Showing posts with label Canada Human Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada Human Rights. Show all posts

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Coming to America: The Crackdown Against Considered and Empathetic Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage

Michael Coren is discussing gay marriage in Canada, but he might was well be describing the U.S.

See: "Canadian Crackdown":
A considered and empathetic opposition to same-sex marriage has nothing to do with phobia or hatred, but that doesn’t stop Christians, conservatives, and anybody else who doesn’t take the fashionable line from being condemned as Neanderthals and bigots. This is a lesson that Canadians have learned from painful experience.

Same-sex marriage became law in Canada in the summer of 2005, making the country the fourth nation to pass such legislation, and the first in the English-speaking world. In the few debates leading up to the decision, it became almost impossible to argue in defense of marriage as a child-centered institution, in defense of the procreative norm of marriage, in defense of the superiority of two-gender parenthood, without being thrown into the waste bin as a hater. What we’ve also discovered in Canada is that it can get even worse than mere abuse, and that once gay marriage becomes law, critics are often silenced by the force of the law.

Although precise figures about gay marriages in Canada are elusive, there are thought to be fewer than 30,000, after an initial surge of around 10,000 as soon as the law was passed. But if large numbers of gay people failed to take advantage of the law, the law certainly took advantage of its critics. Again, definitive figures are almost impossible to state, but it’s estimated that, in less than five years, there have been between 200 and 300 proceedings — in courts, human-rights commissions, and employment boards — against critics and opponents of same-sex marriage. And this estimate doesn’t take into account the casual dismissals that surely have occurred.

In 2011, for example, a well-known television anchor on a major sports show was fired just hours after he tweeted his support for “the traditional and TRUE meaning of marriage.” He had merely been defending a hockey player’s agent who was receiving numerous death threats and other abuse for refusing to support a pro-gay-marriage campaign. The case is still under appeal, in human-rights commissions and, potentially, the courts.

The Roman Catholic bishop of Calgary, Alberta, Fred Henry, was threatened with litigation and charged with a human-rights violation after he wrote a letter to local churches outlining standard Catholic teaching on marriage. He is hardly a reactionary — he used to be known as “Red Fred” because of his support for the labor movement — but the archdiocese eventually had to settle with the complainants to avoid an embarrassing and expensive trial.

In the neighboring province of Saskatchewan, another case illustrates the intolerance that has become so regular since 2005. A number of marriage commissioners (state bureaucrats who administer civil ceremonies) were contacted by a gay man eager to marry his partner under the new legislation. Some officials he telephoned were away from town or already engaged, and the first one to take his call happened to be an evangelical Christian, who explained that he had religious objections to carrying out the ceremony but would find someone who would. He did so, gave the name to the man wanting to get married, and assumed that this would be the end of the story.

But no. Even though the gay couple had had their marriage, they decided to make an official complaint and demand that the commissioner be reprimanded and punished. The provincial government argued that, as a servant of the state, he had a duty to conduct state policy, but that any civilized public entity could accept that such a fundamentally radical change in marriage policy was likely to cause division, and that as long as alternative and reasonable arrangements could be made and nobody was inconvenienced, they would not discipline their employee for declining to marry same-sex couples. Anybody hired after 2004 would have to agree to conduct such marriages, they continued, but to insist on universal approval so soon after the change would lead to a large number of dismissals, often of people who had given decades of public service. This seemed an intelligent and balanced compromise. Yet the provincial courts disagreed, and commissioners with theological objections are now facing the loss of their jobs, with the situation replicated in other provinces and also at the federal level.
BONUS: Here's Pat Buchanan talking to Megyn Kelly a couple of weeks ago. Buchanan delivered the famous "culture war" speech to the 1992 RNC Convention. I don't agree with Buchanan on foreign policy and Israel, but few people have a better handle on the radical politics of gay marriage in the U.S.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Monday, May 14, 2012

Quebec Student Protests Wreak Anarchy on Montreal

I feel kinda dumb just now blogging about this. The protests in Quebec are a major event in the ongoing collapse of ordered society in the West.

Blazing Cat Fur has the latest on this, "Stupid Leftist protesters block students trying to get back to school." Following the link takes us to a report from Sun News discussing the months-long strike that has kept at least 300,000 students from attending classes. And the part that struck me is that despite court injunctions ordering college and universities to open their doors, administrators have defied the injunctions, citing the danger of violence from the mobs. Simply astonishing:
More than two-dozen Quebec colleges and universities have opted to defy court injunctions obtained by students this year.

The schools say they want to avoid confrontations with protesters, some of whom have ransacked colleges in the past.

Also on Monday, marching students blocked traffic in the streets of north-end Montreal. A second group of demonstrators blockaded an education department building in Longueuil, on Montreal's south shore.

Police used pepper spray to clear access to the building.

A general, unlimited student strike began on Feb. 14 to protest Premier Jean Charest's decision to increase annual tuition by $1,800 over the next seven years.

As many as 300,000 students have missed all or part of their semester.

Students have held nightly protests in Montreal for nearly a month.

Some of the demonstrations have turned violent, prompting the federal and municipal governments to introduce bans on masks at protests that could take effect later this year.
Yes, the protests have turned violent. It turns out protesters lobbed smoke bombs in the Quebec subway last week, shutting the place down and causing general outrage at the movement with the general public. Here's a report, from the National Post, "Four suspects in Montreal subway smoke-bomb case will remain detained for more than a week," and video from the Montreal Gazette:



And it's no surprise, but here's video from Democracy Now! featuring an interview with Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, the spokesperson for CLASSE (Coalition large de l’Association pour une solidarité syndicale étudiante). It turns out Nadeau-Dubois is under fire in some quarters for refusing to denounce the violence. See: "Quebec student leader: Gov't apathy worsened dispute."

It's clear that the tuition fee hikes are only the pretext from a massive anarcho-socialist mobilization to bring down the regime. The conservative government of Premier Jean Charest is in fact proposing only mild fee increases, which would be about $200 a year, or $100 a semester. That's hardly the "privatization" of public services that the protesters are decrying. CLASSE obviously doesn't want a deal and instead prefers more anarchy and violence in the streets:
Student leaders said this weekend there was still hope for a resolution, even after the resounding rejection by students last week to the agreement in principle reached between the government and the student federations on May 5.

Nadeau-Dubois said the ball was now in Charest’s court, and they were waiting for a new offer from the government.

He did not think the recent wave of court injunctions giving students the legal right to return to class would be effective, as many protesters are against having the courts being used to break the strike movement.

CLASSE is organizing a mass protest for Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., starting at the corner of Viger Ave. and Bleury St., labelled a “disruption ... aimed at reminding the rich of this world they are rich because they’re keeping us poor.”

Nadeau-Dubois said CLASSE prefers to keep the exact nature of the “disruption” secret until the protest.
Disgusting.

See also Graeme Hamilton, at the National Post, "Hard to claim Montreal violence isn’t tied into wider protest movement."

Thursday, April 26, 2012

'Steynamite' Reactions

At Blazing Cat Fur, "An evening of jovial bigotry...much of it actionable under both provincial and federal law."
We had a wonderful time at Steynamite. Steyn, Coren, Krista Erickson & Jonathan Kay all shone brightly. Several jurisdictions worth of human rights code lay in tatters by evening's end, and we loved it.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Reactions to Guilty Verdicts in Canada 'Honor Killing' Trial

From Phyllis Chesler, at Fox News, "Will Guilty Verdict in Canadian 'Honor Killing' Trial Be a Turning Point for Justice?":

Western-style domestic violence and even domestically violent femicide is not the same as an honor killing.

For example, Westerners rarely kill their young daughters nor do Western families of origin conspire or collaborate in such murders. While Sikhs, and Hindus, (mainly in India), do commit honor killings, the majority of such murders in the West (91%) are Muslim-on-Muslim crimes.

The high-profile Shafia case may be a watershed decision in terms of Canada’s long standing Multiculturalism Policy which was passed in 1971 under Prime Minister Trudeau and legally enshrined in 1988 as the Canadian Multiculturalism Act.

According to Dr. Salim Mansur, a Muslim Canadian professor and author, such policies are ultimately “racist.” They keep immigrants confined to their “group” and do not encourage members to become “individuals” and “citizens” of a modern liberal democracy.

Although some have called for a special “honor killing” law, it is important to note that the Shafias were tried and convicted under existing Canadian law. They were not tried for committing a culturally approved “honor killing,” but for having conspired to commit a cold-blooded and pre-planned murder on Canadian soil.

So, too, were Muslim-Canadian Aqsa Parvez’s father, Mohammed, and her brother, Waqas, who were tried and convicted for murdering the 16-year-old girl because she refused to wear the hijab and other traditional clothing.

Her mother, who was not tried, lured her daughter home from a shelter for battered women to her death.

After the Shafia jury was individually polled, (it was a unanimous decision and the evidence of guilt was overwhelming), the Justice, Robert Maranger said “It is hard to imagine a more heinous crime, a cold-blooded and shameful crime, (committed because of) a sick notion about honor that has no place in this society.”

And in a statement following the verdict, Canadian Justice Minister Rob Nicholson called honor killings a practice that is "barbaric and unacceptable in Canada....This government is committed to protecting women and other vulnerable persons from all forms of violence and to hold perpetrators accountable for their acts."

Defense lawyer David Crowe has vowed to appeal.

The accused continue to insist they are innocent.

I hope that Canadian and North American Muslim associations and experts will welcome this decision in which three murdered Muslim girls and one murdered Muslim woman were considered important enough to merit a long and expensive trial in the search for justice.
VIDEO HAT TIP: Blazing Cat Fur, "Ezra Levant Rips Political Correctness & CBC"s Coverage of the Shafia Honour Killing."

Monday, January 30, 2012

Shafia Convictions Put Focus on Culture of Honor Killings

At Wall Street Journal, "Afghan Immigrants in Canada Found Guilty of Honor Killing":

TORONTO—A Canadian court found two Afghan immigrant parents and their eldest son guilty of murdering four female family members in a so-called honor killing Sunday, the climax of a case that's transfixed Canada and sparked a wider debate about clashing cultures amid the country's large immigrant population.

Mohammad Shafia, his wife, Tooba Mohammad Yahya, and eldest son, Hamed, were found guilty of killing Mr. Shafia's three teenage daughters and Mr. Shafia's first wife in an elaborately staged, though ultimately bungled, car accident in June 2009. The defense argued the four died after a late-night joy ride went awry.

The four-month trial opened a relatively rare window onto honor killings in North America. The crime, where victims are murdered for bringing shame on their family, is increasingly common in western European countries like Britain and Sweden, which has seen large-scale immigration from countries where researchers say the custom happens most—such as Pakistan, India and Turkey ....

The prosecution argued it was honor rooted in Afghan tribal traditions that led Mr. Shafia to cleanse the shame he felt from the conduct of his rebellious daughters, Zainab, 19 years old, Sahar, 17, and Geeti, 13. The eldest two took unapproved boyfriends, and all three disobeyed their father through their independent behavior and sometimes-revealing dress. Rona Amir Mohammad, who was Mr. Shafia's first spouse in the polygamous family, was killed, the prosecution argued, because she was a troublesome first wife and lenient step mother.

The trial filled the Canadian press with the macabre details of a murder in which police believe the victims were drowned and then placed into a car that was then pushed into a lock outside of Kingston, near Toronto. The local press printed police transcripts of a ranting Mr. Shafia calling his daughters "whores" and boasting, "nothing is more dear to me than my honor."
Video c/o Blazing Cat Fur.

And my previous roundup is here: "Shafia Family Guilty of Honor Killings in Canada: Updates."

Prosecutor Heckled by Shafia Guilt-Deniers at Press Conference in Canada Honor Killings Trial

More from Blazing Cat Fur:

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Shafia Family Guilty of Honor Killings in Canada: Updates

Okay, my earlier post is here: "Guilty Verdicts in Canada Honor Killing Trial."

And see Pamela here, "GUILTY! First Degree Murder Verdicts in Shafia Honor Killing Trial."

And don't miss the excellent Christie Blatchford, at National Post, "No honour in ‘cold-blooded, shameless’ murder of Shafia girls."

Plus, London's Daily Mail has a huge article, "Honour killing family jailed for life as judge says: 'It is difficult to conceive of a more despicable, more heinous crime'."

And an update at Blazing Cat Fur, "Shafia Murders: CBC Finds Apologist Who Implies Canada Racist & Just Like Islamist Hell Holes."

And here's an earlier clip with Ezra Levant on the tragedy of honor killings in Canada:

Guilty Verdicts in Canada Honor Killing Trial

See Blazing Cat Fur, "Justice: Shafia Honour Murderers All Guilty."

And at National Post, "Shafia accused guilty of first-degree murder."

KINGSTON, Ont. — After Canada’s first mass-honour-killings trial, three members of a Montreal family have all been found guilty of first-degree murder in the drowning deaths of four other family members — including three teenage sisters.

A jury on Sunday handed down its guilty verdicts for Mohammad Shafia and Tooba Mohammad Yahya, as well as their 21-year-old son, Hamed.

They had been charged with murder after the bodies of three Shafia sisters — Zainab, 19, Sahar, 17, and 13-year-old Geeti — were discovered in a submerged vehicle in a canal near Kingston, in June 2009.

Also in the vehicle was Rona Amir Mohammad, the 52-year-old first wife of Shafia, whom he married in his native Afghanistan before the polygamous family moved to Canada in 2007 and settled in Montreal.

A conviction for first-degree murder carries with it an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.

The trial, which began in October 2011, heard from 58 witnesses and was presented with more than 160 exhibits from both prosecutors and defence lawyers. While some described Shafia as the ultimate family man, other witnesses painted a picture of strict control in the family and limited freedoms for his daughters.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Sex Selection Abortion in Canada

Blazing Cat Fur has this, "Doctor defends controversial fetus gender report."


And see the Calgary Herald, "It's a girl! Action must be taken to stop sex-selective abortions":
 Preventing women from learning the gender of their unborn babies before the 30th week of pregnancy may not be the best way to solve the problem of sex-selective abortions, but at least it would be a gesture that shows Canada is concerned about the issue.

The recommendation was made by Dr. Raj Kale in an editorial published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, which said that "female feticide" is happening in North America "in numbers large enough to distort the male-to-female ratio in some ethnic groups." It is estimated a few hundred such abortions may be occurring yearly in Canada among women belonging to cultures where sons are more prized than daughters.

A 30-week rule, as symbolic a gesture of disapprobation as it may be, is well-nigh unenforceable. There may be some doctors who don't wish to abide by it and some patients who, denied the information from one doctor, may go to another, possibly across the border, to get it.

It is truly deplorable that anyone would abort a baby simply because it is not of the desired gender. The problem is huge in India, China and other cultures where sons are highly valued, and has caused alarm among officials in those countries. The Chinese male-to-female ratio is so skewed by a combination of China's one-child policy and the aborting of female fetuses that the ramifications for future generations of adult men seeking wives will be very serious. And in India, it is estimated that millions of girls are missing from the population - girls who should have been born, but were aborted because they weren't boys.

For real change to come about, there must be deeper cultural paradigm shifts regarding embedded attitudes about girls and women. And those shifts need to come about without the obfuscation and equivocating of pro-choice groups who whine that while sex-selective abortions are not something to be applauded, no one should interfere with a woman's right to choose.
The Third-World-ing of First World counties. And Ezra just hammers the progressive hypocrisy here on abortion all around. Sick and unreal.