Call for Faithful Constitutional Enforcement and Screening of “Trojan Horses” to Safeguard Canada’s Core Values

On November 9, the AOCC held a seminar in Richmond titled Observations, Origins, and Reflections on the Canadian Multiculturalism Act. The keynote speaker, Yi Luo, began by presenting the original text of the Act and outlining its historical, geographic, and cultural context, along with current judicial practices and social realities.

Building on this foundation, he argued that Canada should return to constitutional fidelity in legal enforcement rather than distort reciprocal rights and responsibilities under the banner of “multiculturalism.” He emphasized critical thinking and freedom of speech grounded in truth and common sense, and he criticized performative “political correctness.”

He further argued that, while Canada should remain open and inclusive, it must also identify “Trojan horses” embedded in certain cultures—elements that are anti-inclusive, anti-freedom, anti-respect, and anti-human rights. This, he said, is necessary to prevent erosion of Canada’s ideological foundations rooted in Christian ethics, and to avoid abandoning heritage under the guise of “greater freedom and equality.”

Throughout the talk, he cited historical facts, judicial precedents, and statistical data to support his position, stressing that his arguments were “reasoned and evidence-based.”

In the latter half of the seminar, attendees engaged in a multilingual discussion covering a broad range of topics. The dialogue reflected ongoing public concern about value confusion and loss of national identity linked to the misuse of “multiculturalism.”

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