Report: Terrorist threat to Canada ‘has rarely been higher’
Jan 9, 2025 9:00 am
By Christine Douglass-Williams
6 Comments
While the Liberal Government of Canada focused on the alleged threat of “white nationalism” and allowed jihad threats to fester under cover, those jihad threats were proliferating without the public being properly informed, except for a terse reference in the news cycle here and there. The Trudeau government’s primary concern was to not come across as “Islamophobic.”
Since 2017, Canada’s Security Intelligence Service acknowledged that dozens of ISIS jihadis were walking free, yet authorities won’t charge them. Such news should have been on front pages everywhere. But Canada was focused on DEI. Groups such as the Anti-Hate Network (led by Bernie Farber) continued to bleed taxpayers of funds so as to drive their disturbing radical left agendas, even in schools, while targeting anyone as an “Islamophobe” who warned about Canada’s jihad problem. Now, thanks to the likes of the Anti-Hate Network and a CAIR offshoot, the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), which aggressively wielded the “Islamophobia” battering ram, the terrorist threat to Canada “has rarely been higher.”

“Terrorist threat to Canada ‘has rarely been higher,’ report says,” by Stewart Bell, Global News, January 8, 2025:
The terrorist threat in Canada “has rarely been higher,” according to a report released on Wednesday in the aftermath of the New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans.
“The bottom line: Terrorism in Canada is on the rise,” said the study, which found a “statistically significant” surge in terrorism charges between 2007 and 2024.
The number of charges is “an important indicator” of the threat, since terrorism arrests often stem from foiled attack plots, the Ottawa firm Insight Threat Intelligence wrote.
“Across the board, terrorism attacks and charges have increased in this country over the last 18 years.”
Most of the 73 charges during that period involved “religiously motivated” terrorists, specifically followers of “jihadist groups” like the Islamic State and al-Qaida.
“However, over the last four years, there has been an increase in diversity of motivation, with ideologically motivated individuals also being charged with terrorism offences,” it said…. |