know,” Christieson wrote of Morton in a statement on Qtax’s Facebook page on Mar. 22. 

“She loves all people from different backgrounds, and would never do anything to harm anyone. Everybody that actually knows my mother knows this to be true.”

While preparing tax forms, Morton really gets to know her clients.

“That’s why I love my job, is I get a chance to talk to everybody about anything. And I give them an opportunity. I had one Native girl, she actually ran for city council one time, and after the meeting, she came up and gave me a big hug and said ‘thank you’ because I was the reason that she had the guts to do it,” she recounted.

“I try really hard to make people feel better when they leave here, not just because I did their taxes and they got money back, but just to give them a boost in life. And I’ve hired many, many Native people to work for me.”

Morton attests that her marriage is stronger than ever, despite Paull publicly disagreeing with her actions.

According to Morton, because of the Quesnel controversy, Paull felt pressured to resign from his board position with the New Pathways to Gold Society, a heritage tourism organization.

“I love Pat dearly and respect her and everyone’s right to freedom of speech, to freedom of association… Even through adversity, Pat and I are best friends,” Paull wrote in a Mar. 25 resignation letter, supplied to True North.

“I have decided to resign from the board so as to not be seen in any way as a distraction from the integrity and continuing good work of the (New Pathways to Gold) society,” Paull wrote.

Morton said her husband is a “peace-loving guy” who lets the Quesnel councillors make up their own minds about city matters.

When Morton herself appeared in the chambers on Apr. 2 to offer her point of view, Coun. Laurey-Anne Roodenburg told Morton she had “no respect” for her husband as mayor.

“Why didn’t she come to me and say something?” Morton added, speaking of Roodenburg, who is the council’s indigenous liaison.

“I mean, she’s supposed to be helping the bond, she’s not supposed to be inflaming it. And I think that’s exactly what she did.”

Morton said Roodenburg and Elliott were cozier with the previous mayor.

“What they’re doing to my husband right now is so devastating,” she said.

“He doesn’t blame me for this. I feel really bad that this is happening. And he can see that. It really wasn’t my doing, giving the book to Connie. This is about the politicians getting involved and making hay out of it.”

LAWTON: Danielle Smith slams Trudeau’s “costly” climate agenda

Source: CPAC

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith joined True North’s Andrew Lawton at the Canada Strong and Free Networking Conference in Ottawa for a fireside chat on a wide range of topics, including Canadian oil and gas, Steven Guilbeault’s war on cars, and protecting women’s spaces. Plus, why Alberta is taking a strong stance on parental rights.

Roll up the crust? Tim Hortons adds pizza to menu

Source: Tim Hortons

Tim Hortons is trying its hand at pizza.

The coffee chain is rolling out four flatbread offerings after a two-year pilot run at locations in Calgary, Winnipeg, and the Greater Toronto Area.

Tim Hortons’ new flatbread pizza options include cheese, pepperoni, “bacon everything,” and chicken parmesan.

After having success with attracting new customers during mid-day lunches with their introduction of bowls and wraps, Tim Horton’ wants to continue expanding the brand past the traditional breakfast, donut and coffee location, the company said.

The move will add flatbread pizzas into their current non-breakfast menu of panzerottis, wraps, chicken strips and other sandwiches.

“We started mapping out where we should go over many years, so not to rush it, but to really think about where we can stretch the brand a little in the afternoon beyond what people expect of Tims today,” Hope Begozzi, Tim Horton’s chief marketing officer said in an interview with the Canadian Press.

In 2018 the restaurant launched a “Breakfast Anytime” initiative which was designed to cut into the afternoon market by making their breakfast sandwiches and hashbrowns available throughout the day.

One Toronto pizzeria didn’t seem too threatened by Tim Hortons’ expansion.

“They say imitation is the highest form of flattery. I see on the news today that Tim Hortons is introducing flatbread pizza. Not sure it can compete with ours,” Bistro on Avenue wrote on X.

Trans Mountain expansion poses threat to Iraq’s crude oil exports, analyst warns

Source: Facebook

One major oil-exporting Middle Eastern country may already be feeling the pressure from Canada’s Trans Mountain Expansion as the pipeline nears completion. 

In an interview with Bloomberg News, Rystad Energy analyst Susan Bell said that the heavy crude produced by Alberta has a very similar profile to Iraq’s Bashar Heavy crude. 

“When you look at the yield profile of that crude oil, the distillation profile of that crude oil, it’s very similar to Canadian heavy — so it’s very substitutable,” said Bell.

When faced with the prospect of directly receiving Canadian oil instead of importing Iraq’s crude over a long distance, western U.S. refineries would likely choose the more convenient option. 

Additionally, the Canadian pipeline will open up more access to the Asian market via the Pacific. 

The pipeline is set to deliver 890,000 barrels of oil a day to Vancouver’s coast where it will be loaded on to tankers to be sold overseas, nearly tripling Alberta’s exports. 

According to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, the pipeline will be ready for operation this May despite a long history of delays and regulatory troubles. 

Nations might also prefer to import Canadian oil due to Canada’s stability and environmental regulations. 

Companies like MEG Energy have already requisitioned 2.1 million barrels in advance of the pipeline’s official launch. 

In its last operational update, Trans Mountain explained that it was finishing the final stages of regulatory approval with the Canada Energy Regulator.

“To complete the Expansion Project, there are several remaining steps including obtaining outstanding approvals from the Canada Energy Regulator,” the company wrote. 

“With the appropriate approvals and completion of remaining construction activity, Trans Mountain will commence transporting crude oil on the expanded system. The Commencement Date for commercial operation of the expanded system will be May 1, 2024. Trans Mountain anticipates providing service for all contracted volumes in the month of May.”

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