That holy mayn would probably have beat your wimpy little ayce choir boy.
The "holy man" was nothing if the sort.
That holy mayn would probably have beat your wimpy little ayce choir boy.
There's a surprise.
I suspect the OP may have been referring to this Alberta, N.W.T. bishops issue guidelines that refuse funerals in assisted-death cases - Edmonton - CBC News
Once again the Catholic Church continues its march into irrelevancy.
A friend of mine was fiddled by a priest, when he was a seven year old altar boy. I'd love to fiddle that priest with the bumper of my car. I saw him walking down the street in Montreal, ten years ago and it was damned tempting, I'll tell you.
Alas,he was very old then and by now, he will be sizzling in the fiery seas of Hades, along with the rest of his kind.
You should have mentioned it to whoever he was with and then just walked away.A friend of mine was fiddled by a priest, when he was a seven year old altar boy. I'd love to fiddle that priest with the bumper of my car. I saw him walking down the street in Montreal, ten years ago and it was damned tempting, I'll tell you.
Alas,he was very old then and by now, he will be sizzling in the fiery seas of Hades, along with the rest of his kind.
The breath of life in all people returns to God as that is where it came from. The rest is dust in the wind.But did he get a proper Catholic burrial?
You been down to the DMV again?Insert a link into a post.
You must be an awesome government employee. You didn't read the entire thread or didn't understand it or most likely it wasn't your department or job description so f^ck it, not your problem. Bureaucrat at your finest.
Far be it from me to want to defend the Catholics. I'm not a believer. Moreover, the Catholic clergy has been the most steadfast allies of the English for a hundred years to keep Quebecers in ignorance and servitude.
However, I note that the media are more comfortable criticizing the positions of the Catholic clergy as Jewish, sikh or Muslims representatives
frick...
I come from the only town in Ontario, possibly in Canada, that has the catholics as it's public school board
and the protestants are the separate school board...
It's effed up too...explains why the principle industry in town is a major mental health center, I guess.
See...priests and witch doctors..side by side...cats and dogs, living together.
they also had the highest per capita drug and alcohol consumption records for Ontario for many years too...Lol
not sure what came first
In my case at least, it has to do with the fact that the Catholic Church enjoys an official status in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the separate school system. [/QUOTE
So wheread the Sikh, Muslim, Jewish, and other Faiths are truly separate from the state, the Catholic Church is entrenched in the state constitution. So whereas the other religions belong to the personal domain, the Catholic Church falls under public polcy.
No you confuse entirely different things.
The Charter of Rights and Freedoms was enshrined in the Constitution by "mr canada" itself in 1982. And christians and other specific religions have no special rights... it's more all religions that are protected by this Charter.
The separate relegious education systems were more a way of buying linguistic peace. In theory, the constitution gives to Anglo and Franco theirs own system across canada. When it have been implemented, Catholics and anglican Church mean.... English and french. Except we all know that only Quebec has really respected this constitution mandatory. It's still the case today. By the way, the constitution have been changed to talk about linguistic schools systems instead of Catholics and anglican schools.
The deal between catholic Church and British Crown was to keep Quebecers away from power, politics and economy.... and the Catholics can keep their religion.
The separate school system is still in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and very much applicable to Ontario today,
No it's not Under the Chareter of rights and freedom. It's part of the constitution of 1867. This parts have been changed in different level for each federated state. Québec get rid of it. We kept 2 separated systems based on the language only. In Ontario, the language have more importance but some "relegious" particularity can still be allowed.
We`re both right. It`s in the BNA Act and reitirated in the Charter.
No
It's not mentionned in the Charter.
Article 29:
Nothing in this Charter abrogates or derogates from any rights or privileges guaranteed
by or under the Constitution of Canada in respect of denominational, separate or dissentient schools.
Though granted the BNA Act covers it in more detail. So you are more correct than I am in that the CCRF covers it only briefly in reference to the BNA Act. It was necessary to mention it in the Charter since otherwise the equality provision pertaining to freedom of religion could have been interpreted in such a way as to abrogate the system.
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it's just to tell that the Charter can't interfer with the previous disposition of the constitution.
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But it did have to mention it since the charter also enjoins non-discrimination on the basis of religion. Had the Charter not mentioned it, the courts could have interpreted the equality provisions of the Charter to have abrogated the separate school system. In that sense, the article in the Charter is more important than the one in the BNA Act since the Charter could have overrriden the BNA Act otherwise.
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No
in fact, if it is not excluded this way from the application of the Charter, the separate school system will be in contradiction with the Charter. Then the Charter says that the constitution have precedence on the Charter. In other word, it have been decided to keep the same system no matter the charter. So the charter do no give any previleges to catholics or protestants.
15. (1) Every individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.
Had the Charter not mentioned the separate school system, Article 15 would have abrogated it since the separate school system does not make all religions equal before the law since it applies only to minority Catholics and Protestants.