CALGARY—When it comes to greeting a crowd of adoring fans, Jamie Salé’s still got it.
She shakes hands and hugs, she smiles wide and, if you’re lucky, leans in close to whisper a few words.
The crowd this day mills in front of her, the carbonated vibe of a high school reunion bubbling just below the surface.
To the extent that Salé has aged since her iconic skating performance at the Winter Olympics two decades ago — after which a presumed gold medal was snatched away, so the story goes, by a corrupt French judge — the effects are subtle. The big brown eyes and the tightly coiled earnestness remain, as does her gravitational pull.
People come up for photos — someone pulls their cousin forward, then it’s the turn of the “Saskatchewan crew” — and the chatting pauses just for a moment as someone aims a smartphone, and Salé, always the shortest in the group, beams that megawatt smile.
Others crowd around a merchandise table — hats are $25, hockey jerseys are $160 — and a leader of the convoy movement that ground Ottawa to a halt last winter walks through with a tiny dog, impressively unimpressed by the surrounding hubbub.
While Salé remains a hero of Canadian sport, the crowd gathered in the beige-toned lobby of a Calgary office block has come to witness the birth of a new kind of star — a peppy, bright-eyed advocate for a wide-ranging theory that COVID was a hoax, the mainstream media (hello!) is lying to you and our leaders should be in jail.
Salé has questioned, without evidence, the safety of vaccines, tweeted memes that seemed to support military tribunals and appeared to compare Justin Trudeau to Hitler. To be blunt, most Canadians would find Salé’s stance appalling. Most, but not all. The ideas she espouses are consistent with a growing movement, born of cherry-picked data, conspiracy theories and the opinions of scientists rejected by their peers that rose to new heights during three years of pandemic public health measures and isolation.
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