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Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Radical anarchist producing CBC documentary on BC pipeline protests

CBC has solicited the work of a radical anarchist activist to produce a documentary on the ongoing protests targeting BC natural gas pipelines. 

According to a tweet, Franklin López has recently become involved in the CBC production Yintah, which centres on so-called Wet’suwet’en resistance to the Coastal GasLink pipeline in northern BC. 

“Well the cat’s out of the bag, our film Yintah is a CBC production,” tweeted López on Dec. 6, 2021. López’s Twitter account has since been set to ‘protected’ status although his Instagram account also identifies him as the “Producer/Editor” of the documentary.

López has been a staple figure in the Canadian anti-authority far-left for years and is the founder of the multimedia company sub.Media. Recently, the Western Standard also identified López as a “hardcore anarcho-socialist.” 

The company’s productions include various short films and documentaries on an amalgam of anarchist and anti-authority topics. Videos with titles such as “Oil Pipelines Are Easy To Shut Down” and “How to Paralyze a Country” are commonly featured on sub.Media’s Vimeo channel. 

The content is also a go-to resource for extremist Antifa websites that endorse criminal and violent tactics to achieve their ends. One of those websites, Montreal Counter-Information, linked to sub.Media’s video on how to shut down critical infrastructure such as pipelines. 

As exclusively reported by True North, the extremist Montreal Counter-Information has in the past called for attacks against police, said that looting is legitimate and instructed supporters on how to make Molotov cocktails

“Now that the cages are chock full and that people slowly die behind bars, what could happen if the (prison) guards’ cars would unfortunately meet with a screwdriver/hammer/firestarter? If the people who lock up and stand guard, already under constant pressure, were hit and beaten while going back home?” wrote an anonymous April 13, 2021, post on Montreal Counter-Information. 

In fact, López’s content has been featured numerous times on the violent extremist website. 

When True North confronted CBC with these facts and asked whether taxpayer funds were going into an anarchist activist’s pockets, CBC Head of Public Affairs Chuck Thompson claimed that López was being paid by CBC’s production partners.

“For over 20 years, Frank López has publicly identified as an anarchist filmmaker,” Thompson told True North. “Regarding his specific roles on this particular film, he is an editor and also one of the producers. Accordingly, Mr. Lopez is being paid for his work by our production partners.”

When asked follow-up questions about the identities of those production partners and whether CBC was aware of López’s troubling connections, Thompson said the following: “You have our response, we have nothing more to add.” 

In the Canadian Security Intelligence Service’s 2019 Public Report, “anarchist and anti-authority violence” was classified as a national security threat and an example of “Ideologically Motivated Violent Extremism” alongside ethno-nationalist violence, violent misogyny and anti-LGBTQ violence. 

Recent protests targeting pipeline sites in northern BC have resulted in heavy equipment sabotage and hundreds of workers being stranded without food due to illegal blockades. 

The issue of far-left infiltration into Canada’s public broadcaster recently reared its head after former CBC producer Tara Henley revealed that she left the Crown corporation due to the organization’s “radical political agenda.” 

The CBC is funded by Canadian taxpayers to the tune of $1.2 billion. 

Experts say mandatory masks harmful for young children

Various experts are speaking out against mandatory masks for children five years old and under despite many Canadian jurisdictions recommending or requiring them for young kids. 

The World Health Organization (WHO) has said clearly that children five years old and under should not be required to wear masks “based on the safety and overall interest of the child and the capacity to appropriately use a mask with minimal assistance.” 

Despite this advice, Health Canada has told children two years old and up to wear them. 

“Remember, superheroes wear masks too,” the government website says. 

Kindergarten students at schools in the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) were ordered to wear masks starting in September. A memo issued by the TDSB in August informed parents of the policy even though it goes against the Ontario government’s own guidelines, which require only students in Grade 1 and up to wear masks. 

Durham District School Board trustees followed suit by voting on Jan. 5 to make masks mandatory for kindergarten students when in-person learning resumes on Jan. 17. 

“I just feel very strongly that we need to be proactive with this and protect students and staff the best we can with the masking,” said Pickering trustee Chris Braney. 

University of California San Francisco epidemiology and biostatistics professor Vinay Prasad told True North that it is wrong for Health Canada to recommend children two years old and up wear masks. 

“I think it is a bad policy choice,” said Prasad. “There is no credible evidence to show that this policy will slow the spread of the virus in the short term or long term.” 

Prasad added that masks for young children might make it difficult for them to communicate and cause them to miss out on seeing the facial expressions of their classmates. 

University of Toronto psychology professor Todd Cunningham told True North that requiring children five years old and under to wear masks could negatively affect those with language processing challenges. 

“For this small group of students, they would be at a disadvantage by not seeing their educators’ mouths,” said Cunningham. “(With) other students who might have more of a hesitancy with speaking, the mask might act as a barrier to allowing them or promoting them to speak out loud.” 

Cunningham said these disruptions to speech are a risk factor for language development for younger students, as teachers should be encouraging them to produce and listen to regular speech. He said that teachers should better explain phonetic sounds to mitigate these risks.

Prasad added that in times of crisis, it is reasonable to try ideas without solid evidence, but he gives that practice a six-month grace period. 

“When you enter year two, you have to show what you’re recommending works,” he said. “They simply have never done that for masking young children.” 

The WHO and UNICEF said in 2020 that children five years old and under should not have to wear masks. The organizations argued that young children are less susceptible to COVID-19 and unlikely to spread it to other people. 

“According to the limited available evidence, young children may have lower susceptibility to infection compared to adults, however available data suggests that this may vary by age among children,” they said. 

Children 0 to 11 years old represent 1,343 of the 97,940 COVID-19 hospitalizations in Canada, or about 1%. Meanwhile, children 0 to 11 years old represent 14 of the 30,194 COVID-19 deaths in Canada, totalling less than 0.01%. 

Poilievre leads Conservative charge against taxing unvaccinated Canadians

Some prominent Conservative Members of Parliament are finally denouncing Quebec’s move to force people to take the COVID-19 shots under threat of “significant” financial penalties, with leader Erin O’Toole still ambivalent.

“This government overreach is the direct result of Trudeau’s hateful demagoguery, targeting a minority to divide and distract from his own failures,” Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre said in a tweet on Thursday.

Poilievre referenced a video clip that had resurfaced of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau demonizing Canadians who haven’t taken the COVID shots as “misogynists and racists.” Trudeau’s comments have been condemned internationally.

Poilievre is the most prominent Conservative MP to stand against Quebec’s move to make vaccination mandatory. In speaking out against the policy, he echoed earlier statements by Conservative MPs Michael Cooper, Garnett Genuis and Jeremy Patzer

“Any tax targeting unvaccinated people is discriminatory and wrong. Period,” Poilievre said.

Poilievre’s stand was supported by fellow Conservative MP Melissa Lantsman.

“A tax on the unvaxxed would be legally and ethically wrong. Full stop,” Lantsman said in a Tweet.

Poilievre and Lantsman’s remarks come two days after Quebec Premier François Legault announced his government would be exacting “health-care contributions” from Quebeckers who choose not to get the COVID shots.

Legault’s move followed federal Liberal health minister Jean-Yves Duclos’s suggestion that provinces should consider making COVID vaccinations mandatory.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) came out swinging against the new fee being imposed on Quebeckers and warned that forced vaccine taxes are the wrong way to go. 

Federal CTF director Franco Terrazzano told True North that Poilievre’s comments should be much welcomed.

“We’re not going to tax our way out of a pandemic, so it’s great to see the Conservatives speaking out against this tax,” said Terrazzano. “Canadians are already overtaxed, and this could open the floodgates to a bunch of new taxes.”

“Some politicians want the unvaccinated to pay more today. But who are they going to go after tomorrow? All Canadians need to unite against this tax.”

Conservative leader Erin O’Toole mentioned the issue during a Facebook Live video later on Thursday but was less definitive in his opposition.

“I don’t like to see measures like we’re seeing in Quebec where the provinces don’t have the tools to manage COVID, going to tax people that are unvaccinated,” O’Toole said.  

“We need to get vaccination levels up – get vaccinated, they’re safe and effective. But we have to work with people to make sure they do it, and we are not a country that traditionally punishes or imposes in the way that we are seeing. It’s easy to be frustrated. It’s easy to turn a frustrated 85% of the population against 10 or 15 other per cent of the population.” 

On the provincial front, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe and Ontario Premier Doug Ford have all said “no” to forcing vaccines on their citizens under threat of financial penalties.

British Columbia’s health minister Adrian Dix also said no to forcing the shots onto people who don’t want them.

“I can say definitively we will not be proceeding with a similar measure,” Dix told a press conference on Tuesday.

Premiers in Atlantic Canada have not ruled it out but say there are no plans yet.

The government of Quebec has not yet announced how much the financial punishment will be for those who haven’t taken the COVID shots, or when the fees will start being charged.

Quebec is only the second government in the western world to make COVID shots compulsory for all adults. Austria is scheduled to begin the policy in February, with fines of up to $4000 every three months for people unwilling to get the shots.

The Trump fever dream lives on in the minds of Canada’s Laurentian elites

The pearl-clutching liberal elite in the legacy media revisit their favourite topic – accusing Donald Trump of creating every problem under the sun and pretending that everyone who supports him is a racist far-right terrorist. 

On today’s episode of Fake News Friday on The Candice Malcolm Show, Candice and True North journalist and producer Harrison Faulkner try to parse out the logic in a series of anti-Trump derangement screeds over on the Globe and Mail editorial page. 

Plus, they talk about how journalists push their agenda and wrap their opinions in news stories – by quoting so-called experts who push the woke far-left ideology. 

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LEVY: Ontario small businesses dying under lockdowns

Staying afloat in one of the most locked down places in North America is a battle Ontario business owners know all too well.

Determined to keep her indoor pizzeria in Toronto going, Celina Blanchard decided she needed to be creative and pivot. After three lockdowns by the province on restaurant facilities, the Lambretta Pizzeria owner said she’s much “better prepared.”

“I’ve been through this before,” she said.

So in mid-December when sales started plummeting, she opened a new takeout and delivery service in another location. This was only a few days after Premier Doug Ford had locked down Ontario for the third time.

“I just knew that I had to find a Plan B because indoor dining is not going to work right now,” she said. “Takeout and delivery is the way to go.”

Lambretta Pizzeria, 89 Roncesvalles Ave, Toronto, ON.

Over the course of the nearly 18 months that I’ve followed Blanchard’s fortunes, I’ve witnessed her fight her landlord for rent relief during the first lockdown (he finally agreed) and pressure the city last summer to get a Cafe licence in a timely manner.

“I’ve been quite vocal,” she said.

She added that last summer was great and everyone enjoyed her outdoor patio.

“We saw the energy patios provided to everyone,” she says.

But then the weather turned colder, the patios were gone and the government started pushing the vaccination passports as a condition of dining indoors. Most people followed the rules on the passports, but some decided just to order take out to avoid issues at the door. 

She thought Christmas was going to be better because a lot of Christmas parties were booked. But when Omicron hit, people called and cancelled, she said.

“All of these things came into play,” Blanchard said. “It’s been quite challenging.”

All in all her business was down 75% in 2021, But it could have been worse had she not had the benefit of the summer patio season, she says.

Celina Blanchard, owner of Lambretta Pizzeria.

Joel Gelfand’s small business isn’t far away.

Gelfand owns House of Combat, a martial arts and self-defense studio, in the north part of Toronto. He was “hardest hit” when he was forced to close his facility for the first time. At that point he didn’t qualify for government assistance, he says, so it was a “real tense time.”

He wonders why, during a pandemic, the government would allow LCBO and cannabis stores to remain open when gyms and studios like his are a great outlet for kids with anxiety.

Joel Gelfand, Owner of House of Combat

“The government is not promoting a healthy lifestyle and mental health,” he said.

After a really slow opening, they were able to conduct socially distanced training outside during the summer of 2020. When they reopened after the second lockdown during the winter of last year, they had a “nice streak” all summer.

He says that during the lockdowns, he’s tried to transfer to Zoom classes but that has required readjusting his physical technique – which really requires hands-on demonstrations.

“I enjoy my job but it’s trying,” said the father of two young boys. “It really hurts.”

House of Combat,  3537 Bathurst St, North York, ON

Julie Kwiecinski, director of Ontario affairs for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB), says a recent survey showed that only 35% of their members are at normal revenues and 18.5% are actively considering bankruptcy.

She says the average COVID debt among their 38,000 members is $190,000.

Kwiecinski added that small business owners are “extremely cynical” about being permitted to open when the three-week lockdown is supposed to end on Jan. 27.

“They’ve heard this story before,” she said. 

She has a point.

Ontario has consistently lagged behind every other province when it comes to allowing restaurants to open to indoor dining and services like hairdressers and nail salons to operate at full capacity.

Doug Ford has given no indication of his plans for when the latest lockdown ends on Jan. 27.

As Kwiecinski says, every day the clock ticks with businesses left hanging is another nail in the coffin for those barely hanging on.

It’s not fair and it’s not right.

Saskatchewan premier says it is “now clear” lockdowns aren’t working

Saskatchewan premier Scott Moe said this week that lockdown policies have “little or virtually no benefit” and do more harm than good now that more is known about the Omicron COVID-19 variant. 

Moe made the comments during a press conference.

“But it is now clear, at least in this Omicron wave of the pandemic, that lockdown policies can cause harm in our communities often, with little or virtually no benefit,” Moe said “They cause economic harm by taking away jobs and removing family livelihoods. They cause psychological harm by taking away social contact, most particularly for our youth.” 

“They are an infringement on the rights and freedoms that we have come to enjoy and value as Canadians. And that is why, they should only be used if absolutely necessary and only if they can clearly be shown that they are being effective and they are working and we are not seeing that as being the case today.” 

Although Saskatchewan has not gone into lockdown during the latest wave of the virus, the province still has several pandemic-related restrictions including a vaccine passport system. 

According to the Government of Saskatchewan, Canadians in the province require a COVID vaccination record to access indoor dining at restaurants, night clubs and other liquor-licensed establishments, event venues such as movie theaters and indoor fitness centres or gyms. 

As for other provinces, both Quebec and Ontario have entered into lockdowns as a way to combat COVID-19. New Brunswick has also announced it will be moving to a stage 3 lockdown on Friday, the province’s most stringent level.

“Think of it as short-term pain for long-term gain,” New Brunswick premier Blaine Higgs said. 

On Wednesday, it was revealed that Premier Moe tested positive for COVID-19 on a rapid antigen test despite receiving a COVID-19 booster shot.

According to his spokesperson Julie Leggott, Moe is not currently experiencing any symptoms. He has since entered into self-isolation. 

MPP raises doubts over Ontario saying it won’t force COVID shots

Ontario has signalled that it will not follow in the footsteps of Quebec and institute a tax on the unvaccinated, but an Ontario MPP is saying that the government’s past decisions paint a different picture. 

On Wednesday, Chief Medical Officer of Health Kieran Moore told reporters during a COVID-19 update that Quebec’s approach seemed “punitive” and would not be adopted in Ontario. 

“It does, in my mind, seem punitive. Only in the highest-risk settings have we mandated it, and that was in the long-term care facilities where all of us have realized the increased death rate, the increased risk of severe (COVID-19) outcomes had to be balanced by maximizing immunization and protection of those individuals,” said Moore. 

“That is as far as this government has gone in terms of mandating vaccination, and putting a penalty on those who have not been vaccinated has not been entertained by this government.”

New Blue Party of Ontario MPP Belinda Karahalios told True North that Ford has been telling Ontarians one thing and saying another behind closed doors. 

“The Ford PC government committed to not introducing a COVID-19 vaccine passport and then later admitted they spent the summer of 2021 lobbying the Trudeau government for a national COVID-19 vaccine passport until finally settling on introducing a provincial version on Ontarians,” said Karahalios.

She added, “the Ford PCs also initially made statements in the legislature saying they would support Bill 12 (mandatory COVID-19 vaccination in education and healthcare) but in response to opposition by the New Blue, the Ford PCs reversed course.”

Despite Moore’s assurances that Ontario would not force vaccination onto its citizens, the provincial government has walked back on similar promises in the past.

At the tail end of 2021, Moore also pledged not to shut down schools, but the government flip-flopped on that position as well.  After suddenly announcing that schools would indeed be shut down after New Year’s for in-person learning, the Ford government said Monday that they would resume Jan. 17. 

Currently, Ontarians are required to show vaccine passports to access basic services such as restaurants, event venues and sports arenas, among other locations. 

In Quebec, Premier François Legault announced a vaccine mandate on Tuesday which when in place would charge Quebecers an undefined health tax for refusing to get a COVID-19 shot. 

Alberta and Saskatchewan have also announced they are not considering such a mandate. 

Liberals say news of scrapping trucker vaccine mandate was “provided in error”

After announcing Wednesday that it would be reversing its vaccine mandate for Canadian truck drivers at the US border, the Liberal government is now saying the announcement was wrong and that the mandate is still on.

Yesterday the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) stated that the government would not follow through with its plan to mandate vaccines for truckers after warnings from industry leaders that it could lead to major supply chain issues. 

Only one day after that announcement, Liberal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos stated in a press release that the news was “provided in error,” effectively reversing the policy. 

As reported by True North, even if the Liberals were to scrap requiring vaccination for Canadian truckers, the mandate could still potentially impact 14,000 US truck drivers who frequently enter Canada. 

According to estimates by the Canadian Trucking Alliance and the American Trucking Associations, the current mandate will impact up to 26,000 drivers who regularly cross the border, and will lead to price hikes.

The Canadian Trucking Alliance President Stephen Laskowski has said that the mandate “is not a trucking issue at all. This is a supply chain issue that can have severe ripple effects throughout the entire North American economy.”

“We’ll be seeing shortages of goods in stores,” said President of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce Perrin Beatty.

The mandate is also expected to cause troubles and delays for fully-vaccinated truckers, according to the CBSA. 

 “As the new measures are rolled out on Jan. 15, truck drivers may experience delays at port of entry due to the modified public health measures,” a CBSA spokesperson told trucknews.com. 

“The CBSA will monitor volumes and wait times and be prepared to allocate resources and adjust staffing levels to minimize processing times and potential delays at our ports of entry. The CBSA will not compromise the health and safety of Canadians for the sake of border wait times.”

Conservative Party Leader Erin O’Toole came out against the mandate earlier this month calling for the government to reverse course. 

“We will be short tens of thousands of truckers if the government doesn’t very quickly address this issue,” said O’Toole. “That doesn’t mean that I don’t think people shouldn’t be vaccinated; it means we have to deal with the reality of the fact that there will be a small number of unvaccinated.”

Quebec’s tax on the unvaccinated is coercive, totalitarian, and just plain wrong

Quebec Premier François Legault is trying to boost vaccine uptake by charging anyone who doesn’t have three doses of Covid vaccine a “health contribution.” True North’s Andrew Lawton says the policy is a backdoor vaccine mandate which targets people with lower incomes and makes bodily autonomy – which is supposed to be a fundamental freedom – a privilege you must purchase.

Also, former Conservative MP Kenny Chiu joins the show to discuss foreign interference in Canada’s political process.

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Jewish author calls Trudeau “unethical, immoral” and “evil” over comments on unvaccinated

A Jewish author and columnist has savaged Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for calling unvaccinated Canadians “racists” and “extremists.” 

Diane Bederman, who is Canadian-born, made the comments in a column republished by the New York Orthodox Jewish outlet JewishPress. 

“Here is Justin Trudeau, a sanctimonious, self-serving, self-righteous, inept, unethical, immoral and corrupt man, who can now add evil to the list,” writes Bederman. 

“Here we are in 2022 and our leaders are scapegoating the non-vaccinated, blaming them for the continuation of the pandemic,” she wrote. ”Like other evil leaders, they divide rather than unite. They promote fear rather than courage and strength. Pit one group against another.”

In September, Trudeau was interviewed by the French-language program La semaine des 4 Julie in which he called the millions of unvaccinated Canadian men, women and children a number of derogatory terms. 

“They are extremists who don’t believe in science, they’re often misogynists, also often racists. It’s a small group that muscles in, and we have to make a choice in terms of leaders, in terms of the country. Do we tolerate these people?” said the Canadian prime minister. 

Throughout her opinion piece, Bederman made several comparisons between Trudeau’s remarks and the rhetoric of 1930’s Germany.

Bederman’s commentary also criticized New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs, whose government “suggested the non-vaccinated not be allowed into grocery stores” until public outrage forced them to reverse the decision

“If we had remembered, as we promised NEVER FORGET, we would never have allowed our elected officials, leaders, doctors, to take away our God given rights and freedoms. We would never have allowed these people to separate us into essential and nonessential, when all life is sacred, separate us from our elderly loved ones, desperately in need of care,” Bederman continues. 

An increasing number of voices from around the world are speaking out against Trudeau’s divisive and dangerous rhetoric. 

As reported by True North, New York academic Jared McBrady penned an article accusing Trudeau of “othering” an entire segment of the population. 

“Now, some politicians are othering the “unvaccinated”,” McBrady wrote. “These politicians attempt to scapegoat and marginalize this minority group, despite knowing that vaccinated and unvaccinated persons alike can contract and spread COVID-19.” 

UK outlets talkRADIOTV and GB News also joined in on condemning the Canadian prime minister for his comments. 

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