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In Canada, Criminal Libel Charges Laid For Criticizing Police

BitterOak writes "A Calgary man is facing criminal charges of libel for criticizing police. According to the story, the RCMP have filed five charges against John Kelly for claiming on his website that Calgary police officers engaged in perjury, corruption, and obstruction of justice. What makes the story unusual is that the charges are criminal and not civil. Even in Canada, which has much less free speech protection than the United States, it is extremely rare for people to be charged criminally with libel. It is almost always matter for civil courts."

383 comments

  1. ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    time to pack my bags and head north. ohh wait....

    1. Re:ohhh by shentino · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's right.

      Thirst for power and oppression of dissent is engrained in the very core of humanity's political genes.

      There is no escape.

    2. Re:ohhh by mfh · · Score: 3, Funny

      To Alaska? You can see Russia from your house there.

      --
      The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    3. Re:ohhh by Blue+Stone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not just our 'political' genes, but our actual genes.

      Every simian species* has a hirarchical social structure whereby those at the top dominate and control those at the bottom, often extremely viciously. Humans are little different in that respect.

      *Except Bonobos, who settling disputes by fucking, and spend most of their spare time doing the same. Man, I wish we were more like Bonobos.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    4. Re:ohhh by starless · · Score: 2, Funny
    5. Re:ohhh by VoidCrow · · Score: 1

      Somewhere, there is a Bonobo pining to see you, with a twinkle in its eye, and love in its heart.

    6. Re:ohhh by shadowofwind · · Score: 1, Insightful

      settling disputes by fucking

      We do that too sometimes, but we call it rape, and when it's organized and sanctioned by a political group, as in Bosnia or Congo, we call it a crime against humanity.

      Yeah, invasive behavior is in our genes, but the capacity for respect and self control is also.

    7. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wikipedia: Bonobo males occasionally engage in various forms of male-male genital behavior.[32][33] In one form, two males hang from a tree limb face-to-face while "penis fencing".[34][35]

      Man, I wish we were more like Bonobos.

      I do not.

      Have you tried it?
      If so, what did you dislike about it??

      I can never keep hold of the tree :(

    8. Re:ohhh by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

      ->A Calgary man is facing criminal charges of libel for claiming on his website that Calgary police officers engaged in perjury, corruption, and obstruction of justice.
      And in doing this they hope to show they aren't corrupt lying scum?
      Oh the irony.
      ___
      Next up, proof the Canadian Court system is even more corrupt.

    9. Re:ohhh by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't think you can call rape a way of settling a dispute.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    10. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      settling disputes by fucking

      We do that too sometimes, but we call it rape, and when it's organized and sanctioned by a political group, as in Bosnia or Congo, we call it a crime against humanity.

      No, we don't. We call it makeup sex. And it's consensual, not invasive. Rape and pillaging aren't about solving disputes... they are purely carnal and direct abuses of power. In your attempt to classify monkeys as being beneath us humans, you only succeeded to show further similarity.

    11. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To Alaska? You can see Russia from your house there.

      Or one of the other 56 states:

      Obama Claims He's Visited 57 States

      The "You can see Russia" line is a joke from a comedienne. The "57 states" line is from a joke.

    12. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an idiot. s/monkey/ape

    13. Re:ohhh by dougmc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      settling disputes by fucking

      We do that too sometimes, but we call it rape

      You may call it rape, and maybe in some cases it is, but certainly not in all.

      Depending on the relationship, you may actually find situations where sex (consensual, not rape) does settle disputes. It's hard to remain angry with somebody when you're both awash in that "fresh fucking" glow, after all.

    14. Re:ohhh by fishexe · · Score: 1, Insightful

      settling disputes by fucking

      We do that too sometimes, but we call it rape...

      I thought we called it make-up sex. Perhaps you have "settling disputes" and "exhibiting dominance" a little bit confused?

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    15. Re:ohhh by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      I thought of that angle before I posted. But the animal behavior that "settles disputes" with sex is dominance behavior, not making up afterwards.

    16. Re:ohhh by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      OK. That's real also, even though dominance behavior is also generally a part of that with other animals.

      If you don't also talk and compromise, the sex approach may only go so far, particularly in very long term relationships. But I guess that's obvious.

    17. Re:ohhh by brainboyz · · Score: 1

      The talking and compromising comes in after the angry sex. You've both got enough hormones running through you to calm you down and allow you to think of the other's best interest to some extent.

    18. Re:ohhh by Jerry · · Score: 1

      Tiny Fey's SNL skit misquoted the comment by Palin about seeing Russia during a CBS interview.

      The ridicule with humor tactic is straight from "Rules For Radicals" by Saul D. Alinksy, page 128, rule #5: "Ridicule is man's most potent weapon. It is almost impossible to counterattack ridicule. Also it infuriates the opposition, who then react to your advantage."

      In this case the ridicule is built upon a deliberate deception. Palin said "You can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska." What Tina Fey spoke is certainly more funny, but the real purpose of the script was not to inform, but to misinform using ridicule. It was character assassination. It was a very successful tactic, even if it was dishonest and deceitful. It is identical in tactic to that taken by NewsWeek magazine when they took a full body sports photo for their cover, cropped it to show just the left side of her face, zoomed in to produce a grainy, unflattering affect. The original photo is not so unflattering. Another site tried a series of photoshopped pictures of Palin in an attempt to devalue her greatest, and probably only asset, her beauty.

      Most people, except those on the Left, saw through the deception by doing their own investigation. In the process they probably decided what most people who are neither Right or Left have decided, namely that Palin is short on substance. There is little difference between reading notes off the palm of your hand versus off of a pair of teleprompters. With her as President we'd have another C student in the Whitehouse.

      The USA is in a financial, political and social morass of such proportions that only the 1776 Revolution, the Civil war and the Depression of the 1930s comes close. In fact, we are probably in the Second Great Depression. Of ALL the candidates I've studied, from either side of the isle, or in the "Tea Party", there appears no one who has the knowledge, training or intelligence to serve in the Whitehouse during this time. The Right & the GOP are married to corporate powers, and even the far Left is in pursuit of corporate finance money, although they try to lie about it and hide behind mindless slogans. I fear for this country and for the futures of my grandchildren.

      --

      Running with Linux for over 20 years!

    19. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Rape is used as a weapon because when one side rapes and mutilates the women of the other, the men will often reject and abandon their wives or children. It has a devastating effect on the areas affected and civilian morale is destroyed. Sadly, wars are won with these tactics.

    20. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our politicians would be hookers and porn stars, our hookers would be hookers and porn stars, our porn stars would be hookers and porn stars.

      And humanity would be extinct with AIDs 20 years later, but it'd be a fun 20 years - actually! If ever humanity has 20 years to live before like a meteor wipes us out or something, I say we put this to an earth wide vote - with all the men, and a handful of the worlds sluttiest chicks voting in favour, I'm sure we'd win! :D

    21. Re:ohhh by Barkenna · · Score: 1

      “When a government starts trying to cancel dissent or avoid dissent is frankly when it’s rapidly losing its moral authority to govern.” (Stephen Harper, Canadian Press, April 18, 2005) Down with Harper. He's gone way too far.

    22. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And humanity would be extinct with AIDs 20 years later

      Or not. Slashdotters aside, people generally fuck a lot already, and humanity hasn't been wiped out by disease.

      I can't help but wonder if the fixation with STDs that is so prevalent among nerds is just a way of feeling better about being terrible with women.

    23. Re:ohhh by shentino · · Score: 1

      They aren't showing that they aren't corrupt lying scum.

      They're showing that they're too powerful to care.

    24. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Replying to undo a unintentional mod

    25. Re:ohhh by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

      Actually rape has been shown to be a viable reproductive strategy in some primates - basically the only way for any but alpha males.
      Hidden Estrus defuses that to some degree but the behavior is still there.

    26. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bonobos thing is largely a myth anyway.

    27. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In huron county mi. they would call it--- contempt, then throw you in jail

    28. Re:ohhh by antdude · · Score: 1

      We can escape to moon like the old days with new places. We ran out of places on Earth. :P

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    29. Re:ohhh by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      1) She claimed international knowledge because someone, other than her, could possibly see Russia from Alaska. Not that she's been to a foreign country or had ever seen one from Alaska. Furthermore, she didn't have a passport until shortly before those comments. So she could have been to Canada or Mexico, but it's highly unlikely she's been anywhere else before becoming governor of Alaska. That alone is absurd enough to be worth ridicule. To claim a qualification in international relations because someone could see Russia from Alaska, even though she never has, is simply absurd.
      2) There was no deliberate deception. It was comedy. Almost all impersonation comedy includes saying plausible but wrong things. Tina Fey didn't "deceive" she made a joke. And it was funny. That enough people in the US are stupid enough to not know the difference between a joke and a public statement from a vice presidential candidate is not Tina Fey's fault. Every president who has served since SNL started has been mocked in the same way, and a number of candidates as well. The only time it wasn't funny was for James Danforth Quayle III, who was enough of a caricature of a vice president that a caricature of him was just unfunny.

    30. Re:ohhh by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      "actual genes"

      Odd, because I have no desire to control everyone, as I feel that would be boring. This is a part of personality, and it is usually the illogical capitalistic society which brings forth such desire to control. It is no different than saying that humans are naturally evil, even though they aren't born with any personality to speak of.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    31. Re:ohhh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can grow marijuana legally here. I've been talking to people trying to get them to estimate the percentage of pot smokers, and the nonsmokers tend to estimate one in three, the tokers tend to guess two in three. We're pretty big on privacy (and gun rights, not coincidentally) up here, so public expression is frowned upon, but as long as you keep to yourself and don't bother nobody...

    32. Re:ohhh by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm missing it, but I can't see any way that the Newsweek photo could have come from any of the photos taken from runnersworld that you posted. There aren't any that are even of the same angle of her face.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  2. Less protection for free speech? by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 2

    That's a loaded and subjective statement - care to back it up?

    1. Re:Less protection for free speech? by TermV · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees a Canadian's right to free speech, is inherently weaker than the US constitution because it contains a notwithstanding clause that allows a province to suspend many rights for 5 year periods. Quebec's language laws wouldn't stand up to a first amendment challenge in the US but it is allowed to violate the charter of rights and Freedoms in Canada because they used the notwithstanding clause.

    2. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Let's see

      The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

      Which one has built in exceptions.

    3. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pooh666 · · Score: 2, Informative

      BS.. It is allowed to stand because the people of Quebec wish it. You can compare paper or compare reality. In the US, in the same situation we would just find a way to change the law to suit. So staying there is some kind of static difference really isn't accurate. I think the language laws are a massive affront to freedom, but then I don't live in Quebec, for damn good reason!

    4. Re:Less protection for free speech? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2, Informative

      From the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

      rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

      Tne First Amendment doesn't have the qualifer, therefore it is slightly stronger.

      Note that this is in theory. It is not necessarily true in practice, for either nation.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    5. Re:Less protection for free speech? by florescent_beige · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think the GP is right actually. The problematic part of Quebec law is the requirement that French be predominant on all business signs. I can't see that surviving in the US.

      Note that the restriction is not on what you can say, it's on the language of business signage. Practically speaking I'm not sure if that means Canada has less free speech that the States.

      Given that this was one of only two uses ever of the notwithstanding clause, I don't consider it to be a weakness in the constitution. Think of it more as a shortcut constitutional amendment. Note that notwithstanding overrides expire after five years in order to give voters a chance to express their opinion via a general election it before they are renewed.

      The US constitution has...how many amendments? The Canadian Constitution has none, and two uses of the notwithstanding clause. I wouldn't say one is stronger or weaker than the other.

      Finally, as clear as the 1st amendment appears to be, we all know you can't say anything you want whenever you want wherever you want. There are limits. The Canadian constitution is explicit about that so when you read them side by side the Canadian text appears wishy-washy, but in effect they are equivalent.

      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    6. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pnewhook · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Ok, what about television and radio broadcast standards? In Canada, I can watch uncut movies on public air broadcast channels that contain violence and nudity. In the US, your broadcasts are under a required broadcast delay and censored when deemed inappropriate. Who in this case has more freedom of speech? Do you think ABC would ever get away with broadcasting nudity on a Friday night?

      And the US constitution does not protect anyone from libel statements. There are limits to acceptable free speech in both countries.

      The article summary just reeks of ignorance and bigotry.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    7. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      They are a affront to your freedom but not mine.
      Like he parent said, the majority in Quebec are in agreement with these laws.
      Without these laws we would lose our language, people don't seem to remember,but only a few years ago, all big stores inside and outdoor signs where in English.
      The majority of patrons were francophone but the owner were anglophone.

    8. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Which country as the free speech zones? The text look stronger in the US constitution, but in real everyday life it think Canadian citizens have more freedom.

       

    9. Re:Less protection for free speech? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      I can't see that surviving in the US.

      IANAL, but there's a lot less protection for business/commercial speech than for political. And regulations on signs in general have been upheld.

    10. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They are a affront to your freedom but not mine.
      Like he parent said, the majority in Quebec are in agreement with these laws.
      Without these laws we would lose our language

      Yet in the US the French-speaking population in Lousiana do not require special language and cultural protections despite being surrounded by an overwhelming English-speaking population in most of the country.

    11. Re:Less protection for free speech? by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      Regulation of broadcast depends on the fact that it uses the public frequencies. Print publications enjoy much stronger protection.

      And the US constitution does not protect anyone from libel statements.

      Technically true, but the burden of proof in libel cases in the US is frankly astronomical, especially if the victim is a public figure. I don't know if Canadian law is closer to the US or the UK on this.

    12. Re:Less protection for free speech? by jav1231 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Apparently, when the Cajuns left Nova Scotia they left the pussies in Quebec.

    13. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      And only old people still speak French in Louisiana.

    14. Re:Less protection for free speech? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Is that why changed the stop signs too?
      Next time you get a chance to go to France, checkout their stop signs. They say STOP on them.

    15. Re:Less protection for free speech? by munky99999 · · Score: 1

      Well the provincial abilities to shut down freedom of speech aside. There are a couple limitations to freedom of speech similar to both countries. Such as libel and slander. The big difference that makes Canada's weaker is that we dont protect public hate speech. While this ends westboro baptists... how long until hate speech against the government is banned? How long until the subjectivity of it...

    16. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 0, Troll

      Quebec men prefer pussies, you like cocks?

      By the way the Cajuns did not leave, they were deported by the English.

    17. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      They say Stop in the City of Westmount in Quebec too.

      They were changed because all the French speaking driver refused to stop at the "Stop" signs arguing they could not understand the meaning of the word. This was causing general mayhem on the streets and a lot of nasty accidents, something had to be done.

    18. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0

      >>>There are limits.

      Very few. The Supreme Court of the US has even ruled that death threats are protected speech, unless the issuer of the threat is carrying a gun or knife. But simply walking up to someone (say a KKK guy) and saying, "I hate racist mother fuckers and I'm going to kill you" is protected speech if said person is unarmed. Those rulings were issued in the 60s and 70s.

      Also what's wrong with amendments? We amend and revise our other laws - see no reason why the Supreme Law should be any different. In fact we should use the amendment process more often, rather than have the government arbitrarily grab for power it was never granted in the first place. Example: telling individual citizens how much corn they are allowed to grow - I see that nowhere in the Constitution and yet the government does it.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    19. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >>>Without these laws we would lose our language

      So? There have been millions of human languages... only about 1% of them have survived to the modern day. In fact the world would be better served if everyone spoke just a few. Look at the benefits gained when Roman Latin replaced the native european languages (circa 100 to 900 AD) - you could travel anywhere from Africa to Rome to Portugal to Britannia, and communicate to everyone with ease.

      A single language promoted the sharing of ideas and unity. It's not like that today, due to devolution of Latin into a polyglut of languages. A Roman can no longer communicate with a Portuguese citizen or British citizen or German citizen as easily as he could 1500 years ago.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    20. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      >>>In Canada, I can watch uncut movies on public air broadcast channels that contain violence and nudity. In the US, your broadcasts are under a required broadcast delay and censored when deemed inappropriate. Who in this case has more freedom of speech?
      >>>

      Yeah that is bullshit (and unconstitutional). The argument dating to the 1920s was that children needed to be protected from curse words on the radio and tv. I guess everyone forgets that children eventually grow-up, and then they don't want to be censored by the Nanny Government. - Fortunately 70% of americans are now hooked to Cable TV, which has no government censorship.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    21. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Which country as the free speech zones?

      Which country has protesters that think freedom of speech means the freedom to disrupt gatherings and proceedings of people that they disagree with?
      Which country has protesters that think freedom of speech means the freedom to shout down and drown out the voices of those they disagree with so that speech that they disagree with cannot be heard?

      Yeah that's right. America.

      Free speech zones were put in place for people who think their right to free speech trumps everybody else's right to free speech.

      Think of free speech zones as the kiddy table of free speech.

    22. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      >>>Quebec men prefer pussies, you like cocks?

      I have to admit when I traveled to Nouveau Brunswick and some cute girl started talking to me in French, I was instantly smitten. ;-)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    23. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      They couldn't tell what a stop sign was regardless of what was printed on it? Sounds to me like they were trying to be pricks.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    24. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      e Supreme Court of the US has even ruled that death threats are protected speech, unless the issuer of the threat is carrying a gun or knife.

      Got a source for that?

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    25. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pooh666 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well said. So my freedom is worth less than yours. That sums up the language laws quiet well. I am less free, because you want to keep your "culture" I never have understood what that culture is actuality. The culture of whining and demanding your rights, no matter the effect on others? Those laws start with the idea that the English are out to get the "French" when the people of France can barely understand Quebecois. So who are the French of Quebec and why do they have more rights that other people?

    26. Re:Less protection for free speech? by sbates · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I believe the individual was referring to such bodies as the Alberta Human Rights Commission. These bodies have the ability to prosecute an individual for speech outside of the normal judiciary and without any of the normal protections you might expect from a judiciary. In that sense free speech takes a hard hit, especially when you have to wonder what solution the AHRC (and others like it) provide that the courts could not.

    27. Re:Less protection for free speech? by azrider · · Score: 1

      Very few. The Supreme Court of the US has even ruled that death threats are protected speech, unless the issuer of the threat is carrying a gun or knife. But simply walking up to someone (say a KKK guy) and saying, "I hate racist mother fuckers and I'm going to kill you" is protected speech if said person is unarmed.

      As the first reply said, is there a citation for that supposed ruling?

      The definition of assault is the threat coupled with the present ability to do bodily harm. That is in no way protected speech in any state in the USA.

      --
      And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.
      John 8:32(King James Version)
    28. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could've given them a slap and told them to stop being stop being obtuse little fucks?

    29. Re:Less protection for free speech? by KazW · · Score: 2, Informative

      Quebec men prefer pussies, you like cocks?

      By the way the Cajuns did not leave, they were deported by the English.

      Any Canadian knows that only someone who is Québécois would say that... As a Canadian of French decent, I always make it clear I'm Acadian, not Québécois, and for good reason. You also left out how one third of the Acadian population was wiped out by the English.

      --
      Geeks don't grock information, they grep it.
    30. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fine if less language is better learn French and stop using English.

      Language is a big part of culture, mono-culture is very bad, not only in computers (windows zombies)m also in agriculture and society.

      Languages dies, like culture and civilizations and people.

      "A single language promoted the sharing of ideas and unity."

      Multiple languages promote innovation and diversity, I like that better.

      Speaking more than one language give you a broader mind, as our thinking is dictated by words, language structures, we think mostly in words.

      Ask anybody who speaks multiple languages, there is words and concepts in each of them that can only be approximated in other languages.

      The Quebec Languages law do not aim to eradicate English, they are there to preserve French.
      There is mandatory English classes in French schools.

    31. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a loaded and subjective statement - care to back it up?

      Hate speech tribunals.

    32. Re:Less protection for free speech? by KazW · · Score: 1

      Obviously you haven't heard of the reputation the Québécois have, they're the only province in Canada that is hated by all the other provinces and territories.

      --
      Geeks don't grock information, they grep it.
    33. Re:Less protection for free speech? by KazW · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chances are she was of Acadian decent, not Québécois, Acadians are the majority of the French speaking population in Nouvea Brunswick as well as Nova Scotia.

      --
      Geeks don't grock information, they grep it.
    34. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      "Free speech zones were put in place for people who think their right to free speech trumps everybody else's right to free speech."

      1) a free speech zone implies that outside of the zone there is no free speech

      2) Hiding the ones you don't agree with outside of view is trumping there right to be heard

      "Which country has protesters that think freedom of speech means the freedom to disrupt gatherings and proceedings of people that they disagree with?"

      That is to get on the news, if you do not dirupt anything or do not do anything sensationalist you do not get air time, and in the US, if you are not on CNN or FOX, no one hears you.
       

    35. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
      Law 101 has never infringed on anybody's freedom of speech.

      The restrictions only apply to COMMERCIAL SPEECH and even in the US, there are restrictions to commercial speech.

      Only businesses have been affected by law 101 and businesses are not human so they do not have human rights.

    36. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Whoosh

    37. Re:Less protection for free speech? by KazW · · Score: 1

      Apparently, when the Cajuns left Nova Scotia they left the pussies in Quebec.

      Actually, the pussies ran and hid in Quebec.

      Approximately 5,000 to 6,000 Acadians escaped to Quebec, hid among the Mi'kmaq, or were able to hide in the countryside and avoid deportation until the situation settled down.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Expulsion

      --
      Geeks don't grock information, they grep it.
    38. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Canadian citizens have more freedom, because the Charter of Rights applies to everyone, not just the government. In the US, citizens have less freedom because the constitution only applies to the government, so big corporations are free to oppress the people.

    39. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      Really? What an idiotic excuse. How then did they pass their driver's test without knowing what a stop sign means? If there ever was a driver moronic enough to claim that, they should have lost their license right then and there.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    40. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1, Insightful

      >>>Fine if less language is better learn French and stop using English.

      I'd rather we all go back to the root language, Roman Latin. Or even better - let languages evolve naturally rather than outlaw English in certain jurisdictions and make Anglophones feels like second class shits that should get the hell out of Quebec or France. (Been there; experienced it myself.)

      .
      >>>Multiple languages promote innovation and diversity, I like that better.

      Citation please. History shows the exact opposite, where multiple languages promote distrust of "that strange-speaking guy" and eventually war over trivialities like "he don't speak right".

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    41. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Well said. So my freedom is worth less than yours. Because you don't even know what culture is.

      "So who are the French of Quebec and why do they have more rights that other people?"

      Do you have the right to speak your own language at your workplace and in the store you go to where you live?

      Can I have it to? I do not have more right than you.

    42. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Voila!

      Well said.

    43. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Whoosh to you too!

    44. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      >Citation please. History shows the exact >opposite, where multiple languages promote >distrust of "that strange-speaking guy" and >eventually war over trivialities like "he don't >speak right".

      That is fueled by ignorance. If you learn the "others" languages you understand more their way of thinking and you gain their trust and respect.

      But on the other hand, ignorance is bliss.

    45. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Haeleth · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Or, looking at it another way, a single language was used to enforce the control of a privileged minority who trampled the rights and freedoms of people across an entire continent.

      The same thing happened with Arabic in the Ottoman Empire, with English in the British Empire, and with Mandarin in China. The Japanese also attempted it in China, Taiwan, and Korea in their brief imperial period.

      Having a single language is only a good thing if you belong to the culture whose language it was originally. It is never a good sign for people whose cultures used to speak something different.

    46. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a common misconception that Latin was predominate in the Roman Empire. In the East, which politically and economically was much more important, Greek was the dominant language. Latin was used in the western Empire, but outside of the Italian peninsula most people would not know how to speak it. It was the language of the elites, but not of the common people where indigenous languages continued to be dominant.

    47. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pooh666 · · Score: 1

      In NB, unless I speak French I can't even get a job here, but I bet you could. So yes, I have fewer rights than you do.

    48. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      And seeing the ranting of some of the pro-French language, I can see why.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    49. Re:Less protection for free speech? by seyyah · · Score: 1

      The same thing happened with Arabic in the Ottoman Empire, with English in the British Empire, and with Mandarin in China. The Japanese also attempted it in China, Taiwan, and Korea in their brief imperial period.

      The language of the ruling elite in the Ottoman Empire was Ottoman Turkish, not Arabic.

    50. Re:Less protection for free speech? by seyyah · · Score: 1

      The same thing happened with Arabic in the Ottoman Empire, with English in the British Empire, and with Mandarin in China. The Japanese also attempted it in China, Taiwan, and Korea in their brief imperial period.

      The language of the ruling elite in the Ottoman Empire was Ottoman Turkish, not Arabic. The language was understood by a large segment of society, whatever the ethnic or religious background, and was not a means of trampling "the rights and freedoms of people" since local languages continued to function regionally.

    51. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      You can get a job if you do speak English only, or French only, in Quebec. But that limits you choices. Being bilingual is a plus. Are you serious about no job if you do not speak French in NB? I though NB was officially a bilingual province.

    52. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The US constitution has...how many amendments? The Canadian Constitution has none, and two uses of the notwithstanding clause. I wouldn't say one is stronger or weaker than the other."

        That's because the Canadian Constitution is a loose collection of written and unwritten law. It's not a single written document. This opens the door to so much government abuse. Hell, the Prime Minister's position isn't even mentioned in the constitution.

        Until what, 1982, Britain's Parliament had the power to modify Canada's Constitution?

    53. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're rephrasing and requalifying the nature of the argument to demand that a "static" difference be shown. It already has been, but that aside, to address the original GP's question needs only show there is a substantial difference in protection now.

      And there clearly is, in the language of the law (shown above), in its execution (/. story), and in practice (Quebec signs).

      And plus, are you serious when you say "It is allowed to stand because the people of Quebec wish it"? That would mean any suppression or increase in the future would deem any prior argument void, which is truly, to use your words, "BS." What's the point of a comparison if it's pending the unknown future?

      "but then I don't live in Quebec, for damn good reason!"

      Weird. Seems to me you are admitting there is a static reason that might be related to this case.

    54. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and that something should have been suspending the license of every single one of them who refused to stop.
      The Stop Sign is a red octagon for a reason, it's universally understood despite the language written on it.

    55. Re:Less protection for free speech? by darrenm · · Score: 1

      I'm starting to see a slippery slope of citizen's rights being ignored in Canada. Look at the number of peaceful protesters at the G20 meeting in Toronto this summer that were arrested without cause.

      Some were held for a day without being told why. All the police had to do is walk up to them and ask for ID. By law if you are walking in a public place you don't need to produce identification, but for some strange reason the week of the G20 meeting in downtown Toronto you did. If not, off you went to a holding area with no further explanation.

      There are at least two class action lawsuits underway against the police and various levels of government over the treatment.
      http://www.cbc.ca/canada/toronto/story/2010/09/02/g20-class-action-lawsuit.html

    56. Re:Less protection for free speech? by fizzup · · Score: 1

      The US constitution has...how many amendments? The Canadian Constitution has none, and two uses of the notwithstanding clause.

      You are wrong. Since 1983 there have been ten amendments to the constitution of Canada. This does not include the 1982 amendment to add the charter, which is now Part I of the constitution. There were myriad amendments to Part II (the BNA Act) prior to 1982.

    57. Re:Less protection for free speech? by srussia · · Score: 1

      From the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

      rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

      Wow, let's count the weasel words: reasonable, demonstrably, justified, free and democratic. And some of those even modify/qualify the others!

      --
      Set your phasers on "funky"!
    58. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      >>>Or, looking at it another way, a single language was used to enforce the control of a privileged minority who trampled the rights and freedoms of people across an entire continent.

      True, but by 200 AD everyone was a Roman citizen regardless if they were in Rome or 1000 miles away in Britain. That unity & sharing of ideas via a universal tongue allowed them to enjoy a prosperity never seen before, or afterwards (dark ages)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    59. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      True, but it's been used so sparingly that I doubt very much that it would ever be invoked for something as substantial as a removal of free speech. What it does do is maintain some degree of the British constitutional system, where Parliament is pretty much free to pass any law it wants. The point of the notwithstanding clause, which Trudeau deeply disagreed with, was to allow the Provincial legislatures some control over the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. I agree that it weakens those provisions, but the theory among constitutional experts is that it is still superior to the pre-1982 BNA Act system where Parliament, providing it got the nod from the Queen and the British Parliament, had the same wide powers to tinker with human rights protections. In particular, an attempt to, say, weaken freedom of the press and freedom of expression could entail a major political setback.

      I do like the more potent protections in the US Bill of Rights, which grant the government far less leeway, though there have been examples of overriding liberties, stemming from the notion that no liberty can be absolute.

      At any rate, this particular case has nothing at all to do with the Notwithstanding Clause, but rather with a rather odd application of rarely used criminal law. I'm suspending judgement, because I have this funny feeling that maybe the guy deserves it. He's free to say what he likes, but he's certainly not free to libel people, even cops.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    60. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, IMHO, some Americans and others in this thread are misinformed about Canadian law. I will not pretend to know or understand American law, but I will be quite clear that our laws are at least as strong as yours. The ability of the government to make amendments without a referendum would be what I call dangerous. Really, to be entirely honest this hasn't stopped them with privacy-invading policies in favour of "National Interest". Now, I don't want to start a flame war, because Canada has been no better, but I think we should all realize this kind of crap goes on regularly on all sides of the border.

    61. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Shark · · Score: 1

      While I see your point, remember that it relies on willingness of others to become smarter (learn a new language). That's a tall order.

      The situation in Quebec more or less forces this and that is what tends to make people unhappy. English speakers are sort of forced to learn French to get by... And it's quite difficult in Quebec to earn any form of employment where you need to interact with people if you don't speak English. It's actually a requirement on a majority of job postings I've seen.

      I think the problem is that it sets a standard that is too high for most to willingly meet.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    62. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Shark · · Score: 1

      ... when the people of France can barely understand Quebecois.

      To be fair here, people of *Paris* can barely understand Quebecois *and* just about every other province of France. People from Quebec can understand both Parisian French and just about every other French dialects. You're also much more likely to have your English understood by a random Quebec person than anywhere in France as well.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    63. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and that's why Louisiana is now English speaking.

    64. Re:Less protection for free speech? by telso · · Score: 1

      Actually, Quebec language laws have not used the notwithstanding clause since 1993, though politicians have certainly threatened to since. The reason Quebec languages laws are legal is due to Section 1 of the Canadian Charter, which allows violation of other parts of the Charter as to "reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society." This has been interpreted by the courts (R. v. Oakes) as requiring there be a "pressing and substantial objective" where the means are rationally connected to the objective, minimally impairing the rights and contain proportionality between the infringement and the objective. These limits are somewhat similar to strict scrutiny in the US (which through the due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th Amendment is the strictest scrutiny possible that can apply to the Bill of Rights; many government actions require only rational basis), and contrary to popular belief, between 1990 and 2003, 22 percent of federal cases involving free speech restrictions survive strict scrutiny.

      As a Quebec anglophone, don't think I approve of the Quebec language laws, but you also shouldn't think that the Canadian Charter is impotent while the US Bill of Rights has no restrictions on it. If that were true, there wouldn't be "free speech zones", or "community standards" regarding obscenity, or principals being able to suspend students for holding up a "humourous" sign referring to drugs at an event outside school grounds.

    65. Re:Less protection for free speech? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Businesses are owned by humans. Any time you put a restriction on a business you are restricting the rights of their owners who last time I checked were pretty likely to be humans.

    66. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't expect one. I tried asking for one not too long ago, providing my own reference against C64's claim, and C64 ignored me.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    67. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Golddess · · Score: 2, Informative

      Or you could defend your position with a citation, instead of making claims and then ignoring citations to the contrary. I want to believe you, but it's not looking good.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    68. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Quebec never signed onto the Canadian constitution. That's a major issue for our legal framework up here right there.

      See here for more.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    69. Re:Less protection for free speech? by florescent_beige · · Score: 1

      That's because the Canadian Constitution is a loose collection of written and unwritten law. It's not a single written document.

      Um, what? http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/const/Const_index.html

      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    70. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't back up what you claim so you tell someone to look it up themselves. You area a lier and a moron.

    71. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Citation please.

      How hilarious of you to say so.

    72. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Regulation of broadcast depends on the fact that it uses the public frequencies.

      I'm talking about public, over the air broadcast in Canada. The fact is the US is highly regulated and censored and Canada is not.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    73. Re:Less protection for free speech? by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      From the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

      rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

      Tne First Amendment doesn't have the qualifer, therefore it is slightly stronger.

      Note that this is in theory. It is not necessarily true in practice, for either nation.

      Yup. And it is very true in practice as well. Canada has hate speech laws which would be blatantly unconstitutional in the United States. In fact, it is illegal in Canada to simply deny the holocaust. The problem is, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is quite unlike the Bill of Rights in that it doesn't simply restrict government power, but it grants absolute rights. So a hate speech law, while abridging speech, is also protecting the rights of minorities not to be offended, and that right carries equal weight to the right of free speech. In finding a "balance", courts have allowed many hate speech laws to stand.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    74. Re:Less protection for free speech? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The fact is the US is highly regulated and censored and Canada is not.

      On broadcast, you're right. So what? You can still do whatever you want on cable.

    75. Re:Less protection for free speech? by arkenian · · Score: 1

      >>>Fine if less language is better learn French and stop using English.

      I'd rather we all go back to the root language, Roman Latin. Or even better - let languages evolve naturally rather than outlaw English in certain jurisdictions and make Anglophones feels like second class shits that should get the hell out of Quebec or France. (Been there; experienced it myself.)

      .

      Just as an important side note: English is not a latin-derived language. We're a germanic-derived language. While latin has certainly influenced the language, the languages roots (as you can tell by our grammar) are clearly elsewhere.

    76. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Language is just a tool. The beauty of English, is we just add words when we need to... Look at the English language bloat from Shakespeare through today. We've added tens of thousands of words. It's not uncommon to hear an English word blurted out when watching Japanese, or Spanish television.

      Do the other languages adapt as quickly as English?

      If there isn't a word in English that encapsulates and idea? Just use the other word! We use several french words, and others commonly in English as well.

      Touche!

      --Me

    77. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Human Rights Tribunal shows exactly how little protection there is. 100% conviction rate.

      "I don't agree with what you say, but I'll defend to my death your right to say it" apparently doesn't mean anything here.

    78. Re:Less protection for free speech? by taoye · · Score: 1

      Actually what's really important is that all the rights in the Canadian charter are limited by this wording:

      "The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society."

      What reasonable limits are, what demonstrably justified are, etc, are all up to the courts. In the US, your constitutionally protected free speech is supreme. Here, our free speech can be trumped by laws as long as the court feels it's a reasonable restricting. So much for rights, right?

    79. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Does that make Quebec its own independent State?

      That's what it would mean in the US, if a state did not assent to the Constitution. Example: For a few years Rhode Island had dropped away from the US, even though it had previously been part of the US Independence movement and Articles of Confederation. RI became independent.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    80. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0

      1/3rd of English is French and the other 1/3rd is Latin, making it about 2/3rd Romance and 1/3rd Germanic. You would have a very difficult time composing an English sentence without using any Rome-originated words.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    81. Re:Less protection for free speech? by jav1231 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Eh...the foods better.

    82. Re:Less protection for free speech? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Without these laws we would lose our language

      The only way for a culture to lose its language is for the carriers of that culture themselves stop using it. And if you have to force them to do that, then, face it, your culture is already dead and decomposing.

    83. Re:Less protection for free speech? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Do you have the right to speak your own language at your workplace and in the store you go to where you live?

      No. I am, of course, free to look for a workplace and a store which will serve me in the language which I prefer; and I can always try to speak my language in a store in hopes that they understand it. But I certainly don't have the right to demand that they learn my language.

      So, yes, you do seem to have more rights than I do. And you do that by virtue of taking rights away from other people.

      Then again, a cursory reading of the history of Quebec in the last century on Wikipedia shows that this kind of thing - an extremely exaggerated sense of entitlement combined with extreme hostility towards those same people who grant it - is very much representative of Quebec.

    84. Re:Less protection for free speech? by FrankHS · · Score: 1

      There is and there should be on greater restrictions on business speech then there are on Individual speech. This is to protect the consumer from unscrupulous business practices.

      You can't tell the customer that you have put 10 gallons of gasonline in his tank when, in fact, he received 8 gallons.

      You can't tell a customer that a drug cures something when the FDA does not agree.

      There are thousands of such laws that regulate business to protect consumers and this is a good thing.

      I think we need more and better consumer protection laws especially to prevent misleading advertising.

      Free speech is not unlimited. A person will find himself in trouble for threatening another with violence, even if that person has no intention or ability to carry out the violent act.

    85. Re:Less protection for free speech? by azrider · · Score: 1

      As the first reply said, is there a citation for that supposed ruling?

      You would be more credible if you responded with something that actually backed up your assertion.

      Instead, you provided a strawman argument:

      The relevant Supreme Court cases (CITATIONS NOT PROVIDED) dealt with the race riots of the 60s and early 70s. During these riots certain black men and white men said things to one another, and were sued for issuing death threats (CITATIONS NOT PROVIDED). The SCOTUS (sic) reviewed the cases upon appeal and determined that "during the course of political protests, speech can become heated" but is nevertheless protected by the First Amendment. The men were let go without punishment.

      Without CITATIONS as to the exact situation that was at issue, you are saying that all assault convictions should be voided on the basis of free speech.

      I don't know about you, but if someone comes to me and says something to the effect of "I intend to do you bodily harm", I will call the paramedics or the morgue, whichever is appropriate.

      --
      And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.
      John 8:32(King James Version)
    86. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Reaperducer · · Score: 1

      Do you think ABC would ever get away with broadcasting nudity on a Friday night?

      At least ABC can broadcast pretty much whatever non-nudy thing it wants. And it can source that content from any number of providers in countries around the world.

      Meanwhile, back in Kanukistan, radio stations can't play whatever they want. They have to have a certain percentage of Canadian-made content, no matter how bad that content is. And as someone who gets the Canadian TV channels on cable, and several Canadian radio stations, it's really quite bad.

      At one time, radio stations in Canada couldn't even change formats without permission from the government. I don't know if that is still the case.

      You want to talk about freedom in broadcast? How about the fact that until VERY recently in Canada, it was ILLEGAL to play oldies on FM radio stations. Suck on that, maple leaf.

      --
      -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
    87. Re:Less protection for free speech? by richlv · · Score: 1

      you forgot russian in ussr, german in parts of europe, i'd suspect french at the time of one small man and probably lots and lots of other examples :)

      --
      Rich
    88. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why fly into a nerd rage whenever anyone politely asks for a source for your wild claims? Instead of typing all that rubbish you could have just posted whichever "one of the top links" you're referring to, and actually contribute to the discussion instead of uselessly flaming your way onto a few more ignore lists.

    89. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Students in public schools are not allowed to say nonsense minimally related to drug use.

      see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_v._Frederick

    90. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have a really hard time composing a sentence without using any Germanic-originated grammar.

    91. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      exactly.

    92. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      You just dont't get it .

    93. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      Read it in French, you will will have a different point of view.
       

    94. Re:Less protection for free speech? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Hint: my native language isn't English. I don't really have any reason to pick sides in your fight, but from everything I've seen, Quebec has a really old ax to grind, and is milking it for everything it's worth so far. I honestly don't understand why the rest of Canada think it makes any sense to, effectively, try to bribe a single province into staying in the federation by giving it special deals and handouts that are way above what any other province is having; but that happily Quebec takes those deals (after voting 49.5% for independence - with next referendum almost surely to pass - and all while complaining how oppressed it is!) is just despicable.

      Well, it's their country, so I'm not going to tell them how to run it. Don't expect any sympathy for being oh-so-oppressed from me, though.

    95. Re:Less protection for free speech? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Why, of course I do. It's precisely the same kind of "oh noes, our sacred culture!" that makes some bigoted racists way down south of you to try to mandate English as the sole state language, because they're so afraid of Spanish-speaking folk marginalizing them.

    96. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      I don't feel oppressed at all. Well not more than then most of North Americans.

      But there a Reason why, It's because we stand up for our rights and the preservation of our culture.

    97. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      There is no law preventing you from speaking any language in Quebec.

    98. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      My point is in this regard, the US system is less free. Government censorship of public broadcasts is not freedom.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    99. Re:Less protection for free speech? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      "A single language promoted the sharing of ideas and unity"

      We are the Borg ...

    100. Re:Less protection for free speech? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      You want to talk about freedom in broadcast? How about the fact that until VERY recently in Canada, it was ILLEGAL to play oldies on FM radio stations. Suck on that, maple leaf.

      What are you talking about? I've never heard of that. Please provide a reference.

      Suck on that, maple leaf.

      If you want an adult conversation on freedoms, great. But keep your bigotry out of it.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    101. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      I like how you twist it around to blame me, when it's your OWN laziness. (No wonder professors get frustrated with students.)

      HERE: http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=U.S.+supreme+court+rulings+first+amendment+threats [lmgtfy.com]

      And one of the top links discusses the death threat protection. "Prosecutors charged Watts with violating a federal law that prohibits threats against the president. Watts countered that his statement was a form of crude political opposition. A federal jury convicted Watts of a felony for violating the law and a federal appeals court affirmed his conviction. On appeal, the Supreme Court reversed, ruling that Watts' statement was political hyperbole." (1969) And there are SEVERAL more examples along that line.

      First Amendment provides protection. It clearly says no speech shall be abridged by Congress. The end. No inferior law can overrule that superior law, according to our longest-serving Chief Justice John Marshall.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    102. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>The definition of assault

      I never said assault was protected speech. Please learn to read. The relevant Supreme Court cases dealt with the race riots of the 60s and early 70s. During these riots certain black men and white men said things to one another, and were sued for issuing death threats. The SCOTUS reviewed the cases upon appeal and determined that "during the course of political protests, speech can become heated" but is nevertheless protected by the First Amendment. The men were let go without punishment.

      They also ruled the death threat is not protected if the person is armed, because then it's not just speech, but also a clear and present danger.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    103. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Or, looking at it another way, a single language [French] was used to enforce the control of a privileged superminority [less than 25%] who trampled the rights and freedoms of people [greater than 75%] across an entire continent [Canadian North America].

      Fixed that for you.
      And +1 Insightful.
      .

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    104. Re:Less protection for free speech? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      HERE: http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=U.S.+supreme+court+rulings+first+amendment+threats

      You should read ALL the links that pop up, but one of the key ones says: "Prosecutors charged Watts with violating a federal law that prohibits threats against the president. Watts countered that his statement was a form of crude political opposition. A federal jury convicted Watts of a felony for violating the law and a federal appeals court affirmed his conviction. On appeal, the Supreme Court reversed, ruling that Watts' statement was political hyperbole." (1969) And there are SEVERAL more court cases along that line.

      First Amendment provides protection.

      It clearly says no speech shall be abridged by Congress. The end. No inferior law can overrule that superior law, according to our longest-serving Chief Justice John Marshall and basic jurisprudence.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    105. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      You sir, are a complete asshole. It is no wonder you are unemployed for so long.

      You make a wild claim. You then get asked for a source. You then say "google it". Others call you out on it. You then use a smart-ass "lmgtfy" link and say "read all the links". Considering that there are over 2 million such links that will be hard.

      When you finally give a snippet of what you claim to be your proof of your original statement, it has little relation to your claim. A threat is still a threat, but in the case you cite, there was no threat. Prosecutors trumped up a charge and said Watt made a threat when he said

      ""They always holler at us to get an education. And now I have already received my draft classification as 1-A and I have got to report for my physical this Monday morning. I am not going. If they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J. They are not going to make me kill my black brothers.""

      The court did not say a threat is protected. They said this could not be reasonably seen as a threat.

      So your statement 'The Supreme Court of the US has even ruled that death threats are protected speech, unless the issuer of the threat is carrying a gun or knife' is wrong.

      You are wrong, dumb and arrogant. Not a good trifecta.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    106. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As regards the Canadian Constitution being unamended, the current constitution only dates back to 1982, when the British parliament ceded all control over it to Canada. It changed then, and on several occasions prior to that as Canada attained more control over its internal affairs from the UK.

    107. Re:Less protection for free speech? by florescent_beige · · Score: 1
      Of course, you are right. On the other hand

      Most of these amendments have been limited in scope, dealing with only specific provinces, and thus not subject to national debate. None have been subjected to a national referendum.

      ref the same wikipedia article. Frankly I didn't know about them, only being aware of the failed Meech and Charlottetown accords which were "real" constitutional amendments as most people understand the term.

      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    108. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparenlty there is a lot of social cohesion and understanding going on near the mexican/US border. Having multiple languages spoken by many different groups and not enforcing a single language for the ongoing conduct of society is a recipe for disaster. In my country alone we have eleven identical books for learner drivers. Identical in every respect except for the language they are written in. Have a good look at history you will find that the importation of non-native speakers without a requirement to use the land's native language enshrined in law(OMG lookl at the racist - burn him!) leads to social decay and the implosion of society. Don't believe me? Look around you again in a couple of decades.

    109. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Twist it? Laziness? What are you talking about?

      1) You make claim.
      2) Someone asks for citation.
      3) You say look it up.
      4) I say I did, provide link to what I found, and ask again for citation.

      No twisting required, no laziness present (except from yourself).

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    110. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Raenex · · Score: 1

      So here's one of the top links from your search, which you seem to be quoting from. It says:

      "However, First Amendment jurisprudence has never provided absolute protection to all forms of speech. There are several unprotected categories of expression, including but not limited to fighting words, obscenity, extortion, perjury and false advertising. Another unprotected category is the true threat. The First Amendment does not give a person the right to walk up to someone else and say 'I am going to kill you' or to announce in an airport, 'I am going to bomb this plane.'"

      This directly contradicts your original statement:

      The Supreme Court of the US has even ruled that death threats are protected speech, unless the issuer of the threat is carrying a gun or knife. But simply walking up to someone (say a KKK guy) and saying, "I hate racist mother fuckers and I'm going to kill you" is protected speech if said person is unarmed.

      The Watts case was about political hyperbole, and it wasn't considered a death threat. So when asked to provide specific citations, your original claims do not hold up.

    111. Re:Less protection for free speech? by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      From the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

      rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

      Wow, let's count the weasel words: reasonable, demonstrably, justified, free and democratic. And some of those even modify/qualify the others!

      If you think those are weasel words, then you'll find plenty more in the Bill of Rights.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    112. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      You would have a very difficult time composing an English sentence without using any Rome-originated words.

      My brother's dog bit my father in the arse, so he gave it a good boot right in the knackers. I think that proves you're full of shit.

      For the record, most of the commonly used words - domesticated animals, family members, parts of the body, prepositions, articles - are clearly of Germanic origin. English also uses the adjective-noun word order like German, whereas with French, Italian and Spanish it's the other way round.

      You clearly know nothing about languages (I suspect you only speak one), so why do you keep posting all this inaccurate crap?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    113. Re:Less protection for free speech? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Fine if less language is better learn French and stop using English.

      Please do, the way you write hurts my ears.

      Language is a big part of culture, mono-culture is very bad [...] Multiple languages promote innovation and diversity, I like that better.

      Contradict yourself much? What you wrote earlier implies that monoculture is OK, so long as it's your culture.

      Seems to me you're the kind of petulant asshat who assumes that if you aren't getting preferential treatment then you're being repressed.

      Wolfe pwnd Montcalm. Get over it.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    114. Re:Less protection for free speech? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Its a frequently ignored politics question in Canada. Canada has had two founding documents, and Quebec belongs only to the first, the Federation.

      Its something like wanting to be one of the original 13 states, and not being party to the addendums.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  3. Wlecome to Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Leave your non pro Canada opinions at the door.

    Now cue the responses from the already brainwashed.
    (PS no I am not in the US)

  4. Let me be the frist to sya by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

    Fcuk teh poliec!

    --
    http://www.acetonestudio.com
    1. Re:Let me be the frist to sya by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      As a dyslexic, I completely agree!

    2. Re:Let me be the frist to sya by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      I ma dlyslec...something or other yuo...clod!

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
  5. Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Auroch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Even in Canada, which has much less free speech protection than the United States ...

    Really? Because in canada there is a tonne of laws protecting free speech - so long as you're not engaging in hate speech. In fact, the laws are almost exactly the same as in the USA in regards to freedom of speech (with hate speech being a key difference).

    I think what the article means to say is that "In canada, they're not litigation happy, and the courts have made it very difficult to get a multimillion dollar settlement for pouring hot coffee on your lap and claiming that it was the fault of the coffee shop for not telling you that coffee is hot... (and other such nonsense cases ... like awarding a family damages over the autism-caused-by-vaccines debacle which has been debunked by real scientists over and over...)".

    Yes, in Canada you can't walk around holding a pistol and suing everyone who looks at you funny. You also can't start a chapter of the KKK, start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience. Oh, and queer-bashing? Also illegal. Why? Because you couldn't say or do the same things to someone that wasn't queer, and not get arrested/charged. That doesn't mean canada has lax free speech laws. That means Canada has a better system of protecting the rights of its citizens.

    --
    Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    1. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean canada has lax free speech laws. That means Canada has a better system of protecting the rights of its citizens.

      Actually, I would say that it means both.

    2. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Are there any exclusions for factualness?
      Or in Canada can I not say that all members of the westboro baptist church are evil scumbags since I'd be promoting hate of a religious group?

    3. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by selven · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even in Canada, which has much less free speech protection than the United States ...

      Really?

      The first item in the US bill of rights guarantees freedom of speech. What does the first item in our charter of rights do?

      1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

      Oh, right, it effectively nullifies the rest of the charter by including vague language about "reasonable limits".

      You also can't start a chapter of the KKK, start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience.

      Yeah, that's the problem. See, I don't think we should have government bureaucrats decide whether or not something "has no value". How about we let the audience decide that for themselves? If we want to prove that our ideologies are indeed superior to those of the KKK, that can only be done on a fair and equal forum of debate where the other side has a fair chance to speak. Right now, all we've proved is that the anti-racists have bigger guns.

    4. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

      The truth is an absolute defense in libel and slander cases.

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    5. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by pokerdad · · Score: 1

      You can say to your friends, but you could get into trouble if you broadcast it, published it, or if you gathered an audience to tell them it.

    6. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Auroch · · Score: 1

      ...you could get into trouble if you broadcast it, published it, or if you gathered an audience to tell them it

      And how is this different than in the states? Howard stern, fined by the FCC (that's a federal commission, thus ... government). And in the USA, you can be sued for saying just about anything, and then you've got to go to court, get a lawyer (or have a law degree yourself), ignore your job / responsibilities while in court, just to prove that you *didn't* do anything wrong.

      The big difference I see between canadian and american law, is that in canada you have to worry (mostly) about offending the government. In the USA, you have to worry (mostly) about offending some litigation happy neighbor who has successfully sued some previous neighbor for something they were innocent of, but unable to afford a good (enough) lawyer to defend themselves.

      Which should you prefer, a government system which is (mostly) uniform and consistent? Or a system which is (mostly) not-uniform, non-consistent, very arbitrary and different across the country?

      --
      Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    7. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally agree. (That you wish you could have it like we do in the USA). BUT YOU CAN'T!
      You are not even in a totally free Nation, as you still bow and pay royalties to the English Crown.
      Modern day colony.
      Just saying.

    8. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by mcornelius · · Score: 1

      Truth is a defense in civil suits for defamation (libel and slander) in the United States. It is not so in Canadian criminal cases. It is only mitigating (reduces maximum sentence from five years to two years).

    9. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by HungryHobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Since when are any governments uniform and consistent?

      Given the choice I'll take the individuals since I can sue them and make their life hard right back and they probably don't have a large number of armed men at their beck and call.

    10. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Auroch · · Score: 1

      Given the choice I'll take the individuals since I can sue them and make their life hard right back and they probably don't have a large number of armed men at their beck and call.

      Good thing the government lets you sue people! And it's a good thing that private citizens can't own guns and shoot back ... and can't slander you ... and it's a good thing that every judge will take your side in every issue (the american dream).

      --
      Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    11. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by swabeui · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think what the article means to say is that "In canada, they're not litigation happy, and the courts have made it very difficult to get a multimillion dollar settlement for pouring hot coffee on your lap and claiming that it was the fault of the coffee shop for not telling you that coffee is hot... (and other such nonsense cases ... like awarding a family damages over the autism-caused-by-vaccines debacle which has been debunked by real scientists over and over...)".

      I love how everyone uses that case as their poster-child for all things wrong in American courts. I guess everyone is susceptible to media bias as one point or another. Here's the actual facts of the case: http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cur78.htm

    12. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Bullshit.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    13. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by HungryHobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      that isn't even a good strawman, are you even trying?

      The point you ignore is that I can do the exact same right back.
      Your way, as seen in TFA if I accuse government employees of things I'll get charged with criminal libel, not just civil.
      In a hypothetical scenario where the police had accused him of even worse things, say raping kids and cannibalism how much chance would there be of any of them being charged with criminal libel?

      I'll take the somewhat vaguely, hopefully but of course not always equal playing field of individual vs individual over that kind of system.

    14. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      I rarely post on /. anymore, but let me give this a shot...

      It's literally impossible, for example, for working-class Black lesbians to have a fair and equal debate with bourgeois white straights; there's too much of a power imbalance. Further, not all ideas are equal. I feel completely fine, without knowing any of the nuances or details of their arguments, saying that the KKK's ideas are hateful and beyond worthless; they're dangerous.

      As much as armchair libertarians like to claim it is, speech is not harmless. Someone's probably going to call Godwin's law and ignore the rest of this post, but speech is the means by which the Holocaust got under way. It wasn't just Hitler's regime randomly foisting anti-Semitism upon the masses, but mass complicity in the anti-Semitism by the common German, which was played off of by Hitler's regime. Basically, the national discourse around Jews at the time was similar to our national discourse around undocumented immigrants at the moment. Not to mention that much of this happened to other groups as well, some notable examples being the alter-abled and the Gypsies.

      In other words, the Holocaust might not have happened if it weren't for hate speech.

      Finally, failing to sufficiently protect marginalized groups forces us (and I use the anarchist "we," i.e., anyone who would assign themself to this statement and no one else) to address our problems on our own, by means which will almost certainly be more radical, more millitant, and more effective.

    15. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by demonlapin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Because you couldn't say or do the same things to someone that wasn't queer, and not get arrested/charged.

      Wait, what? I'm with you on the assault bit, but you're not allowed to walk around with a sign saying "NERDS ARE EVIL SINNERS" or "NERDS WANT TO MAKE YOUR CHILDREN PASTY, BASEMENT-DWELLING SLOBS"?

      You don't have a right not to be offended, IMO. As soon as you set up a group of people that have the ability to tell you to shut up because your speech has "no value", you're just institutionalizing one set of prejudices - a set that might not be stable over time. (Always assume your worst political enemies will gain control of whatever policy you enact.)

    16. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by commodore64_love · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >>>You also can't start a chapter of the KKK, start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience. Oh, and queer-bashing? Also illegal.

      It shouldn't be. You're not truly a "free" person if you don't have the right to be an asshole. You've basically made assholes second-class citizens without rights and without freedom - i.e. you demoted them to Serfs. So in my opinion the United States enjoys more freedom because even assholes are free to be themselves.

      Yes I'm being serious. Freedom means freedom for ALL people, even the ones you don't like
      .

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    17. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by khallow · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, in Canada you can't walk around holding a pistol and suing everyone who looks at you funny. You also can't start a chapter of the KKK, start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience. Oh, and queer-bashing? Also illegal. Why? Because you couldn't say or do the same things to someone that wasn't queer, and not get arrested/charged. That doesn't mean canada has lax free speech laws. That means Canada has a better system of protecting the rights of its citizens.

      What rights are being protected here? The right to associate with whom you choose? Nope. The right to say what you think? Nope. All these are sacrificed for some alleged right to not be offended. Looks like folly to me. Maybe you should think about this.

    18. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by selven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's literally impossible, for example, for working-class Black lesbians to have a fair and equal debate with bourgeois white straights; there's too much of a power imbalance.

      Fortunately, we have people (like me) willing to stand up for Black lesbians as a matter of principle. Besides, these days the internet is giving everyone a much more equal voice than before, so I don't see how you could claim that anyone actually being silenced (except by hate speech laws).

      As much as armchair libertarians like to claim it is, speech is not harmless. Someone's probably going to call Godwin's law and ignore the rest of this post, but speech is the means by which the Holocaust got under way.

      The Holocaust did not start because of speech, it started because people started trashing Jewish shops and later shoving Jews into gas chambers. That is what should be punished. Just as you don't sue Smith&Wesson if someone shoots your son - you sue the murderer, the blame for any actual hate crimes should fall solely on the actual perpetrators.

      It wasn't just Hitler's regime randomly foisting anti-Semitism upon the masses, but mass complicity in the anti-Semitism by the common German, which was played off of by Hitler's regime. Basically, the national discourse around Jews at the time was similar to our national discourse around undocumented immigrants at the moment.

      So if the government had violently suppressed anti-Semitism it would have stopped? As much as authoritarians want things to work that way, they don't.

    19. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Oh, right, it effectively nullifies the rest of the charter by including vague language about "reasonable limits"

      This is NO different that the US. The US constitution on free speech does not give someone the right to break the law. For example it does not allow you to slander someone else, nor can you do something like lie on your tax returns. The right to free speech is bounded by other laws in both countries.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    20. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by khallow · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Someone's probably going to call Godwin's law and ignore the rest of this post, but speech is the means by which the Holocaust got under way

      That's a shifty and deceptive rationalization. It only makes sense if you take a cartoonish view of what happened in the build up to the Second World War.

      The thing to keep in mind is that Hitler didn't rise to power because he said bad things. He rose to power because of three things. Germany had been shafted badly by the Treaty of Versailles and most of Germany had an ax to grind. The Nazis had simplistic solutions to the considerable problems of the everyday German. The Weimar Republic was toothless and weak, not all due to the Treaty of Versailles. For example, it couldn't have enforced a restriction on speech against Hitler. (We know this because they tried even to the point of imprisoning him.) Third, both the Germany military and the elite of Germany had prepared the end of the Weimar Republic. For example, the Junkers funded Hitler and the Nazi Party. Meanwhile, the German military was planning out blitzkrieg warfare (a way of using a highly mobile military with combined arms to defeat a more static force) long before they had a military with which to conduct that sort of warfare. The military ramp up following Hitler's takeover probably was planned years before Hitler took power and would have required considerable support from both military and business elites to carry it off. I can't prove it, but where did Hitler get those ideas and that kind of experience to pull off a six year transition from weak client state to first class military power?

      A serious implication of your statement is that somehow regulated speech would have saved the Weimar Republic from the Nazis. I think that absurd. The average German probably despised the Weimar Republic as a puppet government imposed by military defeat and the government was being undermined by its military and elite. My view is that the Weimar Republic would have ended anyway, even if Hitler remained rotting in jail. Some dictator would have taken over. Then the military strategy of rapid build up and selective invasion via blitzkrieg would have led to the Second World War anyway.

      But instead, we must assume that a healthy country is going to fall into Nazism or worse just because kooks can say mean things. That hasn't happened in the US, for example, despite our (no doubt criminally) lax laws on restricting bad speech. Or perhaps Canada is composed of potential criminals who are only kept in check by careful regulation of their speech?

      When I read naive and ignorant argument like the above, I have to wonder, do you ever think about what you say? No offense, but if you're going to argue for a major restriction on Canada speech based on events leading up to the Second World War, you really should understand those events first. Similarly, if you're going to argue for such a broad restriction on Canadian speech, you really need to understand what is being lost and how these powers can be abused by government.

    21. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by SpeZek · · Score: 1

      Hate speech is about inciting violence. You can say whatever you want about the WBC, so long as you're not saying "They're evil scumbags, so we should round them up and shoot them!"

    22. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by selven · · Score: 1

      If we're going to get into the finer points of freedom of speech theory, you have to understand the difference between facts and opinions. Lying on your tax return, false advertising and slander are all examples of stating incorrect facts. Facts can be impartially determined by a court of law to be correct or incorrect. Hate speech laws, however, suppress unpopular opinions, and protecting unpopular opinions is arguably the whole point of freedom of speech. Opinions are not correct or incorrect, and a court has no place deciding which opinions are "better" than which other opinions.

    23. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      The first item in the US bill of rights guarantees freedom of speech. What does the first item in our charter of rights do?

      The US Bill of Rights and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms are words written on bits of paper. Fine words, no doubt, but still just words. They have no intrinsic power. All that matters is what the authorities actually do in practice.

      Just ask the people of China; their constitution also "guarantees" them "freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and of demonstration". But just you try standing in Tiananmen Square displaying a banner saying "I Believe In Falun Gong And Tibetan Independence", and see how long the authorities allow you to exercise those alleged rights.

    24. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Haeleth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And yet by forcing society to permit hate groups like the KKK, you deprive everyone else of the democratic right to choose the laws that they are governed by.

    25. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      Freedom means freedom for ALL people, even the ones you don't like

      That's the crux of the matter. Free speech means speech you don't like - nobody argues against free speech for something they agree with.

      As I've said, the Cubans can talk about the weather. Ultimately, free speech is the right to offend others, including the government.

    26. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One limit for free speech has been set at the point where you start telling people to hurt/kill other people, or otherwise inciting violence.

      I can't think of any case where that should be protected.

    27. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by makomk · · Score: 1

      If we want to prove that our ideologies are indeed superior to those of the KKK, that can only be done on a fair and equal forum of debate where the other side has a fair chance to speak. Right now, all we've proved is that the anti-racists have bigger guns.

      Except they don't even have that. Canada's hate speech laws are very much a double-sided weapon, from what I recall.

    28. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by makomk · · Score: 1

      Just ask the people of China; their constitution also "guarantees" them "freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and of demonstration".

      Actually, it doesn't guarantee any such thing. That guarantee is effectively nullfied by a caveat that's very similar to the one in the Canadian charter of rights. It's essentially worthless.

    29. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Force? There's no force involved. I *choose* to allow individuals to join the KKK because it protects my rights too. For example I can walk up to a KKK guy and say, "You racist bastard," which is probably illegal in Canada but called "free speech" in the US. Se, by protecting the KKK individual, I also protect my individual rights.

      What was it that German Christian pastor said in the 1940s? "First they came for the racists & gypsies but I did not speak, because I'm not racist nor gypsy. Then they came for the Jews but I did not care because I'm not jew. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak." By speaking out and protecting lesser groups or hated groups, we protect all of us.

      Finally:

      The US is not a democracy (tyranny of the majority to squash the minority underfoot) like Canada. It is a Republic that protects the right of the Individual from suppression by his government. And that protection applies to *everyone*

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    30. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by dryeo · · Score: 1

      I'm in Canada and there has been KKK cross burnings down the road from me. They only become hate speech when they're outside some black folks house as an example. Basically what is illegal is promoting violence through hate.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    31. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a half-breed. I hate hate speech, but I hate hate speech laws even more.

      Because the biggest way for me to avoid trouble from bad elements in society that hate at least half of me, is when they MOUTH OFF.

      I like avoiding assholes. I can avoid a lot of them because of free speech, thank you. I like knowing which dogs are barking, so I can avoid them or see them coming, whatever the case may be. Obviously it's not all inclusive to pick out all assholes, but it's surprisingly a good measure most of the time.

    32. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      So if you found a white power group and merely call for the deportation or imprisonment of all minorities then it'd be ok under Canadian hate speech laws?

    33. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by SpeZek · · Score: 1

      Imprisoning and deporting minorities by force sounds pretty violent to me. Hate speech applies to denying rights and freedoms as well.

    34. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      For example I can walk up to a KKK guy and say, "You racist bastard," which is probably illegal in Canada [...]

      It's not even close to illegal in Canada and the word 'probably' in there reveals that you're talking about something completely different from what the GP is talking about. It's a poor slippery slope argument that starts from the bottom of the slope.

      Attempting to mince words about which country is a "tyranny by majority" by Republican Democracy vs. Constitutional Monarchy with Parliamentary Democracy is vastly oversimplified. The fact is, individual rights are enumerated by both countries' central law systems, and calling the USA a Republic doesn't have a lot to do with it. They're both mixed-proportional/geographical representational systems. The US tends toward a two-party system moreso than Canada, which is a tyranny in and of itself. In Canada, some of Jack Chick's works can't be shown because they incite violence so they pass the "fire in the theatre" test from the Canadian perspective, but is always a tricky path to negotiate.

      The priorities of your individual rights are a little different, though. The right to privacy is held much more centrally in Canada -- "Life, Liberty, and Security of Person". Right to bear arms is more of an American thing. A lot of Canadian laws are very expansive and have a clause that say (in legalese) "obviously this law doesn't apply at stupid extremes", whereas a lot of American laws are prescriptive and try to scope themselves down to avoid covering stupid extremes in the first place, instead leaving loopholes -- it's arguable which approach is better and really it usually depends on context.

    35. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by telso · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm sure that "vague language" has never been interpreted by the courts. Oh wait:

      1. There must be a pressing and substantial objective
      2. The means must be proportional
        1. The means must be rationally connected to the objective
        2. There must be minimal impairment of rights
        3. There must be proportionality between the infringement and objective

      You're right, though, that's pretty permissive in what it allows the government to do. Fortunately for Americans, their rights are not subject to such "vague language". For example, when courts are trying to decide if it right has been violated, the most stringent judicial review they are allowed to use is strict scrutiny. What are the three prongs a law must pass to survive strict scrutiny?

      1. It must be justified by a compelling governmental interest
      2. It must be narrowly tailored to achieve that goal or interest
      3. It must be the least restrictive means for achieving that interest

      Totally different situations, obviously, especially since it's been speculated that the Canadian test comes from the SCOTUS test for commercial speech. Still, between 1990 and 2003, 30 percent of federal cases involving strict scrutiny have approved of the rights restrictions.

      Look, I'm not saying there aren't Canadian laws or court decisions I disagree with, while the US is completely messed up. But don't pretend that the country that gave the world "free speech zones", "contemporary community standards" for obscenity, the PATRIOT Act and other national security laws, Morse v. Frederick and Gonzales v. Raich and other ridiculous drug laws, among many, many other laws and court decisions can look down on other jurisdictions' rights while implying theirs are absolute. It's not just what you write in your constitution, it's how five of the nine people in black robes interprets it. And given some of the wacky decisions I've seen out of your country lately, I'll take my nine red-robed over your nine black-robed.

    36. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      So it's not just calling for people to hurt or kill someone but also any non-vilent political speech calling for anything that could negatively affect someone else then?

    37. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      Nope.

      298. [1] A defamatory libel is matter published, without lawful justification or excuse, that is likely to injure the reputation of any person by exposing him to hatred, contempt or ridicule, or that is designed to insult the person of or concerning whom it is published.

      300. Every one who publishes a defamatory libel that he knows is false is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years. [R.S., c.C-34, s.264.]

      301. Every one who publishes a defamatory libel is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years. [R.S., c.C-34, s.265.]

      Looks like you're right! 5 years for if you knew it was false, that must mean the other one, 2 years, is for if it's true, right? Because there's no gray area beween "known to be false" and "known to be true" so anything not known to be false is true! Oh wait, "lawful justification or excuse", fuck! They always have to cover their asses with caveats, don't they. That could mean anything! That could even mean, as the courts have held, that if you have a good faith reason to believe the statement of fact is truthful, you're off the hook. Oh wait, you don't even need to go that far because the Canadian Criminal Code doesn't stop at Article 301.

      309. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes defamatory matter that, on reasonable grounds, he believes is true, and that is relevant to any subject of public interest, the public discussion of which is for the public benefit. [R.S., c.C-34, s.273.]

      310. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes fair comments
              (a) on the public conduct of a person who takes part in public affairs; or
              (b) on a published book or other literary production, or on any composition or work of art or performance publicly exhibited, or on any other communication made to the public on any subject, if the comments are confined to criticism thereof. [R.S., c.C-34, s.274.]

      315. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel publishes defamatory matter in good faith for the purpose of seeking remedy or redress for a private or public wrong or grievance from a person who has, or who on reasonable grounds he believes has, the right or is under an obligation to remedy or redress the wrong or grievance, if
              (a) he believes that the defamatory matter is true;
              (b) the defamatory matter is relevant to the remedy or redress that is sought; and
              (c) the defamatory matter does not in any respect exceed what is reasonably sufficient in the circumstances. [R.S., c.C-34, s.279.]

      Well, fuck, huh? Looks like if you say something that harms somebody's reputation, you are OK if you have a good faith reason to believe it is true, and if it's either a matter of public opinion, or a demand for redress for a wrong against your personally. So a police officer, being a public official, can be commented on under 310, as a comment on the public actions of an official. Complaint and demands of apology can also be leveled under article 315 as well, even if the person wronging you is not a public figure. (Just so long as your complaint is not excessive given the wrong. That is, raising a national stink over your neighbor's dog pooping in your lawn, should you manage it, would probably be considered unreasonable). The truth is a defense under Canadian law. It's just not an absolute defense. Like in some states, such as Florida, the truth can fail to be a defense if, first, you only "got lucky" and had no idea it was true at the time, or secondly, if, however true, the inflammatory fact was not of public interest.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    38. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      So if I don't factually look up how much I earn and just give an opinion on it, put that on my tax return, then that is protected free speech?

      So back to the original post, we have a guy publishing information against the police, saying they are lying, perjuring, corrupt scumbags. These 'facts' can be easily proven or disproven in a court of law- these CANNOT be just opinions, and therefore are not covered under freedom of speech. Since the police filed a libel suit, they clearly think these allegations are false.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    39. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 1

      in my opinion the United States enjoys more freedom because even assholes are free to be themselves.

      Yes I'm being serious. Freedom means freedom for ALL people, even the ones you don't like .

      America: free speech for all, even douchebags
      Canada: free speech for all, except douchebags and Anglophones in Quebec.

      --
      -I only code in BASIC.-
    40. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet by forcing society to permit hate groups like the KKK, you deprive everyone else of the democratic right to choose the laws that they are governed by.

      Correct. Protecting "democratic rights" is not the point. The point is to protect *personal* freedoms. Limiting the people's "democratic right" to use the government as a cudgel to stamp out those the majority disagree with was fully intended.

    41. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hate Speech law is supposed to be about the *fact* that some particular speech has been used intentionally or negligently to incite violence, and the *fact* that such speech could do so. It isn't about unpopular opinion.

    42. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      309. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes defamatory matter that, on reasonable grounds, he believes is true, and that is relevant to any subject of public interest, the public discussion of which is for the public benefit. [R.S., c.C-34, s.273.] 310. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes fair comments (a) on the public conduct of a person who takes part in public affairs; or (b) on a published book or other literary production, or on any composition or work of art or performance publicly exhibited, or on any other communication made to the public on any subject, if the comments are confined to criticism thereof. [R.S., c.C-34, s.274.]

      So yes, truth is a defense. If the Westboro Baptist Church "takes part in public affairs", which crashing military funerals and attacking grieving families probably counts as, you are free to make "fair comment". So you can certainly say particular actions are evil of them, and make comment that such behavior implies those who takes such actions are evil scumbags.

      Now, Canada also has hate speech laws. I don't think they apply if you make statements about a particular church, however. Hate speech is basically just defamation laws given teeth to protect groups without a central authority. If you defame the Catholic Church, there is a specific church with cause, and they can sue or press criminal charges, depending on severity. If you make a comment about all Christians, it was hard to sue for defamation as you needed cause. Hate speech laws let the government step in in this situation. Because hate speech laws are often criticized by people who don't understand them, I'll repeat again, that they are no stronger than defamation laws. As such, truth is a defense if you have a good faith belief in the truth of your statement. And conversely, truth is not a defense if you did not have this belief. That is, if you make up a fantastic story about what the WBC did (using your example) and it happens to be more-or-less true just by luck, the truth is not a defense because you would have made the statement even if it was false, since you had know knowledge as to the truth. Another thing is that your faith counts as truth (in that something that is an unknowable matter of faith is considered non-false). So, it is not hate speech to march around with "God Hates Fags" as the WBC does. The reason being it's a matter of faith, and so they are considered to have belief in the truth of their statements. And, the fact that this subjects gay people to "Contempt, hatred, ridicule, or scorn" is trumped by it being non-false.

      Where defamation and hate crimes come back together again, is that when it says it subjects the target to "contempt, hatred, ridicule, or scorn", which is the same for hate speech and for defamation, is that means the speech has to make a reasonable person feel those things towards the victim. In a hate speech case, a person was fined for saying "Hitler was right to kill jews". On appeal it was overturned. The judge in that case said that though this opinion is vile and disgusting, nobody would read it and find themselves hating jews if they didn't already, so it's not hate speech, and if about a person, wouldn't be libel.

      The only other time truth is not a defense is when a fact may be true, but private. For public officials like police and politicians, few things are considered "private". But if you say, had an ugly break up and took pictures of your ex and posted them craigslist, advertising her as "A dirty slut who wants as many guys as I can get, fuck me hard and leave I don't even need your name!" then, even if you can prove she is, in fact, a dirty slut who fucks anything with a penis, you can still be convicted of libel because this "fact" true or not, is a private fact and not your business to broadcast, especially with intent to bring her reputation harm ;) Wel

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    43. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by jadavis · · Score: 1

      you deprive everyone else of the democratic right to choose the laws that they are governed by.

      The thing about laws is that they apply to everyone. Some laws that are supported by a majority infringe on the freedoms of the minority (or perhaps even the majority).

      I don't think that pure democracy, or anything close to it, is desirable. I'm unconvinced by any argument that just because something is more democratic, it is better.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    44. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by mcornelius · · Score: 1

      Nope.

      Not so fast.

      298. [1] A defamatory libel is matter published, without lawful justification or excuse, that is likely to injure the reputation of any person by exposing him to hatred, contempt or ridicule, or that is designed to insult the person of or concerning whom it is published.

      300. Every one who publishes a defamatory libel that he knows is false is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years. [R.S., c.C-34, s.264.]

      301. Every one who publishes a defamatory libel is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years. [R.S., c.C-34, s.265.]

      Looks like you're right! 5 years for if you knew it was false, that must mean the other one, 2 years, is for if it's true, right?

      Congratulations! You're well on your way to building up a strawman to argue against, rather than considering the points made!

      Because there's no gray area beween "known to be false" and "known to be true" so anything not known to be false is true!

      You're not new at this whole strawman thing, are you? You spend much time arguing against those evil atheist Darwinists, too? I never said that the truth cannot be to a defendant's favor. However, "known to be true" does not mean "true" and "known to be false" does not mean "false." Many false things have been known to be true at the time they were said.

      Oh wait, "lawful justification or excuse", fuck! They always have to cover their asses with caveats, don't they. That could mean anything!

      No, actually it can't mean anything. Its construction is limited by law.

      That could even mean, as the courts have held, that if you have a good faith reason to believe the statement of fact is truthful, you're off the hook.

      A good faith reason that something is truthful is not proof of its truth. The truth absolute defense doctrine requires proof acceptable to a court that the statement is true, not that it was believed to be true. Because it occurs in civil cases only, the normal standard of proof is preponderance of the evidence.

      Oh wait, you don't even need to go that far because the Canadian Criminal Code doesn't stop at Article 301.

      I didn't say it did.

      309. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes defamatory matter that, on reasonable grounds, he believes is true, and that is relevant to any subject of public interest, the public discussion of which is for the public benefit. [R.S., c.C-34, s.273.]

      As I said, belief that something is true does not make it true, and it's not a positive defense against the accusation.

      310. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes fair comments

      (a) on the public conduct of a person who takes part in public affairs; or

      (b) on a published book or other literary production, or on any composition or work of art or performance publicly exhibited, or on any other communication made to the public on any subject, if the comments are confined to criticism thereof. [R.S., c.C-34, s.274.]

      It's too bad for your argument that fair comment is a very narrow legal term, that protects only statements that are already not defamatory. A fair comment is one that is made on a matter of public interest, is provable, made without malice or ill will, a statement of known fact or a synthesis (combination) of known facts or an opinion that could reasonably be held by anyone well-informed on the subject. So, it pretty much constricts the

    45. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Informative

      The fact is, individual rights are enumerated by both countries' central law systems

      No. The US constitution doesn't enumerate rights. It helpds to define what's federal turf which is what is left to the states, and specifies important areas in which the government is expressly prevented from infringing. It doesn't say what a citizen's rights are. It makes a big deal about areas that are off-limits from government interference. Those are not the same things, at all. The US system presumes that rights exist as natural feature of our human existance. And to play it safe, it expressly mentions some areas that are beyond the government's reach, no matter what laws are passed.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    46. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by kwandar · · Score: 1

      You obviously missed the Toronto G20. Arrests were indiscriminate. The laws "might" be better, but the system is broken, so it doesn't really matter, does it?

    47. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      in canada there is a tonne of laws protecting free speech - so long as you're not engaging in hate speech

      It's a thinly veiled way of saying "you can say anything you like, so long as it's not something that I don't like". It's not free speech.

      Granted, freedom of speech is a scale, not an on/off thing. For all the American boast about their First Amendment being unconditional, it is so only on paper. Slander/libel laws are a very clear example of the limitation of freedom of speech, and yet not only they are considered constitutional in US, but they existed from the very beginning. Which implies to me that American First Amendment also has exceptions in it, but they are implicit - which, IMO, is more dangerous than explicitly codifying the rules under which the right can be limited.

    48. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by TheABomb · · Score: 2, Funny

      You also can't ... start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience.

      Off the top of my head:
      Bryan Adams.
      Alanis Morissette.
      Celine Dion.
      Justin Bieber.

      Your argument cuts like a knife through all criticism.

      --
      MSIE: The world's most standards-complaint web browser.
    49. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Icke#Protests_in_Canada

      David Icke thinks alien lizards run the world. B'nai B'rith said he was talking in code about Jews, and as a result, Canadian border control detained him for hours, grilling him constantly trying to find an excuse to kick him out, only to eventually conclude he was really talking about lizards.

      Icke accused a man of trying to silence him, after the man took credit for getting Icke's speaking gigs cancelled. In response, the man sued him, and threatened to add Canadian libraries to the suit if they didn't take Icke's books off their shelves.

      Freedom of speech my American ass.

    50. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      Yes, in Canada you can't walk around holding a pistol and suing everyone who looks at you funny. You also can't start a chapter of the KKK, start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience. Oh, and queer-bashing? Also illegal. Why? Because you couldn't say or do the same things to someone that wasn't queer, and not get arrested/charged. That doesn't mean canada has lax free speech laws. That means Canada has a better system of protecting the rights of its citizens.

      I guess it depends which rights you value more: the right to free speech, or the right not to be offended by others. There are legitimate reasons for valuing both rights, and reasonable people can differ. I happen to value the right of free speech more, but recognizing there may be different opinions on that issue, I merely said that Canada has lesser protection for freedom of speech than the United States. I didn't talk about overall rights.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    51. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally agree. (That you wish you could have it that way). BUT YOU CAN'T!
      To begin with: It seems to me that Canada is not even a free Nation, or why would you bend over, sorry, I mean bow to the British Crown,
      and have the Queen printed in your currency and still pay Her royalties in exchange for....what did you say?
      MODERN DAY COLONY.
      Just sayin....

    52. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      What rights are being protected here? The right to associate with whom you choose? Nope. The right to say what you think? Nope. All these are sacrificed for some alleged right to not be offended.

      The right of association stops at the point where it becomes criminal conspiracy (two people meeting up to plan a lynching or bombing are not indulging in free speech, they are criminally conspiring).

      The right to say what you think also stops at the point when it becomes criminal conspiracy (inciting someone to murder is a criminal offence too, no matter what the crackpot libertarians here seem to think).

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    53. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be suprised if anyone would argue that free speech by itself could've led to the rise of the Nazi's and World War II, but it's a bit ignorant to dismiss it of having been quite prominent in the rise of the Nazis.

      The issue isn't that free speech by itself can be dangerous, but that in the right circumstances it can certainly make a problem worse- so whilst the Nazi's preaching their cause by itself would've had little effect, them preaching their cause to a discontent population, with high unemployment certainly made heads turn and join their cause, giving them the momentum they needed to eventually take power. It's not unrealistic to believe that however authoritarian a measure it might sound, had the military rule at the time silenced the Nazi party (ironically, it was under a lot of pressure not to internationally) that the Nazis may never have been able to rise to power in the way they did.

      To give you some more recent examples, many European nations particularly in the North West- Belgium, The Netherlands, Britain, and such have been quite accepting of extremist islamic preachers preaching at mosques and on the streets because they were largely quite harmless, however post 9/11 and with the seeming injustice of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq these people were given a stronger voice, suddenly youths of mostly Pakistani origin, often those in poor areas with high unemployment had a cause, and they were willing to listen and be turned to the cause by those preachers.

      This rise in islamic extremism has also then been matched by a rise of the far right- look at how politicians like Geert Van Wilders, Nick Griffin have seen their popularity and influence rise as a result- their message is getting to more and more people, and more and more people are listening to them, voting for far right parties, and getting themselves involved in violent demonstration.

      I think it's a little naive to believe that entirely free speech is always completely harmless, just like as you say, belief that governments should have the power to ban it at will can lead to government abuse of such laws. Realistically a sane middle ground is needed, in countries like the US and Canada, restriction on free speech has always been left upto the courts, and that's probably the sanest option we have (assuming a fairly independent and politically neutral judiciary of course)- hence why speech such as shouting "fire" in a crowded theatre isn't protected, whilst relatively harmless kooks like Fred Phelps and family are allowed to spout their bullshit. In an ideal world everyone would have jobs, and be well educated enough to just ignore hate speech, but we do not live in that ideal world, so it can, and historically has sometimes been a major driver in making a problem worse.

      Speech is used to try and manipulate us day in day out, whether it's politicians or someone like Steve Jobs talking about their latest products, it may not work on me, it may not work on you, but taking that last example- I've seen a number of people repeat Steve Job's line that the iPhone 4 is "well engineered" for example- really, how can a device that has a fundamental flaw that in some easily repeated circumstances prevents it from carrying out it's primary function ever be "well engineered"? It's simple- these people have fallen for the rhetoric in the speech.

    54. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by khallow · · Score: 1

      The right of association stops at the point where it becomes criminal conspiracy (two people meeting up to plan a lynching or bombing are not indulging in free speech, they are criminally conspiring).

      You seem a bit confused here. The two people in question still (at least in the more enlightened countries) have the right to associate. Planning criminal activity is not mere association.

      The right to say what you think also stops at the point when it becomes criminal conspiracy (inciting someone to murder is a criminal offence too, no matter what the crackpot libertarians here seem to think).

      I see the obligatory mention of the crackpot libertarian, which always seems to be a warning sign of another sort of crackpot. Let's get back to the matter at hand rather than obsess over people with different belief systems.

      The key problem with your observation is that it is irrelevant. The infringement on peoples' rights to speech as practiced in Canada doesn't have anything to do with incitement to commit crime. Here's the key paragraph from the original poster:

      Yes, in Canada you can't walk around holding a pistol and suing everyone who looks at you funny. You also can't start a chapter of the KKK, start publishing material that has no value and offends a large audience. Oh, and queer-bashing? Also illegal. Why? Because you couldn't say or do the same things to someone that wasn't queer, and not get arrested/charged. That doesn't mean canada has lax free speech laws. That means Canada has a better system of protecting the rights of its citizens.

      Note that every single activity mentioned (well aside from the first one, brandishing a lethal weapon without lawful cause, that's an actively criminal action) that is banned, doesn't lead to or incite criminal activity unless, of course, you directly criminalize speech or association, which was my point. Now you might claim that starting a chapter of the KKK will somehow incite crime or imply people are planning a crime. I see that claim as absurd since you can't provide evidence of what crime is being planned or incited. Violence towards blacks or other ethnic group? Where's the evidence that this group is planning or inciting it?

      It should never be within the power of government to decide a crime will take place or is incited without concrete evidence of direct planning or incitement.

    55. Re:Canada is more protective of rights than USA. by khallow · · Score: 1

      I'd be suprised if anyone would argue that free speech by itself could've led to the rise of the Nazi's and World War II, but it's a bit ignorant to dismiss it of having been quite prominent in the rise of the Nazis.

      Oxygen was also implicated in the rise of the Nazis. They couldn't have gotten as far as they did, if they couldn't breathe. All of the key leaders breathed all the time, for example. So it was a process quite prominent in the rise of the Nazis. The Weimar Republic could have prevented the rise of the Nazis by outlawing Nazi breathing. And I might add, it would have been a hell of a lot more effective than outlawing Nazi speech. But it would have resulted in the sort of government that we're trying to avoid in the first place.

      This is the thing people don't get. Free speech is the political equivalent of free air. If you can't speak your mind, no matter how repulsive the thoughts that lurk therein, then you aren't free. We have to accept certain risks, like the incredibly remote possibility that society will go and kill six million Jews just because I say bad things, in order to have a free society.

      I'm well aware that Hitler and company got where they were in large part due to an effective propaganda machine. This machine worked even better when free speech was eliminated. This is perhaps the greatest irony of the assertion that free speech enabled the Nazis. Lack of free speech (and other elimination of German freedoms) enabled them to start the largest war in history. I think it is folly to assume that you can maintain a free society while selectively banning speech you don't like, precisely because it opens an avenue for tyrants to take over.

  6. I'm OK with this by Baron_Yam · · Score: 1

    As long as it actually WAS libel.

    There are enough people out there who distrust the police, we don't need unfounded accusations reducing police support further.

    On the other hand, if the statements were factual, the cops and prosecutors involved need to be lined up against a wall and shot.

    1. Re:I'm OK with this by AnonymousClown · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If he is innocent and things work there like the US, the charges will be dropped and the police involved will get a suspension with pay while things are being "investigated". The cops will then go back to active duty after the investigations and the whistle blower will be continually harassed because protect each other even when the other is a criminal or eve murderer - I mean accidental shooting victim.

      --
      RIP America

      July 4, 1776 - September 11, 2001

    2. Re:I'm OK with this by HungryHobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't worry, no matter how fake or factual his claims will be found officially to be baseless.

    3. Re:I'm OK with this by Dexter+Herbivore · · Score: 1

      It's not just the US/Canada that uses this "system".

    4. Re:I'm OK with this by noidentity · · Score: 1
      Yeah, this isn't merely critique, as in "they are doing a bad job at such-and-such activity". It's claims of fact.

      Obviously the guy should have just filed a report and been done with it. Oh, wait...

    5. Re:I'm OK with this by Fractal+Dice · · Score: 1

      There's an old proverb: "you don't tug on Superman's cape".

    6. Re:I'm OK with this by demonlapin · · Score: 3, Informative
      Stuff like this, or this, or any of a thousand other examples, are why people don't trust the police. They're not trustworthy, they don't care to help you, and their dedication is only to each other. You are a subject, and they are the ones with power. Disagree, and they'll jail you, shoot you, or frame you. This just proves the point.

      Police and prosecutors say baseless crap all the time. Remember Richard Jewell? The FBI can "leak" information to the media to destroy people's lives with impunity - the best that guy got, despite complete innocence, was the AG saying "I regret the leak." Well, gee, thanks.

      the cops and prosecutors involved need to be lined up against a wall and shot.

      Yeah, somehow that never seems to happen. All Mike Nifong got was being disbarred, and spending one night in jail for contempt of court, on charges that he trumped up and that would have, if successful, put three men in jail for a long, long time. And those are the ones with lots of money to defend themselves. As far as I'm concerned, that level of dishonesty should lead to putting him in jail for the full length of the sentence he was trying to get.

    7. Re:I'm OK with this by future+assassin · · Score: 1

      >If he is innocent and things work there like the US, the charges will be dropped and the police involved will get a suspension with pay while things are being "investigated". The cops will then go back to active duty after the investigations and the whistle blower will be continually harassed because protect each other even when the other is a criminal or eve murderer - I mean accidental shooting victim.

      Yah they'll get the next town over RCMP detachment to investigate it. Yah no conflict of interest here after all this is Canada where the RCMP shoot you first then tazer you to death.

      --
      by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  7. Making it criminal helps the police by Alain+Williams · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It meant that they could raid his house and get a copy of everything that he had, possibly then loosing some of it for him. If it was a civil action then they would not have been able to do this. What is dreadful is that the ''other side'' (ie the police in this case) get an immediate advantage. This is abuse of power.

    1. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by scream+at+the+sky · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The investigation that pressed the criminal charges was conducted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, not the local Calgary Police Service. The Royal's are the Canuck equivalent to the American FBI, and are a national police force.

      There is a lot of infighting between the various Law Enforcement Agencies in Canada over jurisdictional rights, etc, and to the best of my knowledge, they don't really go out of each others way to help each other out that much.

      This is very evident at family functions. I have a couple of cousins (cousins to each other as well) one is local CPS, and the other is RC. They get into pissing matches with each other all the time over who has the more important role in Canadian Civilization, and I am usually the one who gets to moderate their arguments, generally by telling them both to STFU, and handing them a beer.

      --
      I wish I was a neutron bomb, for once I could go off...
    2. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Auroch · · Score: 1

      This is very evident at family functions. I have a couple of cousins (cousins to each other as well) one is local CPS, and the other is RC. They get into pissing matches with each other all the time over who has the more important role in Canadian Civilization, and I am usually the one who gets to moderate their arguments, generally by telling them both to STFU, and handing them a beer.

      I have never had that experience with my friends who are in different areas of policing. Perhaps it's a family thing? ... on second though, maybe it's an alberta thing. (Yes, the rest of the country hates alberta as much as alberta hates the rest of the country ... and everyone hates quebec. It's our main unifying doctrine).

      --
      Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    3. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by scream+at+the+sky · · Score: 1

      It very well could be a family thing, but I don't think so. The infighting between the two of them didn't start until Shane (CPS) got onto the police force. They were fine before then. I really don't know, like I said, I just tell them to shut up and have a beer, and things get instantly peaceful.

      It's also not an "alberta thing", because Rick (The RC) isn't even in Alberta (Barrie Ontario), and the family reunion where the last argument was took place in Winnipeg, which is where they are both originally from.

      For the record, Albertans (at least this one) don't hate the rest of the country (not even Quebec!), we're just a tad arrogant, and don't really care what every one else thinks.

      --
      I wish I was a neutron bomb, for once I could go off...
    4. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Auroch · · Score: 1

      For the record, Albertans (at least this one) don't hate the rest of the country (not even Quebec!), we're just a tad arrogant, and don't really care what every one else thinks.

      LMAO... wish I could moderate.

      --
      Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    5. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by scream+at+the+sky · · Score: 1

      funny thing is, I can. 4 points left =)

      --
      I wish I was a neutron bomb, for once I could go off...
    6. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Auroch · · Score: 1

      Not with that account :P (Now that you've participated).

      Maybe the rest of the country thinks alberta hates them... so we're all just oversensitive.

      --
      Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    7. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have never had that experience with my friends who are in different areas of policing. Perhaps it's a family thing?

      To local cops, FBI stands for "Fucking Big Idiots". To the FBI, local cops are bunglers who can't tell their asshole from... hey, what's that in the ground over there? But maybe your family is just more polite than this other guy's. I never got into any fights at any family events, but I can't say I wasn't close to getting in a fight with one of my uncles on one occasion. Fucking alkies. I don't really see eye to eye on anything with my family and have been out of touch for years. I hope to keep it that way.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by scream+at+the+sky · · Score: 1

      Maybe the rest of the country thinks alberta hates them... so we're all just oversensitive.

      Nah. I've traveled this amazing country from coast to coast, and have lived in 5 different provinces (admittedly, for as little as 6 months).

      I think that the national reputation that we in Alberta have earned (smug, arrogant redneck bastards) is well deserved and has definitely been earned.

      I just don't think that it reflects against us all as individuals. It definitely makes sense why we would be viewed that way from the outside though.

      --
      I wish I was a neutron bomb, for once I could go off...
    9. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by zill · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Royal's are the Canuck equivalent to the American FBI, and are a national police force.

      This is incorrect. The FBI only has investigative jurisdiction over federal crimes, thus differentiating them from local police departments. The RCMP and the Calgary police department enforce the exact same set of laws - Criminal Code of Canada, and they have identical investigative jurisdictions. While the RCMP is a national police force, it is not the equivalent of the FBI.

      Simply put, RCMP hands out parking tickets but the FBI does not.

    10. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It probably is a family thing. I don't go to family reunions for either said of my parents specifically because they always end up in pissing matches, and none of them are police of any sort. Some people just can't be happy for anyone else.

    11. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by mutherhacker · · Score: 1

      ...This is abuse of power.

      OMG! Are you saying that the Canada police abused their power? Get over here, libel charges for you too Mister!

    12. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 1

      This is incorrect. The FBI only has investigative jurisdiction over federal crimes, thus differentiating them from local police departments. The RCMP and the Calgary police department enforce the exact same set of laws - Criminal Code of Canada, and they have identical investigative jurisdictions. While the RCMP is a national police force, it is not the equivalent of the FBI.

      Simply put, RCMP hands out parking tickets but the FBI does not.

      It depends where you are in Canada. Some Provinces don't have their own Police and the RCMP does that role. Ontario for a counter example has the OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) and the RCMP are purely Federal here. Even the OPP is restricted in cities with their own police departments. In Ontario the RCMP won't be handing out parking tickets, in Cities with their own police neither will the OPP. Other provinces differ.

      So in short it depends on the Province and City on whether the RCMP has local policing roles or not.

    13. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small towns pay for FBI agents to handle their speeding rather than hiring a cop of their own? Interesting.

      Or are you just talking out of your ass?

    14. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by rhizome · · Score: 1

      Ontario for a counter example has the OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) and the RCMP are purely Federal here.

      So you're saying that in Ontario the RCMP are *prohibited* from enforcing local laws? That was the OP's point, that there are jurisdictional differences between the RCMP and the FBI.

      --
      When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
    15. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I thought the FBI -did- hand out parking tickets in Puerto Rico, at least. Guess I just learned something new, today. Thanks! :)

    16. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      No they're not prohibited from enforcing anything. The RCMP are a national police force, they can enforce any laws in Ontario, or none as circumstances permit. If it was a minor case(like catching people vandalizing, they'd probably contact the local or provincial dept. If it was something serious(DUI/Robbery/Assault), they'd jump right in. They're the provincial police, and local police out west, in the northern territories, and in parts out east. They can act in-force in other provinces. In Canada, a peace officer, is a peace officer, is a peace officer, no matter where you are.

      Meaning if I was a cop in Ontario, and on vacation in Alberta. I can enforce the laws of Alberta, now we would have some really fancy paper work to go with it. But police in Canada are multi-jurisdiction, and are never off duty.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    17. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by SheeEttin · · Score: 1

      So they're more like State Troopers... except national.
      Well, that might explain the hats...

    18. Re:Making it criminal helps the police by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Even when RCMP serve as a provincial police force, they're still Feds, and their chain of command and responsibility goes there. They're just contracted to also enforce provincial laws.

  8. Is this the site? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.bownessca.com/

    The purpose of this site is to inform the residents of Bowness, the citizens of Calgary and others, as to how senior individuals within the City of Calgary placed the Bowness Community Association (the BCA) into receivership by illegal, corrupt and criminal means.
    .
    There has been over 5 years of corrupt and criminal acts that have been committed and they are continuing to be committed by Derek Podlubny and the present Board, ably assisted by lawyers from the law firm of Blake Cassels and Graydon.

    1. Re:Is this the site? by whisper_jeff · · Score: 4, Informative

      I was going to say it was this site - http://www.rosscarrock.info/ - but I see that Mr Kelly is mounting a multi-pronged attack against, well, anyone he sets his sights on that wrongs him in even the slightest way.

    2. Re:Is this the site? by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Both of these sites have a distinct flavour of crackpottery, mixed with a generous dose of lunacy and tipped with wholesome nuttiness.

      I think the RCMP will end up with a rather embarrassing situation of having dragged a certifiable conspiracy nut before the courts wherein he will quickly drown them in spittle and general ranting incoherence, which then will prompt more reasonable citizenry to start asking pointed questions as to why the RCMP feels threatened by an individual whose case would best be dealt with by the medical profession and if maybe there is something to his ranting...

    3. Re:Is this the site? by scream+at+the+sky · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This guy has an amazing sense of entitlement, and I say this as someone who lives in the Calgary area, and has heard of him through friends who live in the Bowness/Montgomery area.

      Just reading the index to the main site that you listed it is obvious that he just has an axe to grind against the entire community association, probably because he was expelled. Why was he expelled? I have no idea, as all we are able to see is his side of the story, and as we all know there are always at least 3 sides to every story. Yours, Mine, The truth, which is inevitably somewhere in between.

      My side, is that he's an troll who just wants attention, and should not be fed.

      --
      I wish I was a neutron bomb, for once I could go off...
    4. Re:Is this the site? by kg8484 · · Score: 1
    5. Re:Is this the site? by getgame · · Score: 1

      He is covering all bases: http://www.csasoccer.info/

    6. Re:Is this the site? by CyborgWarrior · · Score: 1

      The front page is really ambiguous and more griping about the failure to stand up about the claims he has made. More interesting are his actual claims:

      http://www.rosscarrock.info/id6.html

      Personally, I would attribute most of his problems (if true, we obviously are not seeing any primary sources here) to simple negligence rather than intentional malice or fraudulence. It may be worth looking into, however, and if at the very least this guys stink causes the association to get their accounting and record keeping together.

      He could also be a crackpot. Again, we have almost zilch in the way of reliable information here, so I don't see a way to form any solid opinion on what's even going on.

      --
      If you can't say something nice, make sure you have something heavy to throw.
    7. Re:Is this the site? by Jailbrekr · · Score: 1

      From the looks of it, the RCMP were forced to react because his commentary was actually interfering with their work on various criminal cases. If that is the case, I think this is a case of our justice system working and working well. You can badmouth the cops all you want, but if it starts to interfere with their job, then you are actually forced to take ownership of what you are saying.

      --
      Feed the need: Digitaladdiction.net
  9. f the cops! by vxone · · Score: 1, Funny

    there needs to be some kind of - protest about this .. like ASAP they can't get away with this sort of bullshit. criminal my ass this is not a police state

    1. Re:f the cops! by multipartmixed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wow!

      What grade are you in?

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    2. Re:f the cops! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:f the cops! by mcornelius · · Score: 1

      Really? I suggest you look at 297-317 of the Canadian Criminal Code.

    4. Re:f the cops! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regardless, he strangely seems to care more about free speech rights than you do.

      Cops have been murdering people for CCW, being insane and walking around with knives, and now they're going after mouthy crazies on the internet... ...and you're taking time out of your day to criticize what you deem as a grade school kid. Good job!

    5. Re:f the cops! by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

      The only reason in Canada for a civilian to carry a concealed weapon is if they plan to kill somebody with it. Unlike our brethren in the US, we trade hockey cards are recess rather than practice our handgun skills.

      If the cops shoot somebody here who is carrying a concealed weapon, they almost certainly have a good reason to do so.

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    6. Re:f the cops! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Canada we see people successfully robbing 7-11 with a box cutter while in the states they would be shot dead. In the states everyone has a gun so no one is too quick to pull out their gun unless they know they can beat the guns of everyone around them. In Canada people who have guns are more empowered than everyone else. People who have illegal weapons (like gangs) are even more powerful because they don't have to deal with gun registration laws and restrictions at all. In Canada, someone can go spree robbing people in the street with a shotgun (even without any ammo) or sword and he won't find much resistance until the police arrive. Not saying that everyone having guns is the best solution either, both have a lot of problems.

  10. This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The burden of proof is MUCH higher with criminal charges.

    All the guy has to do is raise a reasonable doubt in the minds of ONE juror.

    When he's not convicted, this will be seen by many as proof that the RCMP did in fact perjure themselves. Dumb move, cops.

    1. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by jav1231 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Stifling free speech is never a good thing. Whether it's hate speech laws or outright criminal charges to stifle someone. This is for fail, not for good.

    2. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 5, Informative
      Yes, I am in Kanuckistan - Poutineville, to be specific, though I'm abandoning Quebec as soon as I can. I'm patient, but I've had it.

      Defamation (there's no such thing as libel in Canada, just "defamatory libel" - not the same thing) is different from the US. The truth is not an absolute defense. However, they screwed up, because the police, being public figures, are more subject to open criticism than the average citizen. This is intimidation, pure and simple.

      The web site is in New York, so it's outside the Canadian courts' jurisdiction, pure and simple. The US 5th Amendment takes precedence on US soil.

      So we have the problem of venue. If the defamatory statements were published in the US, and if Canada doesn't have a long-arm statute (we don't, except for child abuse and terrorism), the RCMP are SOL. Sorry boys, you don't get your man this time.

      Also, sections 309 - 310 of the criminal code:

      Public benefit

      309. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes defamatory matter that, on reasonable grounds, he believes is true, and that is relevant to any subject of public interest, the public discussion of which is for the public benefit.

      R.S., c. C-34, s. 273.

      Fair comment on public person or work of art

      310. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes fair comments
      (a) on the public conduct of a person who takes part in public affairs; or
      (b) on a published book or other literary production, or on any composition or work of art or performance publicly exhibited, or on any other communication made to the public on any subject, if the comments are confined to criticism thereof.

      R.S., c. C-34, s. 274.

      When truth a defence

      311. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel where he proves that the publication of the defamatory matter in the manner in which it was published was for the public benefit at the time when it was published and that the matter itself was true.

      R.S., c. C-34, s. 275.

      Do the RCMP sometimes lie? That's been proven in court. Instead of trying to suppress publication in another country with a SLAPP criminal proceeding, maybe they should address the issues, and realize that when you're a cop, what you do is public, same as a politician.

    3. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name one democracy that doesn't embody the principle of proving beyond a reasonable doubt in criminal cases.

    4. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Did you even read the comment? I make it clear that the RCMP are SCREWED on this one. In a follow-up comment, I also point out that the web server is in New York, and Canada doesn't have a long-arm statute except for child sexual abuse and terrorism.

      The "defamatory libel" (there's no such thing as libel in Canada, just "defamatory libel") wasn't committed in Canada. The publication took place in the US. Even trying to argue that it was posted from Canada fails - it isn't published (under the meaning of the law) until it is made available on the server.

      They didn't dot their "I"s or cross their "T"s, and now that it's public, other sites, even sites hosted in Canada, are allowed to report the details under articles 308-310 of the criminal code.

      They f*cked themselves but good. If this guy has guts (and he seems to) he'll stand his ground.

    5. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by drunkennewfiemidget · · Score: 1

      That's what upsets me the most about this sort of thing.

      Be a man, respond with, "he's right; we need to fix that."

      There's honour in that. Not filing charges against him, that's just sleazy.

    6. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Canada, but in the US, defending yourself eats up so much time and money that even when you win, you lose.

    7. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      While judges don't like it, it's very easy to defend yourself pro se in Canada. In fact, a recent study showed that it's not just becoming more common in criminal and civil courts, but also in family law, where the majority of people (60%) now represent themselves.

      The Internet has changed the balance of power. People can do their research, find precedents, previous filings that they can cut-and-paste and edit, the rules of procedure, etc. Anyone with a bit of hard work and intelligence can make a good presentation - and that's all you're talking about, making a better presentation of the facts and the law than the other side.

      In this case, the law is on the guy's side. Winning will be easy.

    8. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Zeek40 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Does Canada allow people to counter-sue for court charges in a case like this? Because this looks like a case where the police just want to financially ruin someone with attorney's fees without any intent to actually prosecute them.

    9. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Odds are that he won't get a jury trial. I haven't read the fine article but in Canada we only have the right to a jury trial for crimes where the maximum sentence is over 5 years.
      It's in the Charter.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    10. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's tough. In part, this is to keep lawsuit costs "reasonable" as compared to the runaway litigation down south. Like much of life, it's a crapshoot.

    11. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      "I heard recently that Florida can have non-capital criminal courts with only SIX jurors. "

      You are confusing Florida with Massachusetts. They have been doing so in Massachusetts for as long as I have been alive. In Florida, you have no Miranda rights, and trials of any kind are completely optional ;-(

      (I wish I were joking, but they will hold you in Palm Beach County for up to 33 days without so much as filing charges, and they regularly tell the people they arrest that Florida doesn't have Miranda rights. Seriously.)

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    12. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Informative
      Section 300 provides for a 5 year jail term. Section 317 specifically mentions a jury trial.

      Also, except in indictments specifically enumerated in section 553, it is up to the accused, not the judge, to decide whether they will have a trial by judge alone or by jury. See section 554. Also sections 558 and following. Don't take my word for it - here's the Canadian Criminal Code directly from the government website: http://laws.justice.gc.ca/eng/C-46/FramesView.html

      Hope this makes it a bit clearer.

    13. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by MachDelta · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but English law countries (like Canada) typically have a "loser pays" system. So if the RCMP lose in this case, they pony up for the guy's legal costs. If the guy loses, I think the judge can award some/all of the RCMP's legal fees as part of his punishment, but i'm not 100% on that because it a criminal case (eg: The country is suing the individual). In a private vs private case it would almost always be "loser pays."

    14. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does Canada allow people to counter-sue for court charges in a case like this? Because this looks like a case where the police just want to financially ruin someone with attorney's fees without any intent to actually prosecute them.

      yes - but you have to win... and yes, its a common tactic to ruin someone who can't afford a good [set of] attorney[s].
      On top of that, the judge may be in a conflict of interest if the case is also heard in Calgary... I hope he gets good lawyers and advice.

    15. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by TastyCakes · · Score: 1

      Not themselves, the Calgary Police. It's unclear from the article, but it seems the RCMP is investigating because they are at least a separate party, if not a completely neutral one.
      I don't think the situation is entirely clear yet. Maybe the police are trying to hush up dirty laundry, or maybe this John Kelly is just a dick making ridiculous, libelous accusations. I live in Calgary, and I've never heard any whisper about police corruption here before. Based on that, I would tend to give the police the benefit of the doubt over Mr Kelly, who to be honest comes off as a little loopy on his websites (here and here). Regardless, this would appear to be a Streisand effect situation, and no matter what the outcome might be seen as a bungled PR move by the Calgary Police.

    16. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by index0 · · Score: 1

      It is criminal court, he can have a 'free' lawyer.

    17. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      In this case the RCMP are pissed because the guys web site is interfering with an ongoing homicide investigation. He isn't just making general comments about the RCMP, but making specific accusations against specific officers about a specific case.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    18. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by dougmc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All the guy has to do is raise a reasonable doubt in the minds of ONE juror.

      Even in the US, that's hardly sufficient to reliably be acquitted. If one juror's doubt is merely reasonable, the odds of him caving to the other jurors are quite high. It requires considerable certainty to persist when hounded by five or eleven other people.

      The juror's decision must be unanimous, and if one juror sticks to his gun and will not vote guilty, and the other jurors stick to their guns and vote guilty -- this eventually results in a mistrial and the accused gets a new trial -- and really, if the case was strong enough to convince eleven out of twelve this time, it'll likely end with a guilty verdict next time.

      And besides, the jurors probably don't want to be there. If only one juror disagrees with the rest, he knows that he's the one keeping everybody from going home, and may change his mind just for that matter.

      You should do jury duty at least once. It's frustrating and boring at times, but it's also interesting and eye-opening.

    19. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      He is not being sued, he is being criminally charged. The most serious charge is interfering with justice. As it is a criminal case, he would get a government paid lawyer if he cannot afford one.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    20. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by dougmc · · Score: 1

      I should make it clear that my experience is in the US and I have no experience with Canadian juries, though I have no reason to believe that Canada's juries are any different in regards to the issues I mentioned.

    21. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      But he NOT being sued. He is being criminally charged, mainly with interfering with justice. This is NOT a civil case so loser pays doesn't enter into it. For a criminal case the government will provide a lawyer if you cannot afford one.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    22. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I didn't realize that libel carried a 5 year maximum.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    23. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by shadowofwind · · Score: 1

      A related issue is that the policies of banks, employers, and other institutions have a huge impact on a person's life. So even if you can risk the legal penalty of representing yourself and losing, getting the conviction on your record can be a huge issue. So even when you'll probably win if self representing, you still may want a lawyer if it helps your odds, particularly if you've got dependents.

      Thank god we've got citizen juries though.

    24. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by fishexe · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm. Are you Canadian, Tom? Not being sarcastic, really, I'm asking an honest question. It SOUNDS LIKE you are trying to apply US law to a Canadian case.

      Really?? Because it sounds to me a lot like he's trying to apply English common law to a Canadian case. Which is, of course, appropriate because all English colonies inherited the English common law and most of them chose to preserve it upon independence. The beyond a reasonable doubt standard is definitely a common law standard; I challenge you to show me where the words "beyond a reasonable doubt" appear in the US constitution.

      Fact is, I'm not *real* sure about the US. I heard recently that Florida can have non-capital criminal courts with only SIX jurors. Never did check it out - it's just filed away as a curiosity that I should check out.

      That's not fundamentally different from a jury of twelve. As long as it's generally regarded as enough people to fairly determine guilt, and it's the same number for all defendants, as specified in local law, then it preserves due process.

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    25. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Good point - thanks for catching it - though I stand by my statements that member of the RCMP have in fact been proven to indulge in illegal behaviour in the past - that's not news. Thanks for the web site addresses - now it's just a question of how long before someone posts this on wikipeida :-)

    26. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And he's allowed to. There's no law saying that you cannot comment publicly on police behaviour. Look at the tazering to death in the BC airport, and the cover-up that was attempted there before it turned out that people with cell phones had video.

    27. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      You should do jury duty at least once. It's frustrating and boring at times, but it's also interesting and eye-opening.

      Been there, done that, 1 month murder trial. It only takes one juror, but in a case like this, there will probably be more than one. Look at how many times the government tried Morenthaler, and the jury refused to convict (three times) despite the judge telling them it was their duty to convict.

      Canadians are quite capable of telling a judge, nicely, to go f$ck himself when a law is unjust. We have no problem with jury nullification here. It's one reason that judges treat the jurors with respect. Unlike the US, jurors here, through the process of nullification, can judge both the facts and the law.

    28. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      My experience has been the opposite - when it's important, I always end up firing the bozo and doing it myself because I can do a better job (more familiar with the case, certain that I am in the right and that I'm not shading the facts, highly motivated since it IS personal, etc.)

      Besides, I'm cheap ;-p

    29. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by dogsbreath · · Score: 1

      You might look at http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/analysis.aspx?id=21412 which addresses a related issue, cyberbullying, but comes to the point here with comments about limitations of freedom of speech in Canada:

      "In Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto (1995), the court held that a good reputation is closely related to the innate worthiness and dignity of the individual. Therefore, reputation must be protected in the same way as freedom of expression under Section 2(b). The court noted that a reputation tarnished by libel can seldom regain its formal luster. Accordingly, society has an interest in ensuring its members enjoy and protect their good reputation so long as it is merited. Along similar lines, in the case of Newman et al v. Halstead (2006), an adult was held liable for $676,000 for posting derogatory comments about teachers online."

      I believe this was a civil action and it seems to me that the police would be likely to succeed in such a case. However, the Calgary Police would have to do their own work on it with the City of Calgary and the individuals named bringing the legal action forward instead of having the RCMP bring charges. BTW IANAL, just a beer-hazy nerd.

      There might even by some "hate-crime" legislation that could be used.

      Curious that they chose to follow the criminal law path.

    30. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Law student here: most cases, even criminal cases don't have a jury.

    31. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you get what you pay for at the public defender's office

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    32. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Canadian law student (although crim was my worst course...):

      It's often called party costs and they're awarded to the party that wins. I think something like 80% but I could be wrong on the specifics. Very typical.

      If they were really attempting to do that (since it's criminal, it's the Attorney General's office pressing charges) than they could open themselves up to "malicious prosecution" which is a tort.

    33. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Timex · · Score: 1

      Defamation (there's no such thing as libel in Canada, just "defamatory libel" - not the same thing) is different from the US. The truth is not an absolute defense. However, they screwed up, because the police, being public figures, are more subject to open criticism than the average citizen. This is intimidation, pure and simple.

      It's a poor day to do it, too-- too often, we see people trying to speak out against a corrupt authority (or against specific corrupt members of said authority), and said authority tries to squash the person speaking out. In decades past it might have worked, but these days it is more difficult to pull off without exposing problems.

      The web site is in New York, so it's outside the Canadian courts' jurisdiction, pure and simple. The US 5th Amendment takes precedence on US soil.

      Heh. Imagine that. If the Liberals in Washington have their way, that won't be a true statement for very long. They want the United Nations to trump any nation's sovereignty.

      So we have the problem of venue. If the defamatory statements were published in the US, and if Canada doesn't have a long-arm statute (we don't, except for child abuse and terrorism), the RCMP are SOL. Sorry boys, you don't get your man this time.

      Give them time, they'll find a way. What is it they say about the Mounties? "They always get their man"? Sounds more to me like someone desperate for a date on a Friday night.

      Do the RCMP sometimes lie? That's been proven in court. Instead of trying to suppress publication in another country with a SLAPP criminal proceeding, maybe they should address the issues, and realize that when you're a cop, what you do is public, same as a politician.

      They aren't supposed to violate the very law they are called to enforce. They are probably more afraid that admission to being victims of the Human Condition would open themselves up to a whole new can of worms... Of course, if they have nothing to hide....

      --
      When politicians are involved, everyone loses.
    34. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by ma1wrbu5tr · · Score: 1

      I did not really think of it that way, but you make an excellent point.

      However! If the prosecution DOES win, this could set a precedent for even further sqaushing of anti-government/anti-police vocalization. A few states here in the US have even gone as far as to make it illegal to video on-duty police officers (even in public places where no expectation of privacy is considered).

      How could this happen in Canada? I've always thought very highly of our neighbors to the North.

      --
      Why can't we go back to using jumpers to configure slot adapter cards? Why? I say!
    35. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      And he's allowed to. There's no law saying that you cannot comment publicly on police behaviour.

      Correct...but there are laws against maliciously defaming people by telling lies. If the RCMP can prove that what he claims is false, and for criminal charges the burden surely lies with them (but IANAL), then he deserves what he gets. If they cannot prove it then they are going to end up looking very bad.

    36. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by ma1wrbu5tr · · Score: 1

      Wow! a ./er who actually did some research on his own before spouting off. Mod this UP!

      --
      Why can't we go back to using jumpers to configure slot adapter cards? Why? I say!
    37. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      That's because most case, the defendant opts for a non-jury trial because it's a LOT cheaper. It has nothing to do with whether you're entitled to one - and in this case, he definitely is.

      However, people sometimes opt for jury trials for even the most mundane issues - one guy took a couple of weeks over a LAWN MOWER (he lost, btw).

    38. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Well, I have a sneaking suspicion that the worm will turn in the US. Obama is probably going to be a one-hit blunder after selling out to big insurance and big pharma. If things keep going the way they are, even Nixon would be able to beat him in a run-off - it would be the battle of the Zombie Pres'nits.

      My question is when is Hillary going to publicly split so she can try to run. It's not like she can afford to wait 6 more years, and in the event that anone gets a second term, the wait (with an intervening republican interengnum) would be more like 10 to 14.

      She either splits publicly, or Obama finds a "reason" to not run for a second term. And since everyone loves a cat-fight ... you can guess who the Repub. candidate will be.

      Way off-topic, except that it relates to power and the abuse therof. It's not like the Obama administration has been doing anything to repeal some of the more invasive laws.

    39. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Section 310 of the Canadian Criminal Code:

      310. No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes fair comments
      (a) on the public conduct of a person who takes part in public affair

      This is a public affair. Actually, let me rephrase that - it's now a VERY public affair. Hello, Streisand!

    40. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by dougmc · · Score: 1

      Jury nullification exists in the US too -- it's just that not many people know about it.

      And since the jury does not have to tell why they ruled the way they did, there's not really much that can be done to prevent it, once people are aware of the concept.

    41. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Beyond your comments, the law itself is in violation of the Charter, and won't stand that test. Very little question of that; this is just intimidation.

      RCMP have shown themselves to be inept, time and time again. Ohhh .... if anyone from the RCMP wants to file a criminal libel charge, while I'm logged in as an AC, you just let me know. More than willing to tear a strip off you in the courts, which is why they go after the weak or those who can't avail themselves of legal resources.

    42. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not only do most people not know about jury nullification in the US, it is actually legal for the judge to forbid anybody to mention it, and iirc it is legal for the judge to lie about it's existence.

      Every single time I hear about somebody I know getting a summons, I tell them to google "jury nullification" before they go, but to not mention a thing about it. It's one of the few ways the average citizen can have a direct impact on government these days, and the establishment hates it.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    43. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come now, as a fellow Canadian, we have to take into consideration that this isn't Canada, this is Calgary! The cowboys of the North

    44. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Curtman · · Score: 1

      If the RCMP can prove that what he claims is false, and for criminal charges the burden surely lies with them (but IANAL), then he deserves what he gets

      What's good for the goose is good for the gander.

      Chief admits 5-metre G20 security rule didn't exist
      When asked Tuesday if there actually was a five-metre rule given the ministry's clarification, Chief Bill Blair smiled and said, "No, but I was trying to keep the criminals out."

    45. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      "How's that hopey-changey thing working out for you?"

      Pretty well, actually!

      How's that insane racist, homophobic, anti-Islam hatemongering Teabagger faction screwing the GOP six ways from Sunday working out for you?

      (Yes, it's off topic. Yes, it needed saying. Don't like it? Move to Canada and file criminal charges.)

      --
      Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
    46. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by pseudochaos · · Score: 0

      That's funny. They have no problems taping us.

      --
      "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle
    47. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by Timex · · Score: 1

      How's that insane racist, homophobic, anti-Islam hatemongering Teabagger faction screwing the GOP six ways from Sunday working out for you?

      You're not supposed to crawl out from under your rock before Tuesday. What an amateur you are.

      I care about the GOP only slightly more than I care about the DNC.

      Of course, your commentary tells me that you are an extremely shallow lemming, buying into what the MSM tells people about a group of people that care about the basis of the United States of America. Your choice of words shows me that you care about it about as much as those loser muslim extremists that flew airliners into the twin towers and the Pentagon.

      However, at least I don't have the RCMP knocking on my door, trying to file criminal charges against me for speaking my mind. That would be a violation against the First Amendment, which you (as a Canadian, based on your next comment) simply don't enjoy. Sucks to be you.

      (Yes, it's off topic. Yes, it needed saying. ...

      Yes it was, no it didn't. You could have kept your pie-hole shut until Tuesday, when the other trolls come out.

      ... Don't like it? Move to Canada and file criminal charges.)

      You're not worth the time it would take to do all that. Don't think so highly of yourself.

      --
      When politicians are involved, everyone loses.
    48. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Stifling free speech is never a good thing. Whether it's hate speech laws or outright criminal charges to stifle someone. This is for fail, not for good.

      The right to free speech does not mean that you have freedom from repurcussions. Generally, you are free to libel someone, but have to suffer the consequences if/when they sue you. If you accuse someone of a crime, that is potentially criminal libel, and you had better have some proof to back it up.

      (This is how it works in the UK at least).

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    49. Re:This is a GOOD THING! by agbinfo · · Score: 1

      IANAL but I know that Guy Lafleur - #10 retired player of the Montreal Canadians hockey team - is counter-suing in a case where he was accused of perjury. The case is a bit complicated and he's suing for the method that was used, but I guess it demonstrates that you can counter sue. As far as I know, M. Lafleur initiated his lawsuit after he was found not guilty. I'm not sure if one could sue for court charges directly.

  11. Really? KKK worthwhile? by Auroch · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    How about we let the audience decide that for themselves?

    If we want to prove that our ideologies are indeed superior to those of the KKK, that can only be done on a fair and equal forum of debate

    How does a man on fire, tied to a cross, surrounded by people who hate him, have a fair chance to speak? By the time the current discussion is over, I'm pretty sure he never wants to see the colour white again (and will be perpetually biased against the living).

    --
    Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    1. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by HungryHobo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which has fuck all to do with free speech.

      You can let the hate groups fester where nobody can see or you can leave them out in the open to be ridiculed by all.

    2. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by mcornelius · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's not speech and you can't eliminate hatred by outlawing it.

    3. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by Auroch · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, that's not speech and you can't eliminate hatred by outlawing it.

      Yeah, but you can encourage it's growth by talking/spreading it.

      There are many ways to fight hate speech. In canada, we fight it by making hate speech illegal. we fight it by making it illegal to spread, we mock it with our TV programming, education system and comedians.

      In the USA, dissenting voices are usually dealt with by a lynch mob (or some other draconian measure meted out by an arbitrary justice system with no remaining checks or balances). Oh, and glenn beck.

      --
      Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
    4. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by jav1231 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So someone committing a blatant crime is an example of the failure of free speech? You silly, or dumb, or both. Either way you're fucked up.

    5. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by mcornelius · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's not speech and you can't eliminate hatred by outlawing it.

      Yeah, but you can encourage it's growth by talking/spreading it.

      Actually, you can't encourage it's anything because that's gibberish. Learn to apostrophate properly.

      Saying that free speech spreads hate is like saying Lysol makes people sick. Yes, out of a large-enough population, some idiot will try to drink Lysol, but restricting its availability will make everyone sick.

      There are many ways to fight hate speech. In canada, we fight it by making hate speech illegal. we fight it by making it illegal to spread, we mock it with our TV programming, education system and comedians.

      If you make speech selectively illegal, it's no longer free speech, it's restricted speech. Restricting people's activities because of their ideas or origin is the very criterion used to identify a crime as a hate crime.

      In the USA, dissenting voices are usually dealt with by a lynch mob (or some other draconian measure meted out by an arbitrary justice system with no remaining checks or balances). Oh, and glenn beck.

      I've lived in the United States for 24 of the previous 26 years (non-continuously). I have never seen or known anyone that was “dealt with by a lynch mob,” or any “other draconian measure” in our criminal justice systems. Restricting speech because you don't want to hear someone is draconian.

      As for checks and balances, that's a term referring to separation of powers doctrine (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checks_and_balances), which is much more fundamental to the U.S. Constitution (and the individual state constitutions) than it is to the Canadian Constitution. If you just don't like the outcomes, go ahead and say that. Just realize that if you are ever sued for or charged with defamation, and later you're lawfully admitted into the United States, collection of a debt resulting from criminal or civil defamations suits in foreign courts is illegal in the United States, a measure that unanimously passed in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.

      As for Glenn Beck, he's our Lysol-drinking idiot and it's better that everyone keep an eye on him.

    6. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by Blue+Stone · · Score: 0, Troll

      Maybe. But Fox News seems to be doing awfully well.

      I think you're right, but then I wonder about what happens when there's not a significant majority who can pick apart and ridicule the hate. Or, like a number of political movements in the US (and elesewhere of course) the people espousing those views seem entirely immune to reason, debate, logic, facts and so on.

      It frequesntly seems to come down to left-leaning people who think ideas are key and that truth and reason should win the day, and (significantly) more right-wing people who are playing a different game entirely, where it's all actually about red vs blu, warring monkey tribes striving for dominance at any cost.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    7. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Your inner tribal monkey is showing. The left is just as immune to truth and reason as the right.

    8. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by KazW · · Score: 1

      How about we let the audience decide that for themselves?

      If we want to prove that our ideologies are indeed superior to those of the KKK, that can only be done on a fair and equal forum of debate

      How does a man on fire, tied to a cross, surrounded by people who hate him, have a fair chance to speak? By the time the current discussion is over, I'm pretty sure he never wants to see the colour white again (and will be perpetually biased against the living).

      Dude, are you retarded? Or do you honestly not understand the difference between assault/murder and freedom of speech?

      I'm willing to bet the answer is probably "yes" to both those questions.

      --
      Geeks don't grock information, they grep it.
    9. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      I can be wrong without it meaning I'm part of some tribe you know! :)

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    10. Re:Really? KKK worthwhile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which would be nice, if that's actually what happens.

      But look at the US, where the country is actually going somewhat backwards in terms of gay rights, and things are getting worse. The US also has had the worst track record of race equality of any Western nation. Look at Westboro baptist church also, who have had the opportunity to spread their offence globally, when such a group of fringe idiots would otherwise only have spread their message within their own family or immediate vacinity.

      Even here in the UK we learnt that it doesn't work- look what happened when we let muslim extremists preach hate on the streets, we ended up with hundreds, possibly thousands of radicalised young individuals. Sure banning this doesn't eliminate it, but it drastically cuts it down. Worse, because of islamic radicalisation, we've now got groups of white British thugs who claim they're protecting Britain, yet as the aftermath of any of their "rallies" shows, they're a bunch of vandals, albeit vandals united in a common excuse.

      We have another problem in the UK with the rise of far right groups like the BNP and UKIP (UKIP are far right xenophobes, as much as their supporters refuse to accept it). In letting these people spout their hate publicly there are people ignorantly nodding their heads and saying yep, that sounds like a reasonable excuse for our problems, blame the foreigners, that'll do it.

      I'll admit I don't like the concept of banning groups, banning speech, because the slippery slope effect is potentially quite frightening.

      But let's not pretend that not banning it is a magical cure either as that seems to have demonstrably equally faltered as a technique in dealing with the problem too. Without meaning to Godwin the discussion, wasn't Nazi Germany a fine example of how horribly things can go wrong if you let the likes of the far right keep preaching and preaching, growing their support base?

      I know the whole "free speech" thing is popular in the US, but it's not the perfect pinnacle of civilisation many Americans make it out to be, speech is something that demands respect, and can be dangerous if managed wrongly one way or another.

  12. critical of the corepirate nazi holycost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you have the right to remain silent, &/or it's time to take cover no matter where you ?live??

    http://republicbroadcasting.org/?p=10918

    even more fear from far & near; anyone with a conscience, & some form of attention span left, may find this interesting;
    http://beforeitsnews.com/story/178/722/By_Way_of_Deception,_Thou_Shalt_do_War.html

    Retired NORAD Officer's New Book Predicts a Tentative Worldwide UFO Display on October 13, 2010

    it would help with scheduling etc... if the time was supplied; like between 1-6pm, or after some more tornadoes, something.

    as for unfairness, we like this reference; google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=weather+manipulation

    & this one; google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=bush+cheney+wolfowitz+rumsfeld+wmd+blair+obama+weather+authors

  13. Re:Did the police act "stupidly"? by Auroch · · Score: 2, Informative

    See, the funny thing is in America our president can insult the police and its all fine and dandy. Just saying.

    Actually, the funny thing is that it was neither libel nor slander, in this case.

    --
    Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
  14. You got it by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem is that whenever you stop protecting the unpopular speech, and let the government decide what is and is not of "value" or "useful" or whatever, you open the gates to restricting speech for all sorts of bad reasons. It is the unpopular speech that must be protected.

    As an example, look at the sham that is the Canadian Human Rights Commission. You have a lead investigator that said, on the record "Freedom of speech is an American concept, so I don't give it any value. It's not my job to give value to an American concept." Where you don't have the right to question your accuser, hearsay is admissible with few exceptions, and truth is not always a defense. Basically, if a plaintiff can demonstrate you hurt their feelings (with rather dubious standards of evidence to do so), even if your statements were true you can get in trouble.

    Really you want free speech very protected, where there are clear lines as to what can't be done and those lines are only there as needed to protect people (like you can't order someone to kill someone else and claim free speech). As it stands in Canada, the laws are used to shut down unpopular speech.

    1. Re:You got it by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      Down here in the US, we have come to believe that Freedom of Speech is a French concept. On which grounds we are planning to eliminated it, along with pommes frites, as soon as possible.

    2. Re:You got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      geek time:

      With the first link the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.

  15. Welcome to Calgary! by drknowster · · Score: 1

    I live in Calgary. the chief of police is a hard liner to the letter of the law and if stupidity was against the law there would be charges laid ,anybody that expects compassion or common sense would be greatly disappointed .The current mayor is a developer who has blocked the attempts of the charitable societies to make Calgary a more friendly place there is much more damning things to say ,my opinion. Completely normal behavior

    1. Re:Welcome to Calgary! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Calgary. the chief of police is a hard liner to the letter of the law and if stupidity was against the law there would be charges laid

      But, you see, a man like this rises because of the population base he must contend with. Sure, it's fair to argue he's of this type or that type, but to separate him from the people he's had to accommodate for, is unreasonable. With fewer stupid hicks, you'd have a wiser, more tolerant police service. It's really a reflection of how low the local, general populace has allowed itself to fall. Your city is burdened with wealth, the charitable pursuits should be able to happen without any state accompaniment.

  16. Re:Did the police act "stupidly"? by Auroch · · Score: 1

    See, the funny thing is in America our president can insult the police and its all fine and dandy. Just saying.

    Actually, the funny thing is that it was neither libel nor slander, in that case, either.

    Fixed it for ya. Er, for me.

    --
    Quartz Extreme and Core Image. Are there any other real reasons to spend all that money on generic hardware?
  17. In my day... by fazil · · Score: 1

    Back in my day we ignored the crazies....

    --
    -=-Ze End-=-
  18. Insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell me do you like being ruled? Is it one of your favourite pass times to realize that you are not free? Think about it... there comes a time where you need to defend your rights to be free.

  19. sycraft-fu hasn't figured it out yet. URnotFree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before the pen hit the paper to secure Freedom of Speach, the paper itself was not composed from any such. You like many others fail to realize that countries aren't founded on such transient causes of Freedom: they are rogue and vagrant nations that are commandeered by a defective foe, steered by that dictator to assume him every nature to divest his dictatorship in compelling everyone to fit his form.

    In the case of all the putrid legislatures that you are hammering-on, do you want someone to enter your House built on hard-work and command you to have Freedom of Speach over matters not earned to them? You can't legislate upstream, no matter how you call those "corrections" as Amendments, because all they do is swap the original text, and you fail to realize that when the "Amendments" tear at the stiches then all you have remaining is the original text CHARTER and it's dictator.

    When are you going to man-up and just admit that your feined agreement like all other Slashdot participants is nothing more than an insecure Dictation of your opinions having no adhesion to the matter? This isn't a forum of sound reasoning and faithful discourse: it's a SIMULATION. You are not free: everything you say will be measured for a value in domestic currency to see if you are negative or positive to litigate against, and if you don't fall into such domesticatable value then your words are discarded as FREE dross and trash. When you are Free, it means you have no value.

    The courts assume you have negative value in your words, then slowly determine your value to a reduction scheme of tests. This proves the nature of courtship has always been a simulation: the core, root, original and exclusive jurisdiction of the country has always been a series of dictators that might bind their peerage together in a stock of fascism unto their SUBJECTS. I'm sure you have many subjects yourself, even if they are fictitious.

  20. Re:Did the police act "stupidly"? by sco08y · · Score: 2, Informative

    See, the funny thing is in America our president can insult the police and its all fine and dandy. Just saying.

    The federal government is a separate entity from the state and local governments and, in certain ways, is superior to them. For example, the FBI can override the jurisdiction of local cops, particularly if a crime happens across state lines. For those reasons, yes, the President can criticize or even insult police.

    But it wasn't all fine and dandy. Obama is a politician and took a lot of heat for, basically, opening his big mouth when he shouldn't have. That's been a recurring criticism of Obama: that he talks about stuff when there's no good reason for him to, and wastes his political capital.

  21. No kidding by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Informative

    Also I don't know the libel standard in Canada but in the US:

    1) The statements must be untrue. Truth is the ultimate libel defense. So if his statements are true (probably not, but just saying) then that is the end of that.

    2) The person making the statements had to know they were untrue. While this gets a little more "he said, she said," in the case of someone who's connection to reality is a bit tenuous, this could easily be a defense. He may honestly believe what he is writing is true. In that case, it isn't libel. It is crackpottery, but not libel.

    3) The statements must have been made with the intent to cause harm. Well here again, might be a problem. After all, he may well be making the statements to inform people, not to attempt to harm anyone. In that case, again not libel.

    Could be very different in Canada, of course, but that's how it works in the US. Libel/slander are when someone deliberately spreads false information about you to harm you. It isn't when someone makes fun of you or the like.

    So no, in the US, conspiracy nut rantings aren't libel. If they honestly believe what they are saying is true, it isn't libel.

    Also personally I think speech against the government should be the very most protected of all. The government needs to accept that people can just drag them through the mud, that is the right of citizens in a free country. Pretty much anything is fair game. I mean really, if your government can be harmed by the rantings of conspiracy nuts, then you have bigger problems.

    1. Re:No kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That isn't how it works in the US (in general). In particular, points 2 and 3 are not necessary. If they are true, it amounts to malicious libel; if they're false, it's just libel. However: the US courts have held that "public figures" can only sue for malicious libel.

      Beyond that: true statements cannot be libellous (except in a couple of states, where statements made with malicious intent can constitute libel even if the statements are actually true). Statements which turn out to be untrue might not be libellous if the author had reason to believe that they were true when making them. E.g. if someone is convicted of murder, you can call them a murderer, and they don't get to sue you for libel if the conviction is subsequently overturned. However: you have to have /reason/ to believe the claims (substantiation); it isn't sufficient that you believe them.

    2. Re:No kidding by wrecked · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sorry, IAAL in Canada, and I can't let your comment go without a reply. The libel laws between the US and Canada are very different. In Canada, there are several defences against libel: justification (ie "truth", the most difficult defence to prove), absolute or qualified privilege (ie communications in a confidential setting), fair comment (ie honestly held opinion in good faith), and the new defence of "responsible communication on matters of public interest" (ie. "responsible journalism").

      The last defence of "responsible communication on matters of public interest" was created in 2009 by the Supreme Court of Canada in Grant v Torstar 2009 SCC 61. That case was actually covered in Slashdot: Landmark Canadian Hyperlink Case Goes to Supreme Court.

      Read of that case if you are interested in defamation law (but seek legal advice if you have a problem). It explains the legal tests for all of the defences. Since the defence of "responsible communications in matters of public interest" does not exist in US law, it means that American journalists and bloggers have a higher risk of liability for defamation than their Canadian counterparts. So which country has stronger freedom of expression?

    3. Re:No kidding by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      Read of that case if you are interested in defamation law (but seek legal advice if you have a problem). It explains the legal tests for all of the defences. Since the defence of "responsible communications in matters of public interest" does not exist in US law, it means that American journalists and bloggers have a higher risk of liability for defamation than their Canadian counterparts. So which country has stronger freedom of expression?

      The United States, by far. Yes, there may exist one specific defense in libel cases in Canada, but weighed against the much weaker freedom of speech guarantee in the Canadian constitution, as exemplified by the numerous hate speech laws and "Human Rights" Tribunals, there's no contest. Even in the area of libel, the burden of proof is different in Canada and the U.S. In the U.S., the burden is on the plaintiff to show the statements are false. In Canada, while the burden is not purely on the defendant to show the statements are true, it is not as squarely on the plaintiff, either.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    4. Re:No kidding by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You missed one. They must cause actual harm. A corollary of this is that it must be believable as something unbelievable can't cause harm. If I call you a Martian, then it won't be believable, and thus can't have caused a harm, even if I knew it to be false and intended it to cause harm.

    5. Re:No kidding by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      The US by about 200%. The freedom of a country is most easily judged by how it treats it's assholes. If people don't have the freedom to be assholes and speak like assholes there isn't really any freedom except conformance with the majority and that's not freedom.

    6. Re:No kidding by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      I guess you've summed up why the rest of the world doesn't like Americans very much. You folks really need to curtail your assholes. Seriously.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    7. Re:No kidding by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I'm from the UK where our libel laws go the other way (i.e. in making it easier to sue) but surely by the definitions you used nobody would ever be able to prove libel against anyone, if you could just defend i by saying "well, I thought it was true at the time, and I didn't intend to cause any harm anyway."

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  22. Self-libel by munky99999 · · Score: 1

    >Police deny the charges, saying they injure the reputation of Calgary police officers and interfere with an ongoing homicide investigation. Know what... I bet all of 12 people even heard of any of this before. Now people worldwide think Canada, calgary police, and rcmp are the worst kind of scum; who are corrupt and this is their way of trying to get it to go away. They did far more to damage their reputation.

    1. Re:Self-libel by KazW · · Score: 1

      The RCMP are the most corrupt police service in North America, no police agency should be self-governing without public oversight. They have the mentality that the law is their agent to bend to their will as opposed to being agents of the law. As a Calgarian, I think our police service is alright, but could definitely be improved

      --
      Geeks don't grock information, they grep it.
  23. Re:sycraft-fu hasn't figured it out yet. URnotFree by khallow · · Score: 1

    Boy, I hope you grow out of this when you become an adult else it's going to be no fun. You don't need to compete with the grownups to see who's more full of shit.

  24. Criminal vs Civil in Canada by dogsbreath · · Score: 3, Informative

    For Canadian standards see http://www.cscja-acjcs.ca/criminal_civil_law-en.asp?l=4

    "More evidence is needed to find the accused at fault in criminal cases than to find the defendant at fault in civil ones. To convict someone of a crime, the prosecution must show there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the person committed the crime and, in most cases, that they intended to commit it. Judges and juries cannot convict someone they believe probably committed the crime or likely is guilty - they must be almost certain. This gives the accused the benefit of any reasonable doubt and makes it less likely an innocent person will be wrongfully convicted and imprisoned. Civil cases, in contrast, must be proven on a balance of probabilities - if it is more likely than not that the defendant caused harm or loss, a court can uphold a civil claim."

    It will be fairly easy to show who did the publishing and that he intended to do the publishing.

    Problem for the RCMP, who are not the defamed group, and the Calgary Police will be showing that a crime was actually committed. The key phrase in Canadian law is "on reasonable grounds, he believes is true". Is it reasonable for a person to argue these points given what is known to be true? Looking at the site, at least some of the statements do not seem "reasonable".

    But also, he is not publishing in Canada. eg: Court publication bans do not extend to websites hosted in other countries.

    If you look at the site, it clearly appeals to the fringe and is long on accusation and short on evidence. It also explicitly names particular people without a lot of supporting documentation. Personnally, I would say this guy is pushing the limits of free speech beyond what is ethical but I am not so sure that there is a law broken. My gut reaction was that he is a wack job and is doing more harm than good for his cause. Police should be held to higher standards and complaints should be investigated independantly but I would not want to be a public servant in a tough, demanding job and be subject to this kind of public complaint. Again, I'm not saying there is criminal defamation; just saying that this is clearly at the limit.

    Finally, first thing I did upon reading the article was to go find the site: http://www.rottenapples.info/
    I am sure that this fellows site popularity has soared. ;->

    This will be an interesting case to follow.

    1. Re:Criminal vs Civil in Canada by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Rottenapples. Wow. I actually read a few pages. I had to force myself to keep reading after the first page - unnecessary bold print, highlighted print, unnecessary capitalizations - on and on. It looks like any other conspiracy nut's site, really. I'm not even a grammar nazi, but these conspiracy nuts seem to use the printed page to assault you! Thanks for the link, but it doesn't do much to garner sympathy to the defendant, LOL I expect, though, that filing suit against the guy will just have the streisand effect on things. (I mean aside from the site being slashdotted - a well known phenomena in and of itself) The more people who hear of the case, the more visits to the site, the more whackos are going to believe what they want to believe, rather than any facts that get in the way. Ehh. If the cops are stupid enough to feed the troll, they deserve all the bad publicity they can get.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    2. Re:Criminal vs Civil in Canada by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      People like John Kelly should not have a Yahoo email address. It's just too close.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    3. Re:Criminal vs Civil in Canada by fishexe · · Score: 1

      Rottenapples. Wow. I actually read a few pages. I had to force myself to keep reading after the first page - unnecessary bold print, highlighted print, unnecessary capitalizations - on and on.

      Unnecessary capitalizations? Wow, that sure SOUNDS LIKE the five or SIX words I MIGHT have recently seen unnecessarily in someone's post, which MIGHT be higher up in the current thread...

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    4. Re:Criminal vs Civil in Canada by dogsbreath · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link, but it doesn't do much to garner sympathy to the defendant, LOL

      I expect, though, that filing suit against the guy will just have the streisand effect on things. (I mean aside from the site being slashdotted - a well known phenomena in and of itself) The more people who hear of the case, the more visits to the site, the more whackos are going to believe what they want to believe, rather than any facts that get in the way.

      Ehh. If the cops are stupid enough to feed the troll, they deserve all the bad publicity they can get.

      Yup.. my feelings exactly. I wonder who got their snit up to start the legal action?

    5. Re:Criminal vs Civil in Canada by dogsbreath · · Score: 1

      er... a bit of a difference in scale between rottenapples.info and a post with a few words capitalized for emphasis.

  25. Explains the lack of canadian rappers.... by beaker8000 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Public Enemy never would have gotten of the ground. '911 is timely and effective'....just doesn't work. God Bless America.

  26. Canada always gets its way by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 0, Troll

    They're one of the most successful players on the world stage. Diplomatic, friendly, sociable and selfish. How can you lose?

    Canada is going dark. If you want to be a part of the program, you'll be okay. If you want to be an individual, you'd better only do that within the acceptable boundaries, which are, for the most part, pretty wide. But the problem is that they're narrowing. There is a lot of pressure being put on the country these days from dark forces; the people have been sufficiently dumbed down to have allowed a genuine psychopath into power.

    Two words:

    "Fox North."

    -FL

    1. Re:Canada always gets its way by Failed+Physicist · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that the authorities that be have clearly laid bare their contempt for individual sovereignty and the Charter during this summer's G20 (That's the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms for you, rest of the world). We may or may not have lived under a police state for a long time, but I think post-G20 is the first time where the affirmation that Canada isn't a police state cannot be defended at all.

      The last 2 years, I've been trying to ring the alarm for my friends and relatives, to (what seems to be) no avail. But the lack of indignation about the G20 events have told me all I needed to know; we've been (apparently successfully) sheeple'd just like the Americans and the English. I'm out; my plane is leaving in a few days.

    2. Re:Canada always gets its way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm. That Charter link should have been this. Didn't know skipping the http:/// would break the link.

    3. Re:Canada always gets its way by MachDelta · · Score: 1

      Please tell us your version of the G20 summit. All I heard was that a bunch of protesters were sitting our doing there thing when a tiny percentage of them went anarchist and started burning and smashing everything in sight. Then the police stepped in with an iron boot and arrested a few hundred. No?

    4. Re:Canada always gets its way by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      Two words: "Fox North."

      -FL

      Got some bad news for ya there, Hoser. Canada's descent into soft authoritarianism predated Stephen Harper or the new right wing TV network that's coming to Canada. See your infamous Human Rights Commission. People in your government decided long ago that they simply weren't going to put up with the messiness that is American-style freedom, and things were going to be nice and ordered, for the greater Canadian good.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    5. Re:Canada always gets its way by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

      Please tell us your version of the G20 summit. All I heard was that a bunch of protesters were sitting our doing there thing when a tiny percentage of them went anarchist and started burning and smashing everything in sight. Then the police stepped in with an iron boot and arrested a few hundred. No?

      No. And it was well over a thousand citizens, most totally innocent, some even just on their way home from work or wherever, rounded up and held in unheated cages for two days and longer while the cops either laughed at them or felt so much shame they couldn't make eye-contact.

      Also, look up the term, "Agent Provocateur". THAT was the big story which the media refuses to look at. It's huge. It was a big, big part of the events which unfolded. Canada has a history with that kind of manipulation going back to previous fiascos. In one instance in Quebec, cops pretending to be anarchists dressed in the same basic get-up as the G20 'anarchists', were captured on film and proven to be police agents. The police, after several attempted lies, were forced to admit it, (though no real measures were taken or penalties paid in the end by the police. Business as usual). After all their lies up to that point, it was hard to believe their protestations that their agents were not there to incite violence, but simply to monitor and keep people safe. -They told us this even when one of their thugs was holding a nice weaponized rock on camera and refused to put it down when asked by a legitimate protester. Such bullshit. The government cannot ever be trusted.

      Anyway, in this latest instance, the threads on the official account when pulled come apart very quickly for anybody with the stomach and spine for it. (Most aren't. The number of people who bury their heads in the sand is sadly quite large in Canada.) The cops even ponied up some sacrificial squad cars for a nice photo-op public burning in order to justify the 1.4 billion dollars poured into summit security. But the media refused to explore that angle, which of course is to be expected by a media bought and paid for. The only real story here was that of a giant manipulation in order to bring Canada up to speed with modern population control tactics, and by "brought up to speed", I mean two things; installing hardware and procedures for corralling humans into cages in large numbers, and installing the mind-programming to make sure the population knows that this is the new "normal".

      -FL

  27. does it work like that? by nten · · Score: 1

    The recent past with the online gambling and hate speech arrests seems to indicate that it isn't where it was published, but where the person is. If you publish something on a website hosted in Germany that violates laws in Brazil, you won't get extradited if it is not illegal in Germany, but It would not surprise me to see you arrested if you visited Brazil. Bottom line, if you upset a nation state, don't even fly over it.

    --
    refactor the law, its bloated, confusing and unmaintainable.
    1. Re:does it work like that? by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It depends on the jurisdiction. For example, New York State has a "long-arm" statute, so that it doesn't matter where it took place, as long as you hve a presence in New York. Canada doesn't have a similar statute with respect to anything except sexual exploitation of minors (so don't visit Thailand for a nasty weekend of child abuse) and terrorism..

      The Aryan Nations used to run a hate web site in Canada. After they were ordered to remove it, they just moved it to an American server. The prosecution asked for the judge to issue an order, and he said "Okay, but I don't see what good it will do. It's now out of the court's jurisdiction."

    2. Re:does it work like that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Canada doesn't have a similar statute with respect to anything except sexual exploitation of minors (so don't visit Thailand for a nasty weekend of child abuse) and terrorism

      Consensual sex is NOT "child abuse", and no matter how popular the opinion may be, people under the age of 21 (or 18 in some countries) do have cognitive abilities that enable them to make decisions (i.e. "consent").

      Judging by the fact that people like you prop up such myths is evidence that people lose much of their free will (i.e. the ability to "consent") as they "mature" as adults. Children usually don't develop such perverted hangups about sex unless they are specifically taught that sex is bad. Ironically, there is usually a vast amount of hypocrisy by people who demonize sexuality.

      I can anticipate a defensive reaction instead of an acknowledgment of being wrong. People like you usually "win" by such emotional appeals and cliches as "nasty weekend of child abuse". With a statistic and an anecdote thrown in for good measure you'd probably be up-Moderated a lot quicker and a lot higher.

    3. Re:does it work like that? by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      US Citizens: Up to 30 years in jail: It is a federal crime, prosecutable in the United States, for a U.S. citizen or permanent resident alien, to engage in illicit sexual conduct in a foreign country with a person under the age of 18, whether or not the U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident alien intended to engage in such illicit sexual conduct prior to going abroad. For purposes of the PROTECT Act, illicit sexual conduct includes any commercial sex act in a foreign country with a person under the age of 18. The law defines a commercial sex act as any sex act, on account of which anything of value is given to or received by a person under the age of 18.

      Canadian Citizens: Up to 14 years in jail: Canada has included in its Criminal Code provisions that allow for the arrest and prosecution of Canadians in Canada for offences committed in foreign countries related to child sex tourism, such as child prostitution, as well as for child sexual exploitation offences, such as indecent acts, child pornography and incest.

      Citizens in the UK: Up to life in jail: The Sexual Offences Act 2003 enables British citizens and residents who commit sexual offences against children overseas to be prosecuted in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Similar provisions are in force in Scotland

      Citizens in Australia: Up to 20 years, in jail, $500,000 fine: Australia was one of the first countries to introduce laws that provide for jail terms for its citizens and residents who engage in sexual activity with children in foreign countries. The law also makes it an offence to encourage, benefit or profit from any activity that promotes sexual activity with children.

      The child sex tourist trade isn't about "consent."

    4. Re:does it work like that? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Consensual sex is NOT "child abuse", and no matter how popular the opinion may be, people under the age of 21 (or 18 in some countries) do have cognitive abilities that enable them to make decisions (i.e. "consent").

      How about you come and explain that to my six year old? Fucktard.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  28. Both Canadian and American Cops by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    Our cops have trouble with the truth. It is not just Canadian cops. The next small town up the road from me just caught a cop who was raping women by stopping them with his squad car and telling them that if they did not submit he would arrest them on trumped up charges. We even had one cop who moved to another county, while still being a cop, and was tying young women to trees and axing them to pieces.
                      My point being that if we have cops that stoop to rape and ax murders you can bet that more than a few cops are frequently doing lesser crimes while on duty. It is all too easy to "find" drugs or weapons on unpopular people.

    1. Re: Both Canadian and American Cops by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Our cops have trouble with the truth. It is not just Canadian cops. The next small town up the road from me just caught a cop who was raping women by stopping them with his squad car and telling them that if they did not submit he would arrest them on trumped up charges. We even had one cop who moved to another county, while still being a cop, and was tying young women to trees and axing them to pieces.

      Yes, and it would have been other cops who caught these rogue cops, not random conspiracy theorist fucking bloggers.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  29. This guy says "yup" by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    That's a loaded and subjective statement - care to back it up?

    "Freedom of speech is an American concept, so I don't give it any value." - Dean Steacy, Canadian Human Rights Commission

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  30. Interfere with an ongoing homicide investigation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RTFA - the charges include interference with an ongoing homicide. That's why the defamtory libel charges are criminal charges instead of simply civil court actions.

  31. Why french? If not english, Spanish I could see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why french? If not english, Spanish I could see, but not french. English is most widely used, Spanish next and French doesn't come in for quite a few places.

    1. Re:Why french? If not english, Spanish I could see by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      It's a more useful language than you might think; France itself has a pretty high population, and Quebec+Switzerland+Belgium doesn't hurt, but there are also millions of Africans and Caribbean people who speak it, plus quite a few in the Middle East and North Africa.

      Wikipedia lists it as 14th for native speakers, but 4th for total speakers. I'd guess that a lot of the difference comes from Africans who speak another, local language as their mother tongue but speak French when they leave that area, Arabic speakers who also learned French, and continental Europeans who learned French (probably as a third language, after their own and English)

      That's just talking sheer numbers, too--French has not only a history of great art, but continues to be a language in which many great films are produced, and the occasional great book. France, Switzerland, Belgium, and Quebec are all economically powerful, compared to the nations where the more-widely-spoken Spanish is used, making it arguably at least as useful as a business language.

      Overall, of European languages, it's easily the third most useful after English and Spanish, unless you're talking about a specific area (obviously it'd only come in a distant 4th if you were only considering South America, for example). One can easily name scenarios where French would be far less helpful to know than other languages, but taking a general big-picture approach, it's pretty damn far up the list.

  32. There is a distinct difference.... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    ... between insulting somebody and stating something that is actually false.

    Saying that somebody is acting like an idiot is an insult and one cannot be prosecuted for libel (although defamation of character may apply).

    Saying that somebody is not doing the actual job they are paid to, or in this case, saying that somebody committed specific criminal acts while they were supposed to be doing their job is something altogether different. Although defamation may still be applicable, such statements are, in general, provably true or false, and if false, would constitute libel unless the person can present sound reason why they had believed those statements to be true at the time that they originally printed them. If they can show this, they would then be required to retract those statements immediately, or face prosecution for libel just as if they had originally printed the material with the full knowledge that it was false while presenting it as true

  33. Any chance he is wrong? by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Be a man, respond with, "he's right; we need to fix that."

    If what the man is alleging is true then I'd agree that would be the correct response. However why are you automatically assuming that he is telling the truth? Suppose he is just an idiot with an axe to grind against the police? The fact that they called in the RCMP and that criminal charges have been made suggests that at least the RCMP think he is lying.

    I have no idea about the facts of the case but if this man is lying then I think it is completely right and proper that he should get charged with criminal defamation since he would be undermining confidence in an important public institution through lies and misinformation. Frankly I'd be a lot more concerned if they had gone for a civil suit - if you want to bully someone into shutting up that would be the way to go since the burden of proof is so much lower.

  34. Euros have Nazism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and Arabs have Islam. Different names, different methods, same thoughts.

  35. Idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Idiot. Replace "permit hate groups" with "end slavery" and the sentence has just as much logic, and yet is clearly morally repugnant. You fail at the art of convincing--nay, barely lucid--argument.

  36. Mod up parent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If only I had mod points...

  37. Re:sycraft-fu hasn't figured it out yet. URnotFree by Mashiki · · Score: 1

    No they have it figured out. The HRC is a kangaroo court which is not bound to the normal judiciary rules of the Canadian legal system. Where with normal court, hearsay is inadmissible unless it falls under the exclusionary rules. Even in normal court the only other time that hearsay is admissible is during bail hearings. In the HRC court any and all forms of hearsay are admissible. You can be found guilty of hurting someones feelings, or perceived feelings, or no feelings at all. Factual evidence can be excluded based on the heads whim. There's no disclosure for the defense(In canada we have evidentiary disclosure, which means that the police & prosecution must disclosure all evidence to the defense so they can build, or manufacture a defense). At the end of the day, it's nothing other than a way for someone to silence someone based on whether their feelings were hurt.

    If you want examples, feel free to look at Ezra Levant and Mark Styen(last two high profile cases). Both of who were tromped up in front of the HRC for publishing motoons(that's the cartoons in which muslims raged over drawn pictures). In a normal court, it would be bounced so fast that your head would still be spinning next year.

    Did I mention that the "court" had a 100% conviction rate? Well it did until Levant and Styen showed up.

    --
    Om, nomnomnom...
  38. This guy was asking for it. by Petersko · · Score: 1

    Libel laws exist for a reason. If he decides to advertise to everybody that specific officers did specific things then he'd better be able to prove it.

    The fact that it's the police he's railing against doesn't matter. If he'd have just stuck to ranting about the police in general he wouldn't have had a problem.

  39. Free speech means just that, not just some. by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Really? Because in canada there is a tonne of laws protecting free speech - so long as you're not engaging in hate speech.

    Which means that anything someone doesn't want you saying, they simply define as hate speech. What a great way to totally clamp down on anything negative said about the government.

    You obviously don't understand what the term "free speech" really means, it means being free to say WHATEVER YOU WANT. No matter how hateful or hurtful, it should at least be allowed to be expressed without fear of being detained by the government.

    In practice it works out pretty well because you have something like true Nazis put up sites, but then doom themselves to permanent niche status through the absurdity of their own writings. It's called giving someone enough rope to hang themselves with.

    Another way to look at it is that there's no idea so dangerous someone shouldn't be allowed to explain it.

    Now consequences like libel and so on, that's a different matter - but that's monetary punishment, not incarceration.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  40. But had it been the Third Reich (was:In my day...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back in my day we ignored the crazies....

    Of course, had it been in the Third Reich, they gas the crazies (and a lot of the other "undesirables.")

  41. Re:You got it -right to free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I am a U.S. citizen who is appalled by my country deciding that announcing your intentions to burn Koran's amounts to something that should be prevented. The right to free speech does not include just being able to say only those things (or otherwise communicate ideas) which are non-offensive but also must include the right to say offensive things. Including the right to show contempt for the Muslim religion by burning a book. (by the way, I do not approve of burning the Koran, the Bible, or any other religious text.). When my government takes notices of this, and tries to suppress it, that is when I get concerned about the right for free speech.

    Libel, in this Canadian case, must be based on facts showing that the statements being made were untrue and that the defendant knew this but went ahead and said them for malicious reasons.

    Do not confuse punishing libelous speech with punishing free speech.

  42. Fair comment? by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    No person shall be deemed to publish a defamatory libel by reason only that he publishes fair comments

    I don't see how making up malicious lies falls anywhere in the realm of "fair comment" and this is what he is accused of. However if he has seen something that might reasonably lead him to make the claims he has then I completely agree it is fair comment.

    How is the Streisand effect relevant? Have they tried to suppress the website? They don't seem to be acting in a manner to suppress the information, their actions are more consistent with them having found someone committing a criminal offence. Whether or not he is guilty of it remains to be seen but he is accused of criminal defamation, not civil, and there is a big difference.

  43. Re:Interfere with an ongoing homicide investigatio by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

    That still doesn't change the fact that this is absolutely idiotic and should not be allowed. He didn't "interfere" with anything if you read the article.

    --
    Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
  44. The importance of ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Therefore, the importance of a WRITTEN Constitution guaranteeing individual rights, and the willingness of the population to fight for it [by force] if necessary.