Laughable
Laughable
The key word is convicted, just lately that 'not-guilty' came after 6 years of being in court charged with a crime, the 1st time he was found guilty and fined so where does the 'freedom part' come in. Even with the courts out of the picture the Jewish community can (and has) made his life less that it was before.Now here we can argue as to whose crime was the worse, and probably not come to an agreement. But the point is, a person may make anti-Semitic statement and still not be convicted of hate.
A4NoOb, that may be, but the point is, he was acquitted, the system worked. When a journalist writes an article for public consumption, he does run the risk that somebody may be offended and may do something about it. It is all part of the job. But the point is, the system worked.
Now that is a separate issue, funding for human rights commission. I personally think it serves a useful purpose. There are many cases which are not really worth going to court over; such cases could be settled at the lower level, by the Human Rights Commission.
Court trials can be expensive; Human Rights Commission is relatively inexpensive. In many cases it is to the advantage of both parties to settle the issue at a lower level, rather than go to courts. And for those who are not satisfied with the decision of the Commission, there is always the resort to the court system, after the Commission has ruled.
I did nothing of the sort. There are some utterances, some crimes which are truly horrible and they need to be dealt with by the courts. Zundel was one such case.
Oh, so my hunch was correct. It was some religious right operative from USA which was trying to stir up trouble in Canada (when you said Baptist Church, that was the giveaway, you probably meant Southern Baptist, the far right white church). So he (or she or they) deserved to be kicked out.
I really cannot comment on it without knowing the full story. Could you give a reference to web page?
Same comment. Please give a web page, so I can read it myself and form an opinion.
Now here we can argue as to whose crime was the worse, and probably not come to an agreement.
But the point is, a person may make anti-Semitic statement and still not be convicted of hate.
In this case it was his words to the reporter that was instrumental in the not guilty outcome of the 2nd trial. "I don't want to argue with you about the Jews" The 1st one found him guilty. That is not freedom of speech, that is freedom to carry a lawyer around with you at all times so you don't get charged. Freedom means no charges at all.Correction, an Indian may make an anti-Semetic statement and still not be convicted of hate.
However the Human Rights Tribunal has government funding, which is completely inexcusable considering the level of harassment the Human Rights Gestapo has made against controversial people like Mark Steyn.
A4NoOb, that may be, but the point is, he was acquitted, the system worked. When a journalist writes an article for public consumption, he does run the risk that somebody may be offended and may do something about it. It is all part of the job. But the point is, the system worked.
However the Human Rights Tribunal has government funding, which is completely inexcusable considering the level of harassment the Human Rights Gestapo has made against controversial people like Mark Steyn.
Now that is a separate issue, funding for human rights commission. I personally think it serves a useful purpose. There are many cases which are not really worth going to court over; such cases could be settled at the lower level, by the Human Rights Commission.
Court trials can be expensive; Human Rights Commission is relatively inexpensive. In many cases it is to the advantage of both parties to settle the issue at a lower level, rather than go to courts. And for those who are not satisfied with the decision of the Commission, there is always the resort to the court system, after the Commission has ruled.
Quote:
This is one instance where I agree with the hate crime provision, the holocaust denier, Zundel deserved to be convicted.
Then you contradicted your initial statement.
I did nothing of the sort. There are some utterances, some crimes which are truly horrible and they need to be dealt with by the courts. Zundel was one such case.
Here we have a Native Indian Leader, a minority, who is accused of charges much worse than Ernst Zundel, and he is acquitted.
Now here we can argue as to whose crime was the worse, and probably not come to an agreement. But the point is, a person may make anti-Semitic statement and still not be convicted of hate.
Yeah, I'm with Tracy......fear mongering, not gonna happen.......but let me also make two points:
1. The problem here is not religion in general, but the United Nations.....
2. Who gives a rat's ass what the UN thinks, or does? It is irrelevant.
As a side note, it brings interesting questions of when a prophet should be respected as a religion. We've in the end given than mythic status to Moses, Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha, and even eventually Joeseph Smith (except in Muslim states).
Zzarchov, who says a religion or a prophet should be respected? As far as I am concerned, anything and everything is open to criticism, in a free society, people are free to criticize everything. Hell, here in Canada we even permit people to openly plot the breakup of Canada. In a way, that could be considered the ultimate crime, ultimate treason. If we permit that, why not criticism of any religion, or any Prophet or Messiah?
Thus I think newspapers had the perfect right to print the cartoons about Mohammed, which resulted in so many riots (and ironically, death of Muslims) in the Islamic dictatorships.
The cartoons were published in Canada, with the publisher suffering no penalty, in spite of our hate crime laws. It was correctly determined that criticizing or making fun of Mohammed in no way expressed hate towards Muslims.
So as far as I am concerned, nobody is above criticism. We have freedom of religion in Canada, but also freedom of speech, and freedom of speech is the most fundamental of rights, trumping the freedom of religion.
As an Atheist, I have criticized most religions (Christianity, Islam, Hinduism etc.) in these and canada.com forums. If anybody doesn’t like it and gets offended, that is just too bad.
Bear in mind though that there is no contradiction between opposition to criminalizing criticism of religion and opposing disrespect for religious communities. Woud I support a law criminalizing rude behaviour towards my neighbour? No. Would I oppose rude behaviour towards my neighbour? Yes. Same with criticism of Islam. I can accept respectful criticism of Islam, but those cartoons were quite rude to say the least. No they shouldn't necessrily be legally banned, but that doesn't mean we should take every opportunity to disrespect people within the confines of the law.
Canada cannot disband the UN. At most, it could withdraw its membership from the UN.Perhaps if islam wasn't the religion of terrorism they would not be faced with this problem. It would also be a violation of our right to freedom of speech. The UN should be disbanded as it is no longer relevant and has become a colosial waste of money.