Beers2Freedom
A Carney runs CLOWNADA
1% of the population wields enough power to change the laws governing religious freedom and freedom of speech in Canada."Jewish Canadians comprise one per cent of the Canadian population yet are the target of 62 per cent of all religiously motivated hate crimes," said Richard Marceau, vice-president of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs. "We live in a time of rising antisemitism."
Bill C-19: Enactment of Canada's Holocaust Denial Law
Canada criminalized the public condoning, denying, or downplaying of the Holocaust through an amendment to the Criminal Code, which received royal assent on June 23, 2022. This change was implemented via Bill C-19, the Budget Implementation Act, 2022, No. 1, which embedded the legislative amendment within the federal budget process to ensure swift passage. The law specifically targets the willful promotion of antisemitism through Holocaust denial in public statements, while exempting private conversations.
During Covid the Government removed religious exemptions for health and vaccinations. Now they are removing them from speech.
Bill C-9 — dubbed the Combatting Hate Act — that would remove the religious exemption.
Under the guise of combating Anti-Semitism and classifying it as "Hate Speech", free speech is eroded and hate speech laws are weaponised.
Religious exemptions are removed, stripping Canada once and for all of any semblance of a once Christian Nation.
This is just a continuation of an agenda already in motion.
In June 2022, the Canadian Government Criminalized Holocaust Denial.

OTTAWA, Ontario (LifeSiteNews) — A Liberal government bill to criminalize parts of the Bible dealing with homosexuality under Canada’s new “hate speech” laws looks closer to becoming reality after gaining the support of the Bloc Québécois party when a religious exception was removed.
The National Post reported that the Bloc Québécois are now backing the hate-speech Bill C-9 after the Liberal government of Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed to take away a religious exception.
Bill C-9, the Combating Hate Act, as reported by LifeSiteNews, has been blasted by constitutional experts as allowing empowered police and the government to go after those it deems to have violated a person’s “feelings” in a “hateful” way.
As reported by LifeSiteNews, a government insider revealed that the Liberal government plans to remove religious exemptions from Canada’s hate-speech laws by modifying a bill. This would affect passages of the Bible dealing with homosexuality.
A recent media report states that the Carney Liberals and the separatist Bloc Québécois want to amend Bill C-9, which would “criminalize sections of the Bible, Quran, Torah, and other sacred texts,” Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre noted yesterday on X.
Both the Liberals and the Bloc are on board to support the removal of a religious exemption in Canada’s Criminal Code for the bill.
On Monday, Canadian Justice Minister Sean Fraser was rather mum on the deal made with the Bloc, which now says the deal is on thin ice due to canceled justice committee meetings.
Fraser said that it is his “priority” to see “this bill adopted,” but admitted it will need the support of other parties.
“That’s going to require that we collaborate with different parties who have different points of view,” he said.
However, it appears that such meetings will take place this week, but Conservative Party MPs have promised to fight the removal of the religious exception.
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Liberal MP Marc Miller had said earlier in the year that certain passages of the Bible are “hateful” because of what it says about homosexuality, and those who recite the passages should be jailed. As reported by LifeSiteNews, he was recently appointed as a government minister by Carney.
Recently, Canadian pro-life Conservative MP Jamil Jivani warned the Liberal government is targeting Christians and people of other faiths with a bill that would criminalize quoting parts of the Bible.
As reported by LifeSiteNews, Canadian Conservative MP Leslyn Lewis blasted the Carney Liberals’ federal plan to criminalize parts of the Bible as an attack on “Christians,” warning it sets a “dangerous precedent” for Canadian society.
In response, the party launched a petition over fear that religious texts could be criminalized.
(I refuse to link CBC, so I copy and pasted the article below.)

Liberals back Bloc's proposal to remove religious exemption from hate speech laws
Criminal Code change is being added to Liberals' anti-hate legislation
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Darren Major · CBC News · Posted: Dec 09, 2025 5:05 PM PST | Last Updated: December 10
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Estimated 4 minutes
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Minister of Justice Sean Fraser said Tuesday that the amendment would not criminalize religious speech. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)
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Liberal MPs on the House justice committee backed a Bloc Québécois proposal to remove a religious exemption from Canada’s hate speech laws — after the suggestion initially appeared to halt the government's anti-hate legislation.
The Criminal Code currently includes an exemption for hate speech, "if, in good faith, the person expressed or attempted to establish by an argument an opinion on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text."
On Tuesday evening, the justice committee added a Bloc amendment to the Liberals' Bill C-9 — dubbed the Combatting Hate Act — that would remove the religious exemption.
Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet told reporters last week that his party struck a deal with the Liberals to add the amendment in exchange for support for C-9. The deal was first reported by the National Post.
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Bloc Québécois MP Rhéal Fortin introduced the amendment at the justice committee. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)
But progress appeared to stall after an initial committee meeting to go over the bill was abruptly cancelled last week.
Three sources speaking to CBC News said the bill was held up because Justice Minister Sean Fraser’s office brokered the deal with the Bloc without getting buy-in from the Prime Minister’s Office.
Tuesday's meeting was scheduled last-minute after last week's cancellation.
The Bloc has long sought to remove the religious exemption, saying religion could be used as a cover for promoting hate, such as homophobia and antisemitism.
Blanchet said his party would not support the bill without the amendment.
Religious groups raise concerns
The Conservatives oppose both the proposed amendment and the bill as written. Leader Pierre Poilievre posted on his X account last week that the Bloc amendment would "criminalize sections of the Bible, Qur'an, Torah and other sacred texts."
News of the deal also prompted religious groups, including Catholics and Muslims, to speak out, saying it could chill or even criminalize religious speech.
"I think all Canadians can recognize that this is an issue that affects all of them, including religious and non-religious Canadians," said Haseeb Hassaan, spokesperson for the National Council of Canadian Muslims.
Conservative MPs on the justice committee decried that MPs didn't have the opportunity to hear from witnesses on the proposed amendment.
"[The Liberals] are prepared to mount, with the support of the Bloc Québécois, a full-scale assault on religious freedom," Ontario MP Andrew Lawton said during Tuesday's meeting.
After the Bloc amendment passed, Conservative MPs filibustered Tuesday's meeting, forcing MPs to adjourn without completing the clause-by-clause study.
WATCH | Justice minister on the Bloc's amendment:
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Justice minister says Bloc's hate speech amendment 'will not criminalize faith'
December 9|
Duration4:38
Justice Minister Sean Fraser said Tuesday that the Bloc Québécois's proposed amendment to Bill C-9 would not 'prevent a religious leader from reading their religious texts.' Fraser said he is in 'lockstep' with the Prime Minister's Office on the bill and a 'range of other items.'
But Fraser pushed back, noting that freedom of religion is a protected Charter right.
"The amendment that the Bloc is proposing will … in no way, shape or form prevent a religious leader from reading their religious texts. It will not criminalize faith," Fraser said during a news conference earlier Tuesday.
"We are dealing with charges that touch on the wilful promotion of hate. That is not a value that the major religions stand for."
In a statement later posted on social media, Fraser argued that the exemption is redundant and that the government is unaware of any case where it's been used to acquit someone accused of hate speech.
Bill C-9 proposes new Criminal Code offences, including one that would make it a crime to intentionally promote hatred against identifiable groups in public using certain hate- or terrorism-related symbols.
Those symbols include ones used during the Holocaust — such as the swastika and SS lightning bolts — or symbols associated with the government's list of terrorist entities, which includes the Proud Boys, Hamas and Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
- Bloc wants Liberal bill amended to remove religious exemption from hate speech laws: source
- Bloc says Liberals 'fear backlash' from removing religious exemptions in hate speech law
The legislation would also make hate-motivated crimes a specific offence and crack down on willfully intimidating and obstructing people outside places of worship and other sensitive institutions.
The bill would still need to pass third reading of the House and then make its way through the Senate before it becomes law.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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Darren Major
Senior writer
Darren Major is a senior writer for CBC's parliamentary bureau in Ottawa. He previously worked as a digital reporter for CBC Ottawa and a producer for CBC's Power & Politics. He holds a master's degree in journalism and a bachelor's degree in public affairs and policy management, both from Carleton University. He also holds master's degree in arts from Queen's University. He can be reached at darren.major@cbc.ca.
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