Swinger Clubs ruled legal by Supreme Court of Canada.

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
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Cool.

It is absolutely no business of the government what consenting adults do behind the closed doors of a private club.

Film at 11? :D :D :D
 

FiveParadox

Governor General
Dec 20, 2005
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I, for one, wholeheartedly support the decision of the Supreme Court because, while I have no intention of engaging in or viewing some sort of multiple-partners spectacle, I recognize the right of others to do the same.

My applause goes to the Right Honourable Beverly McLachlin and her puisne justices, for having set aside their personal convictions to rule impartially and according to the principles of our rights and freedoms.
 

Papachongo

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Dec 6, 2005
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The ruling, written by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, said acts must be shown to be harmful to the point where they “interfere with the proper functioning of society” before they can be labelled indecent.

One small question. Is Canada a properly functioning society? Seeing as there is murder, rape, poverty, homelessness, starvation and racism in our society I was under the impression that we might be a little dysfunctional already. Of course I could be wrong, as laymen tend to be.
 

HTO

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Papachongo said:
The ruling, written by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, said acts must be shown to be harmful to the point where they “interfere with the proper functioning of society” before they can be labelled indecent.

One small question. Is Canada a properly functioning society? Seeing as there is murder, rape, poverty, homelessness, starvation and racism in our society I was under the impression that we might be a little dysfunctional already. Of course I could be wrong, as laymen tend to be.

Well said.

What do they mean exactly by "properly functioning society"?

Of course it's going to have a harmful effect on society:

a) increase of STDs and strain on the public health system to treat them.

b) A moist, over crowded place is a haven for among other things, bacteria and a quicker transmission of flu and other types viruses.

These people have to work, they'll end up bringing what they contracted in the clubs to work places and stores.

Sorry, but nope. I don't support the decision and I'm generally a Left leaning person.
 

MMMike

Council Member
Mar 21, 2005
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Of course it's going to have a harmful effect on society:

a) increase of STDs and strain on the public health system to treat them.

b) A moist, over crowded place is a haven for among other things, bacteria and a quicker transmission of flu and other types viruses.

In that case, lets just ban casual sex altogether. :?
 

HTO

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Mike said:
In that case, lets just ban casual sex altogether.

No need to go to the other extreme. Let's face it, a couple having casual sex (hopefully protected sex) with each other is different than a room full of strangers exchanging bodily fluids.

If Canada is going to allow these kinds of clubs then I propose that free health care to preventable STDs be limited to one free treatment. At that time of examination, the person get counselling on prevention and if he/she contracts STD again, he/she be responsible for paying for the treatment and future treatments.
 

pastafarian

Electoral Member
Oct 25, 2005
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I'm neither thrilled nor dismayed by the ruling. The Libertarian in me instinctively recoils at the idea of the government regulating morality, but it seems such a trivial use of the Supreme Court when there are so many more important issues than gangbangs. The conspiracy theorist in me finds it interesting that we've had two back-to-back 2 SCoC rulings out of Quebec, which seem to weaken the case for public health insurance, since officially advocating risky behaviours (from a public health perspective) doesn't look like a responsible course of action when our Medicare system is already stressed.
 

Colpy

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Nov 5, 2005
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HTO said:
Mike said:
In that case, lets just ban casual sex altogether.

No need to go to the other extreme. Let's face it, a couple having casual sex (hopefully protected sex) with each other is different than a room full of strangers exchanging bodily fluids.

If Canada is going to allow these kinds of clubs then I propose that free health care to preventable STDs be limited to one free treatment. At that time of examination, the person get counselling on prevention and if he/she contracts STD again, he/she be responsible for paying for the treatment and future treatments.

I say, if we are going to use socialized medicine as a club to enforce societal norms, let's do away with socialized medicine altogether.

Socialized medicine can not become a control on behaviour. I don't care if you smoke 6 packs a day, skydive, weigh 390 kilos, have unprotected sex 4 times a week in bath houses, and wrestle Bengal tigers in the circus for a living, you are as entitled to benefits as the next guy.
 

the caracal kid

the clan of the claw
Nov 28, 2005
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indeed, socialized healthcare should not be used as a social engineering tool. To do so undermines the "freedoms" supposedly granted within Canada. Amung other things, it creates a greater division of classes, as the "rich" could more easily afford "unhealthy behavior" premiums than the "poor".
 

HTO

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The biggest concern for me is communicable diseases that can be prevented.

None of you feel that someone who has caught the cold, flu, or TB or other viruses from these clubs and brings them out into the public via work or stores is interfering with the proper functioning of society?

Or you don't feel that the rise of HIV/AIDS as a result of these clubs is harmful to society?

If the state has no business in sexual promiscuity and its health hazards, then it has no business in paying for it either.

My husband and I disagree about the ruling but the approach we'll be taking with our kids is to continue teaching them the virtues and inform them on effects of certain actions. Also, letting them know that througout their lives they're going to be bombarded with temptations and that they'll need to be aware of which ones are harmful to them.
 

tracy

House Member
Nov 10, 2005
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It's pretty naive to assume that casual sex leads to disease transmission. The risks are there but ime, those are the people who are the most careful about disease prevention (unlike the married businessman on a trip to Vancouver who has a fling and brings a nice present back to his wife). The argument about the flu and TB is silly IMO. Those spread at movie theaters and malls. I don't see anyone in favor of shutting them down. And really, how many people do we think are going to be in these clubs that it would pose such a huge public health risk?

As far as paying for it... almost every health issue has a behavioral component. I'll agree we should stop paying for STD treatment the same day we stop paying for the treatment of heart disease, cancer, diabetes, accident victims, etc.
 

Karlin

Council Member
Jun 27, 2004
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Re: Swinger Clubs - "No Harm Done"

Summary:
The Supreme Court of Canada, by a 7-2 majority, has lifted a ban on swinger clubs. We can all breathe a little easier. They also ruled that obscenity and indecency cases should be judged on actual evidence of harm done, and not just on what people think of the activity being judged.
http://tinyurl.com/a88w3


"No Harm Done" is a basic way of thinking for some of us. Hippies likely started saying it first, as they were being persecuted for using pot.
Prohibition in general goes against this idea. We should be looking at more examples of where "No Harm Done" applies... and we will wind up with a better society for it.


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There is something disturbing about the SEX CLUBS for PARTNER SWAPPING though... and giving them a licence for it seems to be to encourage this activity.
I would like to see it handled like "Don't jail them, but don't give it legal status either".

I am not a prude, I actually believe in/dream of "an orgiastic world of joy and celebration" in our future. But its got to be a "healthy" kind of orgy, something borne of joy, not sickness ; of desire, not mania ; of LOVE, not uncontrollable urges where satisfaction is never achieved so you do it over and over.

Its more like "an illness of excess" than a sex club. Sexuality is complex, and in many cases sexual habits come from abuse, confusion, and even damaged sex organs.
Pornography has created some ugly attitudes towards sex like "only BAD girls feck" , or "its not good unless it is all night and all day" , as well as sexual excesses and so on.
Circumscions can be "botched", "too close a shave", and many men unknowingly have problems from that, which becomes unhealthy sex because we never talk of it.

Sex can become an ADDICTION too. There are lots of sexually fecked up people. This club appeals to them...

With this paradigm of unhealthy sexual habits aboudning in our world, we should not be encouraging clubs where it is expected you will have many partners in one session. That doesn't turn everyone on, and so we ask "who is it appealing to?" and we will find mostly people with sexual problems, a personal history of unhealthy relationships sexual and otherwise.

Maybe well-adjusted people with a healthy sexual life will turn up there and it will be good. I am fairly sure it won't happen often...

Sex has been used for selling things, sex is currently being 'encouraged' on mass media outlets a lot more these days - shows with people "doing it" are common, and it seems every relationship is a sexual one. I don't know what is the point behind it, but every "addiction"

"Oh, so what, we are dogs eh?"

Ya, but when sex is an addiction like gambling, drugs, etc., it is no longer "healthy". If you feel compelled to have multiple partners and to do it to excess, there just may be something behind it all that needs attention. Sex Clubs would appeal to that sickness, and therefore I don't think they should get this licence, on the basis that public permission can be seen as encouragement.

AH. thats it. They WANT us to be addicted - like gambling has increased and been publicly permitted, and like DRUG addictions keep increasing , its a way to keep us controlled, from becoming string and healthy...

-----------------------------------------------
Can "CTP OTS" apply here?
Healthy sex = good ; Unhealthy Sex = bad , so create and encourage the unhealthy sex and they will need help, become weaker, have needs more needs lots of needs
" We can Fill them..."

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too long, sorry, I had three issues to talk about...
Karlin
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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You're kinda messed up, aren't you? On the one hand, you think it should be allowed, but on the other hand, you don't....

You make it sound like you are one of the "no harm done" school, but then you veer off into what sounds like a pretty conservative prudish line, and start to try to define healthy vs unhealthy sex.

Healthy vs unhealth sex depends on the definition of healthy sex. Everyone has a different definition. Pervertion is something you personally don't want to do.
 

coldstream

on dbl secret probation
Oct 19, 2005
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There is an issue here of societal norms of behaviour, of zoning, of social conventions. There might be an issue of privacy but there is also one of countervailing public responsibility. These things rightly belong in the realm of a legislature, not a high court. If sex clubs are a 'right' then clearly someone has the 'right' to open a brothel in the house next door, or next to the local school.

What we have seen in the Supreme Court of Canada, and the provincial High Courts, is a de facto judicial coup over legislative priviledge. It has imposed homosexual mores on a society that has had thousands of years of sequestering the phenomenon on religious and moral grounds. It has caved into a form of rampant individualism, free from notions of social responsiblity, on the most specious of grounds.

The hypothesis that a judge, by virtue of a law degree, has some special insight into rights and justice is being proved ridiculous by these rulings we see coming out now. Some time ago in Ontario, a tribune demanded that a Catholic school allow a homosexual high school 'couple' to come 'flagrante' to prom. They could have come as individuals, kept their relationship to themselves, but what the judges did was demand that a religious school recognize something that is scripturally defined as abomination (and rightly so) as valid. So much for freedom of religion.

Clearly this is the result of a court system out of control. Of a judiciary drunk with its own power, responsible to no one but their own shrivelled consciences. It brings to mind Lord Acton's admonition that "Absolute power, corrupts, absolutely". Certainly the Liberals continue to appoint these average minds, degraded intellects and moral pygmies to the courts as trusted hacks who won't hunt them down for their corruption.

The Charter of Rights, has shown, clearly that a constitution of this sort is an ANATHEMA to a Parliamentary system. It works well enough in a republican system like that of the Americans which has adequate checks and balances on the courts, but that is a written tradition. The oral tradition of Parliament has none of the constraints and restraints on the judiciary. Hence we are in the fix we are in, when Parliament ceased to be the highest court in the land.

I really don't care about sex clubs, they can rent a warehouse somewhere on the city's outskirts and have an orgy for all I care. There has always been an element of this sort in our culture. I don't want it next door to me, though. And its not a 'right'.. no more than injecting drugs or having someone aid you in committing suicide is a 'right'.

Out of control sexual profligacy however, will inevitably lead to increased disease, and to substance abuse.. hence to crime. Those things go hand in hand, and that affects everyone in society. We now have judges who are moral reprobates, infested with sophistry and self interest. Clearly we are in for a period of sexual carnival now, promoted and protected by the Liberals, we'll see what comes of it.
 

FiveParadox

Governor General
Dec 20, 2005
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coldstream said:
There is an issue here of societal norms of behaviour, of zoning, of social conventions. There might be an issue of privacy but there is also one of countervailing public responsibility. These things rightly belong in the realm of a legislature, not a high court. If sex clubs are a 'right' then clearly someone has the 'right' to open a brothel in the house next door, or next to the local school.
If the House of Commons were to legislate more specifically in relation to "sex clubs," as you call them, then the Supreme Court would have had something more to work with. As it is, they were given loose legislation and the broad Charter of Rights and Freedoms to work with. They cannot "override" the Charter with what you would believe, rightly or wrongly, to be common sense.

coldstream said:
What we have seen in the Supreme Court of Canada, and the provincial High Courts, is a de facto judicial coup over legislative priviledge. It has imposed homosexual mores on a society that has had thousands of years of sequestering the phenomenon on religious and moral grounds. It has caved into a form of rampant individualism, free from notions of social responsiblity, on the most specious of grounds.
In terms of "religious grounds," they have no place in the Supreme Court. Moreover, there has been no such "judicial coup." This ruling can be overridden at any time through the invocation of the notwithstanding clause of the Charter by the House of Commons; it isn't a "coup" if the House can overrule the Court, and intentionally chooses not to do so. We have our elected representatives, whether they are in the right or wrong, to thank for that.

coldstream said:
The hypothesis that a judge, by virtue of a law degree, has some special insight into rights and justice is being proved ridiculous by these rulings we see coming out now. Some time ago in Ontario, a tribune demanded that a Catholic school allow a homosexual high school 'couple' to come 'flagrante' to prom. They could have come as individuals, kept their relationship to themselves, but what the judges did was demand that a religious school recognize something that is scripturally defined as abomination (and rightly so) as valid. So much for freedom of religion.
One must keep in mind that the Justices of the Supreme Court are not ruling on the basis of their personal experience, or on their own opinions or feelings. They are making rulings on the basis of Canadian law; if their rulings do not reflect the values of Canadians, then our legislation does not reflect our values; it isn't the Supreme Court that needs to be reformed, but rather the Acts of Parliament that have already been adopted by a majority.

And another note on this, how I am I an "abomination?" I'm a gay teen, and I thought I was quite welcome in Canada. Hm. Learn something new every day, I suppose. And nobody says that just because the Courts have ruled, every now and then, in favour of "homosexual rights," or whatever you'd like to call them, doesn't mean you have to turn gay, now does it?
coldstream said:
Clearly this is the result of a court system out of control. Of a judiciary drunk with its own power, responsible to no one but their own shrivelled consciences. It brings to mind Lord Acton's admonition that "Absolute power, corrupts, absolutely". Certainly the Liberals continue to appoint these average minds, degraded intellects and moral pygmies to the courts as trusted hacks who won't hunt them down for their corruption.
Clearly, this is the result of a House of Commons that has not legislated in favour of your preferred policies. The Judiciary is not drunk with its own power, since this ruling could be overturned by the House of Commons with a simple majority vote to invoke the notwithstanding clause. And in terms of "corruption," the Supreme Court has not been asked to answer any questions relating to the alleged corruption in the Liberal Party — they cannot initiate any inquery or reference on their own.

coldstream said:
The Charter of Rights, has shown, clearly that a constitution of this sort is an ANATHEMA to a Parliamentary system. It works well enough in a republican system like that of the Americans which has adequate checks and balances on the courts, but that is a written tradition. The oral tradition of Parliament has none of the constraints and restraints on the judiciary. Hence we are in the fix we are in, when Parliament ceased to be the highest court in the land.
Let's consider the differences between the Judiciary in Canada, and the United States' courts. Justices in the United States are permitted to be completely and unabridgedly partisan. They can openly exercise their powers in the name of whatever political party they see fit, to serve any political agenda they choose. Whereas in Canada, our Justices can be removed from office if seen as acting overtly partisan — our Justices do not dictate social policy, they answer the Government's questions and rule on the validity of Canadian law as being, or not being, as the case may be, consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. I feel incredibly lucky to live in a nation where my rights and freedoms are so clearly drawn up and protected by a body so respectful and dutiful as our Supreme Court of Canada.

coldstream said:
I really don't care about sex clubs, they can rent a warehouse somewhere on the city's outskirts and have an orgy for all I care. There has always been an element of this sort in our culture. I don't want it next door to me, though. And its not a 'right'.. no more than injecting drugs or having someone aid you in committing suicide is a 'right'.
So, a person cannot have sex with more than one other person at the same time? That is not their right? Perhaps you should re-read the ruling; the Court ruled that the Government has no place dictating with whom, or with how many people, one can have sex, so long as it does not cause harm to society. If some consenting adults are having sex in a safe environment, whether or not they choose to have an audience while they do so, in the confines of a building clearly labelled as existing for that purpose, then it causes you no harm. If you don't like it, then don't watch.

coldstream said:
Out of control sexual profligacy however, will inevitably lead to increased disease, and to substance abuse.. hence to crime. Those things go hand in hand, and that affects everyone in society. We now have judges who are moral reprobates, infested with sophistry and self interest. Clearly we are in for a period of sexual carnival now, promoted and protected by the Liberals, we'll see what comes of it.
If increased disease comes of this, then that is our own fault, as citizens, for not exercising safe sex. Sex and substance abuse do not go hand-in-hand; if people did not have to "hide" and avoid the law in order to have sex how they see fit, then it would not be seen as such a shady activity, in my opinion. Again, I don't plan on having an "orgy," nevermind with others watching, but I recognize the right of others to do the same.

I doubt we're in for a period of "sexual carnival." There are very few of these "institutions" in existence in Canada as of today. Furthermore, the Liberal Party is not "protecting" this apparent "right;" rather, the Supreme Court of Canada has chosen to protect what it deems to be a right in light of the Charter. That is their prerogative, and their duty.

If an error has indeed been made, then I would far prefer, as I am sure many Canadians would agree, that the Supreme Court err on the side of more rights than I would it err on the side of too few.

With all due respect, coldstream, I disagree. And while I doubt that my comments will have changed your mind in the least, our system of governance requires that we all express our opinions in order for it to be effective.

Happy holidays, coldstream, and to everyone else as well. :)

Note Edited to resolve formatting issues.