A small Ontario town, so tiny it doesn’t even have an actual flagpole, was fined $10,000, and its mayor was personally fined $5,000 for refusing to “honor Pride Month.”
The fines, along with the sentence of attending a reeducation camp eerily reminiscent of Mao’s struggle sessions, came courtesy of the ironically named Human Rights Commissions.
These commissions have become infamous for rendering judgments that, in effect, negate individual human rights in favor of collectivist ones—”collective” as determined, of course, by the commissions themselves. The Human Rights Commissions (HRC) operate in perfect alignment with the state’s ever-shifting definition of the “greater good,” enforcing its diktats with ideological precision.
This is precisely what we see in Emo, Ontario—a remote town 12 hours drive northwest of Ottawa, near the Minnesota border, with a population of just 1,204 as of the 2021 census.
To fully grasp the implications of Mayor Harold McQuaker’s case, it’s worth reviewing some of the HRC’s previous rulings. […]
— Read More: rairfoundation.com