Shabnam Assadollahi

Is Radical Inclusion Destroying Canada?

Almost ten years ago, I warned that Canada’s unchecked multiculturalism—driven by political wishful thinking and weak leadership—was setting us up for division, growing extremism, and serious risks to public safety. Back then, many dismissed these concerns. Today, the evidence is no longer deniable.

Justin Trudeau may have stepped aside, but his legacy marches on under Mark Carney and the same old Liberal machine. The faces may have changed, but the ideology hasn’t. Carney, like Trudeau, continues to push policies that erode national security and weaken our democracy—only now with a glossier tone and deeper entrenchment in globalist dogma.

Nowhere is this failure more visible than in the growing threat to Jewish Canadians. Antisemitic incidents have reached levels not seen in decades—vandalized synagogues, Jewish students being bullied and assaulted, threats of violence against entire communities. These are not isolated cases. They are part of a broader pattern: Canada is becoming unsafe for Jews.

In cities like Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal, families are quietly questioning whether they still have a future here. Is it safe to wear a kippah to school? Is it safe to walk to synagogue? Is it even safe to stay in the country? Some are beginning to look for answers outside our borders—not because they want to leave Canada, but because Canada is leaving them behind.

This is no longer just about rhetoric. It’s about safety. Real safety. We now have people living in this country who were radicalized abroad, raised on hatred, and welcomed into Canada under a multicultural policy that refuses to discriminate between those fleeing violence and those who carry it with them.

One recent case says it all. A man from Afghanistan, raised in Pakistan—both countries known for institutional antisemitism—was arrested in Ontario after threatening to massacre Jews in synagogues. Thankfully, police acted in time. But how many more are out there, hiding in plain sight, waiting to strike?

This should have sparked a national outcry. Instead, the Liberal government hides behind platitudes and hollow speeches about “inclusion” while continuing to promote a version of multiculturalism that refuses to acknowledge that not all belief systems are compatible with Canadian life. Some are openly hostile to it.

This isn’t compassion. It’s appeasement. And it’s making us all less safe.

Now, under Carney, this appeasement has gone global. His regime just handed Hamas a propaganda win. By blaming Israel for the humanitarian crisis caused by Hamas, and calling for “international control” of aid into Gaza, Carney is whitewashing terror and punishing the only democracy in the region.

Let’s be clear: Israel isn’t “blocking” aid—it’s trying to stop weapons from reaching a genocidal terror group. Canadian-funded aid is stuck because Hamas loots it or uses UN trucks to move rockets. Carney knows this. So does anyone paying attention.

Calling for “territorial integrity” of Gaza is a sick joke. Hamas doesn’t honor borders, ceasefires, or human life. Equating Israel’s right to self-defense with terrorism is not diplomacy—it’s moral bankruptcy.

Carney’s talk of a “two-state solution” rings hollow when he rewards terror, demonizes Israel, and ignores Palestinians who actually want peace but are silenced by threats and bullets. This isn’t leadership. It’s cowardice wrapped in globalist jargon.

And here at home, that same cowardice has made Canada a less safe place—not just for Jews, but for anyone who believes in law, order, freedom, and national identity.

We must stop pretending that every ideology deserves a place in Canada. We are not obligated to tolerate the intolerant. Diversity should never mean letting in ideas that celebrate violence, repress women, or teach hatred toward religious and ethnic minorities.

Multiculturalism must never become a backdoor for imported tyranny. But that’s exactly what it has become—a Trojan horse for hatred that’s already hurting the people who helped build this country.

If Jewish Canadians—peaceful, loyal, and deeply rooted in this nation—no longer feel safe here, this is no longer just their crisis. It’s Canada’s crisis.

There’s no virtue in policies that put our citizens in danger. No honor in diversity when it leads to division. And no justice in welcoming those who would destroy our freedoms the moment they arrive.

We must draw a firm line—not against people’s backgrounds or faiths, but against extremism, antisemitism, and the political cowardice that’s weakening our country from the inside.

This isn’t just about culture. It’s about survival.

If we don’t find the courage to defend what makes Canada free and safe, we may wake up one day to find it gone.

About the Author
Shabnam Assadollahi is a human rights advocate, freelance journalist and educator. As a teenager, she was imprisoned for eighteen months in Evin Prison for her activisim against the Islamic Republic. She later became a recognized voice on Canadian radio, hosting Radio Hamseda, Ottawa for eight years, where she amplified education, culture, and resistance to oppression. Her advocacy contributed directly to the closure of the Islamic Republic’s embassy in Canada in 2012—an important blow to the regime’s transnational repression network. She is the recipient of multiple human rights and women’s rights awards for her sustained efforts to expose abuses inside Iran and beyond its borders. Shabnam’s primary and heartfelt interest is to focus on the Iranian community and world events affecting women and minority communities.
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