1. A few questions for Grok that may give an idea about what Rule of Law was replaced with in Canada:
Q: How many Church fires were there in Canada from 2020 to 2025?
A:
Here’s the clearest answer for 2020 to end of 2025:Churches completely destroyed or rendered unusable by fire (2020–2025)Best documented total: Approximately 45–55 churches.
BreakdownPre-wave (2020 to May 2021): Around 14 churches destroyed by fire (baseline level).
en.wikipedia.org
May 2021 – December 2023 (peak residential school announcement wave): 33 churches completely burned to the ground (CBC investigation). Of these, 24 confirmed arsons, 5 suspected arsons, and only 2 accidental.
cbc.ca
2024–2025: Additional low double-digit complete destructions (roughly 8–15 more reported major incidents that left churches unusable), with arsons continuing at nearly double the historical baseline.
macdonaldlaurier.ca
Overall from 2020 to end-2025: The total number of churches that burned to the point of being unusable is in the mid-to-high 40s to low-to-mid 50s.Important NotesThese are complete or near-total losses (not minor fires or vandalism).
Broader figures you may see (100–123+) include all incidents: fires + serious vandalism + desecrations (Juno News, CCRL, etc.).junonews.com
Total arsons (not just complete destruction) at religious institutions (mostly churches) were much higher — hundreds across the period — but many did not fully destroy the building.
macdonaldlaurier.ca
The wave started sharply after the May 2021 Kamloops announcement and has slowed but remains elevated through 2025.
Q: How many Mosque fires for that same period in Canada?
A:
Mosque fires in Canada from 2020 to end of 2025 were extremely rare compared to the wave of church fires.Clear SummaryTotal mosques completely destroyed or rendered unusable by fire (2020–2025): Very low — likely 0 to 2 documented cases of total destruction.
macdonaldlaurier.ca
There were occasional suspicious fires, arson attempts, or partial damage at mosques, but nothing approaching the scale seen with churches. Most incidents were investigated as isolated arsons (sometimes unrelated to hate) or remained unsolved with low media coverage.Context from Reliable SourcesStatistics Canada and Macdonald-Laurier Institute reports on arsons at “religious institutions” (which include mosques, synagogues, temples, etc.) do not break out mosques separately in a way that shows a surge. The big increase in arsons since 2021 was overwhelmingly concentrated on Christian churches (especially Catholic ones linked to residential school issues).
macdonaldlaurier.ca
Broader “places of worship” arson totals (592 from 2010–2022) include all religions, but the post-2021 spike was driven by churches.
nationalpost.com
Individual incidents (e.g., a Toronto mosque fire investigated as arson but not classified as a hate crime, or older cases) exist, but there was no national wave of mosque destructions.Bottom line comparison (2020–2025):Churches destroyed/unusable by fire: ~45–55
Mosques destroyed/unusable by fire: Near zero (low single digits at most for any fire damage)
Q: How many arrests/Convictions for the Church fires?
Very low numbers of arrests and convictions for the Canadian church fires (especially the post-2021 wave).Summary (2021–2025)Arrests/Charges: Around 50–60 people charged across hundreds of arson incidents at religious institutions (mostly churches).
macdonaldlaurier.ca
Convictions: Very few — likely fewer than 10 confirmed convictions for the major church arsons in this period. Many cases remain unsolved or result in plea deals with reduced charges.
en.wikipedia.org
Detailed Breakdown2021–2023 (peak period, ~33 churches completely destroyed, 24 confirmed arsons):Only 9 arrests directly linked to the 33 major fires (CBC investigation).
As of early 2024: 12 people charged total in relation to the arsons.
Convictions: 1–2 (e.g., one youth in Alberta for the Kehewin Cree church fire; a few others unrelated or mental health cases).
cbc.ca
2021–2024 broader data (Macdonald-Laurier Institute / Statistics Canada, covering 306 arsons at religious institutions):53 resulted in charges.
Overall clearance rate (charges + other resolutions): ~21%.
This is still very low compared to general arson clearance rates.
macdonaldlaurier.ca
2024–2025: A handful of additional charges (e.g., 3 people charged in Alberta in Sept 2025 for one church burning), but the solve rate remains poor.Overall picture: Out of dozens of completely destroyed churches and hundreds of total incidents (fires + vandalism), the vast majority (over 95–96% in the early years) have no arrests. Motives are rarely clearly established even when charges are laid.
macdonaldlaurier.caThe low prosecution rate has been widely criticized as a major issue. Let me know if you want details on specific cases or a province-by-province breakdown.
Q: How many arrests/Convictions for Mosque fires?
For mosque fires/arsons in Canada (2020–2025), the numbers of arrests and convictions are extremely low — consistent with the very small number of actual mosque fires during this period.SummaryArrests/Charges: Very few — likely fewer than 5–10 total charges linked specifically to mosque arsons or fires across the entire 6-year period.
Convictions: Extremely rare — probably 1–3 confirmed convictions (most pre-2020 or minor cases). Many incidents were either not classified as hate-motivated, remained unsolved, or resulted in no charges.ContextUnlike the wave of church arsons (hundreds of incidents, dozens of charges, but still low solve rate), mosque fires were isolated and infrequent.
When fires or arson attempts at mosques did occur, police often investigated them as general arson rather than hate crimes. Solve rates for arsons at places of worship overall are low (~21% clearance rate nationally).
High-profile older cases (e.g., the 2017 Hamilton mosque arson attempt) had convictions, but in the 2020–2025 window, documented arrests for mosque-specific arsons are scarce in public reporting.Bottom line comparison (2020–2025):Church arsons ? Dozens of charges, very few convictions.
Mosque arsons ? Almost no charges or convictions, because the incidents themselves were far fewer.The data is sparse because the baseline number of mosque fires was so low.
Q: How many charges for arson against Churches were considered a “hate crime”?
No — very few (and likely none) of the arson charges related to Canadian church fires were formally laid or prosecuted as hate crimes.Key Facts from Investigations
- Macdonald-Laurier Institute report (2025): Explicitly states that none of the church arsons investigated up to that point had been classified as hate crimes in official statistics.
- CBC investigation (2024): Out of 24 confirmed arsons (2021–2023), only 12 people were charged total. In the cases where charges were laid, no clear hate motive was established in the majority, and none appear to have included hate crime enhancements.
- Notable examples:
- The only early conviction (a youth in Alberta for the Kehewin Cree church fire) was for straight arson — not hate crime.
- The Surrey, B.C. church arson conviction (woman sentenced in 2022) had no evidence presented that it was a hate crime.
- Many perpetrators in charged cases were from Indigenous communities where the churches were located, which made hate-crime classification (targeting based on religion) more complicated.
Why So Few Hate Crime Charges?
- Canadian hate crime provisions require clear evidence that the offence was motivated by bias, prejudice, or hate based on religion (or other protected characteristics).
- In many church fire cases, motives were described as anger over residential school issues, general vandalism, mental health, or unclear — rather than explicit anti-Christian hatred.
- Police and prosecutors have been reluctant to pursue the hate crime enhancement, even when politicians (e.g., Alberta Premier Jason Kenney in 2021) publicly called some incidents “hate crimes.”
Bottom line: While many people (including politicians and victims) described these arsons as hate-motivated, the criminal charges themselves were almost always just for arson, not hate crimes. This has been a point of significant criticism from groups tracking the incidents.
Fascinating. As Spock used to say.
Although I asked for numbers in Canada, clearly these policies of burning Churches and negating Christianity as well as importing and establishing Islam is a Communist/Globalist policy. You can assume the same things apply wherever you live. In Africa of course, they dont just burn the church. They are murdering the Congregation in numbers, and often taking the women as sex slaves. The REALITY of the world situation is in fact, too awful to allow oneself to believe from a comfortable apartment in Toronto or New York. Although I suspect both places will get a more direct experience of these kinds of understandings in the foreseeable future.
2. A video on France.
3. The following video seems off topic. But at a certain level, everything becomes a data point to a thesis on the philosophical equivalent of the Physics, Theory of Everything,
We did a little thing on how the Rolling Stone downgraded Eric Clapton’s ranking a couple of days ago, from their point of view, because he talked down the mRNA shots. In other words, a low level cancellation of him, the way the left cancels or otherwise tries to hurt ANYONE who is counter narrative.
Below is another example from the arts, this time from the New York Times. What is interesting to us is the perfect example of the dialectical term, “diversity”. Here you have several people who have different looks and sexuality, but are philosophically in perfect mono-culture, explaining who is and is not a good song writer and why.
Diversity is used as a way of destroying diversity in exactly the same way that the Human Rights Commission is an organ to destroy individual, or real human rights in favour of state narratives (research Jonathan Yaniv for quite enough evidence of that) and Health Canada advises doctors to offer death to more and more Canadian patients and for wider and more trivial reasons.
4. Lots of news of course about the Hanta Virus outbreak. No point in amplifying any of the specific narrative timeline points really. Search X for the subject and there will be lots there to keep people guessing, sniping and arguing over the issue. The only question of consequence from our PoV is, Is this an active measure, (almost certainly yes) and how will this narrative take form and perhaps most importantly, what freedoms will we lose as a consequence?
5. While we listen to state narratives about colonialism, white supremacy and so on, it’s fun to look at how the media manages to ignore the massive massive number of polls and interviews that reflect the Islamic view of how the West must be operated.
Thank you all for checking out this site.
I will do a post a little later on the situation with this site to the best of my understanding.
But for the moment, European readers are well advised to get and use a VPN. They should find one that doesn’t log, and they should find a way to pay for it as discreetly as possible because the COMINTERN EU/Oz will very likely make using a VPN illegal. That would probably be the best indicator so far that they have moved from a covert communist revolution to an overt one actually.
Using a VPN won’t necessarily solve all the problems of accessing this site. But it will make it at least possible. Many European IPs ban this site at state request. A VPN will solve that issue. And if you believe you have the right to hear and see opinions other than state sanctioned ones, for the moment a VPN will give you back that right.
Once upon a time, the US navy created a browser called TOR, which is still functioning. Its purpose is to allow people access to sites the state forbade. Like in North Korea for instance. This is free.
Grok offers the following:
Yes, Tor Browser is still very much alive and actively maintained in 2026.Quick Answers to Your Questions:
- Does the Tor Browser still exist?
Yes. The latest stable version is Tor Browser 15.0.10 (released April 2026). You can download it from the official site: https://www.torproject.org/download/ - Is it effectively a VPN?
No. Tor is not a VPN.- A VPN routes your traffic through one server (usually owned by the VPN company) and encrypts it.
- Tor routes your traffic through multiple volunteer-run relays (usually 3) in a layered “onion” fashion.
Tor is designed primarily for anonymity, while a VPN is designed primarily for privacy + speed.
- Can it be used technically speaking by Europeans?
Yes, it is completely legal in all European Union countries, the UK, and most of Europe.
Using Tor Browser itself is legal. What you do while using it can be illegal (just like with a regular browser).
Summary:
- Tor Browser is alive and well.
- It is stronger for anonymity than most VPNs, but slower and not suitable for streaming or high-speed tasks.
- It is perfectly legal for Europeans to use.
Yes, Tor Browser is very effective at bypassing ISP blocks that are requested or enforced by the state/government.How well it works:
- Standard ISP blocks (DNS blocking, IP blocking, etc.): Tor usually bypasses them very well.
- It works by routing your traffic through multiple relays in different countries, so your ISP (and the state) cannot easily see which website you’re actually visiting.
- This is one of the main reasons Tor exists — to defeat censorship.
However a VPN is the right choice if you plan to break geoblocking, such as watching a news clip only available in some location or other. If you use for example, AIR VPN, which is a reliable VPN that doesn’t log, then you can easily pick your proxy server to get around a geoblock and instruct the internet to see you as wherever you say you are.
AIR VPN is a little finicky to set up but most people can do it if they breathe deeply and do one step at a time thinking about what they see. Use Eddie client for easiest list of servers and locations to use. Pick the Wireguard option if you are a little more tech savvy. Wireguard is a little more stable as a connection.
I had written a lot more about this earlier, but this site is not working well for me either, and each time I try and save or publish, it vanishes. The word, frustration doesn’t cover it.
We are working on a solution now.
#5 How could this still surprise anybody? Honor killings are so common now in the west that they barely make the news.