Yeah, it was noticed by more than a few ...
Oh, Canada! Defense chief crying on stage is pitiful virtue signaling – sending the wrong signal
Canada’s top defense officer cried on stage this week.
On Thursday, General Jennie Carignan, Canada’s first female Chief of the Defence Staff, the highest rank in the Canadian Armed Forces, stood in Ottawa and issued a tearful apology for what she called “systemic racism” inside the Canadian Armed Forces.
She wept as she declared that “racism has no place” in the military and promised a long list of reforms -anti-racism training, systemic bias reviews, and the dismantling of “institutional barriers.”
Let’s be clear: No one is defending racism. But what happened on that stage wasn’t strength, but rather weakness masquerading as virtue.
This wasn’t a commander leading her troops into battle. It was a bureaucrat reading a script designed by political consultants. The apology wasn’t even required by law. It was just part of the new virtue signaling political ritual in which the armed forces bow before progressive ideology instead of projecting power.
Carignan’s tears were broadcast across Canada, praised by the CBC,
The Globe and Mail, and every other outlet that mistakes emotional display for moral courage.
If Canada wants to be taken seriously on the world stage again, it needs fewer tears and more backbone.
Because when your general cries on stage, your country looks weak. And weakness, in a dangerous world, is an invitation.
Suzanne Downing is a respected journalist, editor, and commentator who has shaped Alaska’s media and political conversation for years. She previously served as editor of the Juneau Empire and as a speechwriter for Governor Sean Parnell, where her ability to communicate with clarity and purpose...
suzannedowning.com