Remember the Trucker Convoy in Ottawa, Canada, last year? It left Justin Trudeau a dictator, with "emergency powers" that he STILL has not given up. Now it comes out, in the form of reports from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), that Trudeau's government relied upon the word of a lying leftist group, the Canadian Anti-Hate Network (CAHN), about the character and intentions of a man named Jeremy MacKenzie and a right-wing group he founded, called Diagolon.
CAHN essentially did what the ADL sometimes does, which is assassinate the character somebody whose politics they don't like, using libel and slander, whispering rumor and convenient speculation into official ears, and generally posing as the sort of authority on what other people are about that they most certainly really are not, and thereby giving officialdom an excuse for the use of excessive force or for the seizure of powers that the country's constitution (or charter, in Canada's case) would ordinarily forbid.
CAHN's chairman is Bernie Farber, a former chief executive officer of the Canadian Jewish Congress and a social activist.
Richard Warman is a member of CAHN's board of directors. Although he probably isn't Jewish himself, Warman has written reports on alleged Internet hate in Canada for B'nai B'rith's Annual Audit of Antisemitic Incidents, and he received the Saul Hayes "Human Rights Award" from the Canadian Jewish Congress in June 2007. Jewish groups have been known to give similar awards to gangster bosses who donate (possibly stolen) money to them.
Everystein, Singleberg, Timeowitz.
RCMP doubted anti-hate group’s claims about Freedom Convoy