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Canadian mayor defiant in face of fines, orders from government's Human Rights Tribunal

Canadian mayor defiant in face of fines, orders from government's Human Rights Tribunal


Canadian mayor defiant in face of fines, orders from government's Human Rights Tribunal

The mayor of the tiny little Canadian town of Emo, Ontario has been fined $5,000 in Canadian currency after its town refused to declare June as LGBTQ pride month.

The Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario says the $5,000 fine must come out of the mayor's personal bank account.

It also fined the town $10,000. The Tribunal found that Emo's refusal to give special recognition to homosexuals left the group Borderline Pride with hurt feelings, thus the award.

Mayor Harold McQuaker told The Toronto Sun he will neither pay the fine nor submit to LGBTQ training as order by the tribunal.

He also won’t cave to demands that the town host a drag time story hour at the local library, The Sun reports.

Canadian Pastor Artur Pawlowski, himself a victim of Canada's heavy hand of justice, says his country is no longer free.

Pawlowski, Artur Pawlowski

“We're living, truly, in Canada, in or under a totalitarian regime. This is a police state.”

He says Canada has gone all in on celebrating homosexuality, and clearly expects its citizens to do the same.

“In Calgary, where I live, we not only have one month, we got also one week, and we have a number of parades. Not just one, multiple parades.”

Pawlowski grew up under the iron fist of Communism in Cold War Poland and knows a thing or two about totalitarianism. What's happening in Canada could be even worse than life behind the Iron Curtain because the people once knew true freedom.

“This is the greatest takedown of the middle class that I have ever seen in the history of mankind,” he said.

Tired of status quo

McQuaker, Harold (Emo, Ontario Mayor) McQuaker

Canadians are starting to chafe under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's woke government, but Pawlowski says even the conservative party is part of Canada's swamp.

“We need new players, I call them neighbors. People are suffering with us, people that have been there marching with us, a totally new people,” Pawlowski said.