March 2008 Archives

I don't know how else to put it.  A recent poll shows that Tories would double-to-triple their seat count in Quebec, and the Liberals would be reduced to about 10 seats there.

Wow.

Hey Cherniak, this is what happens to your party when you spend all your time thinking up faux scandals.  It's become the only thing you're good at.  Even with all the bad press you've managed to dish at the Conservatives, and gain some momentum, it didn't last.  As soon as people started forgetting about the Cadman affair, the Conservatives have surged in the polls.

Dion is screwed.  The Liberal Party is screwed.

To lift some quotes from John Lapierre, former Liberal cabinet minister, who was on CTV this afternoon: 

"The Bloc has never been in such a bad position.  The Bloc has lost 12 points since the last election." 

[...]

"The Conservative Party is now the federalist alternative in Quebec.  Outside of Montreal, if you're a federalist, you tend to vote Tory."

[...]

"The Liberals, they are in a worse position than they were in the middle of the sponsorship scandal.  It's never been that bad, that I remember, in the last 30 years, at least"
I am going to be right up front with you and say that I don't know what the intention of Geert Wilders was in making the short film, Fitna.  UN Secretary Ban-Ki Moon has weighed in on it, saying it's only purpose was to offend, and that you can't have freedom of speech without social responsibility.  Another freedom-hater. Clearly, Richard Warman should go get a job at the UN.  But that's besides the point.

I found this interesting little bite:

As for the response of the Muslim world to “Fitna,” scholars have stressed that Muslims bear in mind the second meaning of the word and regard this event as a test case that they should pass through patience and educational activities. Yeprem recalled that Islam’s prophet never responded in enmity to the kinds of attacks the Muslim world is facing today. “We should be clever and base our struggle on knowledge. Our responses should be acknowledging, not violent. We should convey the correct Islam, and if the film is using the Internet, we should use it [the Internet] for our own means as well,” Yeprem said.

I hope sincerely that there is not violence in response to this film.  I fear there will be.   There's been violence in the recent past, over similar events.  So it's certainly not unlikely.

The fact of the matter is, the anti-Islamophobia movement is seemingly bereft of the understanding for why people fear Muslims.  They blame the media, ignorance, Ezra Levant, and on. 

Basically, they blame non-Muslims for the fear of Muslims.  They say, the fear of Muslims is completely irrational.  But how can so many people be completely irrational? Certainly we have more faith in people than that.

Here's the reasons why people fear Muslims.  It's not rocket science.  I don't have a liberal arts degree.  I'm not a sociologist.   I don't need to be.  The reason is so self-evident, it's absurd.  In fact, everyone knows the reason, they just don't want to admit it to themselves.

Terrorism.  Yes, terrorism. 

Terrorist activity, linked to Islamic extremism has carried out nearly every major terrorist attack against the West in the past twenty years.  Couple this fact, with the realities of religious laws in Islamic states like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan, Kuwait, Syria, etc.   States where women are second-class citizens, and in some cases, cannot even leave their home without a male escort.

Then there is this...

Protesters2006.jpg

We're reminded that all of these incidents are isolated, they don't represent Muslims, you can't stereotype the religion for the actions of a few.  And on, and on, and on...

The problem is, these pictures are real. The terrorist attacks in Dar es Salaam, Nairobi, the Gulf of Oman, New York, Washington DC, London, Bali, Madrid, and plots that have been foiled—are real.  There are real dead innocent civilians who were intentionally targeted, in the name of Islam.

Whether you find the proclamations of the men who carried out these acts, a legitimate association with Islam or not, the connection remains.

The human brain works through pattern recognition.  It's the fundamental way we understand the world.  It's why we see faces in clouds.  It's why we have the scientific method, to counter for these inherent biases caused by this automated pattern recognition process, that is so fundamental to human cognition.

Whether or not every Muslim is a terrorist or not, is not what the mind is evaluating.  It's looking for a pattern, and it's seeing a pattern.  It's drawing it's prejudices, it's risk assessments and it's worldview based on that pattern.  This process is as much an flaw as it is an advantage.

The death threats against employees of LiveLeak.com, which hosted the movie, only add to the pattern that the average person stakes out in their mind.  It is a pattern that continues to repeat itself in Islam.  

We know most people are good.  We know most Muslims are good.  Hell, Oskar Schindler demonstrated to us, that even some Nazis were good.  This is not the point. 

The point is that perception is reality.  Whether or not it's someone dressed like a gang member, standing on the street corner, or a woman in a burqa, the patterns we see cause fear.  It's actually a survival instinct.

There is only one solution to this problem.  Only one.  The only solution that will bring an end to this clash of civilizations

It is for Islamic extremism against the West to abate. For it to end. No amount of cultural fairs, or one of the left's exciting awareness campaigns will turn the tides of prejudice.  

Every violent protest, every sign that says "Kill the Jews" or "Freedom of Speech Go to Hell" in the streets of London or Copenhagen, takes Muslims one more step away from acceptance and one step towards confirming that they are—in fact—a lurking enemy.  

The reform cannot happen externally, because the problem of Islamic radicalism didn't start externally.  It started internally, and that is where is must be solved.  

Indeed, Muslims like Tarek Fatah or Amina Wadud, are calling for this internal reformation.  But we have seen the effects of that too.  We've heard of the death threats against Irshad Manjii, and Wadud.  We've heard fatwas issued against these reformers.  And then the reformers become yet another example of why to fear Islam.

When Muslims take us to court because we "offend" them and demand us to apologize for being "offensive" we question them more. We ask ourselves: do they not accept our liberal values?  Do they not accept our basic right to free speech?

And why wouldn't we ask these questions.  They are completely appropriate questions, given what we have seen.  The problem is, we often hear the answer: "the right to freedom of speech does not include the right to offend".  And what does this answer mean?  It means some of these people do not accept the liberal value of free speech.  They wish to abridge it.  It is an affront to our society, our culture, or democracy.

This comment I'm writing now, will be dismissed as Islamaphobic. Why?  Because it's easier than actually addressing my points.  It's easier than acknowledging the, oh-so-upsetting truth: that Islam must internally reform.  They prefer the strategy of appeasement, on the backs of the long bankrupt ideal of multiculturalism.  That, sociologists with their contemporary theories of oppression and social justice, can educate us out of this quandary.  

They're delusional.  They are far removed from the stark realities of daily life in Saudi Arabia or Syria.   They are not part of the solution. 

Islam fostered the problem internally, and it is internally, that is must solve it.  Welcome to reality, boys and girls.

Dr. Dawg, has challenged me to step up to the plate as a freespeecher and defend this.

Apparently, a group of anti-Israel activists decided to print what they describe as a "parody" of the Vancouver Sun in a reasonable likeness of the newspaper itself.  In so doing, the "parody" was meant to portray the paper, and it's owners, the Aspers, as being proud of supporting "Israeli apartheid".  

Whenever I hear people using the word "apartheid" in regards to Israel, I just turn off.  I've just avoided the whole debate on my blog, and I'll continue to do so.

Well, CanWest, the owners of the trademarks, that said activists willfully infringed upon decided to take them to task for doing it.  They sued them.  Some people are calling this a SLAPP suit. Censorship. One guy even says it's worse than what the Human Rights Commissions dish out under Section 13 of the Human Rights Act; a ridiculous position.

There is a complex intersection of interests here.  The right to express yourself versus the right to the owner of intellectual or artistic property to exert control over that property.  And make no mistake, under trademark laws, the property of CanWest was infringed.  

From a libertarian perspective, this is a somewhat complicated issue.  But I come down on the side of the fence, of the right to protect your trademark, and your copyrights.  This is not a matter of suppressing speech, as is being portrayed by the left.  But it is a matter of suppressing expression—in a sense.  

Preventing people from expressing themselves by duplicating, or reproducing their trademarks and copyrighted material is something that happens all the time in virtually all developed nations.  It's the fundamental cornerstone of our intellectual property laws.  

Certainly some of these laws are controversial.  There are some, who believe you cannot own knowledge and that patents and copyrights are unethical.  Most people who think like this are socialists and communists however, and are not the mainstream of society.

The reality is, that most people accept that these limits are reasonable because it relates to the livelihood of people who work in the knowledge industry, and rely on their brand image to sell products.   It is for the latter reason that companies are often vicious in going after those who infringe on their "brand" in any way.  I happen to know that Apple, the maker of the iPod and Macintosh computers, sends out cease and desist orders on people using their trademark on a daily basis.  They enforce their control over their trademarks with unrelenting legal force.  And they've earned a bad reputation in some circles for doing so.

It's important to remember that CanWest is not suing for defamation or libel.  They are not actually suing the people for saying anything.  They are suing them for reprinting a trademark, which they own, without permission.   They are suing them for disseminating that trademarked material.

Some people have noted that CanWest would not be suing, if the trademark infringement had not been paired with the harsh political rhetoric against the Aspers.  Perhaps.  In fact, it probably made all the difference in their decision.  But the owner of a trademark reserves the right, as the saying goes, to enforce their trademark in any case.  Even if the trademark infringement was in a completely playful, pro-Asper, pro-Vancouver-Sun manner—they reserve the right.

In that sense, if they can prove that CanWest has willfully allowed people to infringe their trademarks in other cases, than it certainly boosts the defense's case.  They could argue that the lawsuit is purely malicious.  They'd have to demonstrate a pattern of CanWest being highly selective in how they enforce their trademarks to have a chance at that, I think.

Now if you're calling CanWest a censor, then almost all large companies are censors.  I've been party to a trademark dispute before.  It's not something that I'm all that unfamiliar with.  But I accept that trademarks exist, and I understand the reasons why.  I'm even partial to those reasons.

The left wants to portray this as the big, evil, right-wing CanWest shutting down debate.  But it's not the debate they're shutting down, but simply the use of their trademark, used, reprinted and disseminated without permission.  That's hardly shutting down debate.  Nor is it a "minor technicality" as far as intellectual property rights go.  

I mean, I just expressed myself here, and I didn't use a registered trademark such a corporate logo to do it.  Works fine.

The lesson is: don't smear the intellectual property of the person or persons you are trying to smear all over a piece of political propaganda, and you'll avoid a highly inconvenient legal battle over their trademarks and copyrights.  It's not a very difficult proposition.
I'm not quite sure how else to describe Brenda Martin's behavior.  

A few weeks ago, on the Michael Coren Show, I pontificated about how horrible it was that Stephen Harper was not doing more to secure Brenda Martin's release.  A point made, coupled with my inherent distrust of the Mexican justice system, given the events of the past couple years.

Before I did the show, I had heard the recording of the phone call made by Brenda to a media outlet, crying at the top of her lungs for Stephen Harper to step up and do something about it.  She seemed sincere.  She seemed like she was crying for help.

Two days after my appearance on the Coren show, Stephen Harper indeed, spoke up about it.  Something that you'd think Ms. Martin would appreciate.  But no.  In fact, she was downright pissed off that Harper weighed in on the issue.  She claimed he was doing it for "political gain".

At this point, I was downright confused.  I mean, maybe Stephen Harper is doing it for the photo-op.   Maybe he's a political opportunist.  I don't think he is. But lets suppose Ms. Martin is right.  

If the leader of your country, was now publicly making statements demanding your release, something you desperately wanted to happen, and you thought he was doing it for political reasons, wouldn't you in spite of that, button your bloody mouth and wait until afterwards to make those criticisms.  

Ever since the Conservatives have taken an interest in the case, she's shown nothing but disdain for them.  It's the weirdest case of: "Please help me! I hate you! Screw off!"—I've ever seen.  

It's so bizarre that it makes you wonder if somehow the Liberal Party is feeding her talking points, in order to use her as a political pawn in a YAFS (Yet Another False Scandal).  It certainly coincides with Paul Martin going to down to meet her, the day before Harper spoke up.  

Then of course we have Brenda Martin accusing the Conservatives of leaving her to rot in prison.  And of course, when the Conservatives release proof that they've actually been on her case for quite some time, she yells "Yes it's true, they've been helping me! But that was private information!"

So we learn the Harper government has been trying to help behind closed doors, long before Dithers even went to see her.  This is contrary to what Ms. Martin has told the media.  The Conservatives have leaked proof that they've been on the case.  She admits the information is accurate.  But says they had no right to release it.

Essentially this is one of the worst cases of someone wanting to have their cake and eat it too.  She wants to publicly lambaste the Conservatives, lie about the level of their involvement in her case, get help from the Conservative government in-spite of this, and have the truth of the matter protected under her "privacy rights".  You'll forgive me if this doesn't sound like the strategy of someone who actually wants out of jail that badly.  It sounds like someone who'd rather take potshots at a government, while cooling their heels in a Mexican jail cell.

Good Show

| | Comments (4) | TrackBacks (0)
I think we had a good re-premiere of the show, with Ezra Levant as our guest.  Check it out over at the Al & Mike Show Website.

Next week: we have Marc Emory, cannabis and libertarian activist joins us.

I'll also make a point of trying to blog more regularly.
I want to apologize to anybody who has posted comments over the past few weeks, never to see them appear.  I do not moderate comments, but the spam filter, seems to be catching a lot of legitimate comments as spam.  It moves them into a pending approval status, which requires me to manually go and release them.  

I didn't realize this was happening, and I just unlocked quite a few comments dating back, quite a while.

I apologize to anybody who thinks I was intentionally censoring them.  I just never bothered to go through the spam filtered comments.  I will from now on.

Update: Okay, I accidently just deleted like 15 comments posted in the past few days.  Sorry about that. 

Update2: I still seem to be having problems with most comments being blocked.  As I try to get to the bottom of this problem, if people wish, they can sign up for either a MovableType, LiveJournal, TypeKey, or Vox account.  Or if you have OpenID you may use that for authentication here too.  Any comments posted under any of those third-party registrations will be automatically approved.  And for you paranoid lefties... no, using third-party authentication does not reveal your private information to me.  The authentication is a dual-challenge system through the third-party clearing house—your login and password never even passes through this site.  Or you can continue to just fill out the form as you have always been doing.  Hopefully you don't get nailed by the out-of-control spam filter though.  If you do, I'll do my best to get your comment published ASAP.

Fake Outrage

| | Comments (10) | TrackBacks (0)

If there is one thing people seem to be good at in contemporary society, it's fake outrage.   You know, the kind of outrage where you are really not mad, but you find it either politically or morally imperative to at least act outraged.  Yeah, that.


People on the left within the blogosphere are in one of their characteristic anti-Kate McMillan fake tizzies.  Predictably, Warren Kinsella and Jason Cherniak are fake outraged. 

Now, I don't doubt that these people are mad.  But they are not mad about what they portray.  They are mad about something else, all together.  They're really mad that Kate McMilllan exists at all.  But that's another story.

What did Kate McMillan say?  Well she said: "Nazis didn't carry out the holocaust.  The german state did that".

She was making a philosophical point.  That, without the powers of the state, the ability of the Nazis to carry out the holocaust would have been slim-to-none.   Their ability to wage war against the rest of the world would have also been slim-to-none.  But you see, you're not allowed to make philosophical points like this.  Why?  Well, because it's insensitive.

Now, I'm not sure if Kate McMillan is an anarcho-libertarian. .  I could probably e-mail her and ask her, but it's not really material to the discussion.  But here's how James Bow breaks down her logic over at Cherniak's:

All of this argument is turning on the suggestion that you can ascribe a moral value to a thing rather than a person, because that's what the State is: it is a tool, and in my opinion the responsibility for evil rests not with the tool, but the intentions of the people using or misusing the tool. Nothing we create is good or evil until we use it.

But let's take Kate's argument, as reiterated here, to its logical extension: 

1. the Nazis were evil, but their evil could not have been implemented if they did not have the apparatus of the state to enact there evil.
2. therefore, the state apparatus is inherently dangerous to leave in place because it enables people to enact great evils.
3. ban the state apparatus, and thus block the Nazis' abilities to enact evil.

Fair enough.

1. Murderers are evil, but their evil could not have been implemented if they did not have guns available to enact that evil.
2. therefore guns are inherently dangerous things to have around, because it enables people to enact great evils.
3. ban guns, and thus block the murderers' abilities to enact evil.

So, based on this analogy, I welcome Kate McMillan's support for stricter gun controls.

Now, James Bow has been very reasonable in the past.  But his logic is not exactly on-game here.

This logic is at best, a hasty generalization, and at worst, a straw man. It consummates in a false anology. Given James seems to be honest fellow, it's more likely he has a very poor understanding libertarian ethics.  So let's educate him.

This is the crux of his argument: if a person thinks something is bad and should be considered immoral, that all bad things should be considered immoral.  Therefore if a person who thinks one thing is bad and immoral, and another bad thing is not immoral, that person is a hypocrite.

It's a circular argument, and a formal syllogistic fallacy in logic to make an argument like that.  We might also call it begging the question.  Another example of this type of logical error would be saying "Everyone thinks Andy is a good guy. Therefore, everything Andy does is a good thing".  This one is more simple than James' argument.  But it's actually the same logical error.

You see, libertarians believe that government is a generally bad thing.  But they don't think everything bad should be banned—actually James, it's socialists and Warren Kinsella that think that.

Your gun analogy is particularly poor, because how could a libertarian simultaneously be against government intervention and for government intervention?  It doesn't work.  James, libertarians are not hypocrites for viewing one bad thing immoral and the other not.  It's a philosophical position, of which has many adherents, and a system of ethics based on that philosophy.

From a libertarian position of ethics: it is unethical for the state to interfere in the matters of the person, if that person is not interfering with another person.  Therefore, if a person owns a gun, but is not using it to interfere with the liberty of another person, gun ownership constitutes a legal practice.  Libertarian ethics dictate this.

Also, libertarians don't generally believe that anything should be banned simply on it's potential to do harm.  To this extent, they are also generally against: laws restricting recreational drug use, compulsory car seatbelt use, compulsory helmet use, etc.

To a libertarian, the fundamental precept of morality is that: the person is sovereign unto themselves, and free of external coercive force.  From both government and other persons.  If a government is directly exercising physical, coercive force against a person, who is not, directly exercising physical, coercive force against others, libertarian ethics would deem this: unethical, and therefore bad.

Libertarians are generally against governments even having the legal ability to initiate force against it's people, because the government is viewed as accountable to individuals, not to the majority.  When the majority of people in a democracy, use their majority in government to initiate force against a minority, we call that: tyranny of the majority.  In Libertarian ethics, this is unethical and bad.

Libertarian ethics also hold freedom of expression in the highest regard.  Something like hate speech, does not qualify as physical, coercive force.  Therefore, libertarians are against any laws limiting freedom of expression.

So libertarians generally prefer a government which is based around strong constitutional law with negative rights.  Meaning, where all rights are assumed, except for those explicitly removed.

So when James Bow and others, find hypocrisy in this statement from Kate, it is only when viewed through the lens of their own ethics, using spurious logic.  There is nothing hypocritical or illogical in her position insofar as it is a philosophical statement.  Most libertarians and anarchists would actually agree with her sentiment. So, save the fake outrage.

Crossposted

The Al & Mike Show will return live, and in podcast form this Thursday at 8:00pm Eastern Standard Time.  We will be streaming live on ustream and will be distributing our podcast through iTunes, again.  That is, as soon as Apple replies to my e-mails to correct the RSS feed.

Ezra Levant will be the guest. 

We plan on talking phone calls and skype calls, but that is subject to change, based on the availability of our call screener.
There's been some talk in the blogosphere, in comments, and also in private about my choice in using the word fascist to attribute to those who support Section 13(1) of the Human Rights Act.  

A Jewish friend of mine, who mostly agrees with my position, has appealed to me to avoid using the word, given the specific context of the past century.  I understand the position.  I even sympathize with it.  I told them as I'll tell you, that I did not choose the word to deal out strategic hurt against members of the Canadian Jewish Congress.  I'm not a malicious person like that.

But here's the thing:  I believe the CJC is doing a great disservice to the Jewish community in their defense of Warman, the Human Rights Commissions and their support for prosecuting thought crimes.

Nazis used secret courts, secret judges and secret evidence to dish out the terror they did on the Jewish people of Western Europe.  Certainly, Human Rights Commissions in Canada have not committed the same atrocities that were committed in the Nazi courts.  But I suppose my point is—as is the point of many free speech advocates and libertarians—is that it's only a matter of degree.

It's a matter of degree that we empower the quasi-judicial bodies to dole out punishment against citizens who they deem to have expressed political thoughts in a matter that is unreasonable.  Or that they have said or written something that is deemed "likely to expose someone to hatred or contempt", to quote the wording of the law.

And we note that it is no longer just "hate speech", but rather "hate and contempt speech" that is now unlawful.  Where does it end?

Will an organization like the CJC, during the next global crisis, seek to add a rider to the reactionary omnibus bill of the day to prohibit "mean speech" too?  We setup these hyperboles to make our point, but suggesting that the Ezra Levant case or the Mark Styen case was inevitable ten years ago would have been dismissed as hysterical as well.

It's not like this isn't happening in the civilized world, anyways.  The United Kingdom has an Anti-Social Behavior Act, which allows judges there, to issue orders to people to change their daily behavior.  There have been orders requiring people to dress a certain way. Even crazier, two teenagers were charged with anti-social behavior for only wearing a single glove.  The court ordered them they were to wear two gloves, or no gloves at all. 

I'm not making this crap up.

I don't like the state.  I have contempt for the state.  I only get solace in the fact, that the state is an extension of me, to protect me, but not to command me.  I do not answer to the state.  The state answers to me.  

To argue for expanded powers of the state to regulate my speech and my thoughts is nothing short of fascist to me.  It is a fascist tendency, leading us towards contemporary fascism in the name of "social cohesion" and "harmony".

Maybe my contempt for government will lead someone to pull a Tim McVeigh here in Canada?  Maybe? Perhaps I should be silenced.  By being anti-government, am I not exposing people who work for the government to "hatred and contempt"?  If you think so, you can find information on filing a complaint against me here.

Moving on...

We comfort ourselves in that we are creating these statist bodies in the name of protecting everyone.  We're not shipping the Jews off to camps to be murdered this time, so its not the same thing, right?   But maybe it's exactly the same thing.  Did you think, that maybe it's the exact same, evil human tendency to want others to see the world in our way, and to resort to authoritarian means by which to achieve that vision?  Did you think that maybe your logic looks exactly like the logic of those who you wish to silence?

The problem is, that I am not willing to have an argument about the utility of someone's speech, which is what this comes down to, isn't it?  It's about whether we as a society find utility in a racist or bigoted rant.  That, if we find disutility in it, it's fair game for prosecution.   

It's not our individual or collective responsibility to judge the utility of someone's expression, and sic the arm of the state on expression we deem hurtful.

People like Warren Kinsella and the CJC are arguing about the utility of the speech.  That, is the speech harmful to society, and hurtful to individuals?  Could such speech lead to violence? 

These are all meaningless questions, because they are outside the premise of the debate.  Because I would turn around in say that: no, there is little utility to the speech.  It may be harmful to society.  It will definitely be hurtful to individuals.  It may even, through some obscure causal path, lead to violence.  

The question is, do we have a right to charge people with a pre-crime?  Do we have the right to even suppose what the consequence of a particular flavor of political speech is?  I don't think we do.  

I apologize for any pain that the word fascist illicits in people.  But I will not minimize my feelings on this issue.  I will not sanitize my perspective.  This is the real world, folks. 

In the real world, your views get challenged. In the real world, when you hold a position, as the CJC does, you sometimes get scrutinized. Harshly.  In the real world, when you hear something that hurts your feelings, you can forget about it.  In the real world, when you pass laws that limit people's right to even express their feelings, you've done a great deal more harm than I can even put into words.  You may even have increased the chance they'll turn to violence, since you've chosen to deny them their right to express themselves.  Throwing someone in jail for being overtly homophobic—as has happened in Scandinavian countries—does not change someone's mind.  It simply drives their thoughts underground.

The claim that hate speech explicitly increases the probability of hateful action is a difficult proposition to prove.  In fact, on it's own, it's nothing short of a classic logical fallacy known as post hoc ergo propter hoc, which literally means "after this, therefore because of this".  In this case, the argument is that: racists who have engaged in hateful speech have in some cases, consummated their hatred in violent action, therefore it is appropriate to outlaw hateful speech to head off the subsequent violent action. 

This is tenuous logic.

When you're going to abridge a fundamental right, like freedom of expression, you better be willing to prove that: if the racist was not allow to speak, it would have precluded the violent action. Otherwise, the case that abridging the right does more good than harm, by this standard alone is logically invalid.

After all, if people can't speak publicly, they'll speak privately.  Has the banning of neo-Nazism in German discourse prevented various fire bombings?  Or has it just made people feel better?  If we're talking about a trade of my rights for your feelings, then I think the conversation is already over.

So don't ask me to retract.  Don't ask me apologize for the way in which I characterize your position.  I have none to give you.  I view you as committing an evil act, against my sovereign right to express myself.

I have no interest in going off on some racist, neo-Nazi rant.  Because I'm neither racist, nor a neo-Nazi. But I may, from time to time, criticize political-radical Islam, as Ezra Levant and Macleans Magazine have made the mistake of doing.  I think there are valid criticisms to be made there.  I will not tolerate you, giving the  tools to people, to come after me, to prevent me from making those criticisms.  That is evil.  And I dare say, almost makes you evil by extension.

You say these words demean my position.  I say that's your right to say that.

Those of you who like to make the vapid and disingenuous connection between people like myself and neo-Nazi's, in that I support repeal of Section 13(1) of the Human Rights Act, and they just happen to as well—that the quality of my character is in doubt as a result—should take great solace in the fact that you too, share the pleasant company of the likes of: Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, Fidel Castro, Hugo Chavez, Adolph Hitler, Muammar al-Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein, and so on.

Except of course, by demanding the arm of the state, you actually have more in common with the aforementioned than I do with any neo-Nazi.  For one, because the neo-Nazi's don't support free speech, in reality.  They are, in fact, my enemy.  But you are in agreement with these great names in history insofar as it pertains to statist tendencies to enforce political speech codes.  Different subject matters, same idea.

So in the tenuous-association game, I don't really think the pro-HRC people come out on top here.

I was just forwarded a copy of a Tribunal decision that has overruled the Human Rights Commission's invocation of Section 37 of the Human Right's Act. Section 37, as you may or may not know, is a clause of the HRA that allows tribunal proceedings to be held in secret, if the tribunal determines there is any threat to safety of witnesses.

Rogers Communications, on behalf of Macleans Magazine, has been fighting the tribunal to allow journalists to be present when Commission employees Hannya Rizk and Dean Steacy, will be forced to testify, under oath, of allegations that members of the commission (and Dean Steacy himself) indeed planted racist messages on websites, which were subsequently investigated by the commission.

There are also allegations, that Richard Warman, as a non-commission employee gave inappropriate direction to members of the Commission on how to proceed on cases in which he was a complainant.

Warman and Steacy have long fought to prevent giving such testimony, and recently have fought to prevent having such testimony published, citing concern for their safety.

Well, today the Tribunal finally disagreed.  Thanks in no small part to the public pressure that Ezra Levant and Mark Steyn have helped garner.  

Excerpts from today's ruling:


[...]


[10] More significantly, however, having now had the benefit of considering the question in circumstances different than those in which I was placed on the morning of May 9, 2008, I am not persuaded that the witnesses are exposed to a real and substantial risk that undue hardship will be caused to the persons involved, as contemplated in s. 52(1)(c) of the Act, nor that there is a serious  possibility that the life, liberty or security of a person will be endangered, as contemplated by  s. 52(1)(d) of the ActThe excerpts from the Internet cited by the Commission in its submissions  do not, in my view, satisfy these criteria.  They are indicative of no greater risk than that which  has been suggested in the past by comments addressed to other participants in this and other s. 13 cases, including counsel, Tribunal members and staff, and the parties themselves. 


[11] I am therefore rescinding the order.  The hearing will be conducted in public, as mandated by s. 52(1) of the Act.  I would note for the record that the Commission is mistaken in its submissions that the order came about pursuant to my ruling of May 7, 2007, which had merely  excluded cameras from the Tribunal premises.  That ruling preceded the exclusion order.  No request has been made for me to revisit the May 7th ruling and as a result, cameras will remain excluded from the Tribunal's premises. 


[...]


Kate McMillan:

You screamed bloody murder that Stephen Harper wasn't doing enough to help, you splattered every Conservative minister within spitting distance of your tantrums, you bawled and threatened and cajoled, and now that someone is making a personal effort to help - you transform Brenda Martin's cause into a political stink bomb. At about the same time as details begin to emerge that cast a little suspicion on the purity of her victimhood status.

Yep.  It's not unexpected.  When it comes to people on the right, the left holds them up to an unachievable standard: which is to be left.

Another great example is the Status of Women debacle.  Originally, the Conservatives planned to re-allocate funding, and shut down several satellite offices across the country.  Feminists went bonkers, and the Conservatives relented, restoring funding to the bureaucracy.  Since then, the Conservatives have increased the budget of the SOW to $29 million, up from the $11 million budget it was when the Conservatives took office.

This has gone completely unacknowledged by feminist groups.  At best, their response to the increased funding is: "f*** you, where's our universal daycare?".  Some even continue to lie and say the Conservatives have cut funding to the SOW.

Of course they lie.  If you've encountered most feminist groups, you'll find most academic feminists believe that Women's suffrage will never be completely possible in a capitalist society.  Third-wave feminists, as they call themselves, largely view capitalism as patriarchal concept and that a true feminist society, is a socialist society.

Many socialist feminists, do not consider liberal feminists (those are capitalist feminists, by the way) as even feminist at all.  It's viewed largely as an oxymoron by the academic feminists, to be liberal and feminist.  

So you can understand why a right-leaning government would be hesitant to dole money out to people who believe that the government is inherently misogynist, if only by their economic policies.

I've said in the past, much to the chagrin of fellow right-wingers, that feminism has a place in society.  But not socialist feminism.  In fact, socialist feminism, which makes up the majority of feminists, and almost all academic feminists, find very little redeeming about our society at all.  In some cases, the feminist movement has aligned itself with the "Islamic rights" movement.  

Some feminist student groups have actually participated and sponsored "Wear-a-Hijab" day, in a show of solidarity with Muslim women.   An interesting, if not hypocritical position, for a group of generally anti-religious women.

I'm not religious, by the way.  It's beyond the pale, how these women go out of their way to normalize patriarchal elements of Islam in Western society, yet view liberal feminists as unfeminist.

This was greatly exemplified when the CBC (of all places) actually contacted various women's advocacy organizations to comment on the case of Asqa Parvez, only to receive the response that: it's not a white woman's place to comment on the plight of a non-white woman, and they were consistently referred to Islamic women's organizations.  Even the CBC journalist was taken aback by this.

I was explained by a feminist that there is, and I quote, "a complex intersection between racism and sexism as it pertains to the Asqa Parvez case, and it is for Islamic women to seek their own agency.  We have no right to interfere".

I would make no bones about it.  I have no problems funding organizations promoting women's equality in the workplace, and in society in general.  But an organization that gave a response like that, would have it's funding cut faster than the blink of an eye in a Mike Brock government.

Feminist organizations don't serve women anymore.  They serve Islamic radicalism, and socialism. Even a CBC reporter, who was of Islamic descent herself by the way, got a glimpse of this.  Even she was in disbelief.

Tarek Fatah, of the Muslim Canadian Congress, has also been at the receiving end of feminist rejection.  Not because he's Muslim. Oh no.  But because the feminists take the position of Mohamed Elmasry, that Tarek Fatah is not a real Muslim, and that he's an apologist for the West.  Ask Tarek yourself.

Feminist organizations: if you ever wanted to know why people like me don't to fund you.  Look in the mirror.  

For all the feminists out there that are reasonable, and consistent in your views (even if I don't agree with you), this rant wasn't for you.  I've met feminists who are highly disenfranchised by what they describe as the Islamification of the feminist movement.  (I'll ask if I can use some of their names)





What is "liberal" about the Liberal Party anyways?  Here's the Oxford Dictionary's definition of "liberalism":

A political ideology centred upon the individual, thought of as possessing rights against the government, including rights of due process under the law, equality of respect, freedom of expression and action, and freedom from religious and ideological constraint. Liberalism is attacked from the left as the ideology of free markets, with no defence against the accumulation of wealth and power in the hands of a few, and as lacking any analysis of the social and political nature of persons. It is attacked from the right as insufficiently sensitive to the value of settled institutions and customs, or to the need for social structure and constraint in providing the matrix for individual freedoms.

Doesn't sound much like the Liberal Party to me.  In fact, it's interesting how the Conservative Party of Canada has more in common with the ideology of liberalism, than does the Liberal Party.  

Let's try another definition: social democracy

Social democracy is a political ideology that emerged in the late 19th century out of the socialist movement.[1] Modern social democracy is unlike socialism in the traditional sense which aims to end the predominance of the capitalist system, or in the Marxist sense which aims to replace it entirely; instead, social democrats aim to reform capitalism democratically through state regulation and the creation of state sponsored programs and organizations which work to ameliorate or remove injustices purportedly inflicted by the capitalist market system. The term itself is also used to refer to the particular kind of society that social democrats advocate. While some consider social democracy a moderate type of socialism, others, defining socialism in the traditional or Marxist sense, reject that designation.

Ah... there we go.  I propose the: Not-as-socialist-as-the-NDP Party of Canada.

As I've said in the past, social democrats have appropriated the word liberalism from it's once true meaning, of which modern day conservatives in Canada are much closer to representing than is the Liberal Party.  The US on the other hand is a completely different story.  The word liberal there has been completely twisted to mean "socialist" to many on the right.  But it's a word soft-socialists like to be affiliated with, as it has such positive connotations.

For example: Obama calls himself a liberal, but he's not.  He's clearly a social democrat.  In fact, Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher were neoliberals, not neoconservatives.  These words have all been twisted to suit various political goals. 

Today, many conservatives gawk at the idea that liberalism is an inherently capitalist ideology. But it is.  A political scientist from the early twentieth century would not flinch to label Stephen Harper a liberal, based on it's academic definition.

Leftists have sought to de-normalize liberalism, because it is an inherently individualist political ideology, where-as leftist ideologies are inherently collectivist.  Over the past hundred years, leftists have sought to redefine liberalism as a collectivist--or at least--partially collectivist ideology, which it is not.

Stéphane Dion is going to be smarting Tuesday morning.  He just lost a Saskatchewan riding to the Conservatives.  

The Liberals won the riding of Desnethé--Missinippi--Churchill River by 67 votes in the last election. Monday night, the Liberals lost the riding to the Conservatives by about 400 votes. Ouch.

Not unexpectedly, the Liberals maintained their two Toronto ridings, electing Bob Rae and Martha Hall Findlay.  These ridings don't matter in the grand scope of things.  These are both zombie-Liberal-voter ridings. 

The results for Vancouver Quadra are not in as of this post.  But the horrible defeat in Saskatchewan is not good for Dion.

Let's check in on Jason Cherniak...

Toronto is doing great!

I was at two polls for Martha where we had them by 70%. Now, at the victory party, the number for every poll gets read out to a huge cheer as it arrives.

Martha Hall Findlay is going to Ottawa!

The Liberal Party has totally crushed the Conservatives tonight!

Update: The Conservative lead in Sask. seems to be more like 1400 votes.

Update 2: I am projecting the Liberals will decisively take Vancouver Quadra.  The Liberal trend is holding, and their lead is widening as the polls come in.
I'm on the Michael Coren Show tonight on CTS at 8pm EST.  Check your local listings.
Why does Jason insist on giving me such irresistible pieces to munch on.  He really needs to stop thinking out loud, because this is just embarrassing.  Well, actually, it's very funny.  So, one second-thought... don't stop.  The whinier you get, the more entertaining it is:

Today, in suing the Liberal Party of Canada, Stephen Harper has once again shown his authoritarian, dictatorial streak. I know some will think I'm overreacting. However, such people may not understand how the fundraising laws work. No matter how well meaning, no lawyer can volunteer time for the Liberal Party on this file, because it is illegal to volunteer professional services to a political party that exceed a $1,100 value per year. That's about 6 hours of work if you go with somebody "cheap". As a result, Mr. Harper is essentially using the monetary resources of the Conservative Party to force the Liberal Party to spend its money on lawyers, instead of politics.

Yes... yes he is doing that, isn't he?  Just like Dion sued Duceppe.  You know, if you make unsubstantiated claims about someone engaging in criminal activities, as Duceppe did to Dion, and now Liberal Party of Canada has done to Harper, guess what?  You might actually get sued.

Cherniak calls it "authoritarian" and "dictatorial" to sue a political party for lying about you.   That's undemocratic, apparently.  Except, of course, it's not.  Cherniak doesn't even seem to know what the word democracy bloody means. It isn't a license for parties to defame people. It's a method by which we choose our government.  If the Liberal Party makes a fatal mistake, goes bankrupt, and becomes a worthless, withering, pathetic excuse for a political party, then: so be it.  I for one, hope that happens.

Back to the point.

The Liberal Party has gone out of their way to smear Harper any way they can, from trying to link him to the Mulroney-Shreiber file, to suggesting he engaged in criminal bribery.  And then they frickin' complain when Harper actually reacts in a serious way?

We all know politicians smear each other.  It's part of the game.  Harper's never threatened to sue people who accuse him of a "hidden agenda" or being a "neocon", or a "far-right Christian radical".  Whatever, that's the same old political trash talk.  

But there's somewhat of a difference between misrepresenting someone's ideals and beliefs, and misrepresenting their character, and their actions.  And this is precisely what the Liberals have done by suggesting that Harper has been party to an act of criminal bribery.  So they will get what they deserve. 

...

Cherniak then goes on to whine about how the LPC doesn't have enough money:

Some will argue that all's fair in war and politics. If the Liberals don't have as much money as the Tories, that is their own fault. I can accept that when it comes to political campaigns, but not when you are talking about lawsuits. Political parties should not be expected to raise money to defend themselves against other political parties in court, for political arguments. If the Tories can do this to the Liberals, then they can do it to the Greens, the NDP or any other political party.

Translation: "I'm a whiny, partisan, Liberal.  It's not fair the Conservative's have more money! They cut off our corporate money trough.  And now they're going to sue us dry!  Why should we have to defend ourselves against them in court with our political donations!? It's not fair!"

My response: Boo-yah!


Hey Warren, perhaps you and the CJC should carefully examine the people whom you're so vigorously defending, and I'll stop throwing around the word "fascist".

The thing is, I consider it quite fascist to have Human Rights Commissions with the power to judge the palatability of my political speech, and take action against me if they find it not so.

I consider it fascist that the Canadian Jewish Congress has fought so hard to clamp down on free speech rights in this country, exposing all Canadian citizens to the long-term potential abuse by the state.  And we've already started to see this abuse happening, by the way.

I consider it fascist that Richard Warman has sought to have the HRC mandate the CRTC to setup a Great Firewall of Canada on the internet, where our government will have the power to filter specific international websites.  It's neo-nazi websites today, what will it be tomorrow?  International blogs that criticize Christianity, Judaism, or Islam, and in the interpretation of the HRC, is "likely to expose that group to contempt"?  No thanks.  I'd rather take my chances with freedom, than with fascism. 

And by the way, I don't demean the CJC. They demean themselves by this horrible stand they've taken on the issue.  

I cannot believe the Jewish people endured the horrors of fascism, in the unspeakable way they did, only to turn around and repeat those tendencies.  And by that, I'm not in any way suggesting a "moral equivalence" between the slaughter of millions of people and Human Rights Commissions.  So hold on to your outrage.  I'm not calling the CJC fascist, but I'm calling the HRCs fascist. I'm calling support for Section 13(1) fascist, though. Because, when it comes to the abridgment of basic human rights, good intentions are not good enough.  Anybody who wants to abridge my basic right to "free speech" is going to earn the label fascist in my book.  You can interpret that however you want.

Yesterday, Jack Layton took to the streets of Toronto, to demand that Canada be "on a path towards peace in Afghanistan", at a protest organized by the far-left, radical Toronto Coalition to Stop the War. I'm sure he had plenty of fun, but a few notes about this group:

I've had some face-to-face conversations with the organizers of the TCSW, last year, when I went to a conference called Marxism 2007: A Festival of Resistance on the University of Toronto campus.

I spoke to quite a few individuals there, and most of my conversations are still recorded on minidisc, as the purpose of my trip was material for my show. So I can tell people, first hand, that the main people behind nowar.ca are principally communists. No, I'm not being Mr. Conspiracy.

In fact, these people are so far to the left, in their support with the Communist Party of Canada, and the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist), that they see the NDP as only a lesser-evil at best.

These people are also highly connected to local student "unions", particularly the Ryerson Student's Union, a constituent of the Canadian Federation of Students.

They even have their own radio station.

Go to the Ryerson University Student Campus Centre, and go up the stairs to the University Radio Station CKLN, and you'll often find communist paraphernalia on sale there. And if you look deeper, you'll find that the radio station itself is more connected with the communist movement, than with the social democratic movement.

No, I've never gone to Ryerson University as a student. But for a while, I took great time and effort in investigating and affiliating myself with the far-left here in Toronto. It's a tight-knit group, where you find the same old usual suspects wherever you go.

In fact, some local communist activists were at the Maclean's-Islam town hall at—there's that name again—Ryerson University. I know this, because some of them recognized me and approached me, having recognized me from my appearance at the Marxism conference.

The thing I find talking to these people, is that a lot of them are so blazingly honest about their motives, which is why they're probably relegated to the fringes of society. For example: I've been told in conversation, on more than one occasion, that these people are not necessarily against militarism. No, they are against militarism in the form of liberal hegemony. And by liberal, they mean capitalist. They have no problem with organizations like the FARC, or other communist paramilitaries.

Remember, communists are anti-liberal. Not anti-war. Liberalism means completely open democracy, absolute individual rights, etc. All of which are incompatible with far-left dogma.

If you read the manifesto of the Communist Party of Canada, you'll find that they prefer a new constitution, where only socialist parties may run for government; their idea of democracy is making liberalism illegal.

They justify it in weird and curious ways, which I'm sure they themselves believe.

It is their opinion, that in a liberal democratic society, nobody can ever be completely "free" since the "proletariat" are slaves to the "bourgeois". So it is with this, that they think of "mandatory socialist principles" for all political parties as being "more free". But I'm only pointing this out to show how delusional they are. There's a million ways to pick apart their logic, and I don't have the time.

I'm also pointing this out to show the kind of company that Jack Layton, Linda McQuaig, Judy Rebick, and others keep.

They stand side-by-side at rallies. Rallies organized by far-left radicals, who seek to remove the basic underpinnings of our free and open society, through the imposition of their morality, their political ideology and their "leaders".

With the tendency to sympathize with those kinds of people, it's no wonder that such people support the fascist Human Rights Commissions. It allows them to back-end load their ideology into our society, without the interference of real law, or reality for that matter.

Who are you Jack Layton?

We are winning

| | Comments (13) | TrackBacks (0)
By and large, the anti-freespeech movement—which is small—has become tired of the HRC issue. They feel they've won the argument, and that Ezra and co. are simply beating their chests to deaf ears.

The truth of the matter is that the issues has been gaining traction in political apparatuses across this country. MPs on the hill, in both the Liberal and Conservative camps are taking notice, and an ever-growing chorus of support is speaking out.


That's right, from Muslims to gay rights activists, we have a wide-ranging coalition of Canadians concerned about the abridgment of our basic liberties, and they support the call to strip these fascist Human Rights Commissions of their power over our words.

Actually, you'd be hard pressed to find any large, resounding support for Section 13 of the Human Rights Act, outside the NDP, Warren Kinsella, Richard Warman, The Canadian Jewish Congress, and a bunch of silly bloggers.

If this is the group that is going to make the last stand for fascism, then I'd say things are looking up for this country.

Dion has taken a page out of Toronto mayor David Miller's playbook in his recent plan to sell tax hikes on the Canadian people.

Early last summer, David Miller informed Torontonians that new taxes being proposed were, in fact, not taxes at all. Rather, they were "revenue tools" to help the city deal with it's mounting "financial obligations". This was probably the apex—in my opinion—of leftist intellectual condescension. It's the equivalent of saying, this isn't a "war", it's simply a state of "open, armed, prolonged conflict".

In Stéphane Dion's case, he wants there to be a "carbon price" not a "carbon tax". I'm not exactly sure how that works. But rest assured, they mean exactly the same thing.

This of course is not unprecedented. To call taxes something other than taxes is a popular leftist measure to obfuscate the issue, and sell big-government principles to people without offending the populace's sensibilities in that regard.

You'll remember that Dalton McGuinty insisted his taxes hikes were not taxes either, but rather, "health premiums".

I guess it's sort of a victory for the right, that we've managed to make the word "tax" a faux paux. But in this case, as in every other case, the left just invents a more sanitized word to re-sell their idealism, free of the baggage of the compromised word.

There's no socialists or leftists anymore, there are progressives.

There are no protests anymore, there are national days of action.

There is no more political propaganda, there are public awareness campaigns.

There's no sexual orientations or races, there are identities. You can even self-identify. Like Andrea Dworkin, who was a self-identified lesbian, yet only had heterosexual relationships in her lifetime.

It gets even worse...

It's not censorship and tyranny anymore, it's called a social contract, usually in the form of speech codes.

There's no affirmative action anymore, there are social equity programs.

The ways they criticize the right (and the West, in general) have also evolved...

There's no more Western media, it's Western cultural imperialism

Overthrowing the Taliban in Afghanistan, that's Western economic, cultural, and military imperialism.

No cultural assimilation. It's cultural genocide or imperialism.

There's no such thing as being successful anymore, it's called being