Horowitz: Red states should offer asylum to persecuted Canadian truckers



If the federal government can violate state sovereignty and illegally offer asylum to millions of third-world residents coming for economic reasons, shouldn’t red states offer asylum to Canadian truckers suffering from authentic political persecution?

When Reagan warned that “freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction,” none of us truly could have envisioned this applying to Western democracies like Canada so soon in our lifetimes. But the Great Reset and COVID fascism changed all of that. What we are witnessing in Ottawa today is a degree of pre-enlightenment form of governance that is every bit as severe as what we are used to seeing in China and Iran. It can all be summed up in the statement issued on Saturday by Ottawa’s police chief: "If you are involved in this protest, we will actively look to identify you and follow up with financial sanctions and criminal charges. Absolutely. This investigation will go on for months to come."

Notice he didn’t say “riot,” like we saw for months on end with BLM. He said you will be arrested and your assets will be seized if you are involved in a “protest.” In other words, one of the defining characteristics of a liberal democracy has now been vitiated, as there is no longer a right to assemble, protest, and speak, nor is there a right to due process.

Leaked messages from members of the Canadian Royal Mounted Police obtained by Rebel News show that some cops were reveling in the heavy-handed tactics. “Time for the protesters to hear our jackboots on the ground,” wrote one officer. Even the New York Times editorial board ripped the Trudeau regime for subverting a cornerstone value of democracy. “Protests are a necessary form of expression in a democratic society, particularly for those whose opinions do not command broad popular support,” wrote the board in a recent essay.

Forget about protests, they have disallowed people from even walking down the streets near the capital complex, not just in it. Leaders of the convoy have been arrested without having committed a crime. And police are willing to employ needless violence against protesters who have never gotten violent.

Police in Ottawa are being extremely aggressive towards pedestrians on the street.\n\nThe police grabbed this individuals camera and threatened him with arrest for having the camera and for being on a public sidewalk.pic.twitter.com/eAz6RCK66G
— Marie Oakes (@Marie Oakes) 1645390599

After allowing in millions of economic migrants to the detriment of the citizens of this country, isn’t time we finally apply asylum law to the quintessential case for which it was conceived? This is an approach being suggested by Rep. Mo Brooks, who is now running for Senate in Alabama.

“I would say to the Canadian truckers — we’ve got our supply chain issues here in the United States of America. We could use some more truckers in the United States of America. And I suggest we give or offer them all political asylum,” Brooks said during an interview with Mobile, Alabama, radio FM Talk 106.5. “I think that’d be great if they were to leave Canada, come to the United States of America, move our goods from the East Coast to the West Coast and every point in between, and see what Canada then does — as they have, in effect, expelled these truckers by denying them their liberty and freedom.”

Consider the fact that in January alone there were 153,941 encounters of illegal aliens at the southern border. The DHS also reports that 62,573 migrants were released into U.S. just last month alone. That is more than the number of illegal aliens deported during the entire fiscal year!

More migrants were released into the U.S. in January than were deported by ICE in the entirety of FY 2021 (55,590).https://twitter.com/BillFOXLA/status/1494077891113467904\u00a0\u2026
— Adam Shaw (@Adam Shaw) 1645292019

For once, can we have immigration that actually benefits America and harnesses the principles of political asylum that we all cherish in our history of immigration?

To that end, GOP governors should announce they will offer legal protection for any Canadian persecuted by the rogue Trudeau regime. This is especially important for governors in states bordering Canada, such as Idaho, Montana, and North Dakota. The legislatures in those states should pass laws specifically inviting the truckers to cross the border. Local sheriffs should promise protection against any reprisal. This is exactly what are asylum laws were created for. These people are being criminalized solely for “membership in a particular social group, or political opinion,” which is the basic condition of asylum eligibility (8 U.S. Code § 1158(b)(1)(B)).

The minute Kabul fell to the Taliban, the Biden administration prioritized random Afghans for evacuation over American citizens. A new Department of Defense Inspector General report has identified at least 50 individuals posing "potentially significant security concerns" who have been allowed in. And 28 of 31 Afghan evacuees with known "derogatory information" have disappeared into the population. By “derogatory information,” they don’t just mean people who have an affinity for Islamic supremacism. That’s most of the people we brought in. "Significant security concerns include individuals whose latent fingerprints have been found on improvised explosive devices and known or suspected terrorists," the report warned.

Now raise your hands if you fear such concerns from admitting a few thousand Canadian truckers?

Ironically, for years, our side has been accused of being nativist and hateful toward foreigners while the globalists were regarded as tolerant, diverse, and compassionate. The reality is that the international movement for medical freedom is authentically built upon diversity, compassion, love, and tolerance for others. Allowing in the truckers would actually be in line with our immigration values. Yet they are the only truly persecuted people the Left never wanted to admit. That’s because their open-borders movement was never about compassion and love and was always about cheap labor and cheap voters for their elitist puppet masters. The same people who are now persecuting all of us with dangerous experiments to our bodies.

“We are all in this together” has taken on a more poignant meaning.

Key Freedom Convoy leaders arrested as police establish 100 checkpoints in Ottawa to clamp down on trucker protest



Key leaders of the Freedom Convoy were arrested on Thursday by police in Ottawa. Tamara Lich and Chris Barber – prominent organizers of the Canadian trucker protest – were seen being taken into custody by police.

According to the Ottawa Police, Barber was charged with counseling to commit the offense of mischief, counseling to commit the offense of disobey court order (s. 127), and counseling to commit the offense of obstruct police. Lich has been charged with counseling to commit the offense of mischief.

Barber – one of the leaders of the Freedom Convoy and a truck driver from Saskatchewan – was seen on video being arrested in Ottawa.

BREAKING: Freedom Convoy protest organizer Chris Barber got arrested in Ottawa as he was walking down the street. \n\nhttp://ConvoyReports.com\u00a0pic.twitter.com/6Itq8ypRKR
— Yanky \ud83d\udc0a \ud83d\ude9a\ud83d\ude9b\ud83d\ude9c (@Yanky \ud83d\udc0a \ud83d\ude9a\ud83d\ude9b\ud83d\ude9c) 1645139730

Video shows Lich being arrested without incident. As she is being taken into custody, Lich tells the other protesters, "Hold the line!"

Tamara Lich has been arrested, but we will continue to #holdthelinepic.twitter.com/GaPZdsrhVe
— FreedomConvoy2022 (@FreedomConvoy2022) 1645150171

Both Barber and Lich understood that they were at risk of being arrested for participating in the protest against vaccine mandates.

On Tuesday, Barber said, "We'll follow any direction of law enforcement. We've said it right from day one: If you're confronted by a police officer and the handcuffs come out, put your hands behind your back. Take it like a man. I've never been arrested by police. I've never had handcuffs on … If that comes, I'll be the first guy to get arrested."

An emotional Lich shared a video on Wednesday night, where she acknowledged that she would be taken to jail, but said she was "okay with that."

"I want you to know that I'm not afraid," Lich said in the video posted to social media.

"Just please stay peaceful and take care of each other," Lich tells the other Freedom Convoy protesters. "And know this too will pass."

"And there will be a tomorrow, and we will get through this," Lich said. "The only way this is going to succeed is if we always come from a place of love."

"I pray and I hope that you make your choices from love," she continued. "You have to know that they're trying to provoke us."

Lich – who launched the GoFundMe campaign that raised over $10 million for the Freedom Convoy before the crowdfunding website shut it down – also claimed that her personal bank account had been frozen.

The head of the Freedom Convoy, @Tamara_MVC, is preparing to be arrested. "I think it is inevitable. I want you to know that I am not afraid. Stay peaceful, and please take care of each other." \nIf Canada is ever governed by a non-tyrant, Tamara deserves the Order of Canada.pic.twitter.com/5Dzoe0gwcg
— Keean Bexte (@Keean Bexte) 1645118411

True North journalist Andrew Lawton said, "All of the demonstrators I spoke to yesterday were unfazed by the arrests of organizers Tamara Lich and Chris Barber. 'Hold the line' is still the rallying cry."

On Wednesday, the Ottawa Police issued a notice regarding actions that could be taken against demonstrators involved in the trucker convoy protest that is in its third week.

"The Ottawa Police Service wants to inform you that under provincial and federal legislation, you will face severe penalties if you do not cease further unlawful activity and remove your vehicle and/or property immediately from all unlawful protest sites," the warning states. "You may be arrested and charged with criminal offenses including but not limited to mischief, and potentially charged with a variety of other non-criminal offenses."

The Ottawa Police threatened demonstrators that their vehicles and property could be seized, their driver's license could be suspended or terminated, and "personal or business bank accounts, including virtual currency, may be subject to examination and restriction." The bulletin also warned that anyone who brings a minor to an "unlawful protest site" faces fines of up to $5,000 and prison sentences of up to five years.

On Monday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau enacted the Emergencies Act for the first time in the country's history in an effort to quell the trucker protests.

Canada's Department of Justice explains the Emergencies Act:

The Actcontains a specific definition of “national emergency” that makes clear how serious a situation needs to be before the Act can be relied upon. A national emergency is an urgent, temporary and critical situation that seriously endangers the health and safety of Canadians or that seriously threatens the ability of the Government of Canada to preserve the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of Canada. It must be a situation that cannot be effectively dealt with by the provinces and territories, or by any other law of Canada.

On Thursday, the Ottawa Police announced that under the Emergencies Act, "the Unified Command in control of policing in Ottawa has established a Secured Area to ensure that individuals comply with the Emergency Measures Regulations and to ensure designated places (Parliament, Government buildings, critical infrastructure etc) are protected."

Here\u2019s a look at the secure area OPS are setting up. 100 checkpoints through according to police. \n\nBronson to the canal, Queensway to Parliament \n#Ottawa #OttNewspic.twitter.com/IJTj2UCjoE
— Colton Praill (@Colton Praill) 1645131728

Police established checkpoints to verify the identity of anyone attempting to access the secured area. Only people who work or live in the area, "peace officers," and employees of the Canadian government can gain access to the secured area.

“The secured area included almost 100 checkpoints that will have police presence to ensure that those seeking entry to that secure area for unlawful reasons such as joining a protest cannot enter the downtown core,” Ottawa Police Chief Steve Bell said on Thursday during a press conference.

"In the last few days we have been communicating with unlawful protesters," Bell continued. "We have told them they must leave. We want to end this unlawful protest peacefully. We are prepared to employ lawful techniques to remove them from our streets."

Police in Ottawa have set up checkpoints all around the city to ask people where they are going.pic.twitter.com/9ByePAIjvw
— Marie Oakes (@Marie Oakes) 1645195755


\u201cThis is now a secure area\u201d.\n\nPolice checkpoint at Metcalfe/Laurier in Ottawa. It seems they are only allowing drivers to pass if they live in the area or for work/medical purposes. \n\nhttp://ConvoyReports.com\u00a0pic.twitter.com/JSzpRfdrhb
— Lincoln Jay (@Lincoln Jay) 1645148082

Ottawa Police issued a warning on Friday morning, "DEMONSTRATORS: You must leave. You must cease further unlawful activity and immediately remove your vehicle and/or property from all unlawful protest sites. Anyone within the unlawful protest site may be arrested."

DEMONSTRATORS: You must leave. You must cease further unlawful activity and immediately remove your vehicle and/or property from all unlawful protest sites. Anyone within the unlawful protest site may be arrested.pic.twitter.com/txDattNRE4
— Ottawa Police (@Ottawa Police) 1645196581

Canadian cop visits woman's home, admits police are monitoring her Facebook group, hands her info on 'peaceful protests': 'Nice to know that we're being watched'



A police officer from the Ontario Provincial Police in Canada was recorded on video standing outside the door o fa woman's home, admitting that police have been monitoring a Facebook group she has participated in regarding growing protests across the province over COVID-19 restrictions — and then handed her a brochure on "peaceful protests."

Say what?

The cellphone video begins with the resident opening her door and asking the officer for her name and badge number, after which the officer hands the resident her card along with "some information about peaceful protests."

The resident asks, "So you saw something on my Facebook?"

"No, on the Facebook group," the officer replies.

"And [you] decided to come to my personal residence to give me information about peaceful protests?" the resident asks.

"Yes," the officer replies.

At first the resident wonders if the officer is with police in Peterborough, a city about 90 minutes northeast of Toronto. But the officer acknowledges she's with the Ontario Provincial Police, and her shoulder patch indicates it as well.

"Are you guys now monitoring people's Facebook pages or Facebook groups [as] to who comments, as to what their status updates are, or what they're doing ... within the group?" the resident continues.

The officer at this point only admits police are "monitoring the protests" happening across Ontario and then adds, "So, there's a protest coming up. I'm simply providing you with information about a peaceful protest, and now I'm leaving. That is all."

'Nice to know that we're being watched'

But the resident apparently wanted to nail down exactly what was going on, so she inquired more: "So the OPP are watching what people are doing on Facebook in different groups, whether or not they're commenting, participating, liking, and you guys are now doing service calls to give people information about peaceful protests?"

"Yeah," the officer replies. "It's just a proactive measure to make sure you understand your rights about peaceful protesting."

The clip concludes with the resident telling the officer, "I'm hoping that you guys aren't gonna waste our tax dollars continuing to do this to everybody, but now it's nice to know that we're being watched."

The Ontario Provincial Police are allegedly monitoring social media groups for the Freedom Convoy and visiting people\u2019s homes who have commented on Facebook groups regarding the convoy.pic.twitter.com/CqNhsrmaZE
— Marie Oakes (@Marie Oakes) 1644558297

TheBlaze on Friday morning contacted the Peterborough County Detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police to inquire about the video, but an official said the office was being "inundated" with calls about the clip and that OPP's corporate communications arm was now handling the matter. OPP has not issued a statement as of noon Friday; TheBlaze will update this story once a statement is issued.

What has been the reaction?

Reaction to the clip has been somewhat mixed. Some commenters said the officer did nothing wrong; others are saying the visit was more or less the delivery of a chilling message from Big Brother.

One commenter noted, "Not really sure why this is an issue. Facebook public communities are just like any other communities. I'm glad OPP is paying attention. That is what I'm paying them for."

To which another user answered, "You pay them to stalk people online? Shouldn't they be solving crime or something?"

Another commenter in favor of the visit wrote, "Good. I see nothing wrong here. The cop was nice, was only there to give information not to arrest or harm anyone. If you post on a public group that supports an illegal occupation I'm glad the cops are checking on you."

But another user replied, "She's a fascist, as are you, since you see no problem with this. There was no reason to show up at her house, since this lady is entitled to speak out and disagree with the government. And there's nothing illegal about it. No wonder Canada has gone to hell, with people like you."

Anything else?

The Canadian truckers protest against COVID-19 restrictions has been dominating headlines across the globe of late, and sides are being chosen as the truckers disrupt the normal flow of commerce to get their points across.

Indeed, some Canadian provinces recently have ordered the easing or lifting of pandemic restrictions in the wake of the protests as well as decreases in coronavirus cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.