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Wednesday, July 9, 2025

“Exclusively black” theatre argues white complainant can’t claim racial discrimination

A Toronto theatre that hosted a performance “exclusively for black audiences” is demanding that the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario dismiss a complaint because the complainant is white and therefore has “no standing” to claim racial discrimination. 

The complaint was filed by former People’s Party of Canada candidate Robert Stewart earlier this year concerning “Black Out Nights” performances hosted by Theatre Passe Muraille. 

True North was provided with Theatre Passe Muraille’s response to the application. 

In his human rights complaint, Stewart argued that the theatre violated Section 13 and Section 1 of the Ontario Human Rights Code for admitting attendees based on their race, which in turn, caused him a “serious level of discomfort and discouragement.” 

In response to Stewart’s complaint, Theatre Passe Muraille’s lawyer, Morgan Sim, filed a response vehemently denying the allegations and asserting that the complainant, being white, is not entitled to any relief for racial discrimination. 

The theater’s legal argument draws on a previous Ontario human rights tribunal ruling, Lisikh v. Ontario (Education), which held that white individuals and those who are non-racialized do not have standing to claim racial discrimination.

“Here, the Applicant has only identified himself as ‘non-black’. To the extent that the Applicant is a white and non-racialized individual, he has no standing to allege racial discrimination in the context of theatre performances in Toronto,” wrote Sim. 

As it stands, the ruling cited by the theatre remains under appeal. The landmark human rights tribunal ruling caused a stir when first issued. It claimed that “an allegation of racial discrimination or discrimination on the grounds of colour is not one that can be or has been successfully claimed by persons who are white and non-racialized.”

“Vice-Chair Nichols concluded that having identified himself in his application as white, the applicant had no standing to allege racial discrimination in the context of that case,” explained Sim.

“Her analysis regarding the social construction of race suggests that white people may not have standing to claim discrimination on the basis of race given that “race” within the meaning of the Code describes the process of “racialization” which white people do not often experience in the context of a white-dominant culture.”

The theater contends that its “Black Out Nights” events have been conducted without incident and have received positive feedback from the communities they aim to serve. 

These performances typically represent only one show in a production’s run, with invitations extended to people who self-identify as Black, leaving it to audience members to decide if they meet the criteria for attendance, argued lawyers. 

According to the theatre’s submission, in cases where non-Black individuals wish to attend, Theatre Passe Muraille asserts that staff members are available to discuss the specific reasons the patron wanted to go.

According to executive director of Rights Probe and law professor at Queen’s University Bruce Pardy, the Code allows for a “special programs” loophole which enables discrimination in favour of certain groups. 

“Under the Ontario Human Rights Code, every person has a right to equal treatment without discrimination. However, the Code has a loophole for “special programs”, which discriminate in favour of the “correct” groups. The special programs exception is now turning the Code on its head, licensing discrimination instead of prohibiting it, especially against white people,” Pardy told True North. 

“The Tribunal recently said and the theatre is now arguing that white people are fair game for discrimination and have no right to complain about it. For Canadians who asumed that they had a right to equal treatment under the law, this may be a rude awakening. Equity makes the law unequal.”

As part of its argument, the theater’s lawyer also points out that there is no record of Stewart attempting to attend any of the “Black Out Nights” performances, raising questions about the legitimacy of his complaint, however, Stewart contends that he should not have to go through the indignity of buying a ticket and that he was explicitly barred from going by the theatre’s advertisement. 

The case is currently ongoing and the human rights tribunal has yet to make a decision on the claims. 

Constituents “fed up” with prospect of property tax hike

Calgarians are dismayed over the prospect of a looming property tax increase. 

The city’s 2024 budget adjustments hint at a rise in property tax from 5.7% to 7.8%. 

Some city councillors refuse to support the hike, including Councillor Dan McLean. 

“It’s absolutely unacceptable,” he told True North.

McLean argued that any increase is intolerable as residents struggle with an affordability crisis. Instead of rising taxes, the city should be doing away with them altogether. 

“We should be at 0%,” said McLean.

Calgary has hundreds of millions of dollars in surplus, according to the latest budget. The city also has a fiscal stability reserve, which has millions in it as well, explained McLean. 

“We’re getting ready to have pitchforks come down here at city hall,” said McLean.

He explained that he has seen people’s tax bills more than double in the last decade. 

Increasing taxes is one thing if it improves services and safety within the city. However, McLean explained that this is not the case.

“What we’re seeing is taxes going up, safety going down, and services not really increasing,” said McLean.

“Not just my residents, but people from all over Calgary are fed up. They’re done. They’re upset.”

Looking at reports over the last years, McLean explained that the city has added over a thousand employees. He said that these employees make a salary averaging over $100,000 per year. This $100 million investment equates to a five-point tax shift in itself.

Many of those hired were not police officers or essential workers but people in planning or HR departments, which McLean explained he felt was unnecessary. 

“We don’t have a revenue problem. We have a spending problem,” he said.

McLean added that some of the programs for which these employees were hired include diversity, equity, and inclusion, environmental and social governance, and climate change within the government.

“I would like to see a lot of those scrapped,” said McLean.

McLean draws parallels with Alberta’s Bill 1, which requires a referendum for tax increases. 

“Your voice is heard the most at the ballot box,” he advised. 

Calgary has 14 councillors and a mayor, resulting in 15 votes. To pass anything, you need to accrue eight or more votes.

When suggested following a similar path as the Alberta government did with Bill 1, McLean stated that the current city council would vote against such tax reform. 

FAULKNER: To win against Hamas, Israel must show the world what happened on October 7

I was invited by the Israeli consulate in Toronto to join a small group of journalists for an exclusive screening of footage from the October 7 terrorist attack carried out by Hamas.

The 45-minute film, which compiled footage from the body cameras of Hamas terrorists, footage from first responders, and security footage from the homes of slain Israeli victims was the worst thing I have ever seen.

Journalists were not permitted to bring any recording devices or phones into the screening out of respect for the families of the victims but we were routinely encouraged to tell the public what we saw in as much detail as we could after the fact.

In our polarized world, this will only further drive mistrust and skepticism.

It is simply not enough in this era for the public to take the word of hand-picked journalists behind closed doors telling people what they saw because they aren’t permitted to see it for themselves.

All Israel would have to do to end any debate surrounding ownership of the moral high ground in this conflict is release the footage for the world to see.

The film begins with a group of Hamas terrorists on a road in southern Israel executing everyone who drives past them. Each execution is filmed and celebrated as the terrorists yell “Allahu Akbar!”

The film then shows a group of terrorists breaking into a kibbutz and searching each home for civilians to be killed or captured. What follows is the uncensored massacre of an entire kibbutz.

A father of two can then be seen on his own home security camera grabbing his two young sons and frantically searching for a way to get to their bunker in the backyard.

A Hamas terrorist spots the defenceless father entering the shelter with his sons, calmly walks up to the entrance, takes a pin out of a grenade, and throws it into the shelter.

The father absorbs the entire blast, sacrificing himself to save his two kids. The entire moment is captured on film.

The footage continues as Hamas terrorists enter the home and take food from the fridge of the man they just violently killed while the two sons watch on. Viewers will then see an inconsolable wife who returns to the Kibbutz with IDF soldiers to see the disfigured corpse of her husband.

That was just the first five minutes. Forty more minutes to go.

The film then shows a rabid horde of Hamas gunmen walking through a house covered in blood and filled with dead bodies.

It is in this segment that the medieval barbarity displayed by these terrorists enters territory that would churn the stomachs of even the most clinically psychopathic. A Hamas terrorist picks up a garden hoe and begins to repeatedly slash at the throat of a dead Israeli corpse. Each swing of the hoe is preceded by a chant of “Allahu Akbar” and followed by an audible celebration of the gathered crowd who are filming this for promotional material and, I presume, their own enjoyment.

The rest of the film, interspersed with the senseless killing, burning and torture of innocent civilians – which, by this point the viewer is already desensitized to – shows photos of the bodies of charred and disfigured children.

The viewer is able to tell that they’re looking at the charred and disfigured body of a child because one can make out the remains of pyjamas they were wearing before they were slaughtered.

It is precisely the sadistic joy that Hamas militants took in their actions that day which has left me so sickened and why I believe that if Israel has any hope of winning the PR war and changing the Western perception of their actions in Gaza, it must release the footage for the world to see.

In less than 24 hours after Hamas terrorists carried out this attack, street parties and impromptu Hamas rallies were underway in Mississauga, Ont.

In the U.K., people were dancing on street corners waving Palestine flags before Israeli citizens were able to count their dead.

Since October 7, pro-Palestine rallies have become a regular occurrence throughout Canada’s large cities. At these rallies – of which I have covered several – many in the crowd proudly proclaim that Hamas’ attack was “justified” and that Israel has no right to defend herself or her people.

Furthermore, these rallies regularly feature protesters waving Hamas flags.

These brazen displays that glorify Hamas terrorists and the massacre of innocent Jews are taking place because Israel is losing ground on social media and in newsrooms across the world.

Israel’s military response to the attack combined with its inability to effectively control the narrative surrounding its actions in Gaza has given a golden opportunity to those who harbour deep anti-Israel and antisemitic attitudes living in the West to shamelessly celebrate and honour Hamas as “freedom fighters” and a “resistance movement” against Israel.

Israel’s response by bombing Gaza in its pursuit of eradicating Hamas has resulted in the deaths of reportedly 10,000 Gazans according to Hamas figures. With Gaza’s dense population of over two million, 40% of which are reportedly under the age of 18, Israel’s actions have emboldened and galvanized large numbers of Muslims around the world and those who wish to see Israel wiped off the face of the earth.

Out of respect to the families of the victims, the Israel government is only showing the footage to groups of hand-picked journalists and politicians in private screenings.

But, if Israel wants the world to see the true face of Hamas, the evidence must be shown to the world.

This, of course, will have its downsides.

For one, viewers of the film will be deeply traumatized by what they see, likely for the rest of their lives. Furthermore, the families of the victims will be retraumatized after seeing the brutal murder of their own family members all over social media.

But another consequence of the film being released to the public is that once someone sees the true reality of what happened that day, in all its gore and violence, one will never be able to see the so-called “freedom fighters” of Hamas as anything other than the fanatic, murderous dogs that they are.

The release of this film will completely obliterate any remaining pro-Hamas sentiment that exists among the political and journalistic class in Canada. It will send shockwaves throughout Canada and will have a profound and lasting impact on anyone who watches it.

Canadians will look on at the pro-Palestine displays with complete and utter shock once they see what actually happened to the 1,400 dead Israeli civilians on October 7th.

Nobody should be forced to watch the footage, but for Israel to pick and choose who can will only serve to further this mistrust of authority and of the media that we see in society.

Releasing the footage in its entirety is what Israel must do if they are to have any success in winning the long fight against Hamas and Islamic fundamentalism.

Poilievre challenges Trudeau’s housing plan amidst Canada’s housing crisis

The Conservatives are throwing water on the Liberals’ pledge to develop housing units on federal lands. They already promised this in 2015 and didn’t deliver, Pierre Poilievre says.

The federal government’s plan plans to unlock surplus federal properties to construct over 2,800 new homes across various Canadian cities. 

Poilievre said Canadians should be skeptical given Justin Trudeau’s record.

“Trudeau’s promise eight years ago of selling government buildings for housing has produced 13 homes. Now, he says that if you re-elect him two more times, he will keep his promise by 2029 — 14 years after he first promised it,” said Poilievre

The housing plan comes as Liberals face a significant dip in the polls. The announcement puts the government on track to develop about 29,200 housing units on federal lands by 2029.

While Poilievre criticized the Liberals’ plan, he has a different solution in mind.

Among his proposed solutions to the crisis is a pitch to sell 15% of federal buildings and lands for housing development. 

To further promote affordable housing development, Procurement Minister Jean-Yves Duclos announced Tuesday that Canada Lands Co., a Crown corporation, will implement a revised mandate. 

Under this new initiative, a minimum target of 20% affordable housing will be enforced across all projects in the company’s development pipeline. This affordability standard will come into effect in areas where municipal requirements for affordable housing are either lower or nonexistent.

Following discussions with provincial and territorial counterparts, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith have said that housing remains a top priority for collaboration with the federal government.

Canada Lands Co. will be unlocking six federal surplus properties to allow the construction of 2,800 additional units by March 2024 in Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, and St. John’s. These properties are expected to include a minimum of 300 units for affordable housing, as the 20% target applies across all projects countrywide, not individual projects.

Mike Moffatt, the senior director of policy and innovation at the Smart Prosperity Institute, said that the number of units that will be built pales in comparison to what’s needed to address the shortage, according to CBC

“A few thousand units here and there, while they certainly help, are just a very small move in the right direction,” he said. 

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. estimates that the number of units being built falls short of the 3.5 million homes estimated to be needed in Canada by 2030 to restore affordability effectively. 

Housing experts call on the federal government to leverage its real-estate assets to build more homes, particularly ones that would be affordable for lower-income Canadians, said the CBC.

Another way housing advocates advocate for boosting housing supply is by converting excess government office space into apartments. 

Earlier this year, the federal government unveiled its intention to sell ten surplus office properties located in the National Capital Region. According to experts, a number of these structures hold potential for conversion into residential spaces.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland is expected to present a fall economic statement focusing on housing and affordability in the coming weeks. 

Even with policies to accelerate construction, the benefits may not be seen for several years. 

“I do think there’s room to look at areas like rent supplements, like looking at increases in GST cheques, and those kinds of things, to make sure that people can afford to pay the rent,” said Moffatt.

Gov’s technology chief misled MPs about ArriveCan app contract: deputy minister

MPs were informed by a deputy minister that the Liberal government’s chief technology officer Minh Doan misled parliament during a committee testimony about the selection of GCStrategies in the bidding process to build the ArriveCan app.

On Tuesday, hearings were held by the Commons government operations committee to examine how the failed ArriveCan app ended up costing taxpayers over $54 million. 

Health Canada’s assistant deputy minister Cameron MacDonald testified before the committee that he had a heated argument with then-Canada Border Services Agency’s (CBSA) vice president Doan in the month of October, 2022. 

At the time, Macdonald was director-general at the agency and Doan was his superior. 

“I felt incredibly threatened on that phone call with Minh Doan,” MacDonald told MPs. 

He also discussed the anger of  former public safety minister Marco Mendicino who allegedly wanted “somebody’s head on a platter” regarding the bad publicity the app received. 

“He just said: ‘You know, Cam, if I have to, I’m going to tell the committee that it was you,’” MacDonald told MPs. “To which I said, if you do that, I will have to respond. And we ended the conversation.”

MacDonald then testified that he had advised Doan to hire Deloitee to create the app but that Doan told him it was not possible because then-CBSA president John Ossowski said “no one can work with Deloitte” due to a separate IT project that went wrong. 

On Oct. 24, 2023, Doan testified before the same committee saying, “I was not personally involved in that decision” while discussing who selected GCStrategies for the role. 

Instead, Doan said that it was his “team” who was responsible for the decision, according to the Globe and Mail.  

MacDonald was then asked by Bloc Québécois MP Julie Vignola if Doan had presented MPs with false evidence during his Oct. 24 testimony, to which he replied, “It was a lie that was told to this committee. Everyone knows it,” said MacDonald.

“We have our team here behind us. Everyone knew it was his decision to make. It wasn’t mine.”

“In terms of nefarious activities, and some of the things that have been suggested at this committee, I have never seen that in my entire life,” said MacDonald.

Prior to Tuesday’s hearing, the CBSA announced that it would suspend all agency contracts with three separate IT firms, all of which are the subject of complaints around contracting misconduct. 

This is a developing story.

The ‘Whack-a-Mole’ game that is Canada’s illicit tobacco industry

Flavoured vape products are set to be banned in Quebec, a move the tobacco industry warns will likely lead to a further spike in black market illicit tobacco activity.

“It’s a big business, especially for organized crime,” said illicit trade prevention manager Danny Fournier, with Philip Morris International in an exclusive interview with True North.

“We’re expecting to see a shift from physical to online illegal sales.”

Around six billion illegal cigarettes circulate through Canada annually. The underground trade costs the province of Ontario roughly $1 billion in lost tax dollars alone per year.

The tobacco is purchased from legal distributors, predominantly in North Carolina and Virginia. It’s then driven up into Canada through upstate New York in large quantities of what is known as ‘finecut’ tobacco, meaning it’s sold by the pound and is ready to be rolled by a manufacturing machine. 

According to Fournier, over the last 15-20 years there has been a shift from importing finished tobacco products (already rolled and packaged) to importing mostly finecut tobacco that is later distributed to illegal manufacturers in Ontario and Quebec.

“When it comes to manufacturing illegal tobacco products? You probably have four or five First Nations communities that manufacture illegal tobacco, so it’s not fair to say it’s a First Nations issue, it’s less than 1%.”

The most common way it passes through the Canadian Border Security Agency is by being misdeclared as something else. 

“Most of the illicit manufacturers are located in Ontario and in the province of Quebec, well not most, all,” said Fournier. “I know some are on some First Nations territories and there is a misconception around that.” 

“Sometimes in law enforcement and the public in general, the misconception is that First Nations manufacture tobacco products, but when you break the numbers down, in Canada we have roughly two million people that have First Nations status spread across 619 communities across the country, representing over 50 different nations.” 

“When it comes to manufacturing illegal tobacco products? You probably have four or five First Nations communities that manufacture illegal tobacco, so it’s not fair to say it’s a First Nations issue, it’s less than 1%.” 

Another drastic misconception is the notion that anyone can purchase tobacco products on a reserve legally, that is not the case. Only tobacco products which have been government approved with what is known as the ‘peach stamp’ are for legal purchase. 

Anything else is illegal. In other words, a clear plastic ziploc bag of 200 unmarked cigarettes should be a dead give away.  

“From a political perspective it is a very sensitive issue. It’s more of an issue of organized crime using First Nations territories to facilitate the commission of their crimes,” said Fournier. 

The specific “door of entry” at the border from the US into Canada is largely controlled by the Italian mob, operating out of Montreal. Fournier said it’s important to stop the flow of finecut tobacco at the door of entry, before it makes its way onto a First Nations’ territory, because it removes the political element from prosecution. It’s what Fournier calls an ‘upstream’ bust.

The Italian mafia provides its carriers with CTPAT (Customs Trade Partnership Against Terrorism) clearance with trucking companies, false paperwork and the name of a company that, at least on paper, actually exists.

A pound of tobacco purchased legally in North Carolina for $2 can then be resold across the border for $9-10 per pound. 

It’s a lucrative racket, one that Fournier calls ‘low risk, high reward.’

The penalties for being caught trafficking a load of illegal tobacco are far less severe than that of drugs or weapons. 

While provincial police in Quebec and Ontario are doing what they can, they don’t have the resources to keep up with the ever-growing market. 

Online, the illicit tobacco’s trade only makes matters more complicated. Catching someone red handed with a truckload of finecut is what Fournier would consider a ‘slam dunk case.’ 

“From a political perspective it is a very sensitive issue. It’s more of an issue of organized crime using First Nations territories to facilitate the commission of their crimes.”

However, when the “suspect is in the U.S., the cell phone in Mexico, the server in Europe and the product is being shipped from Asia, it’s unlikely that law enforcement will tackle it and even less likely that there will be prosecution in the end,” said Fournier. 

The concept then becomes ‘stop the infraction, don’t stop the individual,’ which as Fournier points out, can sometimes be a difficult pill for law enforcement to swallow. 

Unfortunately, the reality is that far more heinous crimes occur online every day like child pornography, human trafficking and gun smuggling, without the proper resources to keep up.

The best option for now is to stop the infraction through partnering with online sales platforms like Kijiji, VanSky, Craigslist and Facebook Marketplace. 

Although these platforms don’t have the resources to track illegal tobacco sales they have agreed to let Phillip Morris International monitor their platforms and alert them about users who are doing so. 

Once flagged by the company, the platforms will remove the page and user and while this doesn’t lead to prosecution, it does stop the infraction. 

“It’s a whack-a-mole game,” said Fournier. 

For the time being, the best way to curtail the illicit tobacco trade is to raise awareness across various sectors of government, law enforcement and the general public. 

In September, the Convenience Industry Council of Canada published a report that revealed sales of legal tobacco have been on a downward trend since 2019 in tandem with the skyrocketing illegal tobacco market. This influx is costing the federal government billions in lost taxes every year.

Fournier’s message to people is simple: if you’re supporting illegal tobacco, you’re supporting organized crime and everything that goes along with that enterprise. 

Prosecutor seeks to reject expert witnesses on vaccine safety in conduct hearing for Ottawa detective

Police prosecutor Vanessa Stewart called on Helen Grus’ disciplinary tribunal to reject all expert witnesses for the Ottawa detective’s case, including physicians who testified at the National Citizens Inquiry about Covid-19 vaccine safety, and an American doctor who says he witnessed firsthand harms associated with the shots.  

Grus stands accused of bringing “discredit upon the reputation of Ottawa Police Service” for probing a link between the Covid shots and sudden infant deaths in a “self-initiated unauthorized project.” As a former senior member of the sex assault and child abuse unit (SACA) and 20-year-veteran of the force, investigating child deaths was part of her job, she maintains.

The decision of Grus’ guilt or innocence rests with retired OPS superintendent Chris Renwick, tapped to adjudicate the Police Services Act matter which has stretched on through 10 hearing days. But before he can weigh all the evidence and reach a verdict, Renwick must decide which expert witnesses, if any, can appear when proceedings resume in January of next year.

In addition, Grus also plans to testify in her defence.

While the disciplinary tribunal resembles a court, it’s a quasi-judicial hearing where Renwick can set his own agenda. This has resulted in difficulty for interested reporters to obtain documents normally available in trials, and what Grus’ lawyers argue are several unconstitutional decisions, including withholding a duty book (police notebook) from Grus that could contain exculpatory evidence.

Grus’ lawyers, Bath-Shéba van den Berg and Blair Ector, have since filed for judicial review of Renwick’s duty book decision in Ontario superior court but lost their bid to stay Grus’ disciplinary matter in the interim. Another element of the charge against their client is that Grus’ notes during her alleged “unauthorized project” were incomplete, as Police Standards Unit investigator Sgt. Jason Arbuthnot testified in August.

But the heart of the matter also remains the elephant in the room: Grus believed Covid-19 vaccines could be responsible for a perceived uptick in Ottawa-area infant deaths.

While Grus’ SACA colleagues and superiors who testified for the prosecution agreed that Grus is an excellent investigator who garnered exemplary performance reviews, they also indicated a general disinterest in Grus’ concerns about the fast-tracked vaccines, including PSU investigator Arbuthnot. 

Even Grus’ overarching supervisor, Staff Sgt. Shelley Rossetti – who testified about asking for Grus help with a now-shelved project to examine hundreds of unsolved SACA cases – banned her from speaking about Covid-19 in the office. 

Witnesses such as Sgt. Marc-Andre Guy previously testified that if there were a link between the Covid shots and sudden infant deaths it would not be a criminal matter, while Grus’ lawyers have said there is a criminal negligence element, given that public health officials and other authorities were promoting the drugs as “safe and effective.”

SACA unit members’ testimony also revealed that Grus was singled out by her colleagues, including senior leadership, for questioning Covid-19 public health edicts and refusing to take the vaccine as mandated by OPS. Testimony also indicated that Grus was subject of unfounded rumours at the SACA unit, including that she believed Covid-19 did not exist and that the shots contained nanobots to track people.

Though Renwick and the police prosecutor Stewart have tried to steer the tribunal away from discussing vaccine harms – Renwick declaring earlier in the week that the tribunal would not “be a venue for opinions and theories linking the vaccine to child deaths” – Stewart’s own arguments for disallowing expert medical witnesses brought the issue back to the fore.

Stewart went so far as to categorize the experts’ “conclusions” made at the National Citizens Inquiry about harms associated with the Covid-19 vaccines, which included a stillbirth, as “not relevant to this proceeding.”

In addition to lawyer and regulatory health policy expert Shawn Buckley and former OPS Staff Sgt. Peter Danyluk, Grus’ lawyers want to call family physician Dr. Gregory Chan, pediatric neurology specialist Dr. Eric Payne and American OBGYN Dr. James Thorp to testify – all of whom Stewart maintains the tribunal should deny.

“These individuals support Grus’ perpetuation of the offence,” Stewart argued. “(The defence) is trying to use this proceeding to justify detective Grus’ misconduct.”

Then in a bizarre twist over Dr. Peter McCullough’s admissibility as an expert witness, Stewart described the most-published cardiologist in America and his vaccine injury research as legitimate, because he got the information legitimately unlike Grus, who allegedly made unauthorized database queries about sudden infant deaths.

Even though the defence previously retracted its request that Dr. McCullough appear, Stewart nevertheless included him in her oral submissions: that all expert witnesses be denied because, “This tribunal is not an inquiry into adverse events of the Covid-19 vaccine,” and Grus’ actions “have already caused enough harm to families.”

Van den Berg responded that it was internal leaks of confidential police information to CBC Ottawa reporter Shaamini Yogaretnam that caused the harm – what her co-counsel Ector previously referred to as “The Shaamini shakedown,” whereby OPS scrambled to call affected families to get ahead of a story Yogaretnum was about to publish.

To this day, Grus only contacted one family in the course of her alleged “unauthorized project” – the father of a recently deceased child to inquire about the mother’s vaccine status.

“For Shaamini Yogaretnam to publish the details… in those two CBC articles, just a few days after those parents were called by police, has caused harm and most likely retraumatized those parents,” said van den Berg.

“None of that has anything to do with detective Grus. What she was doing was confidential and related to police work.”

The Andrew Lawton Show | Canadian Anti-Hate Network won’t look at left-wing hate

Bernie Farber, the founder of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network, admitted in an X post that the CAHN lacks the “resources” to look into anything other than the “extreme right.” This was his explanation for CAHN’s relative silence in the wake of Hamas’ attacks on Israel and rampant antisemitism across Canada at pro-Palestine rallies. True North’s Andrew Lawton says Farber accidentally said the quiet part out loud, admitting a lot of Jew hatred comes from the left.

Also, the media is freaking out over Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s upcoming appearance with Tucker Carlson.

Plus, interviews and stories from the Alberta UCP AGM and the ARC Forum in London.

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Social media “another front” in war with Hamas: IDF official

In a closed door screening of footage from the October 7 terrorist attack in Israel, a senior Israel Defense Forces official told reporters at Israel’s consulate in Toronto that social media is another front in the country’s ongoing war against Hamas.

The senior IDF official, who spoke on the condition that he remain anonymous, told the room of approximately 20 invited journalists that Israel’s objective in showing the grizzly footage was to give everyone in the room “a better understanding of what our enemy looks like and why we fight.”

When asked about the ongoing propaganda war between Israel and Hamas, the IDF official told reporters that Israel had to learn from the Al-Ahli hospital explosion.

The official conceded that Israel was too slow to respond to what he described as the fake news and propaganda that immediately circulated on social media, which wrongly blamed Israel for intentionally bombing the hospital.

Israel has denied all involvement and blamed the explosion outside the hospital on a misfired Islamic Jihad rocket fired from inside Gaza.

The official reiterated that Israel wants the world to know “that Israel is not at war with the Palestinian people,” but rather with Hamas.

The 45-minute film was composed using footage from body cameras and intercepted calls from Hamas terrorists, bodycam footage from first responders, and video taken from the phones of victims.

The footage showed in full detail the senseless massacre, torture and barbarity toward innocent Israelis carried out by the hordes of invading Hamas terrorists that day.

Reporters were barred from bringing their phones or any recording devices into the room.

The majority of the film was made with footage collected by the terrorists themselves who were seen taking sadistic pleasure in their murderous rampage, filming it all for mass consumption.

In one intercepted call made from the phone of a killed Israeli woman between a Hamas terrorist and his father, the terrorist allegedly tells his father that he should be proud because his son “killed 10 Jews with his hands.”

Before the film screening, Israel consul general Idit Shamir held a press briefing with the IDF official and confirmed that 241 hostages, 35 of which are children – including ten who are under the age of five – are still being held by Hamas in Gaza.

Speaking on the ongoing humanitarian crisis inside Gaza, the official conceded that Israel is “having difficulties” getting civilians out of Gaza and stressed that the Israeli government is doing its best to extract foreign civilians from the strip.

One of the aspects that makes this challenging for the IDF,  according to the official, is that Hamas soldiers have been caught embedding themselves among the large crowds of fleeing civilians trying to cross the border into Egypt.

When asked about Israel’s ground invasion of Gaza, the official described the force’s operation as “slow, but effective” and confirmed that over 30 Israeli soldiers have died since the invasion into Gaza began.

“This is a war about Israel’s existence. No less than that,” the official said.

When asked about the slow response from the Israel Defense Forces on Oct. 7 and how they allowed such a catastrophic rampage to occur in such a heavily monitored country the official did not pass the buck.

“We have to be able to admit that we failed,” the official said to reporters.

Shamir said that Hamas’ actions on October 7 “are worse than ISIS,” calling Hamas “a genocidal terrorist group that would kill every Jew in the world if they could.”

The Daily Brief | Tucker Carlson is coming to Calgary

Tucker Carlson will be appearing on stage at Calgary’s Telus Convention Centre on January 24 and will be joined by former Dragons’ Den star Brett Wilson and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. Everyone who donates to True North before the end of 2023 will be automatically entered into a draw to win a pair of FREE tickets!

Plus, the founder of the government-funded Anti-Hate Network says it’s silent on recent incidents of antisemitism because it only has enough resources to cover the “extreme right.”

Meanwhile, a London Islamic School teacher is under fire for posting a video on social media calling for Israel to be banned.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Cosmin Dzsurzsa and Lindsay Shepherd!

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