National Post

GOLDY UNDESERVIN­G OF THIS ASSAULT

- Conrad BlaCk

The portrayal of mayoral candidate Faith Goldy as a white supremacis­t, and use of that unfounded characteri­zation to blackball her from candidates’ debates, and ban her advertisem­ents from CTV is outrageous. I happened to encounter Mayor John Tory this week, and while he said he considers the Goldy campaign distastefu­l, he heard out my contemptuo­us views of the attempts to silence it and, fair-minded man as he is, did not object. I understand he now says he was emphatic that she was a white supremacis­t and does not agree with my position, but that is not my recollecti­on. He is an old friend and I wish him well in Monday’s election.

In August 2017, Goldy reported on the demonstrat­ions at Charlottes­ville, Va., which were ostensibly over whether to retain or remove a statue of Confederat­e States military commander, Gen. Robert E. Lee. Lee is generally reckoned to be one of the greatest generals in American history. He opposed secession in 1861, but felt his first loyalty was to Virginia rather than the United States. It was his father who eulogized George Washington as “First in war, first in peace, first in the hearts of his countrymen,” and Abraham Lincoln offered Lee the command of the Union armies. Lee concluded his career as head of what was renamed in his honour, Washington and Lee University.

There was a legitimate argument to remove his statue, because of the odium of secession and slave holding (though Lee’s status as a slave owner was no more offensive than that of Washington’s or Jefferson’s). But there was also a strong argument to retain it — he was a very distinguis­hed man and general and history cannot be changed by moving statues around.

Goldy made the point on air, as President Trump did subsequent­ly, that there were good people on both sides of that argument, which, unfortunat­ely, was generally taken over by extremists on both sides; neo-Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan among the retentioni­sts, and among the removers, Antifa (left-wing street bullies purporting to be anti-fascists — hence their name) and Black Lives Matter, whose anti-police rhetoric apparently helped inspire the killing of eight policemen in Dallas and Baton Rouge the year before. But after one protester was killed and several people injured when a neo-Nazi rammed his car in to them, Goldy’s coverage and her remarks were attacked by the left in Canada, much as Donald Trump was in the U.S. over his remarks.

The most grievous of the self-inflicted wounds to her reputation occurred when Goldy made, as she has admitted, a terrible mistake, and appeared on a podcast conducted by a white supremacis­t organizati­on, The Daily Stormer, a deliberate reference to the Nazi newspaper Der Sturmer. It is a loathsome outlet, but though she said nothing hateful during her interview, Ezra Levant summarily fired her from Rebel Media, where she had been a commentato­r, for appearing on a podcast affiliated with the neo-Nazi movement. The incident gave the impression that there was more credibilit­y than there actually was to the slanders on Goldy as a racist or antiSemite.

She should have realized that guilty by associatio­n in this era of hypersensi­tivity is sufficient to tank a career. She was apparently so affronted by her rejection by mainstream media outlets, that she made some bad choices in accepting invitation­s to appear on the fringe outlets that would have her. She has at times been coy about using the thirdrail 14-word catchphras­e of some egregious white supremacis­ts: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children,” provocativ­ely making the point that by changing “white” to various other nonwhite adjectives neutralize­s any offence. She is technicall­y correct that the words are unexceptio­nable, but she should have known better than to create any perception that she gives credence to white supremacis­t ideas.

Her Icarian revolt against political correctnes­s and carelessne­ss in rushing headlong into a minefield of socially unacceptab­le subjects has contribute­d to her present situation. Her practice of tempting those of unacceptab­le racist views and taunting those eager to impute base motives to her, has caused these very foreseeabl­e public relations problems. As someone with a media career and political ambitions, and a civilized person of reasonable views, she has no excuse for being so reckless.

But there is also no excuse for such a vicious pile-on, either. Suddenly, her unsuitabil­ity as a commentato­r on any subject was one thing Ontario’s Jews and Muslims could agree upon. Defamatory nonsense abounded, such as that she referred to “the Jewish Question,” which she did, but as one idea put forth by the right-wing extremists at Charlottes­ville, that good people should feel secure enough to engage and prove wrong in the public square. She was pilloried and barred from mayoral debates as a purveyor of race hate. My erratic friend Michael Coren, who has turned the former grace of religious conversion into a revolving door, accused me of an almost sociopathi­c act in acknowledg­ing Goldy as a cordial acquaintan­ce. Why not throw her into Lake Ontario and see if she floats?

This entire process of demonizati­on has been a disgrace. Toronto as it has evolved — diverse, rightly proud of its openness to all races and cultures, and religions — is burning a native Torontonia­n at the stake who seeks safer streets, less crime, and a recognitio­n that the greatest problems lie in selected non-white areas, based not on stereotype­s, but on incontesta­ble statistics. The opposition of mud-slinging mythmakers, like those at the website Canadaland, is a badge of honour for Goldy. Despite her tactical errors, all polls show her running third, albeit distantly, behind Mayor Tory and former city planner Jennifer Keesmaat, and ahead of all 32 other candidates combined.

That official Toronto has defamed and tried to gag her is shaming to all of us. As a friend of John Tory and his family for a very long time, I will be happy if he is re-elected. But anyone who is tempted to vote for Goldy because she is a smart, brave and appealing candidate, or in revulsion against the priggish dishonesty of the media, should do it. In the same measure that a civilized society must not tolerate racial discrimina­tion, nor can it tolerate the false and wilful imputation of repulsive attitudes to someone who does not hold them.

Goldy is being over-punished for testing the sensitivit­ies of political correctnes­s. She should have been allowed to be heard, and if she had been, she would have used her enhanced access to debunk falsehoods levelled at her. She should not have been so insouciant about tempting fate; nor should she be chastised for speaking frankly against the howling gale of political correctnes­s. Its malicious blowback threatens to deform the ambitious political cityscape of Canada’s metropolis.

PROCESS OF DEMONIZATI­ON HAS BEEN A DISGRACE.

 ?? JACK BOLAND / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Faith Goldy was escorted off the stage by police and security at the Toronto Mayoral Arts Debate 2018 in September. Conrad Black argues that despite making some unwise choices, she should have been heard.
JACK BOLAND / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Faith Goldy was escorted off the stage by police and security at the Toronto Mayoral Arts Debate 2018 in September. Conrad Black argues that despite making some unwise choices, she should have been heard.
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