This article originally appeared in the National Post.
By Mia Hughes, March 12, 2026
Last month, the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal handed down an extraordinary decision, ordering former Chilliwack school board trustee Barry Neufeld to pay $750,000 for publicly criticizing gender-identity ideology and its inclusion in schools. The ruling highlights the conflict between the demands of modern trans activism and the fundamental rights enshrined in Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This must serve as a wake-up call for all Canadians.
Neufeld’s legal saga has dragged on for nearly a decade, encompassing defamation lawsuits, anti-SLAPP motions, hate-speech allegations and human-rights complaints. But Canadians need not wade through years of litigation to understand what’s at stake: the threat not only to freedom of expression, but also to freedom of belief, lies in one particular aspect of the tribunal’s definition of discrimination.
The ruling declares that the “denial of trans identities” is discriminatory, effectively replacing the traditional meaning of unequal treatment with the idea that disbelief in gender identity itself is a form of discrimination.
In his closing remarks, Neufeld stated plainly that he does not believe in gender identities and described gender-identity ideology as a “belief system” comparable to religion. The tribunal’s reaction was astounding, revealing a striking ignorance of the complexity of the gender debate.
“We can think of no better example for how transpeople are denied than this passage. Transpeople are, by definition, people ‘whose gender identity does not align with the sex assigned to them at birth,’ ” states the ruling.
The trouble is, this is simply not true. While that’s certainly one definition — the activist-crafted one — it is by no means the only one.
Next came this astonishing statement: “If a person elects not to ‘believe’ that gender identity is separate from sex assigned at birth, then they do not ‘believe’ in transpeople. This is a form of existential denial.”
This is also incorrect. It is entirely possible to recognize that some people identify as transgender and present as the opposite sex without believing in the unscientific concept of gender identity.
The ruling then rejects Neufeld’s claim that gender ideology is akin to religious belief, with a chillingly authoritarian declaration: “A person does not need to believe in Christianity to accept that another person is Christian. However, to accept that a person is transgender, one must accept that their gender identity is different than their sex assigned at birth.”
Not only is this incorrect, the analogy is also misleading. What the ruling actually means is this: one need not believe in God to accept that someone is Christian; but to accept that someone is transgender, one must believe in the existence of gender souls.
And with that, modern trans activism laid its cards on the table: believe what we tell you to believe, or be punished.
A cascade of confusion flows from the tribunal’s fundamentally flawed reasoning. The term “gender ideology” — the belief system that posits that we all possess a gender identity and it is that which makes us men, women, boys or girls — is framed as a cunning “veneer” used by what the tribunal terms “anti-trans activists” to make themselves appear reasonable.
The social contagion hypothesis, by far the most plausible explanation for the exponential surge in youth presenting to gender clinics in the 2010s, is dismissed as discrimination.
Neufeld is accused of spreading “alarm and misinformation” for opposing puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones and surgeries for minors — treatments now being paused, restricted or abandoned in many countries due to weak evidence and mounting concerns about harm.
Then, in an ironic twist, the tribunal supports its accusation of misinformation by offering misinformation of its own, declaring that “gender affirming recognition and care… is life saving.” The adjudicators seem unaware of the United Kingdom’s Cass Review and a recent Finnish study. Neither found evidence that these interventions reduce suicide risk.
The reality is that the tribunal ignores, or deliberately sidesteps, a whole credible, research-driven side of the gender debate: one that sees “gender identity” as an oversimplified label masking a complex mix of psychological, developmental and social factors.
Within this category there are adult males with an erotic fixation on being female; homosexuals suffering from internalized homophobia; and adolescents with neurodiversity, psychiatric comorbidities or developmental confusion — all condensed into a single label that comes packaged with a drastic medical solution.
These are not fringe theories; they are evidence-based explanations that provide a far deeper, richer understanding of transgender identification than any activist oversimplification ever could.
In truth, Canada approached the gender debate backwards, enshrining the highly disputed, unscientific concept of gender identity into law without analysis or scrutiny. And by doing so, it allowed activists to brand even basic questions or concerns as discrimination or hate.
Yet the real-world harms are now too great even for Canada to ignore, as detransitioners who had their youthful identities medicalized step forward and the country awakens to the consequences of eroding female-only spaces.
Even with human rights tribunals acting like authoritarian zealots, the debate is on and its momentum is unstoppable. If Canadians care about the values upon which their nation was built, they must urgently reclaim one of their most fundamental freedoms — the right to decide what they believe and to speak the truth without fear.
Mia Hughes specializes in researching pediatric gender medicine, psychiatric epidemics, social contagion and the intersection of trans rights and women’s rights. She is the author of “The WPATH Files,” a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute and director of Genspect Canada.


