Vote for Jagmeet, the guy who got molested
Back in 2019, Canada's Ultimate Identity Politician ran on a platform of being a victim
Hey Folks,
I’ve been thinking about writing this piece for a few years now.
The reason that I haven’t written it yet is because it might be too offensive, even for my readers.
But now that the NDP is about to get decimated in tomorrow’s election, this is probably my last chance. Within a month or two, Jagmeet Singh will have almost certainly permanently faded from relevance.
So, I’ve decided to go for it. This may be offensive, but what Jagmeet did back in 2019 was, in my opinion, far more offensive.
During the run-up to the 2019 election, Jagmeet Singh claimed to have been molested to get votes.
Jagmeet Singh was elected leader of the federal NDP in 2017, during the height of the #MeToo movement.
In April 2019, Jagmeet published a book called Love & Courage. It was obvious that it was strategically timed to come out before the next federal election, which ended up being held in October of that year.
When this book came out, every article about it focused on Singh’s revelation that he was sexually abused when he was 10 years old.
According to the National Post:
One of the memoir’s most disturbing scenes takes place when Singh was still a young child, after his taekwondo instructor, Reginald Neilson, invited him to his house for a “special program.” The sexual abuse that followed, Singh claims, continued on a weekly basis until he quit training. He didn’t speak about what had happened for years afterward, and describes blaming himself for the abuse. Neilson has since died.
Now, normally I would never make fun of someone for being abused as a child. But there is a little bit of a problem with Singh’s story - there is zero proof of his allegations. For all we know, he might well have made the whole thing up.
I have found one mention of a Windsor taekwondo coach named Reggie Neilson, so I assume that this guy probably existed. And maybe he did molest Jagmeet Singh when he was a kid. We’ll never know. According to the Toronto Star, Neilson died in 2006.
What I find so offensive about this whole story is that Jagmeet, who never did anything to bring this guy to justice, was gaming people’s sympathy towards survivors of sexual abuse in order to get votes. I don’t know about you, but I find that incredibly sleazy.
In Love and Courage, Jagmeet describes moving back to Windsor after university and discovering that the man who (allegedly) abused him was still coaching.
I opened the phone book to search for a new gym in Windsor. I flipped to the martial arts section. My finger ran down the listings in the yellow pages, past aikido, boxing, judo, and kickboxing. My finger stopped at muay thai. I continued reading the ad and stopped dead at the name of the instructor. There, staring back at me, was a name I knew from more than a decade earlier. That name was Mr. Reginald Neilson.
There’s no way it’s the same Mr. Neilson, I thought to myself. This is just a coincidence. There’s no way he’s still teaching. He may not even be alive anymore. I don’t know why, but I picked up the phone and started dialling the number listed. I didn’t have a plan in mind. I just dialled it. Someone answered and said “Hello?”
It was him. I slammed down the receiver. I felt a sickening sense of nausea as a decade of pent-up shame bubbled to the surface. Instantly, I was assaulted with memories, some of which were familiar and some that I had buried so deep that I’d almost forgotten them.
[…]
I slumped down into the kitchen chair, the weight of all these thoughts too much for me to bear. My next thoughts turned violent. I want revenge for what he did to me. I quickly shot that idea down. He was an old man—where would the honour be in that? Next, I thought about bringing him to justice. Maybe if I told someone, I could prevent him from abusing someone else. Sadly, I still didn’t have the courage to do that.
This is not the only time in Love and Courage that Singh owns up to a lack of courage. On the next page, he says:
I didn’t have the courage to bring Mr. Neilson to justice then, and I regret that. I recently learned that he apparently died years ago. Now I do have the will to share my story. I hope that other victims of abuse who read this will feel safer than I did to speak out about what happened to them.
Now, this may be very virtuous-sounding, but the last decade has taught us that a bunch of people making baseless claims about being victims doesn’t actually help victims. It encourages a culture where victimhood is conflated with virtue, and where people are rewarded with attention (and money) for spreading unsubstantiated rumours.
Even if Jagmeet was sexually abused as a child, that is not something that makes him qualified to lead a country. It sickens me that the NDP would play on people’s sympathies in such a sleazy way.
Jagmeet is the ultimate identity politician. Instead of coming up with actual policies, he ran on a platform of being of a victim.
This all makes sense when one realizes that he went through the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leader program. He can’t run on any meaningful platform, because he is nothing but a puppet for his globalist masters.
Thankfully, we’re probably about to see the last of him.
Crow Qu’appelle
I find it impossible to distinguish one genocidal, Ziofascist, self-serving sleezebag from another. Ergo, I haven't voted in 15 years.