Up in Canada — America’s hat, the country that gave us Justin Trudeau and mandatory pronoun usage — a man kicked a toddler in the head. A toddler. A small child. Kicked. In the head.
And the judge let him off because of his ancestry. No, really. That happened. In a courtroom. In 2026.
The judge cited the man’s “Indigenous ancestry” and something called “disassociation” as mitigating factors. Translation for people who don’t speak Woke Judiciary: the man’s racial background and his claim that he wasn’t mentally present during the assault were enough for the court to basically shrug and say, “Well, when you put it THAT way…”
A toddler. Got kicked. In the head.
We keep repeating it because it feels like someone should. The Canadian justice system apparently moved on pretty quickly. “Yes, a child was assaulted, but have we considered the assailant’s ethnic background? Surely that changes things.” And in Canada in 2026, it does. It literally changes the outcome of a criminal case involving violence against a child.
This is what identity-based justice looks like when you follow it all the way to the end of the road. It doesn’t stop at diversity hiring. It doesn’t stop at college admissions. It doesn’t stop at corporate board quotas. Eventually, it walks right into the courtroom and tells a judge that the color of a man’s skin or the history of his ancestors matters more than the fact that he kicked a toddler in the skull.
And the judge agreed.
Now, we can already hear the “well, that’s Canada” crowd. Sure. It’s Canada. Today. But does anyone honestly believe the same ideology isn’t being pushed in American courtrooms right now? We’ve got progressive DAs in every major city who already factor race into sentencing recommendations. We’ve got legal scholars at Harvard and Yale who publish papers arguing that “restorative justice” should account for historical trauma. We’ve got an entire political movement that believes the criminal justice system should treat people differently based on their identity.
Pop quiz: What do you call a justice system that treats people differently based on their race?
If you said “racist,” congratulations. You’re smarter than a Canadian judge.
The intersectional Left has spent years building a framework where personal responsibility is optional if you belong to the right demographic category. Bad behavior isn’t your fault — it’s society’s fault, it’s historical trauma, it’s systemic this or structural that. And when you build a legal system around that philosophy, you end up exactly where Canada just landed: a grown man kicks a baby in the head and the court says, “Well, let’s consider his background.”
No. Let’s not. Let’s consider the toddler. Let’s consider the child who got kicked in the head by an adult man. Let’s consider THAT person’s background — which is being a toddler who can’t defend themselves and relies on the justice system to protect them from people who kick children.
(Apparently that was too much to ask.)
This is the canary in the coal mine for Americans. Every single “equity” initiative, every DEI training, every progressive prosecutor who factors race into charging decisions — this is where that road leads. Not to fairness. Not to justice. To a courtroom where a child’s attacker walks because a judge decided that ancestry is a get-out-of-jail card.
The Left loves to talk about “the arc of justice.” They love their Martin Luther King Jr. quotes about judging people by the content of their character. Beautiful words. And then they build a system that does the exact opposite — a system that judges people by their ancestry and excuses violence against children because the perpetrator checked the right demographic box.
Canada just showed us the final destination. A toddler got kicked in the head, and the justice system decided the real victim was the guy who did the kicking.
If that doesn’t make your blood boil, check your pulse.
