
This Absurd Canadian Court Ruling Shows Liberal Judges Care More About Deportation Than Canadian Victims
I cannot believe we are still having the same conversations week after week about an absurd Canadian court ruling that puts criminals ahead of victims and leaves ordinary Canadians wondering what happened to basic justice in this country. A man pleads guilty to sexual assault and receives house arrest plus probation while the judge worries more about possible deportation than about the woman he attacked.
This is the kind of decision that makes people lose faith in the entire system. It fits a growing pattern where Liberal-appointed judges seem determined to protect temporary residents who break the law instead of standing up for the people who built this country. Every time one of these rulings drops, the message to victims is clear: your safety comes second.
The details make it even harder to swallow. A 24-year-old security guard named Karandeep Singh admitted he forced himself on a woman after meeting her through her cousin. He took her to a basement suite instead of the planned bonfire and assaulted her. Police arrested him, and he spoke to them in Punjabi, calling it a mistake. Yet Justice Kevin Loo handed down 170 days of house arrest and less than two years of probation. The judge refused to add Singh to the national sex offender registry because it might affect his immigration status.
That single choice tells Canadians everything they need to know about priorities in 2026. A guilty man stays in the country, keeps working as a security guard, and faces almost no real consequences. The victim is left to pick up the pieces while the system bends over backwards to avoid any outcome that might send the perpetrator home. This absurd Canadian court ruling is not justice. It is an insult to every woman who expects the courts to take sexual assault seriously.
📹 Watch the Video That Sparked This Article
You can watch the full video that covers every one of these stories in detail right here:
The Highway U-Turn That Shows How Little Has Changed
Picture an ordinary Tuesday on the TransCanada. A driver decides that a hard U-turn at 90 kilometres an hour right in front of a mother towing a loaded horse trailer with two kids inside is a good idea. He jackknifes his rig trying to make the Summerside exit. She saves everyone with quick defensive driving while a stranger named Josh has to direct traffic for half an hour. Everyone involved sits there shaking and wondering how this keeps happening.
I keep asking the same question and never get a straight answer. How many more near-misses and jackknifed trucks do we need before someone in charge admits the system is broken? The mother in that trailer could have lost everything in a split second. Her kids could have been hurt or worse. Yet the conversation always seems to shift away from accountability and toward excuses. That is not how a serious country protects its people.

These incidents are not random bad luck. They are the predictable result of putting reckless Indian drivers behind the wheel of big rigs who treat Canadian roads like their personal racetrack. The same pattern shows up again and again. Families with children end up in danger because someone decides the rules do not apply to them. Then the rest of us pay the price in fear, in lost time, and in the slow erosion of confidence that our highways are even safe anymore.
When Brampton Violence Reaches Toronto Streets
Right after the shooting at the salsa festival, Toronto police had to deal with a man who stole a car and ran people over with it near Rebel Nightclub. The suspect, Omar Abdul Singateh, 25, from Brampton, faces multiple charges involving weapons, dangerous driving, and other Criminal Code violations. Several people went to the hospital with injuries that were not life-threatening. Police recovered a weapon from the vehicle.
The same man had already pleaded guilty in May to a violent home invasion in Montreal, where he and others tortured a victim until he handed over $15,000. He was free despite that record and now stands accused of new violence that put innocent people in the hospital. This is the revolving door that has become normal in too many Canadian cities. Serious charges, previous convictions, and still the system releases people back into the community with little more than a promise to show up in court.
Canadians are not stupid. They see the pattern. Certain communities keep producing disproportionate amounts of this kind of chaos while politicians and media pretend it is all just random crime. The victims do not care about political correctness. They care about getting home safely after a night out. When the same names and the same neighbourhoods keep appearing in these stories, people start asking hard questions about who we are letting in and who we are letting stay.
This Absurd Canadian Court Ruling Proves the System Protects Criminals First

The Singh case is not some outlier that happened in isolation. It is part of the same broken logic that produced the recent ruling I wrote about involving Kendal Longclaws. In both situations, the courts found creative ways to shield serious offenders from real consequences. One man avoids any trial because of communication issues. Another avoids the sex offender registry because of immigration concerns. The result is the same: dangerous people remain free while victims and communities pay the price.
Justice Kevin Loo heard that Singh had been in Canada since 2023, had no prior record in this country, was married, and worked as a security guard. None of that changes the fact that he pleaded guilty to forcing himself on a woman. Yet the judge still decided the registry listing would be disproportionate because it might lead to deportation. That reasoning turns the whole idea of consequences upside down. The punishment is softened specifically to help the offender stay in Canada after he committed a serious crime here.
I have to ask the obvious question. Why does Canada need more men like this walking around? Why does a Liberal-appointed judge believe protecting a temporary resident’s immigration status matters more than protecting Canadian women from sexual predators? These decisions do not happen in a vacuum. They send a message that certain groups receive special treatment while the rest of us are told to accept the risk. That is not fairness. That is the slow destruction of equal justice under the law.
This absurd Canadian court ruling fits the same pattern as the one I covered earlier this month. In both cases, the system invented reasons to let predators off the hook. In both cases, the victims are left with nothing while the perpetrators keep their freedom. Canadians deserve better than a justice system that treats sexual assault like a minor inconvenience that might affect someone’s immigration file.
Cultural Takeover Comes to Muskoka Lakes and Airport Sidewalks
Now we are watching another Canadian lake in Muskoka get turned into a stage for Hindu traditions imported straight from India. The people involved look proud of themselves as they perform rituals that have nothing to do with Canadian culture or Canadian waters. The question writes itself. How long until our lakes start resembling the polluted Ganges instead of the clean, quiet places generations of Canadians grew up enjoying?
This is not a harmless cultural exchange. It is the steady replacement of Canadian norms with whatever newcomers decide to bring with them. The same thing shows up in smaller ways that still matter. Videos of Punjabi Indians stumbling around moving sidewalks at airports or malls keep circulating because the basic infrastructure of a modern country confuses them. They act as if they have never seen these things before. The clips are funny for about ten seconds until you realize what they actually represent.
People who cannot navigate a moving sidewalk without help are not demonstrating the skills or the mindset needed to contribute to a high-trust, high-functioning society. They are showing that assimilation was never the plan. They came to recreate the conditions they left behind, and too many politicians encourage exactly that. Every time another lake gets claimed for imported rituals or another basic Canadian convenience becomes a source of confusion, the country shrinks a little more for the people who actually built it.
The Empty Chair in Washington Exposes Carney’s Priorities

Canada left its seat completely vacant during a three-day U.S. tariff hearing in Washington that directly affects our economy. The Trump administration is considering Section 301 tariffs tied to forced labour claims that target Canadian auto plants, steel mills, and other key industries. Mexico sent its economy minister to fight for its side. Peru sent a minister. Canada sent nobody at all.
Mark Carney apparently decided our interests were not worth defending in person. While American officials heard complaints from rivals trying to slap extra duties on Canadian goods, the chair representing this country remained empty. That is not diplomacy. That is surrender dressed up as strategy. The same man who promised the best deal with Trump cannot even be bothered to show up when the fight actually starts.
Canadians are supposed to believe Carney is some kind of economic genius. Yet the evidence keeps piling up that he treats the country’s core industries as afterthoughts. When the United States moves to protect its market and punish countries it accuses of benefiting from forced labour, the Canadian response is silence and an empty chair. That tells every trading partner and every Canadian worker exactly how much this government values our economic sovereignty.
Chinese EVs Arrive and Prove the Liberals Never Took Us Seriously

Remember when the Liberals spent months pushing the idea of cheap Chinese-made electric vehicles flooding into Canada? The first ones showed up with starting prices around $119,000, and fully loaded models hitting $159,000. A new SUV built right here in Canada by Canadian workers costs roughly half that amount without the security risks or the hollowing out of our own industrial base.
The whole pitch was a lie from the start. Canadians were told these imports would make green technology affordable. Instead, they got luxury pricing on vehicles that still carry serious concerns about data security and supply chain ethics. Meanwhile, the domestic industry that actually employs Canadians and pays Canadian taxes gets ignored or undermined. This is what happens when ideology drives policy instead of common sense and national interest.
The June Jobs Report Is Another Carney Illusion

Mark Carney wants Canadians to celebrate the June jobs report because it showed 18,000 new positions. Look closer, and the picture collapses. Most of those jobs are temporary summer positions in food and hospitality. The sectors that actually build the country and put food on tables are losing workers in big numbers. Manufacturing shed 16,800 jobs. Construction lost 12,900. Agriculture dropped 7,600. Utilities fell by 7,300.
How exactly does Carney expect food and housing prices to come down when the country is losing farmers and builders at this rate? The beginning of summer is the critical window for both those industries. Instead of real growth, we get seasonal noise and media allies who refuse to tell the full story. The official numbers hide the bleeding in the parts of the economy that matter most for long-term prosperity.
Canadians Are Tired of Feeling Helpless
A lot of people have reached the point where they feel nothing can be done. They see corruption, they see two-tier justice, they see their kids facing worse prospects than they did, and they shut down because the scale of the problem feels overwhelming. That reaction is understandable. It is also exactly what the people in charge are counting on. If enough Canadians stay quiet and pretend things are fine, the decline continues without resistance.
The media carries water for the Liberals every single day. They hold Pierre Poilievre to endless scrutiny while giving Mark Carney a pass on the worst GDP growth of any prime minister since 1963. They downplay the revolving door in the courts and the chaos on the highways. They act like noticing demographic change and its consequences makes someone extreme. None of that changes the reality on the ground.
One Inch at a Time Is Still How Wars Are Won
The choice in front of us is the same one that has faced every generation that cared about the country they were leaving behind. You can give up, pack up, and watch manufacturing businesses keep leaving while 2 million jobs disappear with them. Or you can fight back in every small way available. Share the facts. Call out the absurd court rulings. Demand that temporary residents who commit serious crimes face real consequences, including deportation. Push back against the empty chair foreign policy that leaves Canadian workers exposed.
Taking a break for your own mental health does not mean quitting. It means coming back stronger. The people who feel hopeless are not wrong about the scale of the problem. They are only wrong if they decide the problem is too big to touch. Every time another absurd Canadian court ruling drops, every time another family gets put at risk on the highway, every time another industry bleeds jobs, the case for fighting grows stronger. One inch at a time still adds up to real ground gained.
The Canada your kids deserve does not look like the one being built right now. It does not feature judges more worried about deportation than about sexual assault victims. It does not feature empty chairs when our economy is under attack. It does not feature cultural replacement sold as enrichment while basic safety erodes. That version of Canada only wins if the rest of us stay silent. I am not staying silent. Neither should you.
❓FAQ
What sentence did Karandeep Singh receive for sexual assault?
Singh pleaded guilty and received 170 days of house arrest followed by 18 months of probation. He was not ordered to serve any jail time.
Why was Singh not placed on the sex offender registry?
Justice Kevin Loo decided that adding him to the registry would have a disproportionate impact on his immigration status and could lead to deportation.
How does this ruling compare to the recent Longclaws decision?
Both cases show courts creating loopholes that protect serious offenders from full consequences. One used communication barriers; the other used immigration concerns. The result in each case leaves victims without real justice.
What did the June jobs report actually show under Mark Carney?
Official figures claimed 18,000 new jobs, but most were temporary summer positions in food and hospitality. Core industries like manufacturing, construction, and agriculture lost thousands of positions.
What can Canadians do about these repeated failures in the courts and economy?
Share facts, support accountability, demand deportation for serious crimes by temporary residents, and refuse to accept empty-chair diplomacy or phony job numbers. Small consistent actions still add up to real pressure for change.





Leave a Reply