The Pardy School of Law
How the law works, and how it doesn’t.
“Exclusively black” theatre argues white complainant can’t claim racial discrimination
“Under the Ontario Human Rights Code, every person has a right to equal treatment without discrimination. However, the Code has a loophole for ‘special programs,’ which discriminate in favour of the “correct” groups.”
The Munk debate on the crisis of liberalism
No debate could have demonstrated better the West’s crisis of liberalism than the Munk debate on the crisis of liberalism.
Professions are the Cartels of our Managerial Age
Professional cartels benefit the bullies who run them.
Don't expect Liberals to accept 'no' for an answer on the 'no more pipelines' act
The Trudeau government appears determined to block resource development.
York sends its free speech report to the HEQCO
Legal experts like Bruce Pardy argue that the government’s directive on campus free speech “contains the right ideas, but takes the wrong approach.”
Woke wolves dominate the culture war ecosystem — for now
The masses, a herd of sheep and ostriches, follow at their own risk.
Jordan Peterson against the tyranny of the administrative state
Bruce Pardy: Our modern system of government has moved. Moved away from the rule of law back towards rule by executive fiat. Judicial deference grants control not to a monarch but to a professional managerial class. That deference empowers the tyranny of the administrative state.
Anatomy of the administrative state
Unlike COVID, which transformed society with a fury, the administrative state triumphed slowly over many decades. Its exact origins and timing are matters of debate. Bruce Pardy examines the Anatomy of the Administrative State in a chapter for the new book release, Canary in a COVID World: How Propaganda and Censorship Changed Our (My) World.
'Shifting Legal Ground': Law professor weighs in on technocracy entrenched in government
Bruce Pardy challenges the belief that a technocratic government will benefit society. “If the failure is so obvious during COVID, what makes you think that they'd be any good at very many other things?”
NCI panel says court failures suggest foreboding future
What makes our decade different, says Bruce Pardy, is that legislators, bureaucrats, and the judiciary “agree in the way we should proceed” and view civil liberties as “just getting in the way.”
How Canada’s secular religion of cultural self-hate took hold
Bruce Pardy: Critical theory, postmodernism, social justice and critical race theory have morphed into the dominant ideology.
Bruce Pardy: The four doctrines of the apocalypse: critical theory and our compromised institutions
The most serious threat to the West is not China or Russia but cultural self-hate. No coup is more effective than one committed by a people against itself.
Justice Russell Brown’s departure leaves conservative vacuum on Supreme Court of Canada
Courts, unlike legislatures, do not have an official opposition. But the 57-year-old Justice Brown was the outspoken leader of the Supreme Court’s unofficial opposition.
Legal canons and social fables: The law in Canada has never been perfect but now it is losing its way
Bruce Pardy surveys the descent of Canada’s legal system into Alice-in-Wonderland surrealism, a state that poses dangers to virtually every Canadian and to the future of the rule of law itself.
Bruce Pardy: In Canada, courts mandate socialism to fulfil charter rights
The Supreme Court has allowed the philosophy of John Rawls to determine the meaning of ‘fundamental justice’.
Trudeau’s focus isn’t on making our elections secure, but making Canadians think they are
The countries of the West are teeming with Chinese spies, and Canada is no exception. But other countries have done something about it.
Law Society rebellion has been vanquished. Long live the equity revolution!
The “culture war” has been going on within Canadian institutions for a long time. Equity revolutionaries have waged it in a familiar pattern and the Law Society of Ontario is a textbook case.
The establishment thinks it owns the law society
Pardy: Lawyers are supposed to be the last line of defence for the weak and powerless. It is fascinating to watch the determination of the legal elite to maintain their own power, and to condemn anyone who criticizes it.
Much weighs on the outcome of the Ontario Law Society election
The Ontario Law Society’s bencher election is a lynchpin round two, with both sides more deeply entrenched in their positions today than they were in 2019, writes Barbara Kay.
Agatha Christie revisions are the writing on the wall
Harper Collins is removing references to physique, race and ethnicity in new editions of the hugely popular mystery novels by Agatha Christie. Bruce Pardy looks at literary revisionism and the age of the “dedicated program”.