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Friday, October 3, 2025

LEVY: Ottawa school trustee deserves to be silenced

Ottawa’s public school trustees met for a mere 10 minutes Tuesday night before opting to uphold their December decision to sanction controversial trustee Nili Kaplan-Myrth for breaching the board’s Code of Conduct.

Their motion to confirm their Dec. 19 ruling on Kaplan-Myrth passed unanimously. The trustee’s three-month ban from sitting on five committees and attending this month’s full board meeting passed 10-1.

Kaplan-Myrth indicated her decision to appeal four days after the ruling and submitted a 16-page appeal document on Jan. 8, prepared by Toronto lawyer Mark Freiman.

In it, Freiman argues that Kaplan-Myrth has been subjected to a different standard than her colleagues, Donna Blackburn, a lesbian, and Donna Dickson, a black woman — also part of the original complaints – and the controversial theory of “intersectionality” was used to her disadvantage.

He says the board “has not taken seriously” her concerns about antisemitism.

He suggests that Kaplan-Myrth’s intentions were considered “less important” than the feelings of others.

“Instead of assuming any responsibility for these matters (the antisemitism) …it (the board) has instead sought to blame her for causing the problems and/or making the board look bad by raising these issues in public.”

Freiman also argues that the idea that Kaplan-Myrth’s statements on social media and to the media created an “intimidating environment” for the board has no basis in fact.

He says the trustee “had every right” to call out colleagues on social media and in the media for not respecting her concerns about the misogynistic, antisemitic hate mail and death threats she’d been receiving – and that is not a violation of the Code of Conduct.

Freiman argues that the board ignores the issue of antisemitism. 

He appears to accept Kaplan-Mryth’s contentions that it has been ignored or swept under the rug.

“Antisemitism is not discussed at all in the report as an aspect of the problem under review but rather as somebody else’s responsibility,” he writes.

He says the “penalty is grossly disproportionate” to the crime because Kaplan-Myrth “honestly believed” she was protected by the Charter and making the statements she did “is part of the job description of a board member, as is advocating for unpopular causes.”

It would appear Freiman accepted Kaplan-Myrth at her word and never watched her behaviour in board meetings.

Still the board’s trustees – likely tired of her cries for attention and her antics – weren’t buying it.

I’ve said it before but it bears repeating.

Kaplan-Myrth rarely talked about her Jewish heritage, if at all, before getting into hot water with the board.

As a proud Jew who has battled antisemitism for many years, I resent that she is using that as a cover for her bad behaviour, especially since Oct. 7 as Jew-hatred has risen at horrifying proportions around the world.

She deserved to be silenced, at least temporarily.

Not that it has deterred her from her toxic social media posts.

Within minutes of losing her appeal, she took to X to push her alleged victimization narrative:

Nova Scotia man charged in largest wildfire in province’s history

A Nova Scotia man has been charged with allegedly igniting a forest fire last May, which went on to become one of the largest wildfires in the history of the province. 

Known as the Barrington Lake fire, the fire started southwest of Shelburne, N.S., on May 26, 2023 and wasn’t fully brought under control until June 13. 

It was completely extinguished over a month after it began, with the helping hand of heavy rainfall. 

The fire burned around 23,000 hectares in the process, evacuated over 6,000 people and destroyed 60 homes and cottages and an additional 150 other structures.  

Dalton Clark Stewart, 22, from Villagedale, N.S. was charged on Wednesday with three offences under the Forests Act, according to a statement released by the province’s Natural Resources Department. 

Stewart is accused of “lighting a fire on private property without permission of the owner, failing to take reasonable efforts to prevent the spread of a fire, and leaving a fire unattended.” 

His first court appearance is scheduled for March 7 at Shelburne provincial court, according to the National Post.  

The Barrington Lake fire was the largest in Nova Scotia’s recorded history since the government first began keeping records in the early 1920’s.  

The fire broke out only two days before another wildfire in the Upper Tantallon area, close to many suburban neighbourhoods located northwest of Halifax.

That fire scorched 969 hectares, evacuated 16,000 people and destroyed 151 homes in the area. It was brought under control on June 4 and fully extinguished by July 26. The cause of the fire remains under investigation. 

Strong winds aided as a tragic catalyst for the massive spread of both fires.  

The summer of 2023 also marked the driest conditions in Nova Scotia since the Second World War, according to records from the Canadian Forest Service.

During the wildfire season, politicians and the media blamed the fires on climate change, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Minister of Energy Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Environment Steven Guilbeault, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, and Senator Chuck Schumer, each blaming Canadian fires on climate change. 

CTV and the Washington Post both published articles attributing fires to climate change despite their cause not being known at the time.

Earlier this week, a Quebec man pleaded guilty to starting 14 fires during Canada’s wildfire season this past summer.  

38-year-old Brian Paré pleaded guilty to 13 counts of arson and one count of arson with disregard for human life.

LAWTON: Free speech is on the Davos agenda – because the elites want to curb it

When people at the World Economic Forum talk about freedom of expression, it isn’t favourable. One Davos regular, Australian eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant previously said we need to “recalibrate” freedom of expression. True North’s Andrew Lawton caught up with her on on the streets of Davos to ask her what she meant – she was clear that free speech needs to be balanced against other things, like people’s feelings of safety on the internet.

Ratio’d | UFC star Sean Strickland humiliates Trudeau and “commie” journalists

In the buildup to UFC 297 in Toronto, UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland went nuclear on Canada’s legacy media journalists at a press conference. In a typical move for Canadian sports journalists, instead of asking Strickland about his upcoming fight, one journalist tried to ask the UFC fighter about comments he made years ago on social media. Instead of taking the bait, Strickland turned the tables on the journalist and put him in his place.

In another instance, he asked a Canadian Press journalist if he supported the Trudeau government seizing protesters bank accounts during the Freedom Convoy.

Strickland did his homework on Canada’s legacy media. He knew what was coming and played them perfectly.

Tune into the latest episode of Ratio’d with Harrison Faulkner!

Colombia spent $50K at WEF on gas-guzzling Jeep while climate minister opposed capitalism

Despite insisting that it’s at the forefront of sustainability, one of the main staples at the World Economic Forum summit in Davos this year was a gas-guzzling Jeep rented out at exorbitant rates by a country that sent its environment minister to speak about getting rid of capitalism. 

The Jeep in question was decked out in the Colombian flag with a driver wearing a poncho and sunglasses.

Often seen driving the streets of Davos and honking at pedestrians, the vehicle would also sit idling as World Economic Forum participants took photos with its happy driver.

According to Colombian journalist Melquisedec Torres, the Colombian government paid the equivalent of a whopping $49,086 CAD in Colombian pesos to rent the vehicle for the duration of the 6-day conference. 

At the same time, Colombia was a participant in this year’s summit with Minister of Environment and Sustainable Development Maria Susana Muahamad speaking in a panel on clean technologies. 

“There’s going to be huge technological inequality. People in the South depend directly on nature,” said Muhamad.

“Basically this reality of climate, which is produced by development and capitalism. That’s why technologies are not the answer per se but it’s changing the way we live and changing the economic system. Sometimes it’s easier to think about extinction, to imagine extinction than imagine the end of capitalism.”

Muhamad is a member of President Gustavo Petro’s left-wing government. Petro, is a former member of the country’s far-left M-19 guerilla movement which was responsible for politically motivated kidnappings and murders in the past. 

The minister’s comments contrast with fellow South American politician and President of Argentina Javier Milei, who denounced socialism at the conference on Wednesday. 

“Socialism is an impoverishing phenomenon that has failed wherever it’s been tried, economically, socially, culturally, and it has resulted in the tragic loss of over 100 million lives,” warned Milei. 

UFC’s Sean Strickland clashes with Canadian reporter over LGBT remarks ahead of UFC 297

In a heated exchange during a UFC 297 media event, Middleweight Champion Sean Strickland confronted a Canadian reporter over questions relating to his past remarks about the LGBT community. 

The UFC fighter, known for his unfiltered opinions, did not hold back in his response, sparking widespread reactions on social media.

The confrontation began when reporter Alexander K Lee for MMAfighting.com questioned Strickland about a past statement he had made concerning having a gay son, but before the reporter could complete the question, Strickland interjected. 

Strickland had previously posted his opinions on X in December 2021.

“If I had a gay son I would think I failed as a man to create such weakness…. If I had a whore for a daughter I’d think she just wanted to be like her dad lol!!” Strickland wrote in his post.

Strickland, instead of talking about his past comment, asked the reporter whether he was a gay man. Though the answer was unclear due to the back-and-forth bickering, the reporter claimed to be an ally of the community.

Strickland turned the tables on the reporter and began asking questions himself. He asked whether the reporter would be okay if he had a gay son, questioning whether he’d be fine without having a grandkid.

“[I’d have] no problem with it,” said Lee.

 Following the reporter’s response, Strickland began the first part of his lengthy monologue.

“You’re a weak fu**ing man,” he said. “You’re part of the fu**ing problem. You elected Justin Trudeau. When he seized the bank accounts. You’re just fu**ing pathetic, and the fact that you have no fu**ing backbone as he shut down your fu**ing country and seized bank accounts. You ask me some stupid sh** like that. Go fu** yourself. Move the fu** on, man. You fu**ing coward.”

Lee said that this didn’t answer his question. However, he proceeded with another. He asked whether Strickland would use his fight to speak out on Bud Light. Strickland previously said that he would fix Bud Light after its Dylan Mulvaney controversy. 

“Here’s the thing about Bud Light… Ten years ago, to be trans was a mental illness. Now, all of a sudden, people like you have fu**ing weaseled your way into the world. You are an infection. You are the definition of weakness. Everything that is wrong with the world is because of fu**ing you. And the best thing is, the world’s noy buying it. The world’s not buying your fu**ing bullshit that you’re fu**ing pedalling, said Strickland.

“The world is not saying, you know what, you’re right. Fu**ing chicks have d***s. The world’s not saying that. The world’s saying ‘no, there are two genders. I don’t want my kids being taught about who they could fu** in school. I don’t want my kids being taught about their sexual preference.’ This guy is the fu**ing enemy. You want to look at the fu**ing enemy to our world? It’s that motherfu**er right there, asking these stupid fu**ing questions.”

Finishing the rant with a smile, Strickland looked off the stage.

“Lance, did I cross any lines?” he asked.

“A little…” said the unknown Lance in the background.

“What the fu**? I didn’t say the F word! You just brought this fu**ing guy in here to pi** me off!” Strickland said, concluding the video. 

The interview, drawing significant attention online, was posted to X by Strickland himself.

“Idk who this guy is and I don’t care but you’re not a man… But you’d take that as a compliment…” Strickland wrote in the caption of the video, which he posted to X himself. The video had 9.1M views on Thursday.

Colin Rugg, an American media personality, also posted the video, which had 10M views on Thursday. So, too, did many others, multiple of which have views in the millions.

The video has caused much of Canada to rally behind Strickland for sticking up to a journalist trying to ask a gotcha question. 

Candice Malcolm, the founder of True North, was one of the people to applaud Strickland in her post to X.

“Must have been quite the surprise for this Canadian journo (who’s views represent 99% of the legacy media and perhaps <5% of the public) to hear a real response from a real person. We don’t get honesty much like this in Canada,” she said. 

This confrontation comes as Strickland prepares to defend his title against South African Dricus Du Plessis at UFC 297, which is set to take place at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena. The event marks the UFC’s first show in Toronto since December 2018, featuring a lineup of prominent fighters.

Trudeau government may begin charging bagel shops and pizzerias for air pollution

The Trudeau government is considering requiring certain bakeries and restaurants that cook food using wood-fired ovens to annually report their total air pollution emissions to the National Pollutant Release Inventory.

Annual reports must be sent to the NPRI, which is a federally legislated, publicly accessible inventory that tracks pollution output from industrial, commercial and institutional facilities. 

Owners of businesses that meet certain requirements are obligated to send an annual report of their total pollution released each year to the NPRI, which then relays that information to the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault.

“The NPRI program has recently undertaken compliance promotion activities targeting some wood-fired ovens such as pizzerias and bagel shops across Canada, including Montreal,” spokesperson for Environment and Climate Change Canada Cecelia Parsons told The Gazette.

Montreal currently has about 100 commercial outlets which operate wood-fired ovens to cook food like bagels, pizza and grilled chickens, instead of using charcoal grills. 

Some public health authorities have warned that the fine particulate pollution in wood smoke can become hazardous to the health of people who work and live near those establishments. 

The new federal program has started “compliance promotion” work as “a first step, as part of a scoping exercise to determine if those facilities meet the NPRI reporting thresholds,” said Parsons. 

While the NPRI does not set emissions limits itself, it does have the authority to fine companies that meet the reporting requirements but fail to do so. They can also be fined if they submit past a deadline or with misleading information. 

Historically, regulating the use of wood-burning appliances has generally been undertaken by provinces, territories and municipalities, not the federal government. 

Certain cities, including Montreal, have already passed bylaws which prohibit residential wood-burning appliances that can’t meet the current emissions regulations.  

Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante’s office said that the era of tolerating excessive air pollution from wood-burning businesses was coming to a close back in 2018, however delayed action on this resulted in the task being given to the Montreal Metropolitan Community (MMC) council.

The MMC’s Standing Committee on Environment and Ecological Transition planned to hold public hearings on the proposed bylaw to regulate these businesses in 2020 but the hearings were further delayed by the pandemic.  

The hearings have been rescheduled to begin early this year however, which will be followed by a public consultation on the bylaw.  

“We are extremely pleased to hear that the (federal) government has taken an important step with regards to wood-fired restaurants and bakeries to ensure they comply with the same rules followed by other pollution emitters,” said Daniel Vézina, director general for a Montreal-based group called Families for Clean Air. 

“Data has shown that this is a very important source of pollution locally for many neighbourhoods. We welcome their efforts to potentially include those emissions in the National Pollutant Release Inventory, which would help scientists across Canada to better understand the health impacts and influence policy decisions.”

The move will likely hurt the restaurant industry and small businesses, which have been consistently struggling since the pandemic began. A recent report from Restaurants Canada revealed that a large number of restaurants across the country, about 34%, have been operating at a loss since March 2023. 

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre responded to the news with a social media post on X, writing, “Oh thank God! The Trudeau bureaucracy is spending our money to save our planet from the existential threat of wood-fired pizzas & bagels. Decriminalize crack and ban wood-oven pizza!”

Parents concerned as Ottawa Hospital opens sex change surgery clinic

The Ottawa Hospital announced the opening of a clinic for sex change surgeries, offering the most comprehensive suite of sex-change procedures in all of Ontario.

Ottawa’s new “gender-affirming” surgery clinic is offering three kinds of procedures; facial surgery to masculinize or feminize the patient’s appearance, “top surgery” to sever the patient’s breasts or to create artificial breasts, and “bottom surgery” to surgically create a penis or vagina for the patient. 

Ottawa Hospital’s gender-affirming clinic is the first of its kind in the province to offer all three kinds of sex change procedures. 

The clinic is being led by the Ottawa-based surgeon Dr. Nicholas Cormier, a doctor trained at Harvard and Western University who is said to be skilled and passionate about performing gender-affirming procedures. 

“In my residency, I was always interested in gender-affirming care, and that led me to seek out a fellowship in San Francisco, where I was able to train with world-renowned experts in gender-affirming care,” said Cormier in a Ottawa Hospital press release. 

Under the Canada Health Act, provinces are required to finance all procedures that are deemed to be “medically necessary.”

Ontario parents are expressing their concern that children seeking treatment at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, located right next to Ottawa Hospital, will be referred to the new gender-affirming clinic for sex change surgery. 

Parental rights activist Shannon B Douglas expressed concern with CHEO accepting referrals from school staff on a podcast, saying that CHEO does not undertake sufficient medical examinations to conclude that a child ought to pursue sex change treatments.

“They [parents] go to the gender clinic, and then the child in most cases is prescribed cross-sex hormones or puberty blockers on the first visit,” said Douglas.

“In most cases there is no psychological evaluations, no psychiatric evaluations, there’s no requirements for those sorts of things, and it’s an automatic prescription.”

Douglas’ co-host Melanie Bennet criticized the role schools play in referring their students to gender clinics.

“Schools have a lot to answer for in terms of breaking up relationships in families,” said Bennet.

An Ottawa Hospital statement congratulating themselves for opening the gender-affirming clinic says that CHEO provided Cormier and his team with help with opening up the clinic and will be referring patients to the clinic. 

On CHEO’s website providing information on their gender diversity clinic, patients can be referred to the clinic by school guidance counselors and teachers. Parental consent is not stated as a requirement to see a CHEO clinician. 

On the CHEO’s referral form, there is a section titled “family information” where applicants are asked if the patient’s parents are supportive of gender-affirming treatment with a sidenote that states that youth do not always want parents to know about visits to the gender clinic. 

The Ottawa Hospital clinic joins a Montreal clinic in being the only clinics in Canada to offer facial surgery, top surgery and bottom surgery.

The Andrew Lawton Show | Davos Day 4 | Online censorship finds a home at WEF

One of the many ideas discussed at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos this year was freedom of expression. Global elites often aren’t fond of freedom of expression, from tech companies that restrict their users’ speech to leaders of international organizations calling for regulation of what they call “misinformation.” True North’s Andrew Lawton takes a look at what some of them are trying to do – and why Canadians in particular should be worried.

Also, Chrystia Freeland told her WEF colleagues how the Canadian government needs to force “decarbonization” – but that it’s okay because it will lead to “more jobs.”

Plus, the return of Andrew’s famous Davos hot chocolate rankings, back by popular demand. 

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MPs vote for ethics commissioner to testify on Trudeau’s Jamaica vacation

Source: SurferToday.com

A House of Commons committee unanimously voted to summon the ethics commissioner to testify about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s controversial vacation in Jamaica, despite Trudeau defending his trip at a news conference on Wednesday. 

While making a housing announcement in Saint John, New Brunswick, Trudeau defended his vacation when a reporter asked whether he intended to change his future approach.

“Like many Canadian families, we went on vacation with friends. We followed all the rules,” said Trudeau.

Trudeau’s vacation spanned from December 26 to January 4 at the Prospect Estate resort, owned by businessman Peter Green, a Trudeau family friend. Previous reports revealed that staying at this luxurious Jamaican villa costs around $9,300 a night.

Trudeau spent ten days in Jamaica with his ex-wife and three children.

The initial claims by the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) were that Trudeau would personally cover the holiday expenses. However, these claims were later retracted after media reports revealed that the family vacationed “at no cost at a location owned by family friends.”

The switch-up and uncertainty regarding Trudeau’s vacation led Conservative MP and ethics critic Michael Barrett to send a letter to the interim Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner Konrad Winrich von Finckenstein, urging him to clear up any confusion by releasing the relevant correspondence. 

Barrett voiced his concerns to the ethics committee on Wednesday morning. 

“The question is, was the ethics commissioner deceived or misled in any way? And so, we need to get to the bottom of that. The best way to do that would be to have the conflict of interest and ethics commissioner come to this committee,” Barrett told the National Post.

Barrett tabled a motion calling for a single meeting on the issue to hear from von Finckenstein, which eventually gained cross-party support. 

The Liberals, backed by the Bloc Québécois, proposed an amendment to the motion, aiming to broaden its scope beyond just the Jamaica vacation to include all matters related to travel, vacations, and gifts received by Members of Parliament.

The chair, Conservative MP John Brassard, confirmed that they would be able to question the commissioner on Trudeau’s family vacation to Jamaica.

The committee members were divided on the issue of compelling the commissioner’s office to disclose all correspondence related to Trudeau’s Jamaica trip, including emails, text messages, phone call logs, and documents. 

This contention arises despite the commissioner’s office stating that it is not permitted to discuss information disclosed by public office holders and MPs.

Liberal MP Iqra Khalid warned against setting a “very bad precedent” if such private communications were made public.

The Liberals, Bloc, and NDP all opposed the Conservative’s additional motion for the committee to order the release of correspondence between the PMO and the ethics commissioner’s office on his last two New Year’s vacations.

The opposition has been critical of the prime minister’s past vacations, particularly an all-expenses-paid trip to the Aga Khan’s private island, in which Trudeau was found guilty of contravening conflict of interest laws in 2017. 

The controversy is not Trudeau’s first encounter with ethical questions regarding his vacations. True North previously reported on a similar incident in December 2022 that involved Trudeau’s stay at the same Jamaican resort, raising conflict of interest concerns due to the Green family’s historical donations to the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation.

The ethics commissioner’s upcoming testimony is expected to clarify the PMO’s compliance with the Conflict of Interest Act. This act allows public office holders to accept gifts from friends or relatives but raises questions about the perception of a conflict of interest, especially for high-value gifts such as Trudeau’s vacation.

The Conflict of Interest Act permits politicians to accept gifts and other benefits solely from relatives or family friends, provided a well-established and documented close relationship exists.

The NDP argues that reforms are needed, according to the Canadian Press.

“New Democrats want to see a review of the Conflict of Interest Act to actually crack down on corporate and lobbyist influence in politics, so it’s everyday Canadians who get ahead, not the ultra-wealthy,” said NDP House leader Peter Julian.

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