Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas

The Canadian Press, 13 Nov, 2018 12:29 PM
    A member of Alberta's United Conservative Party is apologizing for making what he says was an unintentional comparison between the rainbow LGBTQ pride flag and swastikas in a speech this weekend.
     
     
    John Carpay issued a statement Sunday evening, saying he wished to clarify the remarks he made at a conference organized by the conservative news outlet Rebel Media in Calgary the previous day.
     
     
    In the statement, Carpay says he was discussing the nature of totalitarianism when he "referred in the same sentence" to the rainbow flag and the flags bearing Nazi and communist symbols.
     
     
    In doing so, he says he "unintentionally drew a broad comparison" between them.
     
     
    He says he meant to stress the need to defend fundamental rights such as free speech, and that slogans touting diversity and inclusion have been abused in ways that undermine those freedoms.
     
     
    Carpay, a lawyer and president of the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, is behind a legal challenge to Alberta's law on gay-straight alliances.
     
     
    The law bans schools from telling parents if their children join the peer groups meant to make LGBTQ kids feel welcome and to prevent bullying.
     
     
    A video of Carpay's remarks, posted on YouTube by Rebel Media, shows him discussing the court case and suggesting the law on gay-straight alliances is "a type of law that they would have in Nazi Germany of Communist Russia."
     
     
    He later says: "How do we defeat today's totalitarianism? Again, you've got to think about the common characteristics. It doesn't matter whether it's a hammer and sickle for communism, or whether it's the swastika for Nazi Germany or whether it's a rainbow flag, the underlying thing is a hostility towards individual freedoms."
     
     
    Rebel Media has come under fire for its coverage in the past, with several conservative politicians — including UCP Leader Jason Kenney — denouncing its editorial direction in the wake of last year's protests in Charlottesville, Va.
     
     
    At the time, Kenney said on social media that he had "publicly condemned their alt-right editorial direction of recent months."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Charges Laid Against Oregon Man After Police Chase From Border To Vancouver

    Charges Laid Against Oregon Man After Police Chase From Border To Vancouver
    An Oregon man faces charges of dangerous operation of a vehicle and flight from a peace officer after a police chase from the Canadian border into Vancouver.

    Charges Laid Against Oregon Man After Police Chase From Border To Vancouver

    Abbotsford Police Take Man Into Custody After Shooting In Residential Neighbourhood

    A male is in custody this morning in relation to a shooting incident occurring last night on Flagman Place.

    Abbotsford Police Take Man Into Custody After Shooting In Residential Neighbourhood

    Collision Between Two Large Trucks Leaves One Dead In Abbotsford

    This afternoon at 3:33 pm, Abbotsford Emergency Services responded to a report of a motor vehicle collision at the intersection of #5 Road and Dixon Road.

    Collision Between Two Large Trucks Leaves One Dead In Abbotsford

    Homicide Team Called After Man’s Body Found In Richmond Home

    IHIT is in RichmondBC this afternoon after a man's body was found this morning in a residence in the 9000-block of Odlin Road. Death was deemed suspicious.

    Homicide Team Called After Man’s Body Found In Richmond Home

    The Fate of Ride Sharing in BC

    The Fate of Ride Sharing in BC
    As taxis become more expensive and less reliable, people are opting for alternatives which will allow them to get to their specific destinations in time and at an economically-friendly cost. 

    The Fate of Ride Sharing in BC

    Wet Weather Means All Types Of Burning, Forest Use, OK In Two B.C. Fire Centres

    Wet Weather Means All Types Of Burning, Forest Use, OK In Two B.C. Fire Centres
    All restrictions on fires or forest use are being lifted in two of British Columbia's six fire centres for the first time since early summer.

    Wet Weather Means All Types Of Burning, Forest Use, OK In Two B.C. Fire Centres