Tag Archives: Lindsay Shepherd

TORY MP REVEALS TAXPAYER-FUNDED TRAP BY THE CBC

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TORY MP REVEALS TAXPAYER-FUNDED TRAP BY THE CBC

CBC-linked sting tried to lure MP Gunn by posing as Sir John A. defenders

A fake production company hired by CBC tried to trap Conservative MP Aaron Gunn in an interview with the promise of “reclaiming the legacy of Sir John A. Macdonald.”

Clayton DeMaineMay 13∙Paid
 
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Source: Dr. Frances Widdowson on X and Aaron Gunn on Facebook

The fake production company acting on behalf of CBC, involved in setting up conservative critics, including Lindsay Shepherd and Frances Widdowson, in bogus interviews, attempted to also lure Conservative MP Aaron Gunn with the promise of “reclaiming the legacy of Sir John A Macdonald.”

Internal correspondence from Gunn’s office shows staff were told the project was being prepared for CBC, which was allegedly “under pressure to provide a balanced view surrounding John A. Macdonald.”

Aaron Gunn@AaronGunnWait until people find out how this CBC show tried (unsuccessfully) to manipulate and deceive a sitting Member of Parliament on its crusade to further attack Canada’s history and smear the reputation of Canada’s first Prime Minister.Lindsay Shepherd@NewWorldHomininI found out recently that I was deceived by social activists in an elaborate scheme dating back to January. A production group with what I now know has a fake name and fake identities gave me a friendly interview about my book A Day with Sir John A, and about Sir John A10:46 PM · May 12, 2026 · 94K Views89 Replies · 544 Reposts · 2.21K Likes

Two producers, using the aliases “Olivia Goldman” of “Nova Frame Productions” and “Pam Gibson” of “Forge Media,” repeatedly portrayed the project as an effort to “reclaim” Macdonald’s legacy, defend Canadian heritage and provide a national platform for conservatives who felt censored or demonized for challenging prevailing reconciliation narratives. Pam Gibson was later identified as Molly Gore, an American producer who has worked on left-wing ecosocialist documentaries.

The newly uncovered email chain shows the operation spent months cultivating trust with conservative organizers, video producers and eventually Gunn’s parliamentary office by carefully mirroring conservative concerns about free speech, Indigenous land disputes and attacks on Canada’s founder.

Contact with the CBC-backed production company and various conservative figures dates back to January of this year. The emails were provided to Juno News by Gunn, and show those behind the ruse contacted a conservative-leaning video production group and discussed a $2,000 fee to help arrange interviews with subjects critical of “certain Indigenous developments” in B.C. as part of the clandestine smear campaign for CBC Entertainment.

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“We’re looking for people who are rightly critical of certain Indigenous developments, whose point of view deserves more airtime, and looking at what the lack of oversight and democratic debate around these projects means for the future of Canada and the cultural amnesia that activists are pushing for,” wrote Goldman on January 16, 2026.

Several conservative-leaning critics of the misleading media narrative surrounding the Kamloops Residential School “mass graves” claim and open defenders of Canada’s first Prime Minister’s legacy were targeted by the fake media company “Forge Media,” which was actually a front for the CBC-backed project meant to entrap unwitting critics.

Eventually, the email chain transitioned into a bid to get Gunn on board. The conservative contact offered several names, but the fake media production team “Forge Media and Nova Frame Productions” pressed for more controversial and “censored” figures.

“The project brings together a range of perspectives across the political spectrum, and what we’re missing most right now are speakers who’ve taken outspoken, principled positions on Indigenous land issues, treaty interpretation, development, and jurisdiction from a conservative position, specifically those taking a strong constitutional, rule-of-law perspective, those who are openly critical of prevailing reconciliation narratives, dissenting from ideological orthodoxy,” the January 28, 2026 email from “Goldman” requesting more censored individuals reads. “We’ve reserved space to feature more ‘unpopular’ positions, especially those enduring censorship or a good deal of public pushback, in order to treat the issues with the full complexity they deserve.”

“Goldman” specifically asked a contact of Gunn for help booking the Conservative MP.

“We’re now booking an episode focused on reclaiming the legacy of John A., and we would love some help booking Aaron Gunn if he is available for an interview at the end of April in Vancouver,” an email to a conservative-leaning strategist dated March 31st reads. “Is this something you would be able to help with?” The strategist has requested that their name be kept out of publication.

EXCLUSIVE: CBC confirms they are behind media sting targeting residential school narrative criticsEXCLUSIVE: CBC confirms they are behind media sting targeting residential school narrative criticsClayton DeMaine·May 12Read full story

So far, it’s been revealed that an unnamed RCMP officer, Gunn, authors Lindsay Shepherd and Jerry Amernic, OneBC leader Dallas Brodie, Toronto Metropolitan University professor Patrice Dutil, political commentator Jonathan Kay, and Daniel Tate from IntegrityTO were among those “Forge Media” attempted to interview as part of the sham docuseries.

The project name “Counting Coup” is a reference to a Plains indigenous war tactic involving humiliating and persuading an enemy on the battlefield to admit defeat after being tapped by a “coup stick.”

Shepherd, author of “A Day with Sir John A,” revealed that she received similar communications from “Forge Media” presenting themselves as supporters of her advocacy and posing the episode explicitly on “reclaiming the legacy of John A. Macdonald.”

The group also asked if they could film in Shepherd’s home and spoke about her newborn child.(Juno News, May 13, 2026)

An inside look at the Vancouver Art Gallery’s anti-white exhibit funded by the Federal Government

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An inside look at the Vancouver Art Gallery’s anti-white exhibit funded by the Federal Government

By Lindsay Shepherd – November 8, 2023 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppLinkedin

A social media post about a hateful, anti-white exhibit at the Vancouver Art Gallery called “Conceptions of White” recently went viral, so naturally, I had to go see it for myself.

After you fork over your $30 admission fee (geez) and take the stairs to the third floor, the first thing to catch your eye is the giant phrase on the wall that reads, “When you’re the problem, we’re the solution.” The text is accompanied by a large headshot of a white male.

Gallery attendees then have the opportunity to interact with an AI program on a set of tablets.

“Stop talking. Never share an uninvited opinion again,” text on the wall reads. When you look into the tablet, a mute symbol is superimposed over your mouth.

“Check privilege. Learn whether you’re special or just lucky,” the text reads. Upon looking into the tablet, a halo that says “Undeserving” appears over your head. 

“Get curious. Vocalize your own ignorance.” 

The tablet prompts me to say aloud, “I know nothing.”

I sauntered over to the gallery security guard.

“Do people find this funny?” I asked her, gesturing at the tablet display. After all, the artist behind the work had described it as “tongue-in-cheek.”

“No,” she said, with a sheepish smile. 

“They don’t like it?”

“No,” she shook her head.

I asked her whether this exhibit has been popular so far, but the answer was another negative. 

“The Emily Carr exhibit is popular though,” she offered, referring to the famous Canadian painter.

I walked by some schizophrenic ramblings and pictures on the wall about how because statues from Ancient Rome and Greece had curly hair, they were probably not white people.

I arrived at a computer station with a webcam.

“Aryan Recognition Tool: How Aryan Are You?” the screen read.

The computer program claimed to measure how your face compared to the facial measurements of “the most infamous leaders of the Third Reich.” 

Sign me up!

“Could face recognition be used to detect genocidal predators, or even casual racists? Find out whether your face matches any of the 1,900 examples of Aryans we’ve gathered.”

I was so eager to do so, but darn! An “out of order” sign was propped up in front of the facial recognition camera. 

On to the next.

The next major installation was a timeline that spanned about 15 feet long. 

“An incomplete timeline of the circumstances that influenced the emergence – and evolution – of White racial identity,” it read.

I learned that as a white Canadian born in the mid-1990s, my identity is defined by slavery, scientific racism, Rudyard Kipling’s 1899 poem “The White Man’s Burden,” colonialism, the Ku Klux Klan, the Third Reich, the “alt-right,” and Robin DiAngelo’s book White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism.

The last items in the timeline of white terribleness were “2013: Black Lives Matter founded” and “2021: January 6 Insurrection.” I chortled.

I was exhausted at this point, and still so very dismayed that I paid $30 only for the Aryan facial recognition tool to be out of order.

The final installation was a short film that purported to be about reflecting the “current state of White identity in America.”

What followed was a 30-minute compilation of internet meme videos spliced with scenes of racial violence, guns, and creepy staring. 

On the way out of the screening room, I asked a couple visiting Vancouver from Australia whether they liked the exhibit.

“I was horrified. Horrified, devastated, saddened,” the man said, before praising the exhibit and trailing off about “violence” and “so many wars.” 

The man had been successfully programmed into hating his heritage. 

We are a culture that preaches self-love: individuals should be self-confident, self-respecting, self-reliant. But how can white people love themselves if they are told repeatedly that they are oppressors, purveyors of violence, and racists just for existing?

Especially when it is the high-culture institutions like galleries, museums, and universities beating them over the head with this message? The “Conceptions of White” exhibit also received government funding through the Canada Council for the Arts. 

The exhibit was palpably hateful and designed to demoralize. I left the gallery not inspired and infused with joie de vivre, but rather drained: it was as if I had just exited a zone of concentrated psychological warfare, and I had fortunately come out alive with my critical thinking faculties still intact.

The security guard had spoken highly of the Emily Carr exhibit, so I went upstairs to the fourth floor to gaze upon something beautiful for a change. 

I read the paragraphs of text about Emily Carr’s life that accompanied her paintings. 

“Carr proclaimed to document a ‘disappearing Indigenous culture’ by undertaking frequent sketching trips in the province and painting totemic sculptures and villages,” the text read.

“She was sincere in her effort to represent Indigenous villages and culture in her work, but naive of her own colonial response to Indigenous cultures and the exploitative and romanticizing effect of her artwork.”

Sigh.

Even up at this exhibit, the artist is scolded for “romanticizing,” by painting vibrant and expressive landscapes.

I’d had enough. 

My trip to the Vancouver Art Gallery: 0 out of 5 stars.