German politician convicted of hate crime after sounding alarm about Afghan rape gangs



A right-wing politician in Germany has been convicted of a hate crime and fined thousands of dollars for sharing statistics about the disproportionate number of gang rapes committed by immigrants, specifically Afghan nationals, and for questioning whether multiculturalism means accommodating rape culture.

Marie-Thérèse Kaiser is a member of the right-leaning Alternative for Germany. The 27-year-old women's safety advocate and former model serves as the party's only representative in the Rotenburg district council.

While campaigning during the 2021 federal election, Kaiser posted on social media, "Afghanistan refugees; Hamburg SPD mayor for 'unbureaucratic' acceptance; Welcoming culture for gang rape?"

The German newspaper Junge Freiheit reported that Kaiser was responding in August 2021 to socialist Hamburg Mayor Peter Tschentscher's announcement that he would take in 200 Afghan workers. Kaiser was evidently concerned about what impact the new cohort might have on local culture and safety.

Her post was reportedly accompanied by a graphic indicating that Afghan and African asylum seekers "are proportionally 40x and 70x more involved in gang rapes than Germans," citing government statistics.

— (@)

The then-AfD candidate cited the statistics to justify her concern over uncontrolled immigration and the possibility of rape by "culturally alien masses."

Background

Mass immigration to Germany from Middle Eastern nations such as Afghanistan has coincided in recent years with a massive spike in violent crime, including rape.

The Pew Research Center indicated that between 2010 and 2016, Germany accepted over 670,000 refugees and 680,000 non-refugee immigrants. Of the roughly 1.35 million immigrants who flooded into Germany during that period, an estimated 850,000 were Muslims.

A government-commissioned study revealed in early 2018 that there was a 10.4% increase in violent crime at the height of the immigration crisis overseen by former German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who had circumvented EU rules and effectively opened the union's doors to immigrants from Syria and other oriental states. Deutsche Welle reported that 90% of this violent crime increase was attributable to immigrants, predominantly males between the ages of 14 and 30.

Despite altogether amounting to less than 2% of the overall population at the time, the BBC indicated that over 10% of murder suspects and 11.9% of sex offenders were asylum seekers and refugees in 2017.

The situation has not improved.

Reuters reported last month that the number of criminals with non-German backgrounds continues to climb. In 2023, there was a 5.5.% increase in overall crime and a 13.5% increase in the number of suspects with foreign backgrounds.

"What the AfD has warned about for years can no longer be hidden ... new crime statistics have triggered a debate on 'foreigner crime,'" said Richard Graupner of the AfD in Bavaria.

Imported criminality has not only victimized countless Germans but created horrible new customs.

New Year's Eve, for instance, appears to have become an annual night of immigrant riots and gang assaults on German women. Blaze News previously reported that two-thirds of the rioters detained in the most recent explosion of New Year's violence were non-citizens, including 27 Afghans and 21 Syrians.

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser stated in the aftermath on Jan. 4, "Good politics must clearly state what is happening: In major German cities we have a problem with certain young men with a migrant background who despise our state, commit acts of violence and are hardly reached by education and integration programs."

Outrage over this imported phenomenon has coincided with the rise of the right-leaning AfD party, which has been critical of the country's immigration policies.

The BBC noted that various high-profile incidents, such as the brutal rape and murder of 19-year-old medical student Maria Ladenburger by an Afghan criminal in 2016, "helped boost the country's far right."

German officials appear to have instead treated the AfD as the problem, harassing and censoring party members. With the AfD polling second nationally and state elections scheduled for later this year, there have even been discussions of banning the party outright.

Free speech ends where inconvenience begins

Kaiser was reportedly charged and convicted with incitement to hatred after raising concerns about a very real problem gripping the nation. She indicated in February that she had appealed the ruling and was scheduled to appear in court in May.

"Simply naming numbers, dates and facts is to be declared a criminal offense just because the establishment does not want to face reality," she wrote on X. "I will not allow myself to be silenced."

A court in Lower Saxony upheld the guilty verdict Monday.

The court was unmoved by Kaiser's argument that freedom of expression in politics, particularly in electoral campaigns, must enjoy special latitude in the spirit of democracy. According to Lower Saxony's local news outlet, the presiding judge stated, "Freedom of expression ends where human dignity begins."

Kaiser, identified by the judge as an "exemplary defendant" during her sentencing, must now pay a fine of over $7,000.

Kaiser, who indicated on Instagram that the courtroom was packed full of supporters along with her parents, said of the verdict, "The whole world is amazed at this decision by the German courts. After even Elon Musk took up my case, I received numerous letters from supporters and press inquiries."

The politician was referencing Musk's Monday response in which he wrote, "Are you saying the fine was for repeating accurate government statistics? Was there anything inaccurate in what she said?"

"My trust in the German constitutional state was once again severely shaken yesterday, but all the letters give me courage and give me confidence," added Kaiser.

Marie-Thérèse Kaiser's original campaign video

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Patriotic company gives free red, white, and blue upgrade to kid who fought school to fly American flag on his pickup truck



Blaze News readers likely recall last week's inspiring story about an Indiana high school student who battled his school for the right to fly an American flag on the back of his pickup truck — and won the fight.

Well, a patriotic outfit in Cincinnati caught wind of Cameron Blasek's dust-up with East Central High School in St. Leon and offered the stand-up senior a free upgrade to his truck — right in line with his heartfelt feelings about America.

GCI Digital Imaging applied a new custom wrap to his ride that features the stars and stripes and a red, white, and blue color scheme, WXIX-TV reported.

“I’m pretty happy that now I get to pull up to school in this thing, and I am happy to show off this American pride that I’ve been shown,” Blasek told the station.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

The company provided photos to WXIX anchor Tricia Macke showing Cameron's truck undergoing its patriotic makeover along with a video of it being hauled on a flatbed back to its proud owner.

— (@)

“We did it because we are proud Americans that believe that Cameron did exactly what needs to be done, stand up for our freedoms,” GCI Digital Imaging owner TJ Bedacht added to WXIX.

As Blaze News previously reported, it all started when a vice principal and counselor told Cameron to remove the flag from his truck.

His response?

"I said, 'It's not happening.' I told them it would be there all day today and first thing in the morning tomorrow, too. Then they said, 'If you don't take it down, you are getting written up for insubordination.' Then they said, 'We could go to the office and talk about it more' if I would like," Cameron told news outlet the 765.

A day later, nearly two dozen other students showed up with flags attached to their vehicles, and Cameron was called to the principal's office. The plucky student said he was told that "the school has a right to request that I remove the flag. I pretty much told him, 'Well, you are just asking me to, but I don't have to.'"

With that, the powers that be backed down, and the principal sent a letter to parents saying the school encourages "expressions of patriotism and pride in our nation among our students and staff."

"After careful consideration and in recognition of the importance of the U.S. flag as a symbol of unity and national identity, I am pleased to inform you that we are allowing the display of the U.S. Flag by students in the East Central parking lot. I understand the significance of this symbol and the pride it instills in our students, teachers, and the entire school community. I share this pride," the letter said.

Cameron — who said he's thinking about joining the U.S. military after high school — noted that "men and women fought and lost their lives for me and others to have the right to fly that flag in our front yard and our trucks. I respect and appreciate those heroes for that. I also believe it's one of my rights as an American to fly that flag, as it says in my First Amendment right."

(H/T: Not the Bee)

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Devout Christian destroys satanic idol at Iowa Capitol. Appreciative donors fund his legal defense inside 3 hours.



A Christian Navy veteran toppled a satanic statue at the Iowa Capitol after finding others were keen only to virtually signal their displeasure.

Unlike many of the leftists who toppled hundreds of historic statues across the nation amidst the BLM riots, former Mississippi congressional candidate Michael Cassidy immediately assumed responsibility for his actions and turned himself into the authorities. He now faces likely legal action from the Satanic Temple.

Conservatives appreciative of the effort have, however, made sure that Cassidy has what he needs for the legal battles ahead, topping off his legal defense fund inside three hours.

What's the background?

The Satanic Temple is an atheistic leftist organization that has sought to ensure that women can legally have their unborn children killed by way of their "religious abortion ritual"; held a demonization ceremony in protest of the canonization of the Catholic Spanish priest Junípero Serra; distributed satanic literature to children; publicly performed "unbaptisms"; and erected statues of Baphomet on public property in multiple states.

Blaze News previously indicated that the temple, formerly included on Fox News' internal list of charities eligible for donation matches, also runs an online clinic out of New Mexico that distributes abortion drugs, which the group has dubbed "Samuel Alito's Mom's Satanic Abortion Clinic."

Last week, the Satanic Temple of Iowa installed an altar on the first floor of the Iowa Capitol along with a caped figure of what appears to be ram-headed Baphomet holding a red pentacle. USA Today indicated that the installation included a display of the anti-Christian organization's "seven fundamental tenets," including "the freedom to offend."

While ostensibly intended to antagonize Christians ahead of Christmas, Lucien Greaves, co-founder of the Satanic Temple, claimed that the statue was not intended to be insulting.

— (@)

The initial response

Various lawmakers called on Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) to remove the installation.

State Rep. Brad Sherman (R), a pastor, noted in a newsletter that the preamble of the state constitution expressly states there is "One Supreme God"; that blessings over the state come from that "Supreme Being"; that "we must depend upon the One Supreme God if we want to enjoy continued blessings."

"It is a tortured and twisted interpretation of law that affords Satan, who is universally understood to be the enemy of God, religious expression equal to God in an institution of government that depends upon God for continued blessings," wrote Sherman.

"If we claim to believe in the One Supreme Being, the God of all creation, we cannot claim an exemption from obedience to Him in things relating to civil government."

State Rep. Jon Dunwell (R), also a pastor, alternatively explained why the statue was permissible in a post on X: "Currently, access for displays at the Capitol are open to anyone through an application process. Though there are some guidelines, they do not discriminate on the basis of religion or ideology. Displays are permitted to be displayed for two weeks."

Dunwell added, "The Satanic Temple petitioned for their display in August and were approved with some modification. They wanted to use an actual goat head (I'm assuming a skull) and we're [sic] prohibited from doing so."

Dunwell acknowledged that the display "glorifies the evil influence we oppose" but defended it on legal grounds, suggesting the "primary response required is prayer."

Gov. Reynolds called the display "objectionable" and encouraged "all those of faith to join [her] today in praying over the Capitol."

Satanic Temple co-founder Greaves stated, "I would hope that even people who disagree with the symbolism behind our values, whether they know what those values [are] or not, would at least appreciate that it's certainly a greater evil to allow the government to pick and choose between forms of religious expression."

Baphomet beheaded

Within hours of liking a post by Blaze News columnist Auron MacIntyre, which stated, "Periodic reminder that the religious right were correct about everything," Cassidy headed to the state Capitol and decapitated the Baphomet statue. The former Navy officer then took the ram head and chucked it into a garbage can.

— (@)

Cassidy, a former F/A-18 Hornet pilot who did a tour on the USS George Washington, told the Sentinel his intention was to "awaken Christians to the anti-Christian acts promoted by our government."

"The world may tell Christians to submissively accept the legitimization of Satan, but none of the founders would have considered government sanction of Satanic altars inside Capitol buildings as protected by the First Amendment," said Cassidy. "Anti-Christian values have steadily been mainstreamed more and more in recent decades, and Christians have largely acted like the proverbial frog in the boiling pot of water."

— (@)

After dismantling the controversial statue, the veteran turned himself in to police without incident. He was ultimately charged with fourth-degree criminal mischief.

The Satanic Temple Iowa said in a Thursday statement, "This morning, we were informed by authorities that the Baphomet statue in our holiday display was destroyed beyond repair. ... [J]ustice is being pursued the correct way, through legal means. Solve et Coagula! Happy Holidays! Hail Satan!"

Greaves called Cassidy a "coward" and claimed the statue toppling was a "Hate Crime."

As Cassidy was charged and faces likely legal action from the leftist group, the Sentinel started a GiveSendGo campaign to raise $20,000 for the veteran's legal defense. The money was raised in less than three hours.

Turning Point USA CEO Charlie Kirk indicated that his organization had pledged $10,000 to the fund, stating, "We stand with Satan Slayer, @VoteCassidy." Daily Wire commentator Matt Walsh was among the others who also chipped in, donating $1,000.

Cassidy later quoted scripture online, tweeting, "1 Peter 5:8 KJV Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour."

Satanic Temple Sets Up Display in Iowa State Houseyoutu.be

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Six teens found guilty in connection to Islamist beheading of French teacher



A high school history teacher was beheaded by an Islamic refugee in a Paris suburb on Oct. 16, 2020. Six teenagers who had a hand in Samuel Paty's savage execution were convicted Friday by a French court.

Among the convicts was a Muslim student who spread lies about the nature of the teacher's Oct. 6 lesson on freedom of expression as well as other teens who helped set up the bloody ambush. Adults suspected of complicity in the terrorist murder, including the Moroccan father of the untruthful teen, are set for trial in 2024.

Although some justice has ostensibly been meted out, it appears to be of little consolation to a country struggling with radicalism and the apparent fallout of multiculturalism.

The Islamist murder plot

Paty, 47, was a teacher at Collège Bois-d'Aulne, in a suburb northwest of Paris. On Oct. 6, 2020, he showed Charlie Hebdo caricatures of Mohamed to his class during a lesson on freedom of expression, posing the question, "To be or not to be Charlie?"

The lesson was timely since Charlie Hebdo, a satirical magazine, had been targeted by Islamic terrorists multiple times in recent memory, including the previous month when two employees were stabbed outside its headquarters. In 2015, two Islamic terrorists gunned down 12 people at the magazine's headquarters. In 2011, the magazine's office was firebombed.

One of Paty's students, a then-13-year-old Muslim girl, was suspended that month for skipping school. Rather than own up to her truancy, the Guardian reported that the teen told her father, Brahim Chnina, that she had been ousted for confronting Paty over the freedom of expression class.

According to the yarn she spun, Paty dismissed Muslim students from the class so that he could show non-Muslims "a photograph of the Prophet naked." She further claimed the upon confronting Paty, the teacher had her suspended.

Chnina, an Islamist preacher who migrated from the 99% Sunni Muslim nation of Morocco, subsequently took to social media to condemn Paty and demand that he be fired.

Abdullakh Anzorov, an 18-year-old Islamist migrant from Chechnya, picked up on the enraged father's cues and began plotting the murder. Prosecutors indicated that Anzorov traveled 50 miles from Normandy to Conflans-Sainte-Honorine to assassinate Paty, reported the BBC.

Five other teens, between the ages of 13 and 15 at the time, then helped Anzorov identify and ambush Paty. The terrorist paid them roughly $327 for their services.

With the help of the teens, Anzorov tracked down Paty as he walked home from work and used a cleaver to hack off his head. Witnesses reportedly heard the attacker shout, "Allahu Akbar," during the commission of the assassination.

Police responded to the scene and successfully gunned down the terrorist, but not before he could boast of the slaying on Twitter.

BBC indicated 15 people were taken into custody following the murder, including Anzorov's parents, brother, and grandfather. Additionally, various Muslim organizations that allegedly trafficked in outrage over the false claims concerning Pety's lesson were scrutinized. The Collective Against Islamophobia in France was, for instance, deemed an "enemy of the state" by the country's interior minister.

First set of convictions

The teenage girl who spread the initial lie about Paty was revealed in court not to have been in class during the lesson. She was found guilty Friday of making false accusation charges and slanderous comments, reported the Guardian.

For her hand in Paty's demise, the untruthful teen was given an 18-month suspended prison sentence.

The five teens who helped Anzorov with his murder plot were found guilty criminal conspiracy with intent to cause violence. Four of the facilitators were given suspended sentences. The fifth was sentenced to six months in prison but may ultimately serve time on the outside under electronic surveillance.

Virginie Le Roy, a lawyer representing the victim's family, told the French press, "The role of the minors was fundamental in the sequence of events that led to his assassination."

Eight adults will be tried next year for their alleged hand in the assassination.

In addition to Chnina and members of the terrorist's family, Anzorov's friends, identified as Azim E. and Naim B., will be tried for alleged "complicity in a terrorist murder," according to France 24. The duo are said to have helped the killer pick out and buy the murder weapon.

Growing concern

The convictions are unlikely to ease tensions in France, where the struggle with what the New York Times characterized in 2021 as a failure of integration appears to have come to a head.

Recently, Muslim students at a school west of Paris raged over their art teacher's exhibition of a Renaissance painting portraying a Greek mythology story and featuring scantily clad women, reported the Daily Mail. Facing threats from Islamists, various teachers went on strike.

This summer, the country faced race riots over the police-involved shooting of an Algerian teen that were almost as destructive to the European nation as the 2020 BLM riots were to the United States.

Last month, a gang of youths who made clear they were out to "stab white people" did just that at a French village's annual winter ball, butchering a 16-year-old boy. The attacks prompted major protests critical of the nation's immigration policy.

The French regime has in recent days unsuccessfully attempted to pass legislation that would clamp down on illegal immigration, toughen French language requirements, speed up the deportation process, and make it more challenging for foreign nationals to obtain residency papers, reported the New York Times.

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Flagstaff City Council Threatened With Lawsuit Over Ban On Arizona Shooting Range’s Airport Ads

Wilson tried to appeal the decision before a record-breaking number of tourists flooded the area, but his requests were repeatedly brushed off.

Regulatory group for psychologists ordered Jordan Peterson to undergo 're-education' after he expressed his opinions online. He's taken it to court, and the result might prove seismic.



Beyond his work as a cultural commentator, a professor, and a bestselling author, Dr. Jordan Peterson has also made a name for himself as an accomplished clinical psychologist.

Following complaints — not by clients but by strangers — about some of Peterson's publicly-stated views unrelated to the practice of psychology, the Canadian governing body for psychologists in his home province of Ontario ordered him late last year to submit to mandatory media training at his own expense.

Rather than submit to the procrustean re-education scheme, Peterson, who no longer has a clinical practice but intends to maintain his clinical license, elected to take the College of Psychologists of Ontario to court, stressing that its order runs afoul of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The court now appears set to reveal its decision in the case, which could prove greatly consequential.

According to Jonah Arnold of the Association of Aggrieved Regulated Professionals of Ontario, a non-profit advocacy group that represents health care workers and other professionals who have experienced mistreatment by their regulators, "the outcome of this case may affect the fundamental rights of about 400,000 professionals from all 29 regulated health professions in Ontario. It could even affect other professionals including teachers, accountants, and lawyers."

What's the background?

Peterson was previously in good standing with the CPO and had no public record of any complaints, reported the Toronto Star.

Then he expressed personal opinions online that evidently did not resonate with everybody.

Peterson retweeted a comment made by the leader of Canada's official opposition party, Pierre Poilievre, concerning the unnecessary severity of COVID lockdowns.

He criticized Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Trudeau's former chief of staff, Gerald Butts, who resigned amidst the liberal leader's damning SNC Lavalin scandal.

Peterson also took Ottawa city councilor Catherine McKenney to task over her use of "they/them" pronouns and suggested the doctor who removed actress Elliot Page's breasts was a "criminal physician."

It appears these and other remarks were too much for some people to handle.

Individuals whom Peterson indicated were neither clients nor familiar with his clients complained to the CPO.

According to Canadian state media, the CPO then launched an investigation into Peterson.

The CPO's inquiries, complaints, and reports committee determined in November 2022 that the doctor's comments were "degrading, demeaning and unprofessional," adding that his conduct "poses moderate risks to the public," and runs the risk of "undermining public trust in the profession of psychology, and trust in the college's ability to regulate the profession in the public interest."

Peterson claimed that he was further accused of tweeting his opinion "'disrespectfully,' ... in a 'horrific' manner that spread 'misinformation'; that was 'threatening' and 'harassing'; that was 'embarrassing to the profession,'" adding that he was also accused of being "sexist, transphobic, incapable of the requisite body positivity in relationship to morbid obesity and, unforgivably of all, a climate change denialist."

Peterson told Canadian state media that the committee had proven itself unable to demonstrate any harms to the targets of his tweets.

Nevertheless, the committee concluded that he must complete a "specified continuing education or remedial program" at his own expense or face an allegation of professional misconduct, which would result in the termination of his license to practice psychology.

Peterson takes the college to court

Peterson wrote in a Jan. 4 National Post article that in agreeing to the CPO committee's re-education order, he would have to admit that he has been unprofessional in his conduct and to have that noted publicly.

"I’m not complying. I’m not submitting to re-education. I am not admitting that my viewpoints — many of which have, by the way, been entirely justified by the facts that have emerged since the complaints were levied — were either wrong or unprofessional," he stated.

"I have done nothing to compromise those in my care; quite the contrary — I have served all my clients and the millions of people I am communicating with to the best of my ability and in good faith, and that’s that."

— (@)

Peterson told the Toronto Sun that he determined "the best way to challenge [the college's order] would be in the courts on constitutional grounds. ... I don't trust the process at the College and no one should."

The psychologist filed with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice for a review of the ruling by the committee.

His notice of application for judicial review stated that the committee's decision as well as certain bylaws and policies of the CPO infringed upon his freedom of expression rights. It also highlighted how his impugned statements "do not relate to the 'practice of psychology.'"

A panel of three Superior Court judges is expected to reveal its decision in the case any day now.

Differences of opinion

There were multiple intervenors in the case that provided expert testimony germane to the Divisional Court's forthcoming decision.

Among them: the antipathetic Egale Canada and JusticeTrans; the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; the Canadian Civil Liberties Association; the Canadian Constitution Foundation; and the AARPO.

The Canadian Constitution Foundation argued that professional regulators ought not regulate off-duty conduct unless they are able to "establish a clear nexus between that specific conduct and the legitimate interest of the profession. And where off-duty conduct engages a Charter right, like freedom of expression, regulators have a heightened duty to ensure they have given full effect to the Charter protection."

Christine Van Geyn, litigation director at the foundation, said in a statement, "People in regulated professions have private lives outside of their professional roles. Any intrusion on the right of an individual to participate in public discourse, including through controversial statements in social media, must be rigorously examined to ensure that a regulator is not over-stepping its mandate."

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association reportedly noted that the CPO's oversight does not extend to "expressive activity that is outside the scope of professional practice."

Carolyn Silver and Amy Block, lawyers for the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, alternatively suggested that health regulators, such as the college, have an "overarching duty" to act in the public interest, and that "includes setting standards for civility in communications in public forums, and ensuring communications are free from discrimination and consistent with core values of the profession."

The AARPO highlighted the danger of "mission creep," noting a decision in the CPO's favor here would "improperly and unlawfully expand the mandate of professional regulators to include regulating 'unacceptable views' on matters unrelated to the practice of the professional outside of its area of practice."

As stated in the factum the advocacy group introduced in court and subsequently provided to TheBlaze, professional regulators previously "did not consider their members’ opinions unrelated to the profession disgraceful, dishonourable, unprofessional or conduct unbecoming, unless such opinions were unlawful, expressed hate, incited violence, or were so abhorrent as to undermine public confidence in the profession."

Past examples of such patently condemnable conduct were: the perpetration of fraud in the form of over-billing; the seduction of minors; secret surveillance of employees without their consent; and deceit about credentials when obtaining a license.

The AARPO noted that "Dr. Jordan Peterson's impugned conduct does not fall within the scope of traditional conduct regulated by professional regulators. ... Dr. Peterson's online posts and commentary unrelated to the practice of the profession are not hateful, incite no violence, and are not unlawful."

Significance and possible fallout

According to Jonah Arnold, a partner at Weinman, Arnold LLP and the leading force behind the AARPO, a decision against Peterson will most certainly ramify for professionals both in the field of psychology and beyond.

"If the Court upholds the College Committee’s reasons and does not provide a detailed decision including a full analysis of why it made such a decision, we all lose," Arnold told TheBlaze. "If the Court upholds the College Committee’s decision to order Dr. Peterson to undergo re-education, it will embolden regulators in Ontario and probably across Canada, to expand and overstep their regulatory authority and intrude into their registrant’s personal lives."

The chilling effect would be such that those entering professions in the province "will have no choice but to stay silent, contrary to their Charter rights," said Arnold.

Extra to damning professionals to a muted existence, a precedent here allowing for the policing of a health care professionals' opinions unrelated to their practice might also preclude people from entering the field. This would be especially troubling, suggested Arnold, in light of the health care worker shortage already affecting Ontario and the rest of the country.

The Star noted that John McIntyre, the lawyer representing Egale Canada and JusticeTrans, suggested a health professional's right to freedom of expression "must be weighed against countervailing interests, including the Charter rights of vulnerable."

When asked about this sentiment, Arnold told TheBlaze, "Mr. McIntyre competently argued his client’s position. However, we do not agree with the position. Such a position would require Committees to decide whose fundamental rights are more important. That is flawed. One cannot make a sweeping decision that one group’s rights are more important than another’s rights. Everyone’s fundamental rights must be respected and protected."

Arnold added, "Egale Canada and JusticeTrans had no evidence to support the position that Dr. Peterson’s statements somehow violate the Charter rights of vulnerable and marginalized stakeholders. It is not enough that a belief or expression is controversial or unpleasant – such beliefs and expressions are the very reason section 2 of the Charter exists."

JusticeTrans, the CPO, and Peterson's legal representative did not respond to TheBlaze's request for comment. Dr. Peterson was unavailable for comment at the time of writing.

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French woman arrested, faces $13,000 fine for calling President Macron 'filth' on Facebook



In the wake of Parisian schoolteacher Samuel Paty's beheading by an Islamic terrorist in 2020, French President Emmanuel Macron claimed he would continue "the fight for freedom."

That fight for freedom appears to have been short-lived or, at the very least, narrowly constructed.

A middle-aged French woman identified as Valérie was recently arrested and now faces a crushing penalty for allegedly calling Macron "filth" online.

Valérie, who hails from the northern French commune of Saint-Martin-lez-Tatinghem, wrote in a March 21 Facebook post, "This piece of filth is going to address you at 1:00 pm… it's always on television that we see this filth."

The post was in reference to Macron's televised TF1/France 2 interview on March 22 where he discussed raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 and suggested that the French people needed to make sacrifices — while allegedly concealing his luxury wristwatch worth tens of thousands of dollars.

Valérie, who had previously taken part in the populist "Yellow Vest" protests critical of Macron's administration, was not alone in her antipathy for the former World Economic Forum's Young Global Leader.

After 10 days of protests, roughly 740,000 protesters took to the streets on March 28 to denounce Macron and his proposed pension plan changes, reported France 24.

Amid the unrest, Valérie was reportedly arrested in northern France on March 24 and charged with "public insult to the President of the Republic by word, written image or means of communication by electronic voice."

Mehdi Benbouzid, the prosecutor in the town of Saint Omer, told AFP that Valérie was held in custody for questioning and faces a fine of 12,000 euros if convicted at her trial on June 20.

"They want to make an example of me," Valérie told the regional newspaper La Voix du Nord.

"I asked them if it was a joke, I had never been arrested," Valérie added. "I am not public enemy number one."

In 1881, after the collapse of the Second French Empire (France is presently on its fifth republic since 1792), the National Assembly passed a law making it illegal to insult the French president. The purpose of this legislation was, in part, to bolster the relatively impotent figurehead at the time, Jules Grèvy, reported the Washington Post.

Grèvy had been called a "profane thug" and an iconoclastic boor (i.e., "goujat iconoclaste") by a man named Simon Boubée, whom the regime saw fit to make an example of.

The law was used against critics of the powerful nine times between 1881 and 1958. The punishment for this supposed crime is jail time or a fine.

The French Parliament all but overturned the law 132 years after its ratification, but it is still on the books. This change was triggered by a European Court of Human Rights ruling, which found that freedom of expression had been violated in the case of a protester who was punished for issuing choice words to then-President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Since the ostensible change to the law in 2013, the Local indicated many thousands of Frenchmen have blasted Macron and his presidency. While the law has largely been put out of use, the prosecutor Benbouzid indicated that prosecution is permitted "on condition that the victim files a complaint," reported La Voix du Nord.

A state representative filed the complaint on Macron's behalf.

While France has an extradition treaty with the United States, Americans can freely and without fear of fine insult Macron online.

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No, Free Speech Doesn’t Mean Porn In Schools

Free speech is not freedom to degrade public morals and destroy the order necessary for liberty. Some speech is beyond the pale.

Mark Levin: Power-hungry flight attendants hassle passengers for wearing 'offensive' masks



Freedom of expression is under unprecedented attack as American Marxists and corporations silence opposition to their ideas. Now, in these telling videos, Mark walks you through the steps they employ in their evil game. It's a wake-up call to protect your precious liberties.

In this clip, Mark reviews two incidents involving a flight attendant targeting a passenger for wearing the wrong mask. The passenger in the first video was not only disallowed to exercise his First Amendment right of free expression, but he was also told he could not record the incident on his cellphone. Ultimately, the flight attendant kicked him off the flight.

"You don't throw people off of a plane for wearing a Let's Go Brandon mask," Mark said. "If I had a mask that said 1619 Project would they throw me off the plane? No."

A passenger on a different flight is asked to cover his "offensive" Let's Go Brandon mask with a crew-issued one. The man captured the incident on his cellphone and can be heard asking why his mask was an issue. According to the flight attendant, his mask can be "offensive to some."

"When you are power-hungry, there is no consistency to it. You are just power-hungry," Mark said.

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