Dozens of students at the Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson) law school have signed – and deleted – an open letter condemning Israel as a “settler colony.” The signatories say they “support all forms of Palestinian resistance and efforts toward liberation” and explicitly Palestinians should be judged by different rules than Israelis because the former are the “oppressor.” True North’s Andrew Lawton discusses.
Lawyer Ari Goldkind says Toronto police have failed to protect the city’s Jews from a spike in antisemitism. He joins Andrew to weigh in.
Plus, Kris Sims from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation joins for her regular Monday check in – this time discussing Rideau Hall’s $8 million barn.
Days after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau implied Israel was behind an attack on al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, the Canadian government has changed its tune.
Plus, Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy has urged the U.S. to erect a wall along its northern border with Canada.
And the University of New Brunswick philosophy department cancelled a planned lecture featuring a conservative Christian.
Tune into The Daily Brief with Cosmin Dzsurdzsa and Lindsay Shepherd!
Conservative MPs on the House of Commons’ procedure committee blasted Liberal and NDP colleagues for voting to make an inquiry into the invitation of a Nazi soldier to the House of Commons last month private and unavailable to the general public.
A motion before the committee called for a transparent and public inquiry into how former Ukrainian 14th SS Division Galicia member Yaroslav Hunka was given a place of honour in Parliament during Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky’s visit to Canada.
The Conservative motion was voted down with four MPs supporting a public inquiry and seven MPs voting against.
Conservative MP Michael Cooper accused opponents of engaging in a coverup and keeping the truth from Canadians to protect Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s reputation.
“What we have is a coverup coalition at work yet again seeking to go behind closed doors rather than to deal with this matter openly and transparently to get to the bottom of one of the greatest international embarrassments brought upon by this prime minister with an S.S. soldier addressing parliament and it’s disgraceful,” said Cooper.
At the time, former speaker Anthony Rota invited Hunka to stand before the House of Commons. MPs then gave him a standing ovation.
“We have here in the Chamber today, a Ukrainian Canadian veteran from the Second World War who fought for Ukrainian independence against the Russians and continues to support the troops today even at the age of 98. His name Yaroslav Hunka,” said Rota.
“I am very proud to say that he is from North Bay and from my riding of Nipissing—Timiskaming. He is a Ukrainian hero, Canadian hero, and we thank him for all his service.”
Rota has since resigned from his position as the Speaker of the House and was replaced by Liberal MP Greg Fergus.
Jewish groups widely condemned the incident, calling it a disgrace to the memory of those who suffered in the Holocaust.
“We are deeply troubled & disturbed that a Ukrainian veteran of the infamous 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the Nazi SS – which actively participated in the genocide of Jews – was celebrated with a standing ovation in the Canadian Parliament,” wrote CIJA at the time.
“Canada’s Jewish community stands firmly with Ukraine in its war against Russian aggression. But we can’t stay silent when crimes committed by Ukrainians during the Holocaust are whitewashed.”
Having exposed the rise in antisemitism since 2009 and the haters who perpetuate it, I knew the Jew hatred would escalate once Hamas left a trail of 1,400 murdered Israeli babies, moms and dads, seniors and children following its barbaric acts of two weeks ago.
But even I — someone who has looked antisemites in the eye many times and called them out for what they are — somehow naively thought the world opinion would be tempered by the egregious atrocities replayed on TV and computer screens everywhere.
I thought even those who harbour a dislike for the Jewish state would somehow have some compassion for those raped, murdered and abducted – and for the innocent babies desecrated by barbarians who have not progressed beyond medieval times.
How very wrong I was.
I am absolutely heartbroken and angered by the deeply visceral Jew hatred that has played out on social media, on college campuses and on the streets of both Toronto and other major Canadian and U.S. cities.
We’ve seen the pro-Palestinian protesters screaming the traditional “From the River to the Sea” war cry — a blatant call to annihilate Israel — on the campuses of many Ivy League and renowned schools including NYU, Columbia and Harvard.
The protesters — while loudly spewing their Jew hatred — regularly hide their faces behind masks to protect their identities (being the cowards they are).
In Toronto, hateful Hamas apologists have taken to busy downtown intersections, as well as the streets in front of the Israeli consulate and the Jewish Community Centre, to attack Jews.
That and their angry antisemitic rants stand in stark contrast to the very peaceful and loving pro-Israel rally I attended, along with nearly 20,000 others, three days after the horrible brutalities in Israel.
Instead of screaming angry epithets about Hamas, the Jewish community quickly and quietly joined forces to support Israel any way they could, from donating cash, clothing and medical supplies to selling bracelets celebrating Israel.
I can’t imagine any of us standing in front of a mosque or closing down a major street loudly screaming “Death to Palestinians,” “Gas all of them” and so on.
Our university campuses have been a hotbed of antisemitic activity for years, starting with the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement and Israel Apartheid week.
Once upon a time, leftist Canadian students couched their anti-Israel hatred in claims they cared about the poor oppressed Palestinians.
Now they make no secret of their disdain for Jews.
Vitriolic statements from student associations at Queen’s, McMaster and York – all of whom claim to be concerned about social justice – shockingly blamed Israelis for bringing the Hamas brutality on themselves.
After years of turning a blind eye to the Jew hatred on campus at York, the administration has threatened to take away the student unions’ status if they don’t recant their hateful statement.
This is likely because Jewish donors are threatening to pull their funding as is now happening with Ivy League colleges in the U.S.
Nevertheless academics with tenure seem to be a protected class. Osgoode (York’s law school) professor Heidi Matthews continues to spew her anti-Israel hate.
“Canada’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza emboldens crimes against humanity. We march for a ceasefire and an end to the blockade. We refuse to look away from the threat of annihilation facing 2.3 million people in Gaza.”
“Canada’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza emboldens crimes against humanity. We march for a ceasefire and an end to the blockade. We refuse to look away from the threat of annihilation facing 2.3 million people in Gaza.” https://t.co/WBmLruSxaK
There’s a professor at Cornell, who captured media attention with his claims on the streets of New York, that he was “exhilarated” by the actions of Hamas two weeks ago.
A trans assistant professor at the Chicago Art Institute called Jews “pigs, savages and excrement” on her Twitter feed.
She subsequently apologized.
But the damage had already been done.
Can you imagine the outrage that would occur if we substituted Israel for any Arab country and Jew for Muslim?
There is a slight ray of hope amidst all of this.
Some Jew haters — doctors, lawyers and dentists even— are actually paying the price for their anti-Semitic rants on social media and in the streets.
Some are being fired and donors are walking away from colleges and universities that don’t deal with Jew hatred.
Others are being forced to apologize. Take this half-hearted statement from CUPE union president Fred Hahn after two weeks of glorifying the violence perpetrated on 1,400 Israelis.
That said, his apology was still tone deaf and highly insulting to the Jewish community, reflecting the narcissism of a man who blamed “bad actors seeking to create divisiveness” (that is, Jews like me) for his troubles.
Five years ago, I feared it was an accident waiting to happen.
I did many stories about university presidents turning a blind eye to the Jew hatred on campus and by their leftist professors, invariably citing free speech.
Other than a few brave exceptions, the Jewish donors, for the most part did not stand up and pull their funding, burying their heads in the sand.
I still remember that pro-Palestinian rally in Toronto’s Nathan Phillips Square in May of 2021 when a few dozen Jewish counter protesters were surrounded, attacked and beaten.
No Palestinian sympathizer was charged and the complicit media ignored the violence.
I was one of only a few Jewish journalists who wrote about it at the time.
Our municipal politicians, as they do regularly, clucked that this was wrong, along with other hateful protests that shut down major intersections. But nothing is ever done. No one is ever charged.
For years I’ve been writing about the illegal and antisemitic Al Quds rally that takes to the streets of Toronto yearly. No politician has had the integrity to ban it.
In an area of Mississauga dubbed the Gaza Strip anti-Jew protests have regularly taken place over the past few years. Mayor Bonnie Crombie, who is now too busy running for Ontario Liberal leader to notice the most recent ones, has never tried to stop them.
It should come as no surprise that these haters have been emboldened and enabled to continue to spew hatred. Now their protests are threatening and violent.
Our politicians enabled hatred. Our universities turn their heads and pretend it doesn’t exist, citing free speech.
There are rarely consequences for the violence on social media and in the streets.
There is indeed a double standard when it comes to Jews and the Jewish state.
Days after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau implied Israel was behind an attack on al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, the Canadian government has changed its tune.
Late Saturday night, Defence Minister Bill Blair posted on X (formerly Twitter) that Canada has a “high degree of confidence” that Israel was not behind the hospital explosion after an independent review by the Canadian military.
We are deeply saddened by the loss of life caused by the explosion at Al Ahli Arab hospital in Gaza on Oct. 17.
In order to determine what happened, the Prime Minister asked me to task the @CanadianForces with preparing an independent analysis. Today I am releasing its findings.
“In order to determine what happened, the Prime Minister asked me to task the @CanadianForces with preparing an independent analysis. Today I am releasing its findings,” Blair posted.
“Analysis conducted independently by the @CanadianForces Intelligence Command indicates with a high degree of confidence that Israel did not strike the hospital on October 17, 2023.”
The government now believes that the explosion was “caused by an errant rocket fired from Gaza.”
The statement from the Trudeau government comes days after the United States said its own intel concluded that Israel was not responsible for the hospital blast, which Hamas claimed killed hundreds of people.
While in Israel, U.S. President Joe Biden told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the explosion was caused by the “other team, not you.”
"The news coming out of Gaza is horrific and absolutely unacceptable. International humanitarian and international law needs to be respected in this and in all cases."
Justin Trudeau comments on the news of the bombing of Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza. pic.twitter.com/WJsldOjwWO
When the explosion first occurred, Trudeau, while not mentioning Israel by name, implied that Israel was behind the attack.
“The news coming out of Gaza is horrific and absolutely unacceptable … International humanitarian and international law needs to be respected in this, and in all cases. There are rules around wars and it’s not acceptable to hit a hospital,” said Trudeau.
Other senior cabinet ministers also laid the blame on Israel, including Melanie Joly and Francois-Philippe Champagne.
Bombing a hospital is an unthinkable act, and there is no doubt that doing so is absolutely illegal.
“Bombing a hospital is an unthinkable act, and there is no doubt that doing so is absolutely illegal,” Joly posted on X.
The attack on the Al-Ahli Arab hospital in Gaza is horrifying and against international humanitarian law. My thoughts are with the victims and their loved ones.
— François-Philippe Champagne (FPC) 🇨🇦 (@FP_Champagne) October 18, 2023
Meanwhile, Champagne posted, “The attack on the Al-Ahli Arab hospital in Gaza is horrifying and against international humanitarian law. My thoughts are with the victims and their loved ones. Let’s be clear. There can be no justification to strike a hospital nor civilians.”
More than 4,300 people have been killed in Gaza, according to Hamas-run Gaza Health Minister. Meanwhile. more than 1,400 in Israel have been killed, most of them murdered in the surprise terrorist attack on Oct. 7.
The Israeli army is currently preparing for a ground assault of Gaza, in an effort to eliminate Hamas.
According to newly released documents, the RCMP was unable to pursue a criminal investigation into the SNC-Lavalin scandal due to difficulties in obtaining confidential cabinet materials. Democracy Watch founder Duff Conacher joined True North’s Andrew Lawton to discuss the documents in question, and the implications of its findings.
Insolvency firm MNP LTD. released a report that revealed more and more Canadians are faced with crippling debt as high costs spike interest rates, making it more difficult for them to meet their payments.
The report was the latest Consumer Debt Index from MNP which found that 51% of Canadians are $200 or less away from not being able to meet their bills, while the amount of money the average person has left over after expenses has dropped to $674 this quarter.
“There is no mystery as to what is causing Canadians’ bleak debt outlook: it’s getting increasingly difficult to make ends meet,” said MNP president Grant Bazian in a press release.
“Facing a combination of rising debt carrying costs, living expenses and concern over the potential for continued interest rate and price hikes, many Canadians are stretched uncomfortably close to broke.”
The survey which has run annually for the last five years found that Canadians are more pessimistic about their financial situation now then in any other year previous.
The survey found that 20% of respondents said their financial situation is “much worse” than last year and 25% said their debt was worse now compared to five years ago.
Many respondents were not optimistic about their future either, 16% said they believe their debt will be even worse five years from now.
Canadian credit card balances hit an all-time high of $107.4 billion this year and total consumer debt hit $2.4 billion, according to Equifax Canada.
The Bank of Canada is expected to keep interest rates stabilized during next week’s announcement by most economists, however the MNP report shows that Canadians are afraid that they won’t be able to continue to outpace their future bills.
The survey found that 28% of respondents said that a 1% rate increase weakened their ability to pay their bills last quarter, while 37% said they would not be able to afford an additional $130 more in interest payments on their debt.
“For now, the financial concerns of some Canadians have been offset, at least to some degree, by the strong job market,” said Bazian. “The uncomfortable truth is that higher interest rates slowing the economy will inevitably come with consequences like increased unemployment.”
Authorities have given full parole to an ex-high school teacher from British Columbia who strangled his pregnant wife to death, killing their unborn child and subsequently burning her body.
Mukhtiar Singh Panghali, a 51-year-old former Surrey, B.C. high school teacher was granted full parole by the Parole Board of Canada after being sentenced to life for the 2006 murder of his pregnant wife, Manjit Kaur Panghali. The incident occurred in their Surrey home, and her charred remains were later found on a beach near Roberts Bank in Delta, B.C.
After killing Manjit, who was four months pregnant, Panghali made a distressing and tearful public appeal seeking assistance in finding his then “missing” wife. The murder was executed while their young daughter was left unattended at home.
Panghali was initially arrested and charged with second-degree murder in 2007. He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in 2011 with no possibility of parole for 15 years. He lost an appeal on his life sentence for second-degree murder in 2012. He was then eventually granted day parole in July 2022, after which he secured full-time employment with an undisclosed company, according to the Parole Board of Canada.
Angela Marie MacDougall, the executive director of Vancouver’s Battered Women’s Support Services, voiced her concerns about the parole decision.
“This tells us everything we need to know about how ineffective the criminal legal system is in meeting any kind of justice for victims of intimate partner and domestic violence,” she told Global News.
Even though the Parole Board found that Panghali had “accepted responsibility for (his) actions and choices.”
“You are assessed as a high risk of violence towards a partner,” stated the Parole Board’s release decision issued on October 6th.
“Should you involve yourself in a relationship, this would be the high-risk situation for you and must be monitored closely by your (case management team) through the relevant special condition to restrict you from initiating relationships with women without the permission of your parole supervisor.”
Several conditions have been imposed on Panghali’s parole, including abstaining from alcohol, participating in a domestic violence treatment plan, and reporting any relationships with women. He is also prohibited from contacting the victim’s family, including his own daughter, who is now being cared for by Manjit’s sister.
In response to a fresh wave of antisemitic protests, the Liberals have reiterated their promise to introduce “online harms” legislation. Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms president John Carpay joined True North’s Andrew Lawton to discuss the Liberals’ obsession with regulating the internet, and the implications it could have on freedom of expression.
Residents of the quaint municipal district of Bonnyville, Alta. took to council to express their concerns over rising rural crime and inaction from federal authorities to address repeat offenders.
A recent rural crime wave last week sparked a cry for help among the district’s council members and residents who said they feel unsafe and unprotected by the current justice system.
Chief Administrative Officer Al Hoggan said the federal government is responsible for setting the legislation that affects how crime is dealt with and that the issue has become politicized.
He warned that there is no quick fix and that the voters will have to decide in the next federal election if they want a change.
“This is as much a political problem as much as a crime reduction problem. This is federal legislation,” said Hoggan.
“Whether or not the federal government has any inclination to change the direction that they’ve currently been going in, it will be a question that the voters will be asked to deal with within the next couple of years.”
One of the residents who appealed for help was Dustin Mortin, who had his truck stolen for the second time a month ago.
He said he and his wife are constantly on edge and that he feels helpless and frustrated as a result of the crime wave.
“I don’t know where to go,” said Mortin. “Everybody wants something done, but nobody knows how to get it done.”
According to Mortin, the combined value of the two trucks stolen was over a quarter million dollars.
Hoggan suggested that the council should request a meeting with Alberta Justice Minister Mickey Amery and invite some of the affected residents to share their experiences and concerns.
He also blasted the provincial government for not doing enough to act on the issue.