2SLGBTQQIA+

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,273
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Edmonton
I'm sure there are just as many people pissing and moaning about "having to pay" cops' salaries.
Only the anti-cop people as anyone with a bit of common sense would actually have no issue paying for cops as long as they did what they're supposed to and that's protect the public from harm. I don't have an issue for paying anything if it benefits me, my family & my city: garbage, street cleaning, healthcare etc. Those are services we need as a society.

Paying for drugs for addicts is not a good use of taxpayer funds. Getting them treatment & shelter is b'cuz it benefits not only the addicted but society itself.
Whoa - BIG difference! They're not waving their asses/boobs in our kids faces - they're out on the field dancing & performing.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Paying for drugs for addicts is not a good use of taxpayer funds. Getting them treatment & shelter is b'cuz it benefits not only the addicted but society itself.
Institutionalization is a dirty word. Should we go back there?
Whoa - BIG difference! They're not waving their asses/boobs in our kids faces - they're out on the field dancing & performing.
Lets get hookers to read to kids. Why not?
 

55Mercury

rigid member
May 31, 2007
4,388
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Institutionalization is a dirty word. Should we go back there?

Lets get hookers to read to kids. Why not?
first let's get the cheerleaders to be the hookers!

:?P

aaaaand... let's get health plans to cover the cost of 'adult services' for the sake of everyone's mental health. People who are otherwise unfvckable, be it on the outside or the inside, should have a right to experience what we all need - human touch (nothing heals like it) and gratification, in both the giving and the receiving.
 
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spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,758
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Pride protester charged after taking selfie with critic's terminally ill dad
Bubba Pollock took a bizarre photo of himself in the hospital room of Brittany Leroux’ ailing dad, Windsor police say

Author of the article:postmedia staff
Published Jun 16, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read
Bubba Pollock of London in a selfie pic taken in a palliative care room at Hotel-Dieu Grace Healthcare. The room's patient is the dying father of Britt Leroux, an online critic of Pollock.
Bubba Pollock of London in a selfie pic taken in a palliative care room at Hotel-Dieu Grace Healthcare. The room's patient is the dying father of Britt Leroux, an online critic of Pollock. PHOTO BY FACEBOOK /Windsor Star
The organizer of a recent protest at a London Pride event has been charged with criminal harassment after a bizarre photo was taken in the palliative care room of an online critic’s ailing father, police say.


Windsor police say 34-year-old Bubba Christopher Michael Pollock of London was charged following an investigation that began earlier this week.


Police say Pollock — the self-styled leader of a protest at last week’s Pride even in London’s Wortley Village — was involved in arguments on social media with a Windsor woman, 36-year-old Brittany Leroux, a vocal supporter of the Pride community.

Police say a suspect travelled from London to Windsor, where he took a selfie with a patient in a Windsor palliative care facility.

That patient was Andre Leroux, Brittany Leroux’s terminally ill father.

Pollock has no relationship with Andre Leroux. It’s unclear how Pollock is said to have gained gained access to the palliative care room.


According to the Sarnia-based group Diversity Ed, the image was originally posted by Pollock in a social media comment chain visible to Leroux, without prompting or additional context.



Windsor police said investigators believe the victim was “consistently harassed through social media over a period of time.”

Pollock now faces one count of criminal harassment, which is defined under the Criminal Code of Canada as conduct that causes another person to reasonably “fear for their safety or the safety of anyone known to them.”


The allegations against Pollock have not been proven in court.

Criminal harassment can be treated as a summary conviction offence or an indictable offence.

Punishments on summary conviction typically involve a fine of no more than $5,000 and/or up to six months in jail.

If treated as an indictable offence, a criminal harassment conviction carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

CTV London’s Marek Sutherland reported that Leroux was recently married in a widely reported ceremony in the hospital, so her father could attend. CTV also reported that Sutherland also interviewed Pollock, who confirmed the visit but denied any intent to harass a critic.

“This was nothing malicious whatsoever and how it’s being twisted,” Pollock told CTV London. “. . . I understand what it’s like to be in this situation. I brought flowers to this gentleman, dropped them off and left.”


In May, Pollock was photographed by The London Free Press walking alongside Shane Marshall outside the London courthouse after a court appearance by Marshall on charges of assaulting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau by throwing gravel at him during a 2021 federal election campaign stop.

Marshall was a local riding official with the People’s Party of Canada. Just before the Trudeau incident, the Canadian Anti-Hate Network issued an advisory over Marshall’s online posts.
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Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,273
3,984
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Edmonton
The usual lame, hypocritical answer is "Oh, I don't approve of that."

Yeah, and you don't belch fear and hatred at it 24/7, either.
I don't agree with this either & it is an issue. The only thing I can add is that it's not "in your face" all the time 24/7 as the Trans B S. Is. And we all don't have to "comply" with thinking it's ok, cuz it isn't (for me).