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Benjamin Dichter

Benjamin Joseph Dichter was a leader in the 2022 Canadian convoy protest. He is an entrepreneur, working as a journalist, truck driver, author and podcast publisher. Formerly, he has worked as a gemologist, and as a print shop owner in Toronto. He is the founder of the LGBTQ conservative group LGBTory.

Early life and education
Dichter was adopted by a Jewish family and attended the Associated Hebrew Schools of Toronto and the York Mills Collegiate Institute. == Career ==
Career
Dichter is a truck driver who has worked as a gemologist, and as a print shop operator in Toronto. Dichter has produced several podcasts, covering topics of philosophy, law, crime, terrorism, and the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. and Not On Record (crime, legal research, investigations). He is the founder of Possibly Correct Media, that publishes a podcast by the same name. == Politics ==
Politics
logo In 2014, Dichter ran for Toronto city council for Toronto Centre-Rosedale, winning approximately 1,500 out of 31,000 votes, (just under five per cent). Kristyn Wong-Tam won the riding. Dichter ran as the candidate for the Toronto-Danforth riding in 2015. Dichter was the only candidate to not turn up for a climate change debate and likewise missed the debate on electoral reform. He won 5,478 votes, ranking third, behind winner Liberal Julie Dabrusin and runner up New Democratic Parity incumbent Craig Scott. Dichter is the founder of LGBTory, the Rainbow Conservatives of Canada. In 2016–2017, Dichter raised criticism against political tolerance to risk, from Islamic extremists. On 13 June 2016, Dichter and members of LGBTory attended a vigil in Toronto for the victims of the Orlando nightclub shooting; later criticizing some political and activist attendees, for hijacking the event. where he spoke about "political Islam" and how it has "infiltrated" the Liberal party and the Conservative party of Canada. Maxime Bernier thanked Dichter for raising questions about how Canada dealt with Islamic extremism. == Canada convoy protest ==
Canada convoy protest
Beginning mid-January 2022, Dichter was the spokesman, and the co-organizer of crowd funding, for the Canada convoy protest. Dichter was listed, together with Tamara Lich, on the GoFundMe crowd-funding campaign. A superior court ruling on a Mareva injunction motion, resulted in the freezing of accounts holding donated funds. In February 2022, Dichter agreed to move the funds into an escrow account. Dichter described his general views that align with the convoy in testimony at the Public Order Emergency Commission (POEC) in November 2022. He stated that he was vaccinated, but uncomfortable with mandates and ArriveCAN app and data tracking due to his work in trucking. He described his main message as spokesman was "peace, love, unity and freedom". Concerned with individuals and groups creating discord or promoting controversial messages in the protest, including James Bauder, Jeremy MacKenzie and Pat King and others, Dichter recommended official messaging to separate from others. He has self-published the book Honking for Freedom: The Truckers Convoy that Gave us Hope that was co-written with former journalist John Goddard. At the end of 2023, Dichter remained a named defendant in a $300 million class-action lawsuit launched by Ottawa residents. == Views and punditry ==
Views and punditry
Dichter promotes use of Bitcoin, and afterwards, speaking about use of cryptocurrency to keep crowdsourced donations outside of government control. He has stated that the Liberal Party of Canada is "infested with Islamists". He has said that "Justin Trudeau must be stopped…no matter the cost” the Guardian quoted his warning of the “growing Islamization of Canada”. He has criticized Pride Toronto for banning police, describing it as having gone "full circle from being a civil rights cause to a celebration to a form of regressive left political weaponry". he was a guest on Tucker Carlson's Fox News program. He spoke about his journey to Ottawa ahead of the Ottawa protests, and how Alberta looked like a "third-world country" due the trucking industry being affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. He has also appeared on Russian state controlled media RT. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Dichter lives in the Danforth area of Toronto. == See also ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com