Top Picks
-
Section 13 about to be removed from Canadian law
YouTube 1y ago
-
Billy Crystal is the Scariest Monster
Top Picks 6m ago
-
Danny MacAskill's Imaginate
Top Picks 2h ago
-
The Originals
Top Picks 2h ago
-
James Gandolfini on Inside The Actors Studio (Part 3)
Top Picks 2h ago
-
James Gandolfini Dead: 'Sopranos' Star Dies In Italy BREAKING NEWS. R.I.P.
Top Picks 4h ago
-
Orange is the New Black "Life" Trailer [HD]
Top Picks 5h ago
-
John John Florence: 10 Point Air. Oakley Pro Bali
Top Picks 6h ago
-
Kenichi Ebina - Matrix Robotik Dancer - Americas Got Talent 2013 Auditions
Top Picks 7h ago
-
Russell Brand on MSNBC Mocking Media
Top Picks 8h ago
-
Official Anchorman 2 Trailer
Top Picks 10h ago
-
High-Wire Daredevil Takes on His Greatest Challenge
Top Picks 11h ago
-
Amateur video shows explosion in Aleppo suburb and car bomb being prepared
Top Picks 11h ago
-
Aug. Trial Set for Ohio Man in Triple Kidnapping
Top Picks 11h ago
-
Royal Baby Could Give U.K. Economy $400M Bump
Top Picks 12h ago
-
Obama speaks against nuclear weapons
Top Picks 13h ago
Tags
- human rights
- congress
- canada
- law
- hate crimes
- democrats
- history
- senate
- house of commons
- mark steyn
- kevin williamson
- the house
- the law
- free speech
- de facto
- public safety
- mr garrison
- in the house
- human rights commission
- et al
- the lesser evil
- pre-op
- large number
- shut down
- take away
- south sandwich islands
- lesser evil
- the restoration
- what a shame
- pick your battles
Description
Mark Steyn: You don't generally get to pick your battles, and, if you'd asked me circa 2007 if I wanted to spend much of the next half-decade battling for the restoration of freedom of speech in Canada and elsewhere, I'd probably have decamped to the South Sandwich Islands. But then the Canadian Islamic Congress and their statist enablers in the "human rights" racket attempted to impose a de facto lifetime publication ban on me, and so I found myself conscripted to the cause. It's been a long, slow process, but the victories have been real. Section 13 of the Canadian "Human Rights" Code has as a practical matter been rendered unenforceable. It's now about to be removed from the law formally. It passed its third reading in the House of Commons, which means it only requires a vote in the Senate and Royal Assent (yes, yes, calm down, Kevin Williamson et al), and it's history. This twit from Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition is a good example of what we've been up against: New Democrat public safety critic Randall Garrison said Wednesday that, due to the large number of hate crimes, the human rights commission needs to have the power to combat the issue online and force individuals and groups to remove websites containing hateful speech. Removing the sections from the human rights code will effectively strip the commission of its power to educate Canadians and shut down inappropriate websites, he said. "We do have a serious problem," Garrison said. "If you take away the power to take (websites) down, it's not clear they have any mandate to even to talk to people about it and educate them about it." Clear off, you twerp. I don't want the state to have a "mandate" to "educate" the citizenry about their thought-crimes. Even if I did not object on principle, one thing I've learned during this five-year campaign is that the statist hacks Canada's official opposition is so eager to empower are, almost to a man, woman and pre-op transsexual, either too stupid or bullying to be entrusted with the task. Mr Garrison himself would appear to be a fine example of the former, at least. If it's a choice between an unlovely citizenry with all its flaws or an overbearing state policing their opinions, I know which is the lesser evil. What a shame a "progressive" "liberal" "socialist" like Randall Garrison has such a low opinion of his fellow citizens.
