Alberta temporarily pauses book bans after backlash
In Alberta, school boards began pulling classic literature from libraries—books such as 1984 and The Handmaid’s Tale—under the rubric of “explicit sexual content” or parental rights activism. Then the province paused the bans to clarify definitions. The Guardian
MP Jagsharan Singh Mahal faces backlash over English proficiency video
A video of a Canadian MP struggling to speak English in a public moment led to a cascade of criticism—some of it racist or xenophobic. The incident reopened discussions about multiculturalism, what counts as “Canadian identity,” and how diversity is treated in political spaces. Indiatimes
Canada loves to brand itself as a beacon of tolerance, freedom, and progress—but the cracks are widening, and they’re impossible to ignore. Banning artists for their politics, flirting with censorship in schools by pulling classics like 1984 and The Handmaid’s Tale, and lowering the bar in politics to the point where elected officials struggle to communicate—this isn’t progress. It’s regression.
What we’re watching is a country that once prided itself on open debate and intellectual strength now retreating into fear, control, and mediocrity. The signs are everywhere: silencing voices under the guise of “security,” censoring books in the name of “protecting children,” and pretending incompetence is diversity.
If this is the direction Canada continues to head, the future doesn’t look like freedom—it looks like decline.
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