There is the explicit antisemitism — the masked and keffiyeh-clad protesters propping up terrorism, the street tags, the social posts, the violence. It can be photographed, prosecuted, condemned in a press release. And then there is what I call the greatest threat: subversive antisemitism. It wears institutional clothing — and it is far more dangerous precisely because it is deniable. It sits inside the Canada Revenue Agency, stripping century-old Jewish charities of their status without due process, while organizations with documented ties to terror-designated groups collect Canadian taxpayer money undisturbed. It sits on school boards that bus students to anti-Israel rallies as though they were field trips. It sits in our public broadcaster, framing Israeli self-defence in language so distorted audiences can no longer distinguish between a military response and a massacre. It sat on the government committee struck to study antisemitism — appointed there by the prime minister himself
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