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February 15, 2016

Student Arrested After Seeking Medical Help 

Steve Katsikaris faces 6 mos in jail after trying to reason with a doctor who ordered him arrested after he sought a referral for nightmares. 

by MG
(henrymakow.com) 

It is bizarre that some unknown force is engaged in censoring this particular video from other YouTube channels  Luckily, that video has not been censored...as yet. For some updates, Ryerson University student (Steve Katsikaris), who was arrested on campus after visiting Dr. Hogarth for a referral is still at-risk of landing six months in prison for some trumped up charge relating to his behaviour at the Ryerson Medical Centre during that appointment.

 One source has revealed that Steve was in court at the Old City Hall on Thursday February 11, 2016 last week. It's indeed peculiar that someone in Canada can have so much authority to censor a live footage of a recording which shows a confrontation between a Ryerson University student and other authority figures. 

 It is even more strange that the Ryerson University school physician Dr. Hogarth would press criminal charges against him, even though one may argue that a case of a "threatening patient" would be considered a workplace hazard rather than someone committing a crime. 

 I also find it highly odd that Dr. Hogarth would even pursue a criminal complaint against Steve knowing that she was the one who exercised her authority to label Steve as mentally incompetent enough to have him whisked away to a mental asylum through police abduction. 

eliot.jpeg
(Elliot, left, found not guilty of harassing a feminist on Twitter) 

There are so many things wrong with Toronto that men should start packing their bags and move out from that hellhole before they end up in problems with authority figures. The Gregory Alan Elliot trial should give men a warning of what is in store for men who question the status quo of that city. Hopefully, the video I've hyperlinked does not get censored. Toronto has a very persistent case of censoring political dissent.




Scruples - the game of moral dillemas

Henry Makow received his Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Toronto in 1982. He welcomes your comments at