This claim is not factually true. Canadians have their freedom of speech constitutionally protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which includes the right to express thoughts, ideas, and information. This is protected by section 2(b) in Canada’s System of Justice. However, as stated in the criminal code of section 319, they put prohibitions on hate speech and harassment in all societies. The last part of the claim is false, as I believe it to be in connection with the 2022 anti-vaccine mandate protest that was sparked throughout Canada. In the wake of the protests, Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau, invoked the Emergencies Act of 1998, that would give banks the power to freeze the bank accounts of anyone connected to the protests. This information is backed by a BBC news article written on February 14, 2022 titled, Trudeau vows to freeze anti-mandate protesters' bank accounts, as the article stated, “With no need for court orders, banks can freeze personal accounts of anyone linked with the protests.” This event and its aftermath had also been reported by organizations such as The New York Times and NPR. The New York Times had reported that in the aftermath, no one’s bank accounts were actually seized, but they state, “froze 219 financial products, flagged 253 Bitcoin addresses tied to protesters and organizers, and led one bank to freeze 3.8 million Canadian dollars held by a payment processor.” The entirety of this claim is not presentable in any media form and has never been reported by any website, and the post linked to this question is not from a trusted, viable media source, so this claim is not accurate nor true.