Vancouver councillor Pete Fry wants the city to adopt a “decolonial and anti-racist” community policing model.
According to a council member’s motion titled Community-based Crisis Management Through Understanding and De-escalation submitted this week, Fry envisions a program of “crisis worker teams” working independently of police to respond to various emergencies.
Fry’s motion calls for council to “direct staff to develop within the strategy a pilot community-based crisis management program of public information education, and engagement that … is informed by destigmatized, decolonial and anti-racist practice.”
True North reached out to Fry to inquire whether Vancouver Police Department funds would be re-allocated to such a program and to ask what a “decolonial and anti-racist” community policing model would look. Fry did not respond before publication time.
Following violent protests in Canada and the US calling for cities to defund their police forces in 2020, Vancouver city council voted to reject a $6.4 million funding increase by the police board but stopped short of slashing the force’s budget.
While council debated a cut to the policing budget, Fry was among a few councillors who made arguments in favor of reducing funding by 1%.
“Decolonization” and “anti-racism” have become popular buzzwords among far-left advocates who seek to dismantle institutions they see as systematically racist. According to academic publications cited by the University of British Columbia, decolonization “sets out to change the order of the world (and) is, obviously, a program of complete disorder.”
The terms are closely interlinked with the controversial theoretical lens known as Critical Race Theory (CRT), which has been blasted by critics as a thinly veiled form of racism itself.
The positions and assumptions of CRT have crept into an increasing number of institutions across Canada including government, business, entertainment, public schools and higher education.
In a recent op-ed, renowned speaker and academic Dr. Jordan B. Peterson blasted the “Diversity, Inclusivity and Equity” (DIE) mandates sweeping through academia and other institutions.
“Diversity, Inclusivity and Equity — that radical leftist Trinity — is destroying us,” wrote Peterson. ”Wondering about the divisiveness that is currently besetting us? Look no farther than DIE …When does the left go too far? When they worship at the altar of DIE, and insist that the rest of us, who mostly want to be left alone, do so as well.”
A growing chorus of Conservative MPs is speaking out in support of the massive Truckers for Freedom Convoy as it barrels towards Ottawa to protest vaccine mandates and an erosion of freedoms under Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Siding with the mass movement of truck drivers, these Conservative MPs are breaking with party leader Erin O’Toole, who has evaded questions on whether he supports the convoy and whether he will even meet with them once they arrive at the capital.
Among the prominent Conservative voices speaking in support of the truckers are finance critic Pierre Poilievre, deputy leader Candice Bergen, infrastructure critic Andrew Scheer, Canadian heritage critic Kevin Waugh, MP Leslyn Lewis and others.
Pierre Poilievre slams hypocrite Trudeau for punishing truckers
I’m proud of the Truckers. Peaceful protest is a cornerstone of our democracy. The liberal mandates are unscientific, vindictive, mean-spirited and promote segregation. The people have a moral obligation to oppose unjust laws and mandates. https://t.co/1i4QQZUToO
Martin Shields awaits anti-mandate trucking convoy
I am in Ottawa awaiting the trucking convoy on its way to the capital. Canadian supply chains are critical and the Trudeau Liberal government’s mandates and freedom-curbing restrictions have gone on too long. It’s time to get our freedoms back. #cdnpolipic.twitter.com/LAl956dN0V
Great big thanks to the organizers and to everyone taking part. Let's make sure we do whatever we can to show our support for the Convoy for Freedom 2022! https://t.co/sNMQrEk5YY
Thank you Truckers! Trudeau is attacking personal liberty and threatening everyone's ability to get groceries because of his overreach on vaccine mandates. He is the biggest threat to freedom in Canada.https://t.co/5b5k5ZjuY3
Nice to listen to a new trucker who sees the impacts of the Trudeau Liberals failed polices daily. He said seeing people rally behind truckers and freedom of choice has “made him proud to be Canadian again.”🇨🇦 #skpolipic.twitter.com/yVDRaezLKx
The trucker convoy has become the biggest news story in the country. It continues to dominate online, and now the legacy media has come around to paying attention to it, but of course, they demonize and denigrate the unvaccinated truckers. So where does the Conservative leader stand? Does he support the convoy? Will he meet with truckers when they come to Ottawa?
On today’s episode of The Candice Malcolm Show, Candice Malcolm discusses the ever-evolving media narrative on vaccines, vaccine mandates and an ongoing effort to demonize the unvaccinated – despite the new reality that Omicron affects everyone and the vaccines and vaccine mandates are demonstrably not effective in preventing the spread.
With many Conservative MPs voicing support for the truckers and opposing the failed vaccine mandates, where does O’Toole stand? Not even he knows.
In less than one calendar year, Canada managed to get 84% of its population a first dose of the emergency-use Covid-19 vaccine. Another 78% are now fully vaccinated, having been administered both shots.
Among the truly vulnerable, those aged 70 and older, 98.7% are fully vaccinated.
That is a remarkable feat, especially given the bumps along the way in the vaccine roll-out, including a failed Chinese partnership and the primary vaccine offered to Canadians being pulled amid health concerns and adverse side effects (AstraZeneca).
Regardless of these blunders, Canadians stepped up. We rolled up our sleeves, we trusted the experts and more than three-quarters of us did what we were told to do and got fully vaccinated.
We all did it for our own reasons and with our own justifications. Some wanted to protect themselves and their families from getting sick, others did it for the “incentives” and other bribes offered by various governments, others did it because of coercion – they were told they would lose their jobs and livelihoods if they failed to do it, leaving them little choice but to get the vaccine.
For me personally, I got vaccinated because I wanted my life back. I wanted to be able to do normal things like go out for dinner with my husband, travel to see family members who live in other cities and countries, celebrate birthdays and weddings, and basically for things to go back to normal. I didn’t want to wear a mask, and I didn’t want to spend another weekend cooped up inside the house with two little kids who have spent most of their lives in various stages of “lockdown.”
Boy was I naive.
Wrapped up in the push to get Canadians vaccinated was the introduction of a vaccine passport or vaccine mandate schemes. The purpose of these mandates, we were told, was to stop the transmission of Covid.
Unvaccinated Canadians would be barred from entering certain areas of society because, we were told, they may spread the disease. This implied both that unvaccinated people were the transmitters of the virus, and also, that once you were vaccinated, you would no longer spread or contract Covid.
Canadians idly stood by while our politicians turned Canada into a segregated, two-tiered country, where certain untouchable members of society were no longer welcome in the public square.
We allowed politicians to take measures that three years ago we would have all agreed were the things of dystopian science fiction novels or excerpts from the history books of fascist and communist ideologies – policies that are the antithesis of a free society and frankly not possible in a liberal democracy like Canada.
We allowed them to strip liberties, restrict freedoms, amass power, spend endlessly, pit neighbour against neighbour and turn Canada into an unrecognizable, angry, tribal place.
And yet, all of these heavy-handed measures ultimately did not protect us.
Here we are, approaching one year after the roll-out of the vaccines and we are no better protected. We are back to lockdowns, restrictions, school closures, and back to indigent politicians hectoring us to get vaccinated.
The introduction of a new variant, Omicron, has made our ever-evolving, nonsensical and often contradictory public health orders even more absurd. This new variant, which seems to be more mild but more virulent, has thrown the equation upside down. The old orders, which were tenuous, illiberal and ineffective, no longer apply.
Almost everyone I know got Covid over Christmas, regardless of vaccination status.
Omicron doesn’t seem to care if you are vaccinated or not.
Public health experts and drug manufacturers have been quick to acknowledge this. They’re now working on new vaccines for new strains, which suggests that we may soon be asked (or required) to get multiple shots to keep up with the new mutations.
The narrative has evolved over the past six months from “get vaccinated to stop the spread of Covid” to the new narrative “get vaccinated so you’ll get a milder version of Covid, a version that won’t kill you.”
Well, if you’re under 70 and you’re generally healthy, Covid probably wasn’t going to kill you anyway. The Omicron variant itself is mild and much less likely to kill you than the original Wuhan strain or the later Delta strain.
In the face of all of these new facts – that vaccines don’t protect us from Omicron, that Omicron isn’t as deadly as previous strains, that vaccines won’t stop the spread of Covid, and, as we’ve experienced in Ontario, Quebec and a handful of other provinces, that vaccines and vaccine mandates won’t even stop governments from introducing heavy-handed lockdowns – little has changed.
The political messaging remains the same, and the zeal has only intensified.
Trust the science. Get vaccinated. Get a booster shot. Vaccinate your little kids. Vaccines are the only way out of the pandemic. This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. The unvaccinated are a threat to public health and public safety.
The political fervour has intensified despite the science. Science is no longer on their side.
And now, remarkably, we’re now seeing yet another shift in the narrative. We’re now being told the real purpose of the vaccination campaign is to protect our frail and anaemic socialized health care system, even as our lying eyes show us that three-quarters of those in hospital in Ontario with Covid are vaccinated.
The experts hand-wave and justify these inconvenient facts, as our politicians roll out even more punitive measures to turn up the pressure on the unvaccinated.
We will fire you from your job, raise your taxes, ban you from the grocery store, stop you from travelling, tell your family not to invite you to dinner, call you every name in the book, and do everything we can to force you to make a health decision that you don’t want to make for public health reasons that constantly change.
Our public health experts and political leaders have lost the plot. Their orders don’t add up, but they don’t seem to care.
Some public health experts and politicians around the world have reluctantly acknowledged the changing reality and tacitly admitted their strategy has failed. This is why we see the U.K. and other Western nations ending all health restrictions and announcing an end to the pandemic.
If Canada was led by decent, honest people, we would do the same. The longer our leaders hold out – coercing instead of persuading, dividing instead of uniting, pushing a narrative instead of following the latest science and facts – the more we know this is about power, not health or safety.
U.S. President Joe Biden did not invite Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to a video call with world leaders on Monday about Russia’s military buildup on Ukraine’s borders.
The invitation shows that European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, European Council president Charles Michel and NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg were included on the call.
The world leaders invited were French President Emmanuel Macron, German chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italian president Mario Draghi, Polish president Andrzej Duda and British prime minister Boris Johnson.
The call took place in the Situation Room in the White House and was closed to the press.
Conservative MP James Bezan raised concerns about the snub in a tweet.
“This is what happens when you fail to stand up for Ukraine,” he said.
Today, the U.S. President is meeting with world leaders, including NATO, to talk about Russia’s military buildup. Justin Trudeau is not on this list. This is what happens when you fail to stand up for Ukraine. #cdnpolihttps://t.co/luRHQ2bwTd
The U.S. State Department and the British government have reported that some embassy staff and their families were advised to start to leave Ukraine because of Russia’s increasing aggression.
Trudeau has not said whether Canada would follow suit by withdrawing its diplomats and their employees from the eastern European country.
“We are following the situation in Ukraine extremely closely,” he said. “The safety of Canadian diplomats and their families is of course paramount, and we will continue to be there for Ukraine and ensure the safety of Canadians and Ukrainians.”
Russia has sent soldiers to Ukraine’s borders and announced naval drills as the countries prepare for a potential armed conflict.
Six Russian military ships capable of carrying troops, tanks and other vehicles have travelled across the Mediterranean Sea and could land on Ukraine’s southern shore if Russian president Vladimir Putin orders an attack.
Ukraine’s intelligence services have claimed that Russia is hiring soldiers and supplying proxy forces with fuel, military vehicles and ammunition for a possible invasion.
Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) ticketed Athena’s Diner in Petrolia, Ont. yet again on Saturday, saying the restaurant was allowing indoor dining despite provincial COVID restrictions.
The incident is shown in a video posted to Instagram.
Owner Tom Stoukas said that the OPP gave him a $1,250 fine and a court summons for being open for indoor dining.
This comes in addition to three $880 tickets he received for not checking vaccine passports in November. The three tickets came during a three-day blitz of Sarnia-Lambton businesses required to show vaccine passports.
“Up until now, I have adhered to all the protocols,” said Stoukas at the time. “The vax pass– That’s where I draw the line.”
Lambton County OPP Detachment media relations officer Jamie Bydeley told True North that the OPP had responded to a complaint about the restaurant and that enforcement measures encourage people to comply with COVID-19 restrictions.
“We attended Athena’s Diner due to a call from a member of the public,” said Bydeley. “The owner was served a summons to attend court on March 10, 2022 for the offence of failing to comply with an order made during a declared emergency.”
Ownere Tom Stoukas told True North (left) that he has retained a paralegal and plans on fighting the tickets.
Speaking with True North on Monday, Stoukas said that the customers who were in Athena’s when it was ticketed told the police officers that fining the restaurant was wrong. The customers, he said, did not start fights with the officers but rather shouted at them and called their activities shameful.
“Businesses were forced to discriminate among their customers with the illegal vaccine passport for months, and now, they are shut down again with very little hope of financially recovering,” said the customer who recorded the interaction and posted it to Instagram. “What business does the government have with a diner in the small town of Petrolia?”
Stoukas said when Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced in August that he was opposed to vaccine passports, it made him relax and realize he could concentrate on rebuilding his business.
He said that he was annoyed when Ontario implemented vaccine passports and that the lockdown was an extension of the passport system.
Stoukas called it “garbage” that Ontario was bringing back 50% capacity limits on Monday, saying that letting in half as many people into his restaurant would not make him any money.
Stoukas said that he has retained a paralegal and plans on fighting the tickets. He said the only way for his business to be viable again is for police to leave him alone when it comes to COVID-19 restrictions.
He recognizes that his defiance of lockdown measures will not satisfy everyone.
“If I think it’s right, I’m going to do it,” he said. “And if I can go home and look my kids in the eyes, that’s fine.”
Amid a global pandemic and the highest inflation rates in more than two decades, it’s nice to know the Durham District School Board hasn’t lost sight of the real issue – erasing Canadian history.
Last week, the school district’s trustees voted 7-1 to expunge the name of Canada’s first Prime Minister, and father of Confederation, from the walls of Pickering’s Sir John A. Macdonald Public School.
It’s a change they expect to cost taxpayers as much as $35,000.
And it’s not as if this action was one being demanded by angry residents.
In fact, a survey used to gather feedback from the community (which included responses from 917 individuals) showed 68.7% of respondents believed the school’s name should remain unchanged.
It follows a trend in Canada where statues and monuments to the man who built this country have been torn down and his public memory erased, all for his alleged crimes against Indigenous Canadians more than 130 years ago.
One key problem – many of the claims about Sir John. A’s legacy simply aren’t accurate, and they don’t take into account the many forward-thinking and beneficial policies he brought into place.
Far from repressing Indigenous Canadians, in 1885 he became the first Prime Minister to extend to many the right to vote.
This decision was decried by Liberal Members of Parliament at the time and later repealed in 1898 by Liberal Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier.
Equally misrepresentative are the claims that Macdonald was responsible for “starving” First Nations across the Canadian Prairies.
In reality, Macdonald engaged in the largest aid operation in Canadian history (again despite the opposition of Liberal MPs) following the overhunting (and disappearance) of the buffalo – with which Macdonald had nothing to do.
As for Residential Schools, which he is often accused of introducing – they existed long before Macdonald was Prime Minister, and attendance remained voluntary until years after his death.
The truth is that Macdonald, like any of us, wasn’t perfect. And, like anyone, he was a product of his time.
But what he accomplished is simply unparalleled in Canadian history – and without him, the country likely wouldn’t exist.
He was the driving force behind confederation in 1867, enticed British Columbia to join not long after and tied the country together, from sea to sea, with our very own ribbon of steel – the Canadian Pacific Railway.
All this he accomplished under the watchful eye of an expansionist United States.
Along the way, he granted black Canadians the right to vote and became an early proponent of voting rights for women.
To his friend Peter Jones, a Mississauga Ojibwa chief, he would write, “I hope to see some day the Indian race represented by one of themselves on the floor of the House of Commons.”
Far from being the racist caricature that he is now portrayed as, Macdonald was a man ahead of his time – the rare statesman whose actions, when examined closely, appear even more impressive than when examined from afar.
And while his accomplishments were many, his most impressive, quite simply, is creating the country we now call home – creating Canada.
And as long as that’s worth celebrating, Sir John A. is worth celebrating too.
Aaron Gunn is a conservative commentator and documentary filmmaker. He has amassed over 100,000 followers on social media and is host of the online series Politics Explained.
With Critical Race Theory (CRT) casting its shadow across a growing number of Canadian school boards, those of us who are fighting the extremist agenda can take lessons from people who’ve had success in pushing back.
CRT concepts have only recently emerged in elementary school curriculum documents in Ontario – especially in the guise of anti-black racism – having germinated to a large extent during COVID lockdowns.
In the United States, however, parents and Conservative politicians subjected to CRT and woke educators are starting to wake up.
In Florida’s public schools, for example, Quisha King has been battling back against the idea of teaching Florida public school students the tenets of CRT for over two years.
“I find it highly insulting for anyone to tell my child that because they happen to have more melanin than someone else that they are more oppressed and to tell a child that has less melanin that they are an oppressor,” she told True North in a recent interview. “That’s so ignorant and so simplistic.”
In fact, the Jacksonville single mother of two teenage daughters has done such a remarkable job of exposing this dangerous theory that she was singled out by Governor Ron DeSantis in his State of the State Address.
One of the most recent victories against CRT came in Virginia, at the hands of newly elected governor Glenn Youngkin. Banning CRT in state schools was part of his campaign, and he made good on that promise by issuing an executive order during his first day on the job.
BREAKING: VA Governor Glenn Youngkin Overturns Mandates and Takes On Critical Race Theory Immediately Upon Taking Office https://t.co/8qOp00SZS3
CRT – which has its roots in Marxist ideology – posits that “anti-black racism” is deeply embedded in western institutions. It claims these institutions maintain white dominance and create an uneven playing field for black people.
King, who is also part of a national organization called Moms for Liberty, says that when she first heard about CRT more than two years ago at a church conference, she had no idea it was in schools.
That was until her daughter’s eighth grade teacher – during a lecture on racial themes – started asking some of her black students how they as African-American children were discriminated against.
“The class turned into one big Oppression Olympics where the children were competing for who was more oppressed,” King told True North.
“This is how CRT is being played out in our schools. It’s not like they have a CRT book… but what they are doing are taking these ideas and pushing them into the classroom through critical pedagogy.”
King calls the focus on racism merely a “smokescreen” to admit Marxist ideology so that educators can raise a generation of “activists and agitators.”“
King has also been vocal about how the curriculum in public schools is being dumbed down to deal with the disparity in success between black and white children instead of pushing everyone to succeed.
She said she finds it “highly insulting” that schools would get rid of gifted programs or subjects like Calculus and that they’d remove standards so everyone “can equally fail.”
“Why in the world would I want my child to strive for less because she’s black..I want them to reach their highest potential,” King said.
“We should be pushing for excellence, not mediocrity.”
Last June, King told a Florida board of education meeting that CRT was “racist” and disingenuous. Her remarks were picked up by the New York Post and Fox and Friends.
She feels kids should be taught about the positive contributions of black Americans.
“I want more American history taught, but I want to hear positive experiences.” King says. “I am tired of hearing the black American experience as just slavery, Jim Crow and civil rights.”
While she’s been lauded by many – including DeSantis – she’s also been called an Uncle Tom and even nastier names like “bed witch,” which was used to describe female slaves who had relations with wealthy plantation owners.
King is so incensed with what’s happening in education, she has advocated that like-minded parents pull their kids out of the public school system to avoid being indoctrinated by CRT.
She put her eldest into a private Catholic school four years ago. Her younger daughter is now part of a homeschooling co-op.
King says that more parents are homeschooling after seeing first-hand what their kids were being taught during the COVID lockdowns.
She feels that if public school boards start losing the funding attached to each student, they’ll wake up to the fact that parents aren’t happy.
“(I say) pull your kids out and I guarantee you will start to see the system change,” she told True North.
Today was the second official day of the Truckers for Freedom Convoy 2022 across Canada to protest vaccine mandates, forced vaccines and other heavy-handed government restrictions.
Truckers in the West made their way through Alberta today and are expected to be in Saskatchewan by Tuesday.
Around 1am on January 24, 2022 the freedom trucker convoy made its way through Airdrie, Alberta, Canada outside of Calgary.
All across Canada, Canadians have come out to support the convoy as it makes it’s way to Ottawa to protest mandates next weekend.pic.twitter.com/9vyD4UlWwz
Canadian author Jordan Peterson retweeted news that approximately 500,000 Canadian truckers will descend on Ottawa Saturday. He warned Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that he’s in for “a very bad week.”
Asked twice today about whether or not he supports the trucker convoy and if he will meet with the truckers when they arrive in Ottawa on Saturday, Conservative leader Erin O’Toole refused to answer both questions definitively and instead encouraged truckers to get vaccinated.
Conservative leader Erin O'Toole refuses to say when asked repeatedly if he supports the trucker convoy headed to Ottawa to protest Justin Trudeau's vaccine mandate. pic.twitter.com/XC2bmNFw3c
Unlike the Conservative leader, Alberta Conservative MP for Bow River Martin Shields publicly supported the truckers. He posted a video on Twitter in support of the convoy, saying “I am in Ottawa awaiting the trucking convoy on its way to the capital” and “It’s time to get our freedoms back.”
I am in Ottawa awaiting the trucking convoy on its way to the capital. Canadian supply chains are critical and the Trudeau Liberal government’s mandates and freedom-curbing restrictions have gone on too long. It’s time to get our freedoms back. #cdnpolipic.twitter.com/LAl956dN0V
Dragon’s Den star Brett Wilson called out the legacy media and in particular, CBC, CTV, Global News and Fox News for their lack of coverage of the convoy saying that they have “no right to ignore” the trucker protest.
Conservative leader Erin O’Toole gave muddled responses on Monday when questioned whether he supports the convoy currently headed to Ottawa to oppose vaccine mandates.
When pressed by reporters during a media conference, O’Toole evaded several questions about whether he would meet with the truckers when they arrived in the capital later this week.
“I support getting as many people vaccinated as possible including truckers and I probably – with the exception of a few doctors who are on TV everyday – I’ve probably encouraged vaccination more than any Canadian and that’s our most critical tool to reduce the severity of COVID but also to get this public health crisis under control,” said O’Toole.
Conservative leader Erin O'Toole refuses to say when asked repeatedly if he supports the trucker convoy headed to Ottawa to protest Justin Trudeau's vaccine mandate. pic.twitter.com/XC2bmNFw3c
Despite the media asking a number of follow-up questions, the leader of the opposition still couldn’t give a definitive answer. Even during an interview on CTV’s Power Play, O’Toole continued to be unclear on whether he would appear at the protest.
“We’ve been meeting with them for the last few months and I will continue to meet this week and into the weekend with truckers and with the industry – both individual people suffering but also the industry,” said O’Toole.
Earlier this month, the Liberal government confusingly undid an apparent reversal on vaccine mandates for cross-border truck drivers. After stating the mandate would not go into effect, Liberal health minister Jean Yves-Duclos claimed that the reversal was “provided in error.”
Since the mandate began on Jan. 15, trucking companies across Canada have been reporting a shortage of drivers. Some workers are reportedly walking off the job.
Estimates by the CTA show that the mandate could force 10% to 20% of Canadian truck drivers – between 12,000 and 22,000 essential workers – off cross-border routes, which would have significant impacts on the country’s supply chain.
Despite O’Toole’s waffling, a number of Conservative MPs have spoken out publicly in support of the truckers currently making their way across the country.
Conservative MP Martin Shields recently posted a video of himself awaiting the convoy in front of Parliament.
“I am in Ottawa awaiting the trucking convoy on its way to the capital,” tweeted Shields. “Canadian supply chains are critical and the Trudeau Liberal government’s mandates and freedom-curbing restrictions have gone on too long.