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Toronto Police officers will not march under the force’s banner in this year’s Pride parade, chief Mark Saunders confirmed Friday, thus settling — sort of — a dispute that’s been going on since Black Lives Matter temporarily halted last year’s parade and demanded police be excluded in future. Last month, Pride officially agreed.

“We understand the LGBTQ communities are divided,” Saunders said in a statement. He promised “this will have no impact on our ongoing outreach to LGBTQ communities” and to “sit down with any group who feels marginalized.” But his officers would stand down this year, he said, “to enable those differences to be addressed.”

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One of the biggest “differences” in play here is perfectly illustrated in a half-famous YouTube video from the march against Islamophobia in Toronto on Feb. 4. In it, we see Yusra Khogali, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Toronto, trying to whip the crowd in an anti-discriminatory frenzy.

“When Justin Trudeau responded to the Muslim ban that this … white supremacist coward Donald Trump put forward, what did (he) say?” she asked rhetorically. “He said he wanted to accept everyone who is not allowed into the U.S. border to Canada.”

Trudeau didn’t actually say that, but in any event the crowd cheered lustily. And Khogali quickly admonished them to stop, on account of this country’s rotten foundations: on the “genocide of indigenous people” and on “the enslavement and genocide of black people.”

Trudeau, she thundered, is “a liar, he is a hypocrite, he is a white supremacist terrorist.”

At that, a much smaller and different group of people cheered.