📹 Watch the Video That Sparked This Article
Canada Two-Tier Justice System on Full Display
Canada two-tier justice system is the only way to describe the chaos I’m watching unfold in this country, and this video is more proof that the people running Canada have completely lost the plot.
I walked into this story and felt the bile rise. Canada, a country that prides itself on fairness, equality, and “progress,” is showing its true face. Welcome to what I call my take on the Canada two-tier justice system, where some walk free on bail, some are silenced for wearing a poppy, and entire flocks of ostriches get gunned down while the “science” stands aside.
Let’s be blunt: eight men were charged for trying to buy sexual services from a minor in London, Ontario. Yet a judge set them free on bail. Their names: Sukwan Singh (22), Sed Bal Sedat (31), Jarnell Singh (34), Sammy Til (27), Mojit Deshbai Kanani (31), Pujan Route (31), Ibrahim Abdal Malle (27), Omar Atar (26). According to the transcript, they were released. In a sane society, this would provoke outrage. In ours? A shrug.
And if that wasn’t enough, we’ve got judges banning poppies in courtrooms, universities redefining science, and the federal agency Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) killing 300-plus ostriches without bothering to test properly.
This isn’t progress. This is a system stacked for insiders. Welcome to the Canada two-tier justice system.
Bail for eight men, bail for what?
In one corner, we have sexual-exploitation charges. Men accused of preying on a minor. Yet the system says, “Have a seat, you’re out on bail.” I quote from the video:
“Eight men were charged … they were trying to get sexual services from a child. … And the judge set them free on bail.”
Why? Because apparently our justice system is like an airport lounge: some people get expedited through, others get stuck in the holding pen. If I’m a Canadian-born citizen, the rules seem much stricter. If I’m an immigrant or foreign-born, maybe I get a gentler set of conditions. It’s not just unfair, it’s outrageous.
Compare this to the new legislation the federal government has introduced under the Bail and Sentencing Reform Act: over 80 clauses aimed at making bail harder to get, especially for repeat and violent offences. Canada So on paper, the system says “tighten bail.” In reality, these eight men walk free. Something’s rotten.
When Canadians see this, they don’t feel safe. They feel cheated. When accused predators walk free while law-abiding people live under the weight of bail conditions or courts that reject them, you’ve got a system that works for them, not us.
Poppies banned in courtrooms: respect or control?

Then we get to the jaw-dropper. Two judges in Nova Scotia allegedly banned staff at the Kentville Justice Centre from wearing poppies in courtrooms. Poppies, symbols of remembrance and sacrifice.
“Judges Ronda Vanderhook and Gene DeWolf reportedly prohibited court staff from wearing poppies … Premier … Tim Houston may enact a law to protect the right to wear poppies…”
If courts ban remembrance, what are they allowing? Why is a symbol of honour treated like a political threat? In my mind, banning poppies is a power move disguised as neutrality. It says: We decide what you may wear, what you may honour, what you may feel. That’s not justice. That’s arrogance.
If you’re a Canadian veteran or someone who cares about Canadian values, this should light a fire in you. When the justice system suppresses a symbol rather than protects it, you know it’s lost track of whose system it is.
Universities, “science,” and fairness: the war on ordinary Canadians
Then there’s the prof at Sheridan College who shamed commenters as racist because they called out foreign-student quotas and white-male exclusion. According to the transcript:
“One user stated their niece with a 90.5% grade 12 average was denied admission … The reason they said was they need to reserve so many spaces for foreign students. … Another user mentions how white males are deliberately excluded from career choices and employment.”
This is more than awkward. It’s proof that the system is skewed. Education is supposed to level the playing field. Instead, when Canadians with stellar grades watch spots being filled for others, no disclosure, no transparency, they see the two-tier system again: some get opportunities because they’re insiders; others pay walls.
And when the teacher labels the critical voice “racist” rather than answer the questions, you know the system isn’t listening to its citizens. It’s lecturing them.
Ostriches shot dead while Canadians ask “why?”
This one should stun you. The CFIA completed its operations at the ostrich farm in Edgewood, B.C., 314 birds out. Canada
“Ostrich cull complete at B.C. farm, flock of birds shot dead, CFIA says.” Global News
No proof that the birds were infected. Just kill them. Dispose of them. Deep burial in a landfill. CityNews Vancouver
What message does this send? If the federal agency can kill a huge flock of animals without solid proof, what can the courts do to citizens when they decide they don’t like you? If we can normalize this, what’s the limit?
And the minister, Shawn Fraser, says it’s “following the science and evidence.” But where’s the evidence? Where’s the test data? None was publicly shown. So science becomes a slogan. And when slogans replace substance, that’s a system that protects officials, not people.
The system is built for insiders
Pulling these threads together, what do I see? A justice system that says:
- If you’re accused of sexual wrongdoing and maybe you’re an immigrant, you might walk free on bail.
- If you honour Canadian sacrifice (wear a poppy), you might be told you can’t.
- If you call out institutional bias in education, you might be labelled racist rather than heard.
- If you’re a flock of ostriches without a Canadian voice, you might be shot.
In every case, it’s the citizen who pays. It’s the Canadian who gets told: trust the system. The insiders? They rarely face the full weight. That’s the Canada two-tier justice system. I’m calling it out.
Why it matters to Canadians
Let’s bring this home. This is about your street, your home, your kid.
- If sexual predators walk free, you or your child could be the next victim.
- If institutions suppress symbols or voices you hold dear, your values are under siege.
- If government agencies act without transparency, your rights are eroding.
When ordinary Canadians are treated as second-class in their own country, anger is not just justified, it’s required. Behind this veil, there’s a system rigged in favour of those with connections, background, or privilege. And Canadians without those get the leftovers.
What I’m asking you to do
Don’t sit there. It’s time to act.
- Share this article. Let people see the truth.
- Comment everywhere: on social media, forums, and school boards. Don’t let the charges of “racist” or “intolerant” silence you.
- Support legal challenges: push for transparency in bail decisions, poppy bans, and university quotas.
- Hold your representatives accountable: whether it’s the minister, your local MLA, or judges. Demand they answer why these things are happening.
The only way we fix this is to drag the truth into the daylight. Because the media won’t. And the system certainly won’t voluntarily change.
Final word
We live in a society where eight men can attempt exploitation of a minor and walk free on bail. Where remembrance poppies get banned by judges. Where universities reshape admission based on quotas, and where federal agencies can slaughter 300+ birds without meaningful test results.
That is the grand picture of the Canada two-tier justice system. I’m not exaggerating. I’m exposing. And I won’t stop until Canadians demand a system that truly works for everyone, including them.
Cheers!
Internal Linking Suggestions:
- Link to Ottawa school sparks outrage on Remembrance Day
- Link to Indian immigrants Canada’s surprise guests
FAQ
Q1: What is meant by the “Canada two-tier justice system”?
A1: It refers to the idea that Canada’s justice institutions apply different rules depending on who’s before the court: insiders or foreigners may receive lighter treatment while Canadian-born citizens and ordinary folks face harsher outcomes.
Q2: Why are bail laws a key part of this system?
A2: Because bail decisions reflect how seriously the system treats an accused. When eight men charged with sexual offences against a minor are released, it signals that bail thresholds differ in practice. Also, the federal government introduced reforms to tighten bail laws. Canada
Q3: How does the poppy ban fit into this discussion?
A3: The ban of remembrance poppies in courtrooms shows that the system is willing to suppress Canadian symbols of sacrifice, suggesting the justice system guards its own rules rather than Canadian values.
Q4: What about the ostrich cull? How does that relate?
A4: The CFIA’s decision to shoot hundreds of ostriches without transparent testing exemplifies how powerful agencies can act unilaterally, highlighting a system where ordinary Canadians get less protection and oversight. CityNews Vancouver
Q5: What can Canadians do about it?
A5: Share the facts, demand accountability from your representatives, push for transparency in bail cases, courtroom rules, and government agency actions, and refuse to accept unequal treatment as the norm.







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