I think both are in bad taste, but the graffiti example is worse -- it is a deliberate act of vandalism, desecration and arrogant virtue signalling. Like burning a church because you fell for the MSM "mass graves" propaganda. It also imposes a cost on society, as it involves time and labour to remove.
The other was a brief and peaceful exchange of some words meant to exalt the fallen. To pay genuine respect to their sacrifice by pointing out our ever-dwindling freedoms as Canadians. The crowd was more hostile towards her than she was to them.
I'm sure if the fallen soldiers were alive today they would be more offended by a healthy and capable nation of fighting age men paralyzed by fear, laziness and complacency -- the majority of whom let their country sink into tyranny while paying lip service -- than a women brave enough to take an actual stand for her convictions.
Just my 2 cents.
Check out this vet:
https://twitter.com/ChickenGate/stat...42886746202112