By Bruce Pardy, first published by the National Post
Bill C-9 (the Combatting Hate Act) is a dangerous overreach on free speech, but it’s just the latest symptom of a much deeper, long-standing erosion of free expression in Canada, argues law professor Bruce Pardy.
True free speech, he says, isn’t about “reasonable” limits or social benefits—it’s an absolute individual right!
Prof. Pardy slams the Supreme Court’s view that speech is protected only when it serves democracy or truth-seeking—making it conditional, not fundamental. He calls out the Charter’s “reasonable limits” (Section 1) as doublespeak for managed rights in a managerial state.
Bottom line: If free speech is real, you can hate, joke, misgender, refuse pronouns, protest, or label your cereal in English only—without government approval.
Read Bruce Pardy’s commentary at the publisher’s website here.
Bruce Pardy is executive director of Rights Probe and professor of law at Queen’s University.
Contact us to book Bruce Pardy for an interview or appearance, or to subscribe to our newsletter: rightsprobe@protonmail.com.
