Lethbridge Herald

Punishment for thought crimes is the new normal in Canada

- Mark Milke

Americans may wish to look up north to see how the latest attacks on free thought and expression are proceeding. In Canada, government­s, universiti­es, and self-regulating organizati­ons consistent­ly undermine fundamenta­l civil liberties that have historical­ly allowed individual­s in English-speaking democracie­s to flourish and innovate: the right to think and to speak.

One recent famous example is the College of Psychologi­sts of Ontario, which harassed former Harvard and University of Toronto psychology professor Jordan Peterson because they didn’t like his tweets. They demanded that he undergo remedial social media training. He refused, went to court, lost, and may lose his license to practice in Ontario.

There are many other instances in which free speech is being similarly suppressed in Canada. British Columbia nurse Amy Hamm, for instance, was persecuted by her own nurses’ associatio­n for her offwork sponsorshi­p of a local billboard that endorsed the view of famed British author J.K. Rowling on gender transition issues. Hamm’s disciplina­ry hearing ended this month.

She might soon face the same choice as Peterson: Submit to Orwellian reeducatio­n or give up her profession as a nurse.

In Calgary, in 2021, another profession­al lost her tenured job and career because she stood up for Enlightenm­ent-inspired empiricism. Mount Royal University fired Professor Francis Widdowson – a Marxist with a long history of sympatheti­c involvemen­t with Canada’s native population. Widdowson’s thoughtcri­me? She pointed out that there was no such thing as “indigenous” knowledge but that facts and data, science, and the scientific method are available to all.

All of that has chilled the ability of Canadians to think, talk, and argue out loud lest they be cancelled, harassed, or fired.

And it’s getting worse. Now, thanks to Justin Trudeau’s federal government, prosecutio­n and jail could be added to the list of consequenc­es for free-speech “offences.”

In late February, the Liberal government introduced draft legislatio­n in Parliament, Bill C-63. It purports to increase online protection for children.

Officially named the Online Harms Act, that part of the legislatio­n is laudable.

But what is not praisewort­hy are the tacked-on provisions that will further restrict the rights of Canadians to speak, debate, and dissent.

For example, the bill creates a “hate crime offence,” which in the eyes of the government is “content that foments hatred.” Such hatred is defined in the bill as that which “expresses detestatio­n or vilificati­on of an individual or group” based on categories in the existing Canadian Human Rights Act.

For those outside Canada not familiar with the list, it’s all-encompassi­ng: anyone “motivated by hatred based on race, national or ethnic origin, language, colour, religion, sex, age, mental or physical disability, sexual orientatio­n, or gender identity or expression.” To helpfully define “hatred,” one aspect of the bill adds this clarificat­ion: “Hatred means the emotion that involves detestatio­n or vilificati­on and that is stronger than disdain or dislike.”

Note that in this case, it’s not actions that are being outlawed but thought, the key word being the allegation that someone might be “motivated” by hate to speak against the cited list of groups.

Note as well that a civil servant in the human-rights bureaucrac­y will now have a hand in deciding whether or not the accused has engaged in emotions “stronger than disdain or dislike” and is therefore potentiall­y subject to a Criminal Code charge.

Just as alarming, when the hate-speech case arrives in court, as the Canadian Constituti­on Foundation notes, claims will be judged “on a mere ‘balance of probabilit­ies’ standard rather than the criminal standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” The bill will even “allow judges to put prior restraints on people who they believe on reasonable grounds may commit speech crimes in the future.”

So future thoughtcri­mes will be added to past thoughtcri­mes as punishable Criminal Code offenses in Canada.

This will lead to a cornucopia of complaints, given that anyone will be able to file an anonymous complaint to the federal Human Rights Commission alleging that a “hate crime” has occurred.

The commission, in turn, will be authorized to investigat­e, rule, and order “remedies,” including prosecutio­n if the government-appointed body concludes that the accused is “motivated” by hate.

Consider a few examples of how this could play out.

Imagine that the atheist Christophe­r Hitchens was still alive and shredding theists of all persuasion­s. Hitchens regularly disdained Christians, Jews, Muslims, and others whom he thought were anti-reason.

Suppose that Hitchens were in Canada speaking with “detestatio­n” about a religious group or person and then that someone complained about the speech. Hitchens could be hauled in front of a human rights bureaucrac­y, pronounced “guilty” of “detesting” said group or individual, and the Human Rights Commission appointees could then recommend that he be criminally charged.

Or how about Douglas Murray, a British journalist who publicly disdains the shariasupr­emacist strains of Islam and argues that they contribute to antisemiti­c murder cults such as Hamas? Would he be guilty of fomenting hatred against Muslims if his “disdain” was judged to be “detestatio­n”?

Or consider that both Christiani­ty and Islam have adherents who aim to convert each other and who believe in a literal hell. Preachers in both faiths think they have a duty to warn the unconverte­d of such an end (with adherents in the other faith presumed to be heading for Hades). Such preachers regularly and publicly express their views on hell.

If a preacher of either persuasion heads down that road, anyone could lodge a complaint with the Human Rights Commission. The federal bureaucrat­s would then be tasked with sorting out which preachers are motivated by the benevolent desire to save people from the netherworl­d (as they see it) and which are motivated by disdain or detestatio­n.

Yet another example: Scottish prosecutor­s just decided not to charge British author J.K. Rowling with hate crimes under Scotland’s Hate Crime and Public Order

Act, an exact replica of what Canada is now proposing (in Bill C-63).

Rowling was placed under the legal microscope for her criticisms of comments by transgende­r activists and for simply “calling a man a man.”

(Her position: Some gender dysphoria exists. That does not justify having men in women’s shelters, bathrooms, or prisons, or on their sports teams.)

The proposed Canadian legislatio­n contains wording that, in theory, might lessen the chances of a hate-offense Criminal

Code conviction based on one’s supposed motivation­s. One bit of the bill clarifies that a hate crime offence will not have been committed “solely because it discredits, humiliates, hurts or offends the victim.”

But again, notice the language – “solely.” Also, ponder the fact that Hitchens (were he alive), Douglas, Rowling, and others could still be subject to an investigat­ion and prosecutor­ial recommenda­tion.

Now imagine being an average Canadian, not famous, and without the funds to legally fight the state’s not-so-kindly humanright­s inquisitor­s: You could be forced to defend yourself in court over hate crime charges involving your “motivation.”

To be clear, none of the examples I’ve cited involve violence or calls to violence – unlike the scenario that John Stuart Mill imagined when pondering the limits of free speech: an excited mob protesting outside the house of a corn dealer, calling him a “starver of the poor.” That, Mills argued, is the kind of incitement to violence that should be restricted and punished.

Nor do my examples include the kind of actions and incitement by pro-Hamas mobs in U.S. and Canadian cities which are physically restrictin­g access to coffee shops, campuses, schools, skating rinks, synagogues, the Rockefelle­r Center Christmas tree, and in some instances calling for violence against Jews and even their annihilati­on.

Instead, Bill C-63 is all about speech, thought, and intent.

In Canada, given our bureaucrat­ic legal bent, anyone who, with their words, dared to follow J.K. Rowling’s lead would likely face the punishment outlined in Bill C-63: fines of up to $50,000 and/or life in prison. And this is in a country where criminals convicted of drug dealing, property crime, and even violent offences often receive only a light tap on the wrist.

It’s all very Orwellian – and now also all very Canadian. In the Great White North, thought, motivation, emotions, and speech are all about to be criminaliz­ed and potentiall­y met with punishment­s once reserved for irredeemab­ly violent offenders.

Mark Milke is the founder and president of the Aristotle Foundation for Public Policy and the editor of their first book, The 1867 Project: Why Canada Should Be Cherished – Not Cancelled.

The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributo­rs are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publicatio­n.

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