I thought that Canada wasn't an extension of the Crown or some European fish market.
Do we have to have Louise Arbour sponging off of us?:
Arbour spent five years on the Supreme Court during the tenure of chief justice Beverly McLachlin, who helped author many of the most disruptive and consequential Supreme Court decisions of the modern era. Race-based sentencing, low-barrier MAID, the catch-and-release bail regime; it all ultimately originates with a decision out of the McLachlin court.
So it’s notable that Arbour’s most memorable contribution during her time as a Supreme Court judge was a dissent arguing that the McLachlin court wasn’t being activist enough.
The case was Gosselin v Quebec, which surrounded a Quebec law that made welfare benefits less generous for residents under 30 as an incentive to encourage younger Quebecers to get a job.
The majority decision, written by McLachlin, rejected the notion that the law was a violation of the Charter right to “equal benefit of the law without discrimination.”
Arbour didn’t just disagree with this, but authored a dissent arguing that welfare was a “positive right” guaranteed under the Charter of Rights of Freedoms. By not paying full freight on welfare benefits to 20-somethings, Quebec had “interfered with their fundamental right to security of the person and perhaps even their right to life,” she wrote. ...
After a series of sexual harassment scandals hit the Canadian Armed Forces in the 2010s, Arbour was picked to head up a review recommending reform.
The resulting Arbour Report, published in 2022, spoke of a culture of “toxic masculinity” within the military, and would find fault in the fact that service members were predominantly composed of white men.
“Members of Indigenous and black communities, and other visible minorities and equity-seeking groups, have been largely absent, clearly not welcome,” reads the report’s opening paragraph.
Arbour would expound on this in press interviews, telling Macleans in 2022 that what the military needed was an injection of “diversity” similar to the identity-based quotas being pursued by universities.
“If you just recruit white boys who like guns but don’t like women or anybody who doesn’t look like them, you’ll perpetuate that culture,” she said.
And indeed, one of the Arbour Report’s recommendations was to start leaning into identity quotas. “The CAF should establish a system of progressive targets for the promotion of women in order to increase the number of women in each rank,” reads recommendation number 36. ...
(Sidebar: what can go wrong?)
And Arbour has very much been on the pro-migration side of things. So much so, that when in 2016 the Toronto-based Munk Debates needed someone to defend the position that Western countries should admit far more asylum seekers, they called Arbour. Among her arguments was that migration surges would indeed alter Canadian culture, but that this was a good thing. The next generation of Canadians would develop their “own culture, fully open to that of others.”
In 2018, Arbour was serving as UN Special Representative for International Migration when she gave an interview to France24 saying it was only “mythologies, stereotypes, negative attitudes” that were driving Europeans to oppose migration increases.
“The Western world is going to face demographic deficits that are such that Europeans, North Americans will not be able to maintain their standard of living unless they can import part of their workforce at all skill levels,” she said. ...
Between 2004 and 2008, Arbour was UN High Commissioner of Human Rights. The office is notorious for obsessively critiquing every perceived sleight made by Israel, while ignoring or obfuscating the actions of Israel’s enemies, be they Hamas, Hezbollah or Iran.
Arbour was not an exception to this dynamic. She had hinted publicly that Israel was guilty of “war crimes” in its 2006 Lebanon War, while simultaneously dismissing the Hezbollah rockets fired indiscriminately into Israeli territory because they rarely killed anybody.
Her tenure would also see her laud an Arab human rights charter that described Zionism as “racism” (she recanted when that part was shown to her).
When a Danish newspaper was assailed with death threats after publishing cartoons depicting the prophet Mohammed in 2005, Arbour came out against the paper, saying, “I find alarming any behaviours that disregard the beliefs of others.”
**
Canada's new Governor General, Louise Arbour, views soldiers as,
— Matt Alexander (@RealMattA_) May 5, 2026
"White boys who like guns, but don't like women..."
She worked fro the pro-mass migration UNHCR.
The UNHCR is also pro SOGI.
She's another brick in the wall of the globalist agenda.
LOST FREEDOM FILES # 5111 https://t.co/RnO3tyQtxh pic.twitter.com/wvdm3MtmB6
Do we really need her?

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