That's the hate speech provision, which I've written about it at numerous occasions in the past. The CPC ditched it after a years long smear campaign engineered by white supremacists, Ezra Levant, various scribblers in the press, and a few easily gulled artsy farts. But the point is--and this should be obvious when you considered the ill-favoured crowd that pushed it--the repeal was never popular. The deed was accomplished via a private member's bill in the dead of night and pundits who had howled for repeal for years suddenly found something else to ruminate over. And while we may argue over the philosophical underpinnings of any hate-speech law, its worth noting that the concrete misdeeds ascribed to various government agencies in enforcing S13 were fabrications. Furthermore, some of the real weaknesses in the Human Rights Commision/Tribunal system pointed out during the ongoing debate (the possibility of forum shopping among federal and provincial bodies) were fixed at the adiministrative level by the bodies themselves. So these issues will not likely come up again.
The CPC just ran one of the ugliest campaigns in living memory, and the repeal of S13 gave them a little more rhetorical space to propogate their various hate messages during this campaign. I would love to watch them try to frame their opposition to a reinstatement; however, I suspect those of those left will cave out of pure embarrassment. And I would love to watch the punditorcracy shit themselves in blind fury. Remember, all they've got now are philosophical arguments against, and a few obviously self-serving economic ones like "If we have to live up to standards, we won't be able to publish as much."
Fun times ahead, hopefully.
sounds reasonable, and now that we have a govt ( on nov 4th) that hopefully will listen to the citizens again, its got a chance.
ReplyDeleteGawd, i wish people would STFU about appointing Elizabeth May to Minister of Environment. I mean, really.
ReplyDeleteYeah, where the hell *is* the Lizzie for MoE post? Either that or the Senate appointment one.
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