Day: July 17, 2022
Coffins for Children Ordered in Bulk, ‘First Time in Over 30 Years’ (Exclusive Interview)
A Toronto-area casket manufacturer has seen a dramatic rise in orders for smaller-sized coffins since the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines. Children are dying.
Ultimately, everything in life comes down to death.
We are raised to believe that there’s a time for living and a time for dying. The time for dying comes with illness, accidents, and old age. Except it doesn’t anymore.
In an exclusive interview with RAIR Foundation USA, Mick Haddock, a manufacturer of caskets in northern Toronto, says things have changed markedly in the industry in the last nine months. “Small people are passing away,” he says. “It’s noticeable in our industry. For the first time in over 30 years, we are receiving bulk orders for smaller-sized caskets.”
Driving Col de l’Iseran in France | Route des Grandes Alpes
Woman Beater violently assaults Canadian pro-life woman after shouting ‘I’ll put a bullet on your head’
(Campaign Life Coalition) – A pro-life woman leading a group of young people in witnessing to the truth about abortion was violently assaulted by a man who first threatened to shoot her before hitting her and knocking her camera out of her hand.
Josie Luetke, 26, was in Jackson Square in Hamilton, Ontario on Thursday afternoon with a handful of young people to witness to the gruesome reality that abortion kills children. They held large signs showing the violent deaths these children suffer. Luetke, who is the youth co-coordinator at Campaign Life Coalition (CLC), was working with the youth, all of them summer interns at CLC, teaching them how to engage in pro-life activism on behalf of pre-born children.
About 2:30 in the afternoon, a bearded, tattooed man wearing black shorts with green stripes and a black t-shirt, approached Luetke, aggressively demanding that she look at something on his phone. Luetke turned him down because earlier that day the group had been harassed by a different man who forcefully shoved pornography from his phone in their faces.
“I want to show you something,” the tattooed man said to Luetke, mentioning something about his “son” before shouting at her “f*ck you, f*ck you.”
The exchange was captured by Luetke on a handheld video camera, which was already recording for safety purposes.
“No, thank you,” Luetke replied to the man.
The man then walked away, with Luetke continuing to record, but not filming the man, while asking a young female demonstrator with the group if she was “ok.”
At this point, video footage records the man shouting and threatening to shoot Luetke.
“Chick with the camera, put it in my face again, I’ll put a bullet in your head,” he can be heard saying, but without the camera being pointed in his direction.
At this point, Luetke swivels the camera in his direction, telling him, “Sir, you cannot say that.”
The man, who was walking away at this point, suddenly turned around and started aggressively approaching Luetke.
“You did it in my face, I f*cking sh*t you not.”
“No, you cannot say that, Sir,” replied Luetke.
The man continued to storm toward Luetke, angrily shouting “put it my f*cking face again.”
He then came directly in front of Luetke, physically assaulting her with his right hand, hitting her hand and sending her camera flying through the air.
“He didn’t just hit the camera, he hit my hand, but with enough force so that the camera went flying. That’s assault,” said Luetke after the event.
Luetke sustained tissue damage on her right hand below her thumb, leaving the area bruised and sore.
The camera landed on the pavement and remarkably continued to record while landing in such a way so as to capture the man leaving the crime scene. Luckily, the camera was undamaged.
Luetke has reported the incident to police and is hoping to press charges if the man can be identified.
She said she was alarmed when the man threatened to shoot her.
“Well, you can see in the video that he’s very aggressive. He starts moving his backpack around as if he’s going to fight me. He had threatened to put a bullet in my head. It entered my mind that he could have a gun,” she said after the event.
Luetke said that she’s grateful that she received the brunt of the assault and that it did not happen to one of the CLC interns she was supervising.
“I’m thankful that it didn’t happen to any of the interns and that it did not escalate to something even worse,” she said. “It could have been a lot worse.”