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Tuesday, July 8, 2025

Judge Fuhrer quashes CAF vaccine exemptions as 1,300 soldiers await decision

Federal Court Justice Janet Fuhrer turned down four Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) members on Wednesday who had sought an injunction against the forces’ vaccine mandate, even as court records show that 1,300 more personnel have requested exemptions

In October 2021, Chief of Defence Staff General W.D. Eyre had directed all CAF members to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Dec. 18. 

In her ruling, Fuhrer turned down the four soldiers’ case on the grounds that their claim did not meet any of the necessary legal standards. The CAF members had gone to court out of fear of being dishonourably released from their duties.

“The applicants also have failed to provide any evidence or arguments to show that their interests outweigh the public interest in ensuring, to the extent possible, the readiness, health and safety of the Forces, the Defence Team (military and civilian personnel), and the vulnerable groups they may be called on to serve,” wrote Fuhrer. 

Among those involved in the case was Lt.-Col. Ilon Neri, a pilot for 28 years, and Warrant Officer Morgan Warren, who has served in the CAF for 22 years. None of the applicants has yet been removed from service. 

“I do not have confidence in the government’s declaration that (the vaccines) are ‘safe and effective,’” said Lt. Col. Neri in his submission to the court. 

As exclusively reported by True North, unvaccinated CAF members are facing an “unsuitable for further service” release from their service which would have career consequences

“A Canadian Armed Forces member’s unvaccinated status may have additional consequential career implications, including loss of opportunities contributing to promotion, which are outside of Canadian Armed Forces control,” a DND spokesperson told True North. 

“Examples may include the inability to attend career courses, deployments, domestic and international exercises, and OUTCAN (outside-of-Canada) postings owing to domestic and international travel restrictions and other nations’ entry requirements.”

The military has also denied unvaccinated CAF members the opportunity to leave the service voluntarily. The last time CAF personnel were allowed to submit a voluntary release request was the day the vaccine mandate went into effect. 

To date, the military has issued 71 vaccine exemptions, with 33 on medical grounds, 24 religious and 14 for unspecified reasons. 

On Thursday, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole defended the mandate, reiterating that COVID-19 vaccines were safe and effective and that vaccination should be a priority for the military. 

“This is a critical job that attaches with it the potential risk that you take by serving your country in uniform, so balancing off and making sure that as many people are vaccinated as possible needs to be the priority for the Canadian Armed Forces,” said O’Toole.

 

Trudeau lashes out and blames Canadians for his failures

First, Justin Trudeau called the unvaccinated “extremist, misogynistic and racist.” Now he’s blaming them for queues and rationing in our centrally-planned state-run healthcare system. 

On today’s episode of The Candice Malcolm Show, Candice examines the data to show that Trudeau is dead wrong in blaming the unvaccinated for the latest surge of omicron, the lockdowns and the impact on our socialized healthcare system. 

She also looks at his angry and derisive comments towards Quebec influencers who were partying on a private flight to Mexico, and points out the absurd hypocrisy coming from Mr. Blackface Party Animal who has frequently been caught breaking his own covid rules.

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LEVY: Canadian travel rules under COVID dystopian and senseless

There are countless examples showing how little sense the federal government has shown in its handling of the COVID pandemic over the past two years. 

Nowhere is this better illustrated than with international travel.

Take Daniel, a 27-year-old Torontonian who asked not to have his last name used. Despite  having followed all the rules and requirements, he found himself subject to policies and practices that had him shaking his head. 

“The entire experience was just horrible and uncalled for,” he said. “It was very clear the government has zero regard for its citizens and zero trust in its own policies.”

Daniel was fully vaccinated and had his booster when he and his girlfriend landed in Toronto from Florida a few days ago. He’d also taken not one, but two, PCR tests prior to leaving Florida. 

Both tests were negative.

But to his surprise, Daniel found himself shuffled into a line-up with hundreds of others to take another PCR test from government workers dressed in full personal protective equipment (PPE).

He got the pink sticker on his passport, his girlfriend the green. Pink, as he was to discover, meant he was selected for a “mandatory random” PCR test. Green offered a full exemption from any further testing.

He stood crammed into a line-up with no social distancing measures whatsoever, he said.

Daniel had heard the Ontario government recently announce they were limiting access to PCR tests to high-risk individuals with COVID symptoms. Subsequently, the tests would not be available for everyday people unless they paid for one at a private clinic.

“I think that’s what bothered me the most,” Daniel said. “The government was saying there is a shortage of PCR tests (for those who truly need to be tested), but thousands are being tested everyday at Pearson airport.”

“It made no sense to me.”

Ottawa’s draconian travel restrictions were put in place in Feb. 2021 – months and months after hundreds of flights containing infected passengers landed in Toronto and airports across the country. The infected passengers were not tracked or tested.

After the prime minister was embarrassed into doing something, Trudeau chose to mandate an expensive and highly problematic hotel quarantine – punishing even those who returned to Canada fully vaccinated.

Those who refused to go to a government-ordered hotel were fined as much as $5,000 – even if they were already vaccinated. In fact, the federal government refused to accept the status of those vaccinated outside of Canada until mid-summer of 2021. 

I know because I was one of them. 

Despite being double-vaccinated, I was forced to quarantine for 10 days upon returning to Toronto from Florida in May 2021.

Until Aug. 2021, Ottawa permitted U.S. citizens to cross the border by plane but not by car. 

The edicts made no sense then, and nothing much has changed. As I wrote in an earlier piece, Ontario and Florida are different worlds, and Ford’s new lockdowns have only made things worse.

Daniel flew out of Florida, but his headaches didn’t begin until his plane landed in Toronto. The passengers were told that because of COVID they could only deplane 50 at a time, with 10-minute intervals between groups. 

He said he was not sure of the purpose of that. They’d already been in the same cabin for three hours breathing the same air and would be crammed into the same customs line once they got off the plane.

Although others were told to isolate for up to 72 hours until receiving the test results, Daniel said he received no such instructions.

“It really felt extremely dystopian,” he said.

Tax watchdog warns that government is considering new tax on home sales

Source: Flickr

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) is sounding the alarm about a federally funded study into taxing the sale of homes. 

“Both the Liberals and Conservatives just spent the last election promising Canadians that they wouldn’t hit us with a home equity tax,” said CTF federal director Franco Terrazzano on Wednesday. 

“Now we find out that the government is using our tax dollars to dream up new ways to tax Canadian homeowners and that’s unacceptable.”

Terrazzano said politicians should “build more homes with hammers, not tax hikes.” 

The study was released Wednesday by Generation Squeeze, an organization that has frequently pushed for a home sale tax. 

Their recommendations include targeting the “housing wealth windfalls gained by many home owners while they sleep and watch TV.”

The report was funded by taxpayers through the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). This home sale tax, the report argues, would be an annual surtax of 0.2% to 1% of the value of a home beyond a million-dollar threshold, accumulating until it is sold or inherited. 

At a rate of 0.5%, an average home in Vancouver or Toronto that is sold after 10 years of ownership could face a new tax of close to $10,000. 

“It’s very easy to be living in a home assessed at more than a million dollars in Vancouver and Toronto, so this is going to hit homeowners and potential home buyers hard,” said CTF B.C. director Kris Sims. “This could increase the listing prices of homes because this tax will just be tacked on.”

The report estimates this home sales tax could cost Canadians $5.8 billion per year. That amount would cover less than five days of the Trudeau government’s spending.

The CMHC spent $250,000 in 2020 on a study that examined home equity and capital gains taxes on main residences. 

The Liberals received an endorsement from Generation Squeeze in the last election, and Generation Squeeze gave the Liberals the highest rating on their housing affordability scorecard. 

Generation Squeeze has called for the government to increase taxes on property wealth because they say it will contribute to more affordable housing. The group recommends this tax increase be done through higher annual property taxes, deferrable surtaxes or capital gains taxes.

The sale of a primary residence – the only home a person owns and lives in – has been tax-free in Canada since the 1970s. 

FUREY: Who’s to blame for the latest lockdown?

The government has plunged Canadians into yet another lockdown, putting the blame on a potential surge of hospitalizations that will overwhelm our health care system.

But here’s the thing – politicians and public health officials have had two years to prepare our health care system.

What’s going on here? Anthony Furey discusses in his latest video.

Trudeau upset by video clips of Canadians partying on charter flight

Recent social media clips of Canadian reality TV stars partying on a charter flight to Mexico have Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “extremely frustrated.”

Videos of the Dec. 30 flight from Montreal to Cancun showed revellers singing and dancing in the aisle. At least one was vaping while others had what appeared to be alcohol. Some had pulled their masks down, but most were not wearing them.

“It’s a slap in the face to see people putting themselves, putting their fellow citizens, putting airline workers at risk by being completely irresponsible,” Trudeau said to reporters on Wednesday.

He added that he felt “extremely frustrated…like all Canadians who’ve seen those videos.”

“We know how hard people have worked to keep themselves safe, to limit their family gatherings at Christmastime, to wear masks, to get vaccinated, to do all the right things,” Trudeau continued. “I can assure you this is a situation Transport Canada takes extremely seriously, and we are definitely following up on that.”

Officials said Tuesday that passengers could be fined up to $5,000 per offence if Transport Canada finds them to have broken the rules.

As a result of the attention, the group of travellers – who would have had to have shown proof of full vaccination to board the plane – is now finding it difficult to get back home.

Despite the event organizer’s claim that the travellers followed all of Sunwing’s rules and bought their alcohol onboard, the carrier has now cancelled their return flight in the wake of negative publicity.  

Air TRANSAT posted on Twitter that they would also be denying them passage.

“We confirm that they will be denied boarding based on our legal and regulatory obligations to ensure the safety of both our passengers and crew, which is our top priority,” the airline wrote.

Trudeau’s comments come weeks after he was photographed in the Netherlands maskless while hugging, drinking and laughing with fellow world leaders on his way to the COP 26 climate meeting in Glasgow.

He was also criticized for hosting a crowded Brampton fundraiser in September which saw 400 supporters packed into a banquet hall with no social distancing.

Only weeks earlier, he had attended another event in Mississauga that ignored capacity limits.

In June, Trudeau was seen laughing and drinking shoulder-to-shoulder with world leaders at a G7 summit in the UK, again maskless.

At the time, he had had only a single dose of COVID vaccine.

Brampton mayor calls Ontario’s new lockdown “Groundhog Day”

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown condemned the Ontario government on Tuesday for bringing back more lockdown restrictions. 

Brown said in an interview on Toronto Today with Greg Brady on AM 640 that the latest measures are disappointing and nonsensical.

“I sort of feel like we’re in the movie ‘Groundhog Day’ where we’re making the same mistakes over and over and over again despite the fact that the science and the data is clear,” said Brown. “You know, you look at all of the research about COVID-19 and there are correlations with severe outcomes along with obesity and age.” 

According to Brown, closing recreational facilities will make it more difficult to foster the healthy lifestyles that would prevent COVID-19 in the first place.

Brown said he had encouraged people to be vaccinated because it was supposed to allow life to return to normal. He said he is confused about why there are vaccine requirements if people cannot go to recreation centres and restaurants. 

Brown went on to say that lockdown measures would lead to vaccine hesitancy. They are also, he said, an equity issue because people who do not have backyards or equipment cannot exercise without facilities. 

Brown said he has not seen any movement from the provinces or the feds to increase ICU capacity. He said that part of the problem of the COVID-19 pandemic is that Canada has among the fewest acute care beds per capita in the developed world, and steps should have been taken to expand them. 

Brown announced Wednesday that Brampton would be working to offer more ways for residents to be active while gyms and recreation facilities are shut down. 

He said the city would extend the hours of operation of many city-run rinks in the next few weeks and would be holding outdoor activities such as instructor-led hikes. In addition, Brampton would be doing more maintenance on some of the outdoor trails, and snow would be cleared from the city’s 100 outdoor sports fields. 

Another politician who has recently criticized Ontario’s lockdown measures is Conservative MP Dean Allison. 

“Another lockdown will destroy what has not already been destroyed with lockdowns previously,” said Allison in a tweet. “So much for two weeks to flatten the curve!” 

Making math teachers know basic math is racist, according to Ontario Court

An Ontario Divisional Court has ruled that forcing Ontario teachers to pass a Grade 9 multiple choice math test is unconstitutional and racially biased. This is a prime example of judicial activism (judges acting like politicians) and the woke ideology seeping into every aspect of our lives.

On today’s episode of The Candice Malcolm Show, Candice Malcolm dissects this absurd decision and describes how divisive identity politics puts race above everything else.

Rather than putting race at the front of every conversation, we should focus on the things that matter about a person – their character, their competency, their effort and their abilities.

Making math teachers know math is not racist. It’s common sense. It’s about finding competent, qualified people to teach the next generation of Canadians.

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Spousal visa applications fell by nearly 81% in 2020, immigration data shows

Source: Government of Canada

Canada received several thousand fewer temporary resident visa applications for spouses and partners in 2020 than 2019, according to a memorandum to the minister of immigration.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) data shows that from January to July 2020, Canada received 1,382 applications. This compares with a total of 5,008 applications for the whole of 2019, signifying an approximately 81% year-over-year decrease.

Despite the sharp drop in applications, the approval rate for spousal visas remained relatively the same, with 46% in 2020 and 47% in 2019. 

True North was shown the memorandum titled Issuance of Temporary Resident Visas to Foreign Nationals Who Have Applied for Permanent Resident as a Spouse or Partner Under the Family Class by immigration lawyer Richard Kurland. The report originally appeared in Lexbase, a monthly publication of Kurland’s law firm Kurland, Tobe.

The memorandum also notes that COVID-19 has affected processing times. Before the pandemic, IRCC was processing anywhere from 3,000 to 4,000 persons a month, but by April 2020 only 582 applications were processed. 

Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Sean Fraser was tasked by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in his latest mandate letter to speed up the family reunification process.  

“Work to strengthen family reunification by introducing electronic applications for family reunification and implementing a program to issue temporary resident status to spouses and children abroad while they wait for the processing of their permanent residency application,” Trudeau directed. 

Recent reports show that the IRCC has struggled to deal with the skyrocketing backlog of immigration applications.

As of Oct. 27, 2021, 1.8 million immigration applications had yet to be processed. Of these, 548,195 were permanent residence applications, including 112,392 refugee claims. 774,741 of the applications were for temporary residence, which includes study and work permits or temporary resident visas, while 468,000 were applications for Canadian citizenship.

“Ongoing international travel restrictions, border restrictions, limited operational capacity overseas and the inability on the part of clients to obtain documentation due to the effects of COVID-19 have created barriers within the processing continuum. This hinders IRCC’s ability to finalize applications, creating delays that are outside IRCC’s control,” a department spokesperson told CBC News. 

Illegal border crossings down 63% in 2019-2020 due to travel restrictions

COVID-19 travel restrictions led to a huge drop in illegal border crossings last year, Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) data shows. 

According to CBSA numbers, illegal border crossings into Canada dropped by 63% in 2019-2020. Data also showed that the year 2020 had the lowest number of claims since 2016.

True North was shown the CBSA Targeting Directorate: Refugee Claims Analysis Report (RCAR) 2020 (January to December) by immigration lawyer Richard Kurland. The report originally appeared in Lexbase, a monthly publication of Kurland’s law firm Kurland, Tobe.

In November, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau re-opened illegal border crossings including Roxham Road to refugee and asylum claimants after nearly a year-and-a-half of inoperation. 

A moratorium on crossings had been in place since March 2020. In his decision to reopen the site, Trudeau cited an improved public health situation. 

As exclusively reported by True North, while CBSA officials are screening for COVID-19, unvaccinated migrants are being allowed to enter Canada “regardless of their vaccination status.” 

“Refugee claimants are requested to show proof of vaccination if they have been vaccinated,” CBSA spokesperson Sandra Boudreau told True North. “Unvaccinated individuals will be permitted to enter if making an asylum claim but will be required to follow all COVID-19 public health obligations, including all testing requirements. If they are not fully vaccinated against COVID-19, they should have a 14-day quarantine plan.” 

“Throughout the pandemic, regardless of their vaccination status, Canada continued to accept asylum claims made by people who were already inside Canada.” 

Although both Ontario and Quebec have been put under lockdown due to the severity of COVID-19 case counts, the Trudeau government has not closed Roxham Road again. 

CBSA statistics show that following the decision to close the illegal border crossing in 2020, the number of crossings fell dramatically from 3,500 in March to only 360 in April-June. 

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