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PostPosted: Wed Mar 20, 2013 7:57 am
 


Bill 18's infringements on religious belief are 'reasonable'
$1:
Bill 18 does not violate religious freedom. In fact, the proposed legislative initiatives are required to protect queer students from bullying.
Permitting students to form a GSA, a gay-straight alliance, has no impact on the belief systems of other students, their parents, a school division or anyone else. The Supreme Court of Canada has stated clearly that merely recognizing the equality rights of one group, sexual minority students in this instance, does not in itself constitute an infringement of the equality rights of another -- those asserting religious freedom rights.
Bill 18 does not impose religious beliefs on anyone. Any argument that Bill 18 infringes religious freedom, either of students or of a school division, is weak and would have to give way to a Charter equality rights claim. The objective of Bill 18 is to ensure that all students, including sexual minority students, have safe and equal access to education.
The Supreme Court of Canada has made it clear that a sincerely held religious belief is subject to Charter protection. In order to establish that religious freedom has been infringed, however, there must be evidence of a "significant infringement" to that belief as a result of state action. At most, any interference is trivial, such as requiring an administrative assistant to make a room booking or to deal with other minor administrative matters related to the GSA.
The principle that freedom of religion is a right to hold such religious beliefs as an individual chooses is well-established. Religious freedom also includes the right to engage in religious practices and to declare one's religious beliefs openly. Some will argue they are compelled by religious belief to speak out against sexual minority students and the presence of GSAs. It also is well-established, however, that all of these religious freedoms are subject to those limitations that are necessary to protect the safety or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others.
In February 2013, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in Whatcott that freedom of religious speech and the freedom to teach or share religious beliefs was subject to reasonable limitations. In particular, the court said religious freedom is limited by the requirement that the exercise of these rights not be accomplished through hate speech.
It is important to bear in mind that Whatcott dealt with speech in the public arena, the larger marketplace of ideas. Rules can be different in a closed environment such as a school or a workplace. In specific environments, we have the right to be free from harassment, belittlement and ridicule.
The opposition to Bill 18 is unfolding in the context of schools populated by vulnerable teenagers. In the context of schools, it is even clearer that any speech that delegitimizes and rejects a particular group in the eyes of the majority would not be permitted.
My own work in schools confirms that the attempt to delegitimize and harm not only abounds in schools, but is often the norm in particular schools and in some communities.
Given the ameliorative purposes at the heart of Bill 18 -- confronting the problem of bullying, particularly homophobic, transphobic and gender-based bullying -- any limitation on expression grounded in a sincerely held religious belief or otherwise, would most likely be viewed as a reasonable limitation on religious expression.
Therefore, rather than undermining Bill 18 as some have argued, the decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada establish that Bill 18 is on solid legal ground and achieves a just and appropriate balance between both of the rights that are engaged by the proposed legislative proposals.

Donn Short is a law professor at the University of Manitoba. The author of Don't Be So Gay! Queers, Bullying, and Making Schools Safe, published this month by UBC Press, he teaches human rights law and education law.





PostPosted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 7:03 am
 


Commons approves transgender rights bill
$1:
18 Tories voted in support of bill

The Opposition private member's legislation passed by a vote of 149-137, with the crucial support of 18 Conservatives, including four cabinet ministers.
...
Other Conservative MPs opposed the bill on other grounds, such as the argument that pedophiles would be protected when they lurked in public bathrooms.

Shortly before Wednesday's vote, Calgary MP Rob Anders tabled a petition "on behalf of thousands" of Canadians opposed to what he called "the bathroom bill."


Still nothing from Vic about how this persecutes religious biggots in Steinbach.

I wonder why.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 4:35 pm
 


Oh THAT PIECE OF WORK.

Everyone knows the back story there. He banged the EA of another MP while married and got her knocked up and denied the child was is/refuses to pay child support.

Class Act, Minister Toews is. He lives in a highly Mennonites area is a Mennonite himself. And anyone who grew up in rural Manitoba or Saskatchewan is well familiar with this group and it doesn't require much explanation. (I grew up in Southern Manitoba...Bible Belt Central...Morden/Winkler highest teenage pregnancy rate in Canada, Virden highest STD rate in Canada; keep it class MB).

They're a very judgmental, insular and socially conservative bunch. He's pandering to the social cons in his riding. He voted against gay marriage, transgender rights bill, and has the AUDACITY to preach moral rights when his "family values" practice is abysmal in his own life.

But Mennonites never abandon one of their own, doesn't matter how morally lacking they are.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 4:37 pm
 


This is a very fun website for some laughts/memories if you grew up in a Mennonite area!

http://www.shoutmennonitenames.com/

Omg, so many names I know. So ridiculous.





PostPosted: Mon Mar 25, 2013 5:26 am
 


Gay British Teen, Dies After Being Set On Fire At Birthday Party
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A young British man has been convicted of manslaughter after killing a gay teen by setting him on fire.

The BBC reports that 20-year-old Jordan Sheard has been sentenced to three and a half years in jail for the death of Steven Simpson after pleading guilty to manslaughter charges. Simpson, 18, died one day after sustaining "significant burns" in June 2012, according to the report.

Simpson had Asperger's syndrome, a speech impairment and epilepsy, the Yorkshire Post noted. The teen had reportedly been dared to strip down to his underpants before being doused in tanning oil, after which Sheard set him aflame at the party. Other reports said that anti-gay messages, including "gay boy" and "I love d*ck," had been found scrawled across Simpson's body.

Detective Sean Middleton described Simpson to the BBC as "a very caring and likeable young man" and a "generous spirit was taken advantage of and a single thoughtless act resulted in his death."


8O



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“It’s going to be the beginning of an incremental attempt to destroy the Christian church. That’s what’s taking place. That’s the agenda behind the scene,”


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PostPosted: Sat Mar 30, 2013 5:21 pm
 


I love how setting someone on fire is "a stupid prank..." and we wonder why there are so many layers in hell jokes. :P


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