Canadian Heritage Alliance
From Metapedia
The Canadian Heritage Alliance is a Canadian nationalist group based in Southwestern Ontario.
Melissa Guille of the Canadian Heritage Alliance states the site "is a collection of dissident writers and concerned Canadians who have united to act as a political lobby group."
In 2001, the CHA gained exposure by joining the Adopt-A-Road program to clean debris along highways near Cambridge, Ontario. After it was brought to the attention of Waterloo Region, it soon expelled the CHA from the program.
In 2004, the CHA achieved notoriety for distributing flyers in Fredericton, New Brunswick on Canada Day. One pamphlet addressed the issues about Canadian immigration policies and another featured a picture of a white woman, with the title "Love Your Race." The group has adopted the 2004 New Orleans Protocol.
The CHA and Melissa Guille are co-defendants in a federal "human rights" complaint for "Internet hate" filed in 2004 by Ottawa leftist lawyer Richard Warman. The complaint alleges that material on the website would likely expose non-Europeans to hatred or contempt in violation of s. 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act. The hearing began in 2006 and is scheduled to resume in September 2007.
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