Empire strikes back! Cops knock down, arrest man, 78, for honking for truckers Government decides horns are an 'offense' By Bob Unruh Published February 8, 2022 at 7:22pm
A video of a 78-year-old man being taken down and arrested by police in Ottawa, Canada, for the offense of honking in support of a truckers convoy opposing the nation's COVID mandates has this week obliterated all else in the dispute.
The case developed when police stopped Gerry Charlebois only a few blocks from the massive truckers' protest of COVID-19 restrictions the federal government in Canada has applied to residents.
He honked at a trucker and gave him a thumbs-up.
However, that violated a brand new order from a judge, Hugh McLean, of Ontario Superior Court, who ruled that no one could use "air horns or train horns" in that area of Ottawa, except for those on fire trucks, for 10 days.
The offense also requires that the person know about the order and it doesn't actually mention ordinary electronic car horns.
However, those details weren't an issue when two police officers arrested the great-grandfather, who at 4-foot-10 was hardly a presence in the disagreement.
Watch the video, but be aware of foul language throughout, mostly from bystanders.
The Gateway Pundit commented that the arresting officer, identified only as Jones, insisted that honking a horn "is an offense."
The old man sustained bruises and cuts on his arms and hands, shoulder, and knee.
A bystander had no tolerance for the officer's actions, shouting, "Yes, I know you’re abusing the old man. It’s called communism. You [old man] don’t have to show anything [driver’s license]. You didn’t do anything wrong. You have the right to freedom of choice. You have the right to beep your horn or whatever."
The officer said he had it "written down" that honking a car horn was an "offense."
Charlebois told the Toronto Sun he meant no trouble, he just wanted to give a trucker "a thumbs up and a honk."
Truckers for several weeks already have been protesting in Canada over that nation's extreme COVID mandates. The movement already has spread to several other nations, even as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau continues to consider them "fringe."
Charlebois eventually was given a $118 ticket for "unnecessary noise."
But the father of four, grandfather of 11 and great-grandfather of four said, he would remember the takedown.
"I'm so sore."
The Ottawa Citizen noted the judge found people "have a right to protest various things," but said the noise could cause irreparable damage.
"Tooting a horn is not an expression of any great thought," the judge claimed. And he said the public already is fully aware of the protest, so there's no need to do something to bring it to their attention.
The noise ruling came in a case brought on behalf of a resident, Zexi Li, 21, who reportedly measured the noise in her apartment at 80 decibels.
A lawyer from the Justice Center for Constitutional Freedom, Keith Wilson, represented several trucker defendants and said the protest was a matter of free expression, and his clients weren't necessarily involved in any noise.
He called it a "spontaneous grassroots phenomena that started in Canada and is now spreading around the world in response to what we’ve all had to endure for the last two years. It’s an effort to end that harm and that hardship."
The Toronto Sun reported Charlebois' son was horrified by what happened to his father.
"He's just 4-foot-10," said his son Steve. “He wouldn’t hurt anybody.”
The Washington Examiner pointed out that several people were arrested in recent days because of the protest.
And police issued more than 500 tickets as the "Freedom Convoy" continued. Officers already have been arresting anyone bringing fuel to the truckers.
The Examiner explained, "The protests began after a group of Canadian truckers and their supporters drove from Western Canada to Ottawa to challenge a regulation that requires truckers returning from the United States to show proof of vaccination. If the truckers are not fully vaccinated, they will be subjected to COVID-19 testing and quarantine requirements. There are similar requirements on the U.S. side of the border."
"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves, in the course of time, a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."- Fredric Bastiat
During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.- Orwell