
© Tyler Anderson / National Post
University of Toronto professor and best-selling author Jordan Peterson is seen at his home in Toronto on May 31, 2017.
It's a no-contest, call-off-the-fight race for the ineluctable choice of Canadian book of the year. It has to be
12 Rules for Life
Who doesn't love a good origin story (Book of Genesis, A Brief History of Time, Batman Begins)?
Two years ago, almost to the day, a child was born in the little town of ... Sorry, my mistake, let me start again. It's those damn far-too-early Christmas carols.
Two years ago, almost to the day (Nov. 29, 2017), the University of Toronto's Varsity newspaper carried the bold, not to say ominous, headline: "Hundreds sign open letter to U of T admin calling for Jordan Peterson's termination."
The story underneath bristled with comminations of Peterson's "gross misconduct," his "efforts at agitation ... inflammatory denunciations ... evident connections to white supremacists ... disruptive behaviour." U of T's administration had acknowledged the "danger he posed both to students and faculty" it claimed, and if he didn't comply with "the law, the Ontario Human Rights Code and university policy" (I paraphrase) his academic goose was cooked, his copybook irredeemably blotted, and his career as a professor would soon be as one with the fates of the Norwegian Blue, the great auk, the dodo and (among the unsophisticated) red wine with fish.
Comment: Ocko is just another sorry example of people who, lacking their critical faculties, buy into government propaganda and support some of the most insidious ideologies in the process. It's notable that Twitter are quick in banning commentators on such issues as the proven biological differences in gender, as well as a variety of other well founded viewpoints, and yet drones like Ocko, promoting baseless and quite violent messages, seem to get a free pass.
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