by
By World Economic Forum – Flickr: Mark Carney – World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2012, CC BY-SA 2.0, Wikipedia
Year after year, Toronto police have allowed Muslim pro-terrorist mobs to invade and harass the Jewish community. Now, PM Mark Carney has declared that there is a “scourge of antisemitism” and plans to combat it with a DEI council.
To that end, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, today announced the launch and membership of Canada’s new Ministerial Advisory Council on Rights, Equality, and Inclusion to be chaired by the Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture. The Council has a clear mission: to combat racism and hate in all their forms, and to guide the Government of Canada as we build a fairer, more just, and more inclusive country.
Today, the Prime Minister directed the Council to begin by addressing antisemitism from four different directions:
-
Reassess the nature, scale, and drivers of antisemitism in Canada – across public institutions, workplaces, campuses, and online spaces.
-
Develop a whole-of-government approach to antisemitism to ensure federal policies, workplaces, public safety programs, and community initiatives are aligned in protecting Jewish Canadians and confronting hate.
-
Improve research and the collection of data on hate incidents and build stronger data-sharing systems so all orders of government, schools, and police services are working from the same facts.
-
Measure the impact of our efforts so that investments in education, prevention, training, and community safety are delivering real results and helping build a safer Canada for everyone.
This is meaningless gibberish. It’s a process of producing reports while doing nothing and not dealing with something as basic as, and I repeat here, pro-terrorist mobs invading Jewish neighborhoods.
The council includes Marc Gold, a Canadian ex-politician linked to Justin Trudeau, Martine Roy, a gay rights activist, Catriona Le May Doan, a former athlete, Omar Alghabra, a Saudi born politician, Gary LaPlante, a First Nations figure, Aftab Erfan, an Iranian, and Avnish Nanda, an Indian lawyer.
This isn’t a plan to fight antisemitism. It’s a comedy sketch.
Ezra Levant of Rebel News described Omar Alghabra as an Islamist who called for Hamas and Hezbollah to be legalized and Avnish Nanda as having “filed nuisance lawsuits against Jews (including me) on behalf of notorious antisemites. He has worked closely with the Muslim Brotherhood front group”.
Here’s an old article reporting on Omar’s past.
Alghabra previously was the head of the radical Canadian Arab Federation (CAF) between 2004 and 2005.
CAF just this August lost an appeal to have its government funding reinstated, after then-Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney back in 2009 cut $1 million in annual funding to the group.
Kenney proved that the group’s leadership repeatedly expressed support for the terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah. In cutting the funding Kenney’s office noted a CAF executive took part in a Cairo conference together with Hamas and Hezbollah delegates, and likewise that the Hezbollah flag was flown at a CAF rally.
The 2014 Federal Court ruling to uphold the suspension of funding included evidence showing CAF rallies compared Israelis to Nazis and included a sign threatening to murder a Jewish child, reports the Canadian Jewish News.
That plan to fight antisemitism is really going well.


We find representatives of the homosexual community, from the Saudi/Hamas community, the Indian community, the native community, the sports community on this council. Can anyone say who is missing? Let me think carefully. Wait! I got it! It’s the Jewish community! But, perhaps Carney is right. After all, what would the Canadian Jewish community know about anti-semitism?
My country is in a death spiral