Montréal Contre-information
Montréal Contre-information
Montréal Contre-information

White supremacist plaque removed in Montreal

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Aug 212017
 

Anonymous submission to MTL Counter-info

Inspired by the popular removal of racist monuments across North America in the wake of Charlottesville, and in solidarity with the anti-racists confronting the white supremicist group La Meute in Quebec City today, community members removed and destroyed a Heritage Canada plaque celebrating colonial genocide early this morning in Montreal. They replaced it with a notice commemorating the people killed on the site and honouring resistance to colonialism and to white supremacy. There are many similar monuments in Montreal, just waiting to be taken down …

Soldiers of Odin – Québec : members and demonstrators

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Aug 182017
 

Members:

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Demonstrations:

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Group photos:

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Atalante: members

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Aug 182017
 

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La Meute: members and demonstrators

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Aug 182017
 

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Demonstrations:

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Transphobic, far-right, anti-Muslim “Students in Support of Free Speech” have disastrous evening in Montreal

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Jul 302017
 

The transphobic, far-right, anti-Muslim Students in Support of Free Speech (SSFS) group from Toronto had a disastrous evening today in Montreal. Their planned recruitment event, a Montreal Pub Night, never happened. Instead, the Toronto SSFS President, Mari Jang, and the wannabe Montreal President, Oliver Marshall, spent several hours in a downtown police station filing a police report regarding their cancelled event. There were no arrests or injuries.

Just hours before their scheduled pub night, SSFS had to move their event away from Grumpy’s Bar because the staff and management at Grumpy’s, a Concordia lefty hangout, clearly indicated to SSFS that they were not welcome (instead, Grumpy’s organized their annual fundraiser in support of community group Head and Hands Sex Ed For Youth Project, which is queer and trans inclusive).

Provided with no platform at Grumpy’s, SSFS announced a last-minute move to Trois Brasseurs just a block away. More than an hour before any SSFS individuals or sympathizers arrived, their reserved table was occupied by Montreal-area anti-racists. In all, at least 60 anti-racists mobilized both inside and outside Trois Brasseurs, to make sure there would not be a platform for transphobia or Islamophobia in Montreal. Inside, during the evening, only about 4 individuals tried to attend the SSFS event. They were engaged in discussion and, in at least one case, an individual, when informed about the SSFS’s transphobic and racist affiliations, disassociated with the event and left.

Meanwhile, Oliver Marshall and Mari Jang never attended their co-organized event. Instead, Oliver Marshall was seemingly chased away from the vicinity of Trois Brasseurs, and he spent the evening in the police station, accompanied by Mari Jang and her partner. The police did not seem to be taking the frivolous complaint seriously and, in Mari Jang’s own words, there was an “almost assault.”

The flyer passed out to explain the action today by local anti-racists is included in full below, as well as links providing background to SSFS and their support for transphobic, Islamophobic, far-right views.

This is a personal report from one observer and participant in today’s anti-racist action.

No Platform for Transphobia or Islamophobia in Montreal!

Students in Support of Free Speech (SSFS) is a Toronto group that since its start has supported a far-right political discourse. We are part of a group of Grumpy’s regulars, Concordia students, and others who object to the presence of Islamophobic, racist, and other far right groups.

SSFS claims to be apolitical and solely about freedom of expression but they have only platformed far right individuals and organizations. The SSFS supported the Halifax Proud Boys who disrupted an Indigenous ceremony. The SSFS supported professor Jordan Peterson after he openly mocked trans students.

SSFS are an attempt to mainstream the hate spouted by others by packaging far right discourse into a more palatable form. Their rallies attract violent provocateurs across the rightwing spectrum such as white supremacist and neo-Nazi Paul Fromm who spoke at their rally in Toronto on July 15th.

We are here to assert our freedom of speech to say the SSFS is not welcome in Montreal. We are here to say hate is not welcome in our spaces. We denounce the SSFS as a far right group that provides a platform for transphobia, Islamophobia, and racism. We encourage you to support Grumpy’s and their fundraiser for Head & Hands!

Background Info:
Info about the racist Proud Boys disruption in Halifax
Info about the Students in Support of Free Speech Rally in Toronto for Halifax Proud Boys
Info about transphobe Jordan Peterson, openly supported by Students in Support of Free Speech
The Warning Signs of Fascism on Campus; using “free speech” as a cover for extremism

Islamophobic Panic Surrounding “Safarigate”: A Fake Scandal Made Up by Notorious Racists!

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Jul 062017
 

From Montreal-antifasciste.info

The media has begun commenting on a short racist youtube video, shot at Parc Safari (a zoo 45 minutes outside of Montreal) on July 2nd[i]. The video, seemingly shot by a woman who just happened to be innocently visiting the zoo that day, is in fact not easy to make out – one sees a crowd of people milling around of the grass, a woman in a headscarf walking by, and one hears something difficult to make out coming through a sound system. Nothing in fact out of the ordinary to anyone who spends any amount of time out in public in most big cities in North America.

Nonetheless, this anodyne 47 second video clip (linked to by several media websites now) has apparently provoked a storm of controversy, as it shows Muslims praying in public, and not only that but saying their prayers through a sound system. The number of angry complaints and demands for clarification, elicited an official response from the zoo[ii], which explains that the Muslim Association of Canada had organized a group visit to the zoo that day, that they had brought their own portable sound system, and that they had followed all of the zoo’s rules. As Parc Safari explains, their zoo is open to everyone, regardless of nationality, religion, race, culture, language or sexual orientation, and that it is too bad that freedom of religion has offended so many people.

So far, all seems clear, if depressingly so: just another day in this Islamophobic society, just more of the media stirring up fake scandals about “reasonable accommodations.” If anything, we are pleasantly surprised that the zoo issues such a good response.

Scratching a bit beneath the surface, though, there are other facts that should be brought to light.

First, who uploaded this video? On youtube, the video was uploaded by “guindon87” [iii]; this account specializes in uploading anti-Muslim videos, including footage shot by members of far right groups in Quebec. For instance, one recent upload is a video shot by Sylvain Gallant in 2016 in Drummondville[iv], in which he drives by a local mosque asking “Are we going to allow this in Drummondville, a mosque? Me I don’t want any here … we are being invaded by mosques here, there are three, and I am completely fed up!” This video is part of the evidence that was used against Mr Gallant earlier this year, for inciting hatred, getting him 200 hours of community service and a condition of not going on social media for three years[v]. Within the far right, Gallant is seen as a hero being persecuted for free speech. Other videos uploaded by “guindon87” defend the recent St-Jean parade against accusations of racism; include two videos devoted to a local activist, in which he is subjected to racist slurs[vi]; and more in a similar vein, including one in which she calls for the murder of anti-fascists militants[vii]. It is unclear whether guindon87 shot the video in question (which first circulated on facebook), or whether they are simply the one who uploaded it to youtube.

The timing is also curious. The day before this video was shot, the small town of Hemmingford was invaded by members of the Quebec far right, as sixty or so people from groups like the “templar knights” and La Meute heeded a call by the anti-immigrant Storm Alliance to gather at the border to bear witness to irregular crossings by refugees, and to intimidate the latter for good measure. Their anti-immigrant protest was met with a boisterous counterprotest organized by the Montreal group Solidarity Across Borders[viii]. This was all ten minutes away from Parc Safari, which is actually where the Storm Alliance parked their bus. So that weekend, far-rightists from throughout Quebec had gathered in the area.

A further element to consider is that once this video was uploaded to facebook by Audrey Tremblay, it went viral, as of Wednesday having over 1500 shares and 500 comments. In the comments, one can read not only the most vile racism, but also links posted to far right groups such as La Meute. Indeed, the video has been avidly promoted by members of La Meute over the past three days. “Sue Elle” (real name: Sue Charbonneau), a La Meute member from Montreal, posted the video to the Mouvement républicain du Québec and Front Patriotique du Québec web pages, along with a model protest letter to send to the zoo, encouraging people to protest the fact that Muslims had been allowed to pray in public. At the same time, André Pitre (aka “Stu Pitt”) used his youtube channel to promote the issue, tying the Muslims who were at the zoo that day to the Muslim Brotherhood and explaining that they want to set up a global caliphate, and that a key part of “conquest” by Muslims is to humiliate subject populations. According to Pitre, who claims to be nothing more than an ardent free speech advocate, this is what was being done when they broadcast a prayer on their sound system: it was all a matter of “invaders” humiliating their “victims”!

Muslims praying in public should of course not be cause for concern, and certainly should not be considered so controversial as to be newsworthy, any more than Christians saying grace at a restaurant, or people meditating at a park, or any of the other things people do to live their beliefs in a multicultural society. However, we live in a context where previous, equally innocuous, examples of minority groups daring to live in public and claim their place, have become hot-button issues, galvanizing broad racist opposition. Most famously, this racist potential has been harnessed by politicians of both right and “left” during the “reasonable accommodation” and “charter of Quebec Values” “debates”.

Since earlier of this year, following the massacre by a far rightist in a Quebec City mosque, a national populist movement has been on the march. The July 1st demonstration in Hemmingford is just the last in a series of public displays against immigrants and Muslims. La Meute (who were present in large numbers on the 1st, providing most of the boots on the ground) is very much at the center of this racist wave, so far.

This is the context in which a simply trip to the zoo can become a flashpoint for racist organizing.

 

[i] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAY9FoHHjYY

[ii] https://www.facebook.com/ParcSafari/posts/1555486877824473

[iii] https://www.youtube.com/user/guindon87/videos

[iv] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_ksRxGtzn0

[v] http://www.journalexpress.ca/faits-divers/justice/2017/6/29/des-videos-hargneuses-contre-l-islam-le-mene-devant-le-tribunal.html

[vi] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ar3SiS37iVw

[vii] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDbbv9d4FDY

[viii] http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-aslyum-seekers-crossing-roxham-road-canada-day-1.4187469

Who is fuelling populist racism in Quebec?

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Jun 292017
 

According to Groupe de recherché sur l’extrême droite et ses allié-e-s (GREDA) , there are currently about 60 active Quebecois far right groups, and if you count those which are connected with the rest of Canada, there are about 100. However, once one starts looking at the activities of the groups, there is a lot of collaboration and cross-membership. Provided below is a list of the larger organizations operating in Quebec.

Registered Parties

l’Alliance nationale réformiste du Québec (formerly Front National du Quebec)

Registered with elections Quebec in October 2016, the founder of the party is Daniel Boucher. They aim to field candidates in the 2018 Quebec elections. Among their stated aims are to declare full independence, end reasonable accommodation, end the practice of Islam and destroy every mosque in the province. Boucher claims to have been inspired by meeting Marine Le Pen in March 2016.

Citoyens au pouvoir du Québec

Registered as a party in 2012, the current leader of the party is Bernard Gauthier. Citoyens au pouvoir is a populist party. They were at a colloquium of far-right organizations in the suburbs on June 17, and say that they were impressed by La Meute and by some of the organizing.

Parti Indépendantiste

Founded in 2008, Parti Indépendatiste was led by Éric Tremblay from 2008 to 2011, when Michel Lepage took over. According to the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, donations were sixth highest of the provincial parties in Quebec at $5,3350.00. The Parti indépendantiste has been criticised for having links with neo-Nazis. A neo-Nazi, Sebastien Moreau, was the president of the executive committee for the region of Quebec and Marc-Étienne Maurice, a member of the neo-Nazi group Blood & Honour, was a local treasurer.

In May 2017, Alexandre Cormier-Denis, ran for the Parti indépendantiste in the Gouin riding. Cormier-Denis won less than 100 votes — but caused controversy due to racist statements and posters. While most of the media stories about Cormier-Denis were the result of these stunts, his more important ties are to Horizon Quebec Actuel (see below). Despite being promoted by open racists, Cormier-Denis remains a member in good-standing of the Parti Québécois.

Parti unité nationale (formerly the Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec)

Parti unité nationale was founded in 2000. The founding leader of the party was Gilles Noël and he was re-appointed the leader of the party in 2017. Elections Quebec authorized $16,055 for contributions to the party in 2017 according to the P.U.N. 2016 financial reports.

On June 18, 2017 Gilles Noël was one of the featured speakers at the Rassemblement pour le bien commun et l’intérêt supérieur du Québec (the assembly for the common good and superior interest of Quebec) organized by the Movement Republicain de Quebec and guarded by La Meute.

Large Quebec-based organizations

Fédération des Québécois de Souche (le FQS)

Founded in 2007 by a former skinhead named Maxime Fiset as Quebecers debated reasonable accommodation. The FQS now calls itself a political unifier of “real Quebecers.” Maxime Fiset, who now works against racists to help de-radicalize people, has recently been speaking out in French and English press about his role in founding FQS and in being one of the early adopters of Islamophobic organizing.

The group’s magazine Le Harfang is run by Remi Tremblay and focuses on publishing and disseminating information from the French far right. On May 6, 2017, the FSQ hosted Steven Bissuel of the Group Union Defense (GUD), a militant nationalist student group from France. Atalante (below) was also a sponsor. Founded in the 1960s, GUD has always been unabashedly far right, “nationalist,” and militant. Bissuel has been imprisoned for violent attacks against other students and is also credited with rejuvenating the GUD in Lyon. They were also heavily promoting the June 18 event organized by Mouvement républicain du Québec.

Mouvement républicain du Québec 

Founded in March 2017 by Guy Boulianne, author, editor and cultural promoter. On June 18, 2017, Mouvement républicain du Québec helped organize le Rassemblement pour le bien commun et l’intérêt supérieur du Québec (the assembly for the common good and superior interest of Quebec) originally planned at the CEGEP College de Maisonneuve and later moved to the suburb of Vaudreuil-Dorion. The conference featured a host of well-known far-right speakers. La Meute was providing security for the event. Here is an account in French by GREDA of who was there and what happened.

Atalante

Founded in 2016, it is known for taking more racist positions than the other organizations in this list. Some of their slogans include “Terrorists to the death! Islam Out!” It does co-sponsor events with the FQS and some members of Atalante are also members of FQS.

In August, 2016 Atalante and FQS co-hosted a lecture in Quebec City by Gabriele Adinolfi, a prominent intellectual of the Italian neo-fascist movement. Atalante also engages in social activism, modeled after CasaPound, the best-known exponent of Italian neo-fascism. Atalante, like CasaPound, are committed to welfare programs and direct action, and Atalante hands out food in Quebec City’s underprivileged neighbourhoods, but according to their site, only to people of “Neo-French origin.”

Horizon Quebec Actuel

An NGO, founded in 2016, with Alexandre Cormier Denis as President. It is a new organization which aims to educate about French and Quebecois history. When it was founded, the Front National and the COMEF (le Collectif Mer et Francophonie), a global sovereigntist organization of which FN is an important part, celebrated the formation of this organization, which is a Quebec affiliate.

La Meute (the Wolfpack)

The following is pulled from a post by Itsgoingdown.org. Founded in 2015 by two ex-soldiers, Éric Venne (alias Eric Corvus, who since left the group) and Patrick Beaudry, the first major action of La Meute was on May 21, 2016. According to their Facebook page they have a little more than 42,000 members — but likes have never been an accurate way to guage membership.

The group’s most vocal position is against “radical Islam.” According to GREDA and the experience of protestors in Quebec, La Meute is a paramilitary organization. La Meute members come to rallies well-equipped with weaponry which they are allowed to carry. Since March 2017, they have been coming out in force to numerous anti-Muslim demonstrations across Quebec.

On May 15, 2017 on André Pitre’s YouTube show, La Meute announced that it would be making itself available anywhere in Quebec to stand up against “threats to freedom of speech.” Pitre and La Meute made it clear that what was meant by this, was any intervention by antifascists, feminists, or anti-racists to protest or disrupt racist, sexist, homophobic or transphobic events. It was also made clear in Pitre’s show, that this announcement was the result of Pitre himself reaching out to La Meute and requesting that they play such a role (the declaration was filmed in his living room).

Canadian Coalition of Concerned Canadians (CCCC)

Founded in 2017 by Georges Hallak, CCCC is known as a one-man show. A list of its founding principles can be found here. This group burst onto the scene on March 4, 2017, when along with other far-right groups, CCCC called for demonstrations in 63 cities across Canada. This call was supported by Guy Boulianne’s MRQ and others. The CCCC is now losing steam in Quebec. According to GREDA, Hallak is a federalist.

Global groups

PEGIDA Quebec

Founded in 2015, this group is affiliated with the German group called Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West. The current president is Stéphane Asselin, and this article from Vice provides an interview with him. According to the December 2016 interview, Asselin helps run a secret page that allies the leaders of most of the province’s far right-wing groups — roughly 50 of them — who are working to get political.

Soldiers of Odin Quebec

Founded in Finland, the group started growing in Canada and Quebec in 2016. By December 2016, they claimed to have 3500 members in Canada and 400 in Quebec. The current head of the Quebec chapter of Soldiers of Odin is Katy Latulippe. Soldiers of Odin have been patrolling neighbourhoods where Muslims live and have also joined Atalante for its food drives.

In the past months, the Soldiers of Odin began splintering in Canada over whether to remain aligned with their racist namesake in northern Europe. The president of Soldiers of Odin Canada, Bill Daniels, denounced the “racist agenda” of Soldiers of Odin leaders in Finland and said his branch was no longer associated with them. However, Katy Latulippe has said that Quebec will dissociate with Soldiers of Odin Canada and, presumably, retain the affiliation with Finland.

While the Canadian chapters have emphasized their community volunteerism, organizing events such as food drives, they have also clashed with anti-racism demonstrators, and posted blatantly anti-Muslim rhetoric on social media.

The politics of the Finland group were previously cited as the rationale for the split within the Quebec Soldiers of Odin where Katy La Tulippe took over and Martin Tregget left the group to form the Storm Alliance. The Storm Alliance is working with La Meute.

 

Radio

Garbage talk radio (Radio Poubelle) is big business in Quebec as in other parts of North America. Recently two of the prominent commentators Andre Arthur and Jeff Fillon were fired or let go. However, Eric Duhaime, who works with Rebel Media and FM 93, continues to broadcast Islamophobic tirades and others will be there to take their place. An online radio site which often broadcasts Garbage talk radio is Radio InfoCité.

 

Online

Online sites keep growing. This list is just a smattering. Three popular sites are Vigile.net, the Council of European Canadians, and Novopress, the press outlet of the bloc identitaire. One of the currently active Facebook pages is Justiciers du Peuple: Christian Desrochers and Alain Parent.

ALERTA /// Nationalist Far Right to Meet Up in Montréal Suburb on June 17th

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Jun 132017
 

Anonymous submission to MTL Counter-info

UPDATE : the MRQ conference has been displaced to the Centre équestre l’Intégrité, located at 3987 chemin Sainte-Angélique, in Saint-Lazare.
You can call directly the owner, Sophie Robichaud, at 450-510-5354 or 514-992-2141

Saturday June 17, several right-wing and far-right nationalist groups and individuals were supposed to meet at the College de Maisonneuve, for a day-long conference organized by the Mouvement républicain du Québec, in collaboration with La Meute. Following media reports and the announcement that the Mouvement étudiant révolutionnaire would be organizing a demonstration to “block the far right”, the college canceled its contract with Editions Dédicaces (publishing house of Guy Boulianne, leader of the MRQ).

The conference is now to be held in the suburb of Vaudreuil-Dorion, with the same lineup of speakers and still in direct collaboration with La Meute.

The Speakers on June 17

The June 17 “Rassemblement pour le bien commun et l’intérêt supérieur du Québec” will feature a number of speakers from the far right fringe of the nationalist movement, including Alexandre Cormier-Denis, the Parti Indépendentiste candidate who recently received less than 100 votes in Gouin, but who attracted massive media attention due to his racist electoral placards.[1. http://acd2017.quebec/biographie ; http://infoman.radio-canada.ca/article/2017/05/19/avoir-du-front/] While most of the media stories about Cormier-Denis were the result of this stunt, his more important ties are to Horizon Quebec Actuel, which is affiliated with Marine Le Pen’s Front National.[2. http://ici.radio-canada.ca/premiere/emissions/gravel-le-matin/segments/reportage/22284/horizon-quebec-actuel-parti-front-national ; http://acd2017.quebec/biographie] Despite being promoted by open racists such as the Fédération des Québecois de Souche,[3. http://quebecoisdesouche.info/entretien-avec-alexandre-cormier-denis-dhorizon-quebec-actuel/ ; “Un patriote dans Gouin?”, Le Harfang Juin/Juillet 2017 http://quebecoisdesouche.info/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/floute_juin_juil_2017-1.pdf] and his links to the FN, Cormier-Denis remains a member in good-standing of the Parti Québécois, and works with a variety of “politically incorrect” nationalists, for instance on the Vigile.net and “Radio Infocite” internet sites. [4.http://acd2017.quebec/biographie]

Other speakers include the vlogger André Pitre (aka “Stu Pitt”); on “gauchedroitistan” and his own youtube channel, Pitre has spent years indulging in conspiratorial rabble rousing, with a penchant for complaining about “social justice warriors”, “globalists”, and feminists. Overjoyed by the election of Donald Trump in the United States, in 2017 Pitre has used his internet media presence to promote Islamophobic groups such as La Meute, and conspiratorial right-wing populists such as the MRQ.

Gilles Noel, of the Parti d’Unité National, will also be speaking at the June 17 conference, where his presence gives a lie to Islamophobes’ insistence that what they really want is simply a “secular” society. Noel is a longtime organizer with the Catholic far right. He was the founding leader of the Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec in 2002, a group which emerged out of the Centre d’Information National Robert Rumilly [5. http://www.wikiactu.com/?page_id=17271; http://quebecoisdesouche.info/achille-larouche-fils-spirituel-de-labbe-groulx/;] (known in the 1980s and 90s for its ties to anti-immigrant and openly fascist groups, such as the Cercle Jeune Nation). In 2012 the PDCQ changed its name to Parti d’Unité National, a move that also signaled a shift from a theocratic programme to one based more on conservative nationalism. The new PUN remains staunchly opposed to abortion and the breakdown of the traditional family, but has now reoriented more firmly against “unreasonable accommodation” for non-Christian minorities, insisting on the French and Christian identity of the Quebecois nation. [6. Promotes the Vatican’s 1983 “Charte des Droits de la Famille”: Prône que “la famille est fondée sur le mariage, cette union intime et complémentaire d’un homme et d’une femme”, que “la situation des couples non mariés ne doit pas être placée sur le même plan que le mariage dûment contracté”; et que bien sûr “Dans les relations internationales, l’aide économique accordée pour le développement des peuples ne doit pas être conditionnée par l’acceptation de programmes de contraception, de stérilisation ou d’avortement” car “L’avortement est une violation directe du droit fondamental à la vie de tout être humain.” “Le divorce porte atteinte à l’institution même du mariage et de la famille.” Also, in its own words: “La société distincte du Québec est née de notre héritage culturel, de notre patrimoine historique, de nos traditions, de nos fêtes chrétiennes et des institutions fondées par nos ancêtres jusqu’aux années 60 (écoles catholiques et collèges classiques, hôpitaux, universités, hospices, séminaires, etc). Au Parti unité nationale, c’est tolérance zéro à l’égard du racisme pratiqué par certaines personnes qui viennent dans notre pays avec l’intention de bousculer et de piétiner les droits de la majorité.” (http://www.partiun.ca/accueil/qui-sommes-nous.html) And: “Cette nation parle français avec son accent canayen dans ce grand territoire de l’Amérique du Nord anglophone. Cette nation tient à protéger sa langue et sa culture canayenne. Ici, ce n’est pas l’espagnol, le libanais, l’arabe, le chinois, le japonais, le russe ou autre langage. Cette Constitution a été construite pour défendre les droits de la majorité et lancer un message clair à ceux et celles qui veulent faire partie de notre société, APPRENEZ NOTRE LANGUE !! … Nous acceptons vos croyances sans vous poser de questions. Tout ce que nous vous demandons, c’est de respecter les nôtres, de vivre pacifiquement et en harmonie avec nous. Ceci est NOTRE PAYS, NOTRE TERRE, et NOTRE STYLE DE VIE et nous vous donnons l’occasion d’en profiter. Mais à partir du moment où vous vous mettez à vous plaindre, à gémir et à ronchonner à propos de notre drapeau, notre engagement, nos croyances chrétiennes ou notre style de vie, nous vous encourageons fortement à profiter d’une autre grande liberté québécoise : “LE DROIT DE PARTIR “.”]

Other speakers at the June 17 conference include Richard Le Hir, Daniel St-Hilaire, and Jean-Jacques Nantel, all of whom have long been involved in the more mainstream nationalist movement (PQ, BQ, Cap sur l’Indépendance, Vigile.net). These “respectable” luminaries will be accompanied by lesser known oddballs, such as Hans Mercier (whose Parti 51 wants Quebec to separate from Canada in order to join the United States), Jean-Louis Pérez-Martel (another anti-Muslim and anti-« globalist » conspiracy theorist associated with Vigile.net) and Jérôme Blanchet-Gravel (a University of Ottawa doctoral student and author of the book Le nouveau triangle amoureux: gauche, islam et multiculturalisme).

Together, the June 17 conference represents an attempt to consolidate a far right political current in Quebec, bringing together as it does, ambitious younger activists, older more mainstream political figures, and representatives of minor fringe groupings. Indeed, such is the stated goal of the Mouvement républicain du Québec, a group that was only founded this year by Guy Boulianne, in the hope of giving organizational form to this milieu on the fringes and the right end of the nationalist project. While hiding behind talk of “freedom of speech”, Boulianne is in fact a right-wing conspiracy theorist and xenophobic nationalist. (This “free speech champion” has, for instance, called for the imprisonment of American comedian Kathy Griffin for her recent “behead Trump” artistic statement; on the show of “free speech champion” André Pitre, no less!)[7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHKwY-QMnEo]

La Meute

Guy Boulianne shakes some hands at a La Meute BBQ, on May 27th, 2017. In the background, André Pitre.

Beyond speeches in an empty suburban field, there is an additional aspect to the June 17 conference. Arguably, this reveals the true goal of the entire exercise.

La Meute is the largest far right racist organization in Quebec. Founded in 2015 by two ex-soldiers, Éric Venne (alias Eric Corvus, who left the group in January of this year) and Patrick Beaudry, the group’s first events were in the Quebec City and Saguenay areas. In August 2016 their fliers started appearing in public places, and a few weeks later Venne and other members disrupted an information event organized by a group of volunteers planning to host a family of Syrian refugees.[8. https://mtlcontreinfo.org/en/frontlines-in-the-fight-against-islamophobia/]

The January 29 attack on the Islamic Cultural Center in Quebec City by far-rightist Alexandre Bissonette, which left six people dead and nineteen injured, was condemned by La Meute, but nonetheless was taken as the opportune moment to “come out from the shadows” and affirm a more aggressive public presence. La Meute was subsequently present at numerous anti-Muslim demonstrations across Quebec on March 4, along with other far right groups, and since then as well. (The March 4 demonstrations were organized by Georges Hallak’s one-man show, the “Canadian Coalition of Concerned Citizens”, but supported by Guy Boulianne’s MRQ and others.)[9. https://mouvement-quebec.com/agenda/manifestation-2017-03-04/]

While insisting that it is not racist (because “Islam is not a race”) and not “extreme right” (because things are not “extreme” without “blood in the streets”), La Meute promotes a conspiratorial worldview of shadowy globalist elites conspiring with “Islamic extremists” to impose Sharia law on western populations. Besides the MRQ, up until earlier this year La Meute also worked with the Soldiers of Odin, an anti-Muslim group started by neonazis in Finland.[10. http://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/1006108/extreme-droite-une-patrouille-avec-le-groupe-des-soldats-dodin] In the words of its founder Patrick Beaudry, “We here in Quebec are the home, the umbilical cord, of European civilization in the Americas”[11. http://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/1004095/43-000-membres-pour-le-groupe-dextreme-droite-la-meute]; In the words of its media liaison Sylvain Brouillette (aka Sylvain Maikan), “Marine Le Pen is a lot closer to us than Donald Trump.”[12. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-far-right-la-meute-1.3876225]

On May 15, on André Pitre’s youtube show, La Meute announced that it would be making itself available anywhere in Quebec to stand up against “threats to freedom of speech.” Pitre and La Meute made it clear that what was meant by this, was any intervention by antifascists, feminists, or anti-racists to protest or disrupt racist, sexist, homophobic or transphobic events. It was also made clear in Pitre’s show, that this announcement was the result of Pitre himself reaching out to La Meute and requesting that they play such a role (the declaration was filmed in his living room).[13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Zpv3F5UlMQ]

In this context, the MRQ publically announced that it had arranged for La Meute to provide “security” at the June 17 event;[14. See for instance: ] the MRQ links to and promotes La Meute on its website, where it also mirrored La Meute’s declaration.[15. https://mouvement-quebec.com/meute/] As of June 5, almost half of the tickets sold on the June 17 eventbrite page, were sold to individuals openly claiming to be La Meute members. Meanwhile, both Pitre and Boulianne have been raising money to help defray La Meute’s costs at the event.

Meanwhile, on facebook, where the Mouvement Étudiant Révolutionnaire announced a demonstration to shut down the June 17 conference, La Meute members have enthusiastically threatened violence,[16. For instance, threatening to beat up and kill antifa “faggits” (sic): ] [17. And then these boneheads explain that they are members of La Meute: ] whereas in their public statement, they declare that they will work with police to contain and neutralize any antifascist protests. (As for Pitre, he has crowed that the “it is game over for antifa in Quebec”, who he characterizes as “drugged out youth from single-parent households.”)[18. This declaration has made some waves on social media, and not only because of its spelling mistakes, as several women who were planning on attending the June 17 conference have complained that Pitre is stigmatizing single-mothers. Pitre followed up with an “apology” typical of his crude antifeminism: “ Hier j’ai blessé des gens en utilisant le mot “monoparental” de façon trop péjorative. Je suis conscient qu’il y a beaucoup de nouveaux sur mon Facebook et ils ne sont pas habitués à la façon dont je m’exprime. Alors à eux, je tiens à m’excuser et je promets de faire très attention à l’avenir aux mots que j’utilise pour être sûr de ne pas blesser personne. C’était absolument pas mon intention de vous comparer aux crisses de folles qui ont des relations sexuelles avant le mariage. (sssshht, c’est un test de QI déguisé)”]

As such, besides consolidating the far right, June 17 represents an attempt to establish a new balance of forces between the far right and the antifascist left. The initial choice of the Cegep de Maisonneuve, in Hochelaga, a base for the left in Montreal, appears in this light as a deliberate provocation.With the help of the MRQ, La Meute was looking for a fight so that it could lay down the law, guaranteeing that Islamophobic, sexist, racist, or transphobic organizing and propaganda can be carried out in the future, without resistance.

Currently being held in the suburb of Vaudreuil, this conference still represents a moment of consolidation for the far right within the nationalist movement, which is going on the offensive against Muslims, the left, feminists, as well as « globalists » and the « New World Order ».

The meeting on June 17 has nothing to do with the “greater good of Quebec”, any more than La Meute’s presence has anything to do with “protecting freedom of expression”. A meeting where all of the speakers are white men, whose opinions range from ethnonationalism to ultraconservative Catholicism, in alliance with La Meute and other far right forces looking for a fight, is a threat.

We call on everyone to denounce this racist and sexist circus, and to take serious steps to prepare to resist the rise of anti-Muslim, conpiracist, and xenophobic political movements!

Police Protect Far-Right Demo From Antifascists

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Apr 242017
 

From Sub.media

Today the far right in Montreal was able to take the streets, with the supposed aim to protest against the Liberal government. They left out their affiliations out of their call-out, and successfully attracted a sizeable crowd, who were none the wiser about the politics of the organizers.

They also left their flags and insignias home, and favored Quebec flags, and in a bizarre instance, one person flew the indigenous unity flag, popularly known as the “warrior flag” Taking inspiration from recent events in the US, the proto-fascist elements within the the protests were ready to fight.

Some wore masks, body armor, and helmets and even brandished sticks. Their security marshals wore armbands, and they had scouts through the perimeter of the protest. Anarchist and anti-fascists were blocked by a large presence of riot cops, and comrades were not able to get close enough to the protesters. The police protected the protesters as they freely marched through downtown.

Montreal Solidarity with Stabbed Antifa from Marseille

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Apr 092017
 

From subMedia

Red and Anarchist Skinheads (RASH) and Montreal Sisterhood, made a graffiti in solidarity with a comrade in Marseille, France, who was stabbed by two fascists in late March.