Partially Tearing Down the Paywall
Stories on the perversion of the legal concept of "Judicial Notice" and the 2025 Listing of Important and Influential Canadian "NEW" Media" Outlets are Now Free to the Public.
Freedom Forum has removed three important Canadian stories from behind our paywall. They are:
The December 27th, 2024 Freedom Forum post, “The 2025 Freedom Forum Listing of Important and Influential Canadian "NEW" Media" Outlets.” The post lists 60+ independent Canadian media outlets worth watching as the legacy media collapses, provides an overview of recent Federal government media legislation and discusses why our legacy media is dying.
May 16th, 2024 piece "The Historic Concept of "Judicial Notice" Has Been Twisted by Canadian Courts." The post discusses how the traditional common-law legal concept of "judicial notice" has been perverted in Canadian courtrooms to encourage justices to accept government propaganda, position papers and press releases on a wide variety of medical, social and political topics, without question or the need for validation.
The June 20th, 2024 Freedom Forum post, “More on the Concept of Judicial Notice in Canadian Courts,” a follow-up to the May 16th, 2024 story.
We posted the list of new media outlets because voters need alternatives in the upcoming Federal election to the bankrupt, government funded propaganda outlets they’ve historically turned to in past elections.
We posted the two stories on the twisted concept of “judicial notice” as a reminder of how the current Trudeau government, with more than a little help from their opportunistic NDP allies, has perverted the Canadian justice system since gaining office in 2015.
Because of the changes to the concept of “judicial notice,“ direct court challenges to government authority are now dismissed for "procedural" reasons long before the merits of any individual case can be assessed.
This is intentional. It’s how court cases are traditionally dealt with in China and other authoritarian nations.
Up until a few years ago, it wasn’t how court cases were assessed in Canada.