Showing posts with label Public Safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public Safety. Show all posts

Friday, February 6, 2026

What We Were Warned About and Ignored

Gangs, Violence, and the Cost of Denial in Toronto and Across North America (2026 Update)

More than a decade ago, many citizens warned that Toronto — like other major North American cities, was drifting toward a dangerous tolerance of disorder. Those warnings were often dismissed as exaggerated, politically incorrect, or alarmist.

They were not.

What we are witnessing today is not a sudden breakdown, but the predictable result of years of denial, leniency, and institutional avoidance of responsibility. Crime did not appear overnight. It evolved, while policymakers looked away.

A Failure of Enforcement, Not of Law

Canada does not lack laws. Toronto does not lack police officers. What it increasingly lacks is the will to enforce consequences consistently and visibly.

Gang-related violence, illegal firearms, drug trafficking, and organized criminal activity have continued to spread across neighbourhoods once considered stable. Yet public messaging has often minimized the scope of the problem, treating it as isolated incidents rather than as a systemic pattern.

When repeat offenders are released quickly on bail, when sentencing fails to deter, and when responsibility is fragmented across courts, commissions, and political talking points, criminal networks adapt faster than institutions do.

The victims, families, local businesses, and law-abiding residents, are left to absorb the cost.

Political Denial and Judicial Drift

For years, citizens were told that acknowledging gang activity risked “stigmatization,” that enforcement itself was the problem, and that social spending alone could substitute for accountability.

That theory has failed.

Compassion without consequence does not produce rehabilitation; it produces recidivism.
Justice that prioritizes process over public safety erodes trust, not only in courts, but in democracy itself.

Judicial systems exist to balance rights and responsibility. When that balance collapses, the public does not become safer, it becomes more cynical and more disengaged.

Responsibility Cannot Be Outsourced

Education and employment matter. Early intervention matters. But pretending that all criminal behaviour is merely a social abstraction, detached from individual choice, is both dishonest and dangerous.

A society that removes agency from offenders while demanding endless patience from victims reverses moral accountability.

Personal responsibility is not a harsh concept; it is a civilizing one. Without it, no amount of funding, programming, or rhetoric can restore order.

The Democratic Deficit

One of the most troubling developments over the past decade has been the transfer of real decision-making power away from elected representatives and toward unelected bureaucratic and technocratic structures.

Policies affecting policing, sentencing philosophy, and public safety are increasingly shaped by committees, agencies, and interest groups that face no direct electoral accountability.

This democratic distancing allows politicians to evade responsibility and courts to drift from public confidence, while citizens are told their concerns are “misinformed” rather than addressed.

Multiculturalism Without Civic Integration

A successful pluralistic society depends on a shared commitment to civic norms: respect for law, acceptance of equal responsibility, and allegiance to democratic rules.

When integration is replaced by permanent grievance politics, when cultural identity is treated as an exemption from civic obligation, social cohesion fractures.

This is not a failure of diversity. It is a failure of leadership to insist that rights and responsibilities are inseparable.

We Have Seen This Before

Cities across North America offer clear warnings: Detroit, Oakland, Chicago, St. Louis, Flint. The pattern is consistent:

  1. Rising violence is denied

  2. Enforcement is constrained

  3. Victims are deprioritized

  4. Institutions lose legitimacy

  5. Recovery becomes exponentially harder

Toronto is not immune to history — but it still has a choice.

The Question We Can No Longer Avoid

The real question is not whether crime exists, it does.
The question is whether our leaders, courts, and institutions have the courage to confront it honestly.

Not with slogans.
Not with denial.
But with law, responsibility, and democratic accountability.

We were warned.
We debated.
We delayed.

The cost of continued inaction will not be paid by politicians or bureaucrats, it will be paid by ordinary citizens who did everything right and are increasingly told they must simply endure the consequences of institutional failure.

Author’s Note (2026)

This updated reflection aligns directly with the themes explored in my book, Freedom, Reason, and Responsibility. The central argument remains consistent: societies do not fail for lack of ideals, laws, or resources, they fail when responsibility is diffused, reason is subordinated to ideology, and freedom is separated from accountability.

The concerns raised here are not partisan, nor are they new. They are grounded in a decades of public service, civic leadership, and observation of institutional decision-making. This update is offered not as hindsight, but as a reminder that warnings ignored do not disappear, they mature into consequences.

If Freedom, Reason, and Responsibility asks what sustains a democratic society, this article examines what happens when those principles are deferred, diluted, or denied.


Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Do Women Deserve to Feel Safe on Our Streets, or Has the State Decided They Don’t?


 December 23, 2025

In a functioning democracy, some questions should never need to be asked. “Do women deserve to feel safe on our streets?” is one of them.

And yet here we are asking it anyway, not because the answer is unclear, but because the actions of the state increasingly contradict it.

When Bail Stops Being Justice and Starts Being Negligence

Canadians are now being asked to accept the following reality as normal:

An 18-year-old Toronto man, Osman Azizov, faces 14 serious criminal charges, including:

  • Sexual assault with a weapon
  • Attempted kidnapping
  • Impersonating a police officer
  • Unauthorized possession of firearms
  • Alleged hate-motivated offences
  • Alleged links — indirect or otherwise — to extremist terrorism via a co-accused charged by the RCMP

Police allege that women were:

  • Chased
  • Threatened with guns and knives
  • Nearly forced into vehicles
  • Saved only by the intervention of passersby

And yet astonishingly, Azizov is out on bail.

This is not a close call. This is not a grey area. This is a catastrophic failure of judgment.

Presumption of Innocence Is Not a Suicide Pact

No serious democracy confuses presumption of innocence with obliviousness to risk.

Presumption of innocence governs verdicts, not pre-trial risk management. Courts are explicitly empowered — and morally obligated — to detain individuals when:

  1. The risk of reoffending is credible
  2. Public safety is threatened
  3. Confidence in the justice system would be undermined by release

All three apply here.

Releasing an accused individual facing armed sexual violence and attempted kidnapping is not enlightened justice. It is institutional denial.

Women Are Being Forced to Carry the State’s Risk

Let’s speak plainly.

When courts release individuals accused of extreme violence:

  • The danger does not disappear
  • It is transferred
  • And the recipients of that transfer are innocent citizens

Primarily:

  • Women walking alone
  • Jewish communities are already under heightened threat
  • Ordinary Canadians going about their daily lives

This is not compassion. This poses a danger to the public through outsourcing.

The state knows the risk and chooses release anyway.

Electronic Monitoring: A Security Blanket, Not Security

Ankle monitors are often invoked as reassurance.

But the record is clear:

  • They are easily removed
  • They do not prevent violence
  • They do not stop weapons use
  • They do not protect victims

Ontario alone has seen multiple accused individuals simply cut them off and flee, including those charged with sexual crimes, weapons trafficking, and violent offences.

Electronic monitoring comforts judges and policymakers, not women on the street.

Woke, Ideology Has Overridden Judgment

Even organizations committed to reform, such as the John Howard Society, understand that violent, high-risk offenders are not the population reform is meant to protect.

When reform ideology refuses to draw lines, when everyone is treated as equally safe to release, reform collapses into recklessness.

Ironically, these cases do more to discredit criminal justice reform than any conservative critique ever could.

The Same Gaslighting Used Against Women Is Being Used Against Jewish People

This case also exposes a parallel failure.

Some public voices insist that concerns about antisemitism are exaggerated, even as police acknowledge hate-motivated targeting.

Figures such as Avi Lewis have dismissed warnings as hysterical or manipulative.

This is the same rhetorical pattern long used to dismiss women’s fears:

  • “You’re overreacting.”
  • “Statistically, you’re safe.”
  • “Stop making people uncomfortable.”

That is not moral leadership. That is elite gaslighting.

When No One Supports the Outcome, Democracy Is Broken

Here is the most damning fact of all:

  • No serious law professor believes this release was appropriate
  • No defence lawyer would want this person living next door
  • No political party defends the outcome
  • No citizen supports it

And yet the system produces it anyway.

That is not democracy. That is unaccountable power hiding behind procedure.

This Is Not About Vigilantism, It’s About Responsibility

Canadians are peaceful, law-abiding people. That restraint is a virtue — not an invitation for abuse.

But when:

  • Violent accused individuals are repeatedly released
  • Clear risks are ignored
  • Common sense is treated as reactionary

Public trust does not erode, it is betrayed.

A democracy cannot survive long if it asks its citizens to absorb preventable danger in the name of ideological purity.

The Only Conclusion That Matters

  • Women deserve to feel safe.
  • Jewish people deserve to feel safe.
  • Canadians deserve to feel safe.

And individuals accused of armed sexual violence, attempted kidnapping, and hate-motivated crimes Do Not belong on the streets awaiting trial.

That is not authoritarianism. That is the minimum standard of civilized governance.

And yet, incredibly, here we are. Judges and the justice system are out of touch with the people, time for change.

SOURCE:

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/selley-do-women-deserve-to-feel-safe-on-our-streets-or-not#comments-area