Its too easy.Well obviously "common sense" needs to be a thing here. Wearing a balaclava in a driving snowstorm is one thing. Wearing it in the mall food court might be a teensy bit more suspicious.
Its too easy.Well obviously "common sense" needs to be a thing here. Wearing a balaclava in a driving snowstorm is one thing. Wearing it in the mall food court might be a teensy bit more suspicious.
I half expected that story to end "That man's name? Albert Einstein. And then the whole bus clapped."
FYI: Asqa Parvez was murdered by her Father and brother because she didn't want to wear a hijab (which isn't even "covered" by this law btw).In fact, when concerns about religious divisions caused France to ban the hijab in schools years ago, many among the Muslim community expressed relief.
The women’s organization Ni Putes Ni Soumises surveyed niqab-wearing women after their 2011 ban. Its research revealed some high-profile acts of defiance, but other women anxiously waited for the law to free them of their husband’s pressures.
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The niqab is a vestige of a tribal and pre-Islamic culture defined by men. It was instituted when women were considered chattel owned by men. The concept of sexual consent by women is of course a recent development even in the West, but in patriarchal cultures it is taking much longer.
The niqab is a primitive society’s primitive attempt to proclaim ownership rights. Naturally, it is aggressively marketed by those with a vested interest in prolonging such a dehumanizing value system.
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But Canadians also expect him to support the rights of those forced by husbands, in-laws or even parents to cover up. What about the Charter rights of Aqsa Parvez and the Shafia girls?
Niqabi women believe the niqab protects them, and even gives them back their humanity. Seriously? By becoming anonymous and invisible? Their best chance to attain the respect they deserve as people lies not in rejecting the open garb of other women, but in emulating it.
It is not a free choice. It is coercion and something that signals an older and horrifically sexist dominance over women. That some have internalized it as "freedom" is all the more tragic.Aqsa's brother, Waqas, had strangled her to death when she chose to not wear a hijab covering.
Do you think this law is gonna empower any woman to break free of that dominance?It is not a free choice. It is coercion and something that signals an older and horrifically sexist dominance over women. That some have internalized it as "freedom" is all the more tragic.
It worked for Turkey... for a while at least (current events are something else entirely). And the article I linked shows how it DOES work for the victims. Not all, but it helps a lot.Do you think this law is gonna empower any woman to break free of that dominance?
This law is, at best, a sideways attack at that coercion, hoping that the woman's fear of legal punishment will get her to resist the that coercion.
So lets make laws to target the coercion, rather than directing legal punishment against the victims.
Perhaps. But it still feels to me a damn unCanadian thing to be making laws that punish women for being forced to wear something in order to break them free from being dominated.It worked for Turkey... for a while at least (current events are something else entirely). And the article I linked shows how it DOES work for the victims. Not all, but it helps a lot.
Other than ethnic cleansing (which last I heard wasn't a thing in Canada... I hope), this kind of decline just doesn't happen. I wonder what's gone wrong with the data and how it's collected, compared, etc.The size of the country's Jewish community appears, on the surface, to have seen its most dramatic decline in decades, with newly released census data on the country's ethnic makeup suggesting a 56 per cent drop in numbers over a five-year period.
The decline to 143,665 in 2016 from about 329,500 in 2011 — a drop of almost 186,000 people — is the largest such drop for any ethnic group recorded in the census data released last week.
The census wasn't mandatory, for one.[DOUBLEPOST=1509557418,1509557370][/DOUBLEPOST]Fascinating: Jewish groups question census results showing dramatic population decline
Other than ethnic cleansing (which last I heard wasn't a thing in Canada... I hope), this kind of decline just doesn't happen. I wonder what's gone wrong with the data and how it's collected, compared, etc.
Weird. I'd pick something quite different.I would normally put this in the funny political pictures thread, but it seems apropos to recent topics...
From the rest of the article, it seems like they are already violating laws here, this isn't just "looks bad" but already illegal.Alberta’s privacy commissioner has launched an investigation into 800,000 emails deleted by government and political staffers under the NDP, including in the premier’s office.
The numbers also showed Notley’s then chief of staff Brian Topp had just one email in his sent folder, 78 in his inbox and an empty deleted mail folder, despite being in the job since the NDP formed the government in May 2015.
Everything worked out when they did that in Ontario, right?I'm sure they have nothing at all to hide, right? Alberta privacy commissioner investigates 800,000 deleted government emails
From the rest of the article, it seems like they are already violating laws here, this isn't just "looks bad" but already illegal.
Edit: for reference, I've been in my job just about exactly 11 months, and I have 3400 CONVERSATIONS in gmail. Now a good proportion of those are automated emails from the bug tracking system, but even a conservative estimate would be at LEAST 5 emails per working day. So let's spitball and say 200 days (it's more, but still) and so that's at LEAST a 1000 emails to or from me in a year. And these clowns only have 78 in a staff-oriented job? The number deleted is staggering IMO.
Probably a good ruling. Ruling the other way would mean that any group (Natives have an advantage, but technically could probably be applied more widely) could say their "God/Goddess/whatever" lived in a particular spot, and you were destroying their religion by doing (or not doing) anything there, and thus impinging on their religious freedom, even if they had no ownership of the area.OTTAWA—The constitutional guarantee of aboriginal rights does not give Indigenous groups the right of a veto over land development in the name of religious freedom, says the country’s top court.
In a landmark decision on how courts should protect not only Indigenous religious beliefs, but all religious beliefs, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled Thursday that a British Columbia First Nation, the Ktunaxa people, could not block the development of a ski resort in the Jumbo Valley.
The high court ruled that the constitution’s religious freedom guarantee protects Canadians’ freedom to hold religious beliefs and to act in accordance with them, but does not require the state or courts to protect the “object of beliefs or the spiritual focal point of worship, such as Grizzly Bear Spirit.”
The real problem is that everyone looking to run the show is a cheat.. . . "the cheats shouldn't be running the show" demographic, but unfortunately I don't have faith that's a very big demographic!
Ya, while that does once in a while bring up the whole idea of "Random" representation being an interesting concept (basically like Jury Duty, except you're an MP), it would probably make people MORE bribe-able/corruptible, as then they don't even need the appearance of lack of conflict in order to be elected. While you're in, it's Gravy Train time!The real problem is that everyone looking to run the show is a cheat.
I'm still pushing the rationale I suggested over four years ago.The real problem is that everyone looking to run the show is a cheat.
...you think a good politician won't spend time telling everyone he's the greatest, best and mostest at everything? Hah!
A good one wouldn't....you think a good politician won't spend time telling everyone he's the greatest, best and mostest at everything? Hah!
Thanks for the bullet points. They helped.The star's got some bullet points that may help. Down the page a bit.
It really just looks like:
1) Repair existing subsidized housing.
2) Build some more,
3) Extra details that all boil down to telling the bureaucracy how to manages it and decide who gets to move in or qualify.
Really, to me, it looks like more like a continuation of what has long existed and is just the government announcing "hey look we're doing this thing" (that was already being done)
I sort of meant that funding to be lumped that right in with the whole of my summary.Beyond your summary, about $6B is "expected" to be matched by the provinces (we'll see what various provinces say)
Jeez, you know shit's fucked when even the Sun is calling out groups associated with the UCP's lies.
http://edmontonsun.com/news/politic...hike/wcm/73a29a7c-afe1-45cd-82e1-ab2d5525e253
Some PAC come up with it and you say "the UCP's lies."? From inference, they're repeating it in the legislature, so there's something to it, but it's also TRUE.A meme floating around social media claims Albertans’ home heating bills will increase by 75 per cent thanks to a carbon tax hike Jan. 1.
The meme is authored by Alberta Can’t Wait, a political action committee that backed conservative unity and, now, the United Conservative Party and its leader Jason Kenney.
WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR MY BILL?Some PAC come up with it and you say "the UCP's lies."? From inference, they're repeating it in the legislature, so there's something to it, but it's also TRUE.
And according to the text of the article, the price will be 75% higher because of the tax. If there was no Carbon Tax, the bill would be just north of half of what it will be in January.
The math goes like this: If the typical bill would be $2 without the tax (from the article), and you add $1.52 (from the article), then the result is $3.52/GJ of gas. That's BARELY more than a 75% increase in the price.
So from my reading of this (I have no idea what this meme is, I haven't looked) the article backs up that it is factually true. So no, they're not lying at all. The article is minimizing in many ways, but the original statement seems true to me. Explain to me how that math is wrong, and please link the original meme if you can.
And as for the "Sun" thing, when you see "Sun" think "Post Media" ie: The National Post. It's not independent anymore. Hasn't been for years. They got bought.
The bill would be $2.01 if the NDP had not gotten in (possibly cheaper, if there were more production), and because of them and their carbon tax, it is going to be $3.52/GJ.The current price is 3.01/GJ and is raising to 3.52.
Meanwhile I look forward to winter so that my utility bills go under $100. The costs you describe are like my summer electricity billsIt's not hard for the gas bill here to be US$300/mo in the wintertime. There have been months where it's been > $500.
I'm thinking people who are complaining about $30/mo need some perspective.
--Patrick
My summer electricity bills usually run $180-250/mo. We live upstairs in a house with lots of windows. Too bad they don't catch the same amount of sunlight in the wintertime, right?Meanwhile I look forward to winter so that my utility bills go under $100. The costs you describe are like my summer electricity bills