Mike Brock: March 2008 Archives
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.

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.
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.
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[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 Act. The 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.
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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.
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.
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.
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!
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.
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.
