Texas1 said:
You have no idea what a human right is.
Lets go to China and i'll show you.
Keep in mind please,
Texas1, that each and every nation carries a separate opinion on what "human rights" are. Canada chooses a very broad description of human rights, securing far more rights as being inherently possessed by a person than would most other nations on the globe.
Some "human rights" in Canada may not be recognized in the United States as being "human rights" (as I would contend is the case regarding same-sex marriage, for example, where the United States appears to be headed in quite a separate direction from Canada on that matter in particular).
The
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (which led to the particular responses of the Supreme Court of Canada, and the Supreme and Superior Courts of the Provinces to the Government of Canada's questions in relation to same-sex marriage) serves as a
minimum of human rights; the Charter makes no representation of setting forth the
extent to which those rights may be extended.
In addition, human rights evolve. In their response to the reference of the Government of Canada regarding same-sex marriage, the Supreme Court stated that despite the fact that marriage had at one time been recognized as exclusively an opposite-sex institution, "[the] recognition of same-sex marriage in several Canadian jurisdictions as well as two European countries belies the assertion that the same is true today" (the jurisdictions referred to by the Court were the Provinces that had accepted their own Supreme and Superior Courts' decisions).
Human rights are a fundamental keystone of Canadian governance, the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and of the Canadian people. To oppose the decision of the Honourable Justices of eight Provinces, and of one Territory, I would submit is unrealistic in the modern world; even if the House of Commons were to rescind the
Civil Marriage Act, same-sex marriage in those jurisdictions would continue to stand.
:arrow:
Returning to the Topic at Hand
One must keep in mind that the statistics we receive, in terms of projected support for the parties, could change at any moment; this campaign could become more and more interesting as we approach the taking of the votes for the
Thirty-ninth General Election, and anything could yet happen.
Hell, for all we know, we could end up with a majority
New Democratic Government. It doesn't seem likely, even near-impossible for this present election, but the point that I am trying to assert is that
anything whatsoever is possible.
:?:
What Are the Current Support Statistics?
As of January 3rd, 2006, according to
SES Research:
The
Liberal Party of Canada is supported by
33 % of the sample.
The
Conservative Party of Canada is supported by
36 % of the sample.
The
Bloc Québecois is supported by
13 % of the sample.
The
New Democratic Party is supported by
15 % of the sample.
The
Green Party is supported by
4 % of the sample.