Tag Archives: equity

“Equity” Means Anti-White Discrimination in the Courts & Employment & Means Coddling Coloured Criminals

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“Equity” Means Anti-White Discrimination in the Courts & Employment & Means Coddling Coloured Criminals

Bruce Pardy: Racial discounts for violent criminals was inevitable in equity-obsessed Canada https://canadafirst.nfshost.com/?p=4898

The Supreme Court ensured the Charter would never guarantee equality under the law

Author of the article:

By Bruce Pardy

Published Mar 22, 2026

Melissa Blimkie.
Murder victim Melissa Blimkie. Photo by Handout/IHIT

In December 2021, Everton Downey stabbed his girlfriend Melissa Blimkie 15 times in a stairwell at a shopping mall in Burnaby. She died. Downey was convicted of second-degree murder. In February, the British Columbia Supreme Court sentenced him to life in prison, the minimum sentence set out in the Criminal Code. The Crown sought no chance for parole for at least 15 years. But Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes decided on 12 years instead, in part because of “mitigating circumstances of his background,” as described in his Impact of Race and Culture Assessment (IRCA). The time to parole was reduced because of Downey’s experience of being Black.

Race-based sentencing has become commonplace in Canada. The sentence doesn’t fit the crime but the identity of the criminal. “Racialized” offenders, especially Indigenous and Black, may have their sentences reduced because of “overt and systemic discrimination.” So the Supreme Court of Canada said last July. The Criminal Code directs judges to consider “the circumstances of Aboriginal offenders” in setting sentences. The Supreme Court has suggested that “inquiring into social context” of other racial groups can provide guidance “to understand the particular experience of an offender and their moral culpability.” It doesn’t matter if you’re black or white, Michael Jackson sang. He wasn’t referring to Canadian courts.

It’s not just criminal sentencing. From employment opportunities, government programs and subsidies, seats in university programs, and myriad other ways, Canadian laws and institutions treat different races, sexes, and genders differently. They provide more favourable or lenient criteria to “historically disadvantaged groups.” Which are all of them. Except straight white men, of course.

How can this be? Doesn’t the law prohibit discrimination? In Canada, the answer is no. Americans have a constitutional right to equal protection of the law. Canadians don’t.

The text of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms suggests that they do. Section 15(1) says that every individual “is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination.” The Charter was adopted in 1982, but section 15 did not come into force until April 1985. The Supreme Court of Canada did not decide its first case under section 15 until 1989. In the interim, another development would have a significant impact on the path of equality law in Canada.

In 1984, the federal government established the “Royal Commission on Equality in Employment,” also known as the Abella Commission after its commissioner Rosalie Abella, later a judge of the Supreme Court (now retired). The commission’s mandate was to enquire into employment discrimination in Canada, particularly against women and visible minorities. Its report, released in 1985, recommended employment equity policies in the federal government and in federally regulated companies. Those recommendations led to the passage of the federal Employment Equity Act in 1986. It required federal employers to “ensure that persons in designated groups achieve a degree of representation in each occupational group in the employer’s workforce” that reflected their representation in the Canadian workforce. In other words, it directed federally regulated employers to adopt affirmative action programs that gave preference to candidates from some groups over others. It mandated unequal treatment, or equity.

As a mere statute, not part of the Constitution, the Employment Equity Act did not bind the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Charter’s equality provision. But the Act was newly in place when the Supreme Court heard its first case under section 15. The Court decided that section 15(1) required “substantive equality.” Which means equal or comparative benefits and burdens. Which means equal or comparable outcomes between groups. Which may require different rules for different groups. Which means equity.

Section 15 also includes an exception. Section 15(2) allows for laws and programs that aim to ameliorate “conditions of disadvantaged individuals or groups.” The Supreme Court of Canada has since made the exception into the general rule. Sections 15(1) and (2), it declared in 2008, “work together to confirm s. 15’s purpose of furthering substantive equality.” Which means equity.

Race-based criminal sentencing is not an automatic discount. It’s not a coupon or a “get-out-of-jail-free” card. The court takes the background and circumstances of “racialized” individuals into account. But that is exactly the problem. Defenders of the practice would say that the court is merely ascertaining culpability of the individual accused. But if that were so, the same considerations and potential reductions would be available to the accused of any racial group. White guys don’t get Gladue Reports or Impact of Race and Culture Assessments.

In Canada, legal equality now means equity. Equity means unequal treatment. The same laws and standards do not apply to everyone. Instead, laws and institutions can treat different identity groups differently. In criminal sentencing, as in applications for jobs, schools, and programs, some Canadians are more equal than others. Canada’s justice system is broken. To fix it, equity must go. (National Post, March 21, 2026)

Bruce Pardy is executive director of Rights Probe and professor of law at Queen’s University. 

DEI (DIVERSITY, EQUITY & INCLUSION) EXPLAINED

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“Social Equity” Or Racism Against White Canadians: Judge For Yourself“

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“Social Equity” Or Racism Against White Canadians: Judge For Yourself

Many of them[Canadians] think that they have a right to equal treatment under the law. They think that discrimination is illegal. But nothing could be further from the truth.”Brad SalzbergOct 21 READ IN APP Share“Canadians have been sold a bill of goods,” says Bruce Pardy, the author of the report and a Queen’s University law professor.“Many of them think that they have a right to equal treatment under the law. They think that discrimination is illegal. But nothing could be further from the truth. In Canada, discrimination is lawful as long as it is committed against the right groups — and in particular against straight white men.”Professor Pardy’s distinction between social equality and social “equity” is critical to race-relations in our country. At present, the ominous nature of his statements are poorly understood within Canadian society. “Social ‘equity’ recognizes that each person has different circumstances and allocates the exact resources and opportunities needed to reach an equal outcome. Social ‘equality’ means each individual or group of people is given the same resources or opportunities.” “This isn’t just the law, but part of the Canadian Constitution. Unequal treatment is embedded as a constitutional standard — and in some situations, a constitutional requirement.”“Equal treatment and equity are opposites,” writes Pardy, senior fellow at the Aristotle Foundation.

As an example, we turn to Toronto Metropolitan University[formerly Ryerson], who recently made an administrative decision to limit the intake of white medical school students to 25% of those accepted to the program.Equality, or racism? If and when Caucasian Canadians reach 25% of TMU medical school acceptance, further candidates will be excluded simply because they are white, heterosexual males.“The law cannot simultaneously apply the same laws and standards to everyone and also adjust them depending upon the group. Equal treatment and equity are mutually exclusive and cannot co-exist.””This issue should be particularly concerning to young Canadians who could be squeezed out of opportunities because of their identity.”Is it a hyperbolic statement to suggest that TMU policy emulates Nazi-era racial prejudice?“In April 1933, the law restricted the number of Jewish students at German schools and universities. In the same month, further legislation sharply curtailed ‘Jewish activity’ in the medical and legal professions.”

Back on contemporary Canadian soil, we learn the following:“While the American constitution sets out limits on the powers of legislatures,” Pardy writes, “For most of its history, Canada did not have an equivalent.””In 1974, the Canadian Supreme Court underscored this point by saying that while citizens are entitled to the application of law in a neutral way, lawmakers are not curtailed from drafting unequal laws.”Wanna know what this spells for Canadians of European heritage? T-r-o-u-b-l-e, that’s what. The source of inverted racism against Anglophone Canadians is the Canada Research Chair program.“The current opening for a Canada Research Chair in physics  at the University of New Brunswick will not accept applications from white men. Similarly, white people can’t apply to Dalhousie’s opening for a chair in industrial engineering. Many more such cases exist.”To justify the prejudice against white Canadians, academia reference the following: “We pursue policies that were established in law by the Federal Court and subject to a mediation that was overseen by the Canadian Human Rights Commission.” “Those policies are contained in an addendum to the program and are set to ensure that by the year 2030, the Canada Research Chairs Program will ‘look’ more like Canada…”How the woke vengeance-seekers love this one. Knowing that whites are on a demographic decline, they plan to push this to the limit. Down the road, let’s say when whites comprise 20% of our demography, these communities would be limited to 20% of employment opportunities within Canada’s university system.Bringing about an obvious question: what if the policy doesn’t apply exclusively to schools, colleges and universities? What if– lord help us– these policies permeate every government-related job sector in Canada?We dare to put forth a proposition perpetually eschewed by media– including our “alternative media” sector, as minimal as it is.Immigration policy in Canada is serving as the impetus to transition Canadians of European heritage to a second class community. Why do you think the woke, media, academia and government are unified in their advancement of the evils of “colonialism?”

The premise is deceptively simple: “you stole the land in the first place, so we have the right to steal it back.”Back to Bruce Pardy: “By comparison[with United States], in Canada, unequal treatment has become the constitutional standard. So we are stuck with a big problem.”CAP refuse to mince words:  It’s Canada’s “Old Stock” communities who are stuck with a “big problem.”“Our Supreme Court is largely to blame, but of course our foolish politicians and woke bureaucracies have had a big hand in fostering it as well.”Kudos to Professor Pardy. As for CBC, CTV, Globe & Mail, Toronto Star, Montreal Gazette, Calgary Herald et al, you can forget about it. They wouldn’t expose these realities for all the white rice in China.“Every individual is equal before and under the law,” says the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, “and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination.”“But the Supreme Court of Canada has long insisted that the clause does not mean equal treatment but equity.””So what happened? The federal government established a Royal Commission on Equality in Employment, also known as the Abella Commission after its commissioner Rosalie Abella. Abella, now retired, would later become the most activist judge on the court.””The commission’s report, released in 1984, recommended employment equity policies in the federal government and in federally regulated companies, and led to the passage of the federal Employment Equity Act in 1986, which required affirmative action programs that gave preference to candidates from some groups over others.”In Canada, “Liberalism” in all its vicissitudes– government, academia, corporations, law, courts–  has instituted a program for comprehensive marginalization of Canada’s Caucasian communities.Is this the true meaning behind Justin Trudeau’s proclamation stating that Canada is a “post-modern” society? Who, pray-tell, was prime minister of Canada during the 10-plus years that all of this came into being? Pierre Trudeau is your answer.“The strict enforcement of diversity rules has indeed changed the demographics of the Canada Research Chairs program. As of last September, it surpassed its 2029 racial minority quota of 22 per cent, but the racially exclusionary job ads persist.”President of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Ted Hewitt “revealed that he had no plan to pare back the quotas — even though some have been surpassed.”Bingo. There’s your social “equity” for you. Now, back to Hockey Night in Canadastan.

“Equity” Means No Standards

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