Canadian Association for Free Expression

The Canadian Association for Free Expression (CAFE) is a Canadian political group founded and led by white nationalist activist Paul Fromm. Established in 1981, CAFE claims to be committed to the promotion and defence of total freedom of speech. It publishes the Free Speech Monitor ten times a year. Although it began in Ontario, it has also been incorporated in Alberta. CAFE is a signatory of the white nationalist New Orleans Protocol. Opponents have accused CAFE of racism, arguing that it does not merely support the free speech rights of far right groups, but also promotes their views.

CAFE has criticized what it considers injustices against white people in Canada, and has argued that Canadian laws do not robustly defend the free speech of whites, and are too weighted in favour of minorities.[1] CAFE has campaigned (along with the defunct white nationalist groups Canadian Heritage Alliance and Northern Alliance) for the release of Brad Love, whom it claimed was jailed for expressing his nativist sentiments. CAFE has also campaigned for the release of Holocaust deniers Ernst Zündel[2][3] and David Irving, and against human rights lawyer Richard Warman and the Canadian Human Rights Commission.

On November 23, 2007, Ontario Superior Court Justice Monique Métivier ruled that Fromm and CAFE had libeled Warman, and ordered them to pay $30,000 in damages and to post full retractions within ten days on all the websites on which the defamatory comments were posted.[4] The Ontario Court of Appeal upheld the judgment in December 2008 with damages being raised to $40,000, as Fromm was ordered to pay an additional $10,000 towards Warman's legal costs.[5] Warman said the appeal court's ruling "sends the message that those who try to use the cloak of free speech to poison other people's reputations through lies and defamation do so at their own peril."[5]

See also

References

  1. http://www.canadianfreespeech.com/human_wrongs/index.html
  2. "Ernst Zundel", Anti-Defamation League (accessed July 26, 2008)
  3. "Ernst Zundel sentenced to 5 years for Holocaust denial", cbcnews.ca, February 15, 2007 (accessed July 26, 2008)
  4. Butler, Don, "Anti-racism activist wins libel judgment", Ottawa Citizen, November 24, 2007
  5. 1 2 Makin, Kirk, "Court upholds $40,000 Web defamation award", Globe and Mail, December 16, 2008

External links

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