Politics

Freedom of Speech Breakthrough in Canada

A draconian law which made criminals of anyone with a dissenting opinion in Canada has been struck down by a Conservative private members’ bill which repealed a part of that country’s set of repressive laws that more closely resembled a tin pot dictatorship rather than a western democratic state.

Bill C-304, introduced by Conservative backbencher Brian Storseth, repealed Section 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act, which banned “hate speech transmitted over the Internet or by telephone.”

The new law doesn’t make “hate speech” (which is usually interpreted as anyone who opposes globalism, mass immigration and who speaks out against Jewish Supremacism) legal on the web or by phone, as it still remains a crime under the Criminal Code.

But by removing it from the Canadian Human Rights Act, it takes away the authority of the country’s human rights commissions to investigate online hate speech and request that violating websites be taken down.

This right has led to great abuse, and “complaints” fabricated by Jewish Supremacist organizations in Canada have led to the persecution of their opponents on an unjustified and vindictive scale.

Some powers of the commission have already been ruled as a violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by the Canadian Supreme Court.

The repeal of the law brings Canada closer in line with the U.S.’s First Amendment, and doubtless the assorted Jewish Supremacist organizations in that country will be agitating against the newly-found freedom of speech.