Charlie Angus isn’t just raising an alarm—he’s naming the drift so many democracies are feeling but haven’t fully faced. The slow normalization of hate, the weaponizing of faith, the decay of shared truth… it doesn’t always arrive with sirens. Sometimes it shows up in suits and slogans.
Charlie Angus isn’t just raising an alarm—he’s naming the drift so many democracies are feeling but haven’t fully faced. The slow normalization of hate, the weaponizing of faith, the decay of shared truth… it doesn’t always arrive with sirens. Sometimes it shows up in suits and slogans.
This piece isn’t about Canada alone. It’s a mirror. And a quiet call to stay vigilant, stay human, and refuse to let apathy become policy.
“We thought we were safe.” That line sticks.
Charlie Angus isn’t just raising an alarm—he’s naming the drift so many democracies are feeling but haven’t fully faced. The slow normalization of hate, the weaponizing of faith, the decay of shared truth… it doesn’t always arrive with sirens. Sometimes it shows up in suits and slogans.
This piece isn’t about Canada alone. It’s a mirror. And a quiet call to stay vigilant, stay human, and refuse to let apathy become policy.