March 25th could be an interesting day
March 4, 2008
If I’m reading this order correctly, March 25th may become known as Black Tuesday at the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
That’s when Marc Lemire — one of the few Canadians who has had the energy and legal resources to fight back against the CHRC’s Section 13 thought crimes steamroller — will be allowed to cross examine commission staff about their “undercover” activities on the internet. Judging by what Lemire has uncovered so far — such as an Edmonton Police “hate crimes” officer posting anti-Semitic and anti-Aboriginal bigotry on the Internet — it’s sure to be a blockbuster.
(It’s deeply disturbing that “hate crimes” police — I’m not talking about human rights keystone cops now, but real police officers — publish such bigotry on the taxpayers’ dime, and all in the name of keeping the peace. One must ask: at what point is the “fake” hatred generated by the police a larger problem than the “real” hatred that exists already on society’s fringes? And, really, is there any moral difference between the two, other than the police claim they don’t really mean it? At what point does the cure become worse than the disease?)
Remember that these are the same “anti-hate” activists — police, human rights activists, and even CSIS agents — who paid a government agent to set up the Heritage Front, arguably Canada’s leading neo-Nazi movement twenty years ago. The fact that these same government agents then “infiltrated” the nascent Reform Party, to the great embarrassment of Preston Manning, shows that these “anti-hate” campaigns have long been torqued into a partisan political weapon.
I’m not any particular fan of Mr. Lemire, or of any other white supremacist the reader might care to name. But the evidence he has collected of government collusion and entrapment, both by members of various Canadian authorities and by members of various Canadian human rights commissions (especially the CHRC, notably staffer Dean Steacy), is both convincing and alarming.
One can only hope that it makes for the undoing of the HRCs in Canada. While on one hand it is a shame that there are white supremacists and racists in the world, I would not for one instant prefer that such people be forced to remain silent; better they speak their filth that its evil might wither in the light of day.
Perhaps it is bitter irony, then, that an avowed white supremacist be the one to deal a major blow to the Canadian government’s agency of censorship.
Reader Mail: Racism in Edmonton
February 25, 2008
Anita Perron sends in a response to this article, which I confess was offered as much in the spirit of “tongue in cheek” as it was in the spirit of seriousness. Let me be clear: I consider racism to be a vile thing indeed. But please…an election sign gets vandalized in Mill Woods and we’re calling out the Edmonton Police Service to give this matter their full and undivided attention? When Edmonton leads the nation in gun-related murders (perpetrated, for the most part, by gangs or people affiliated with the drug trade)?
Priorities, people, priorities.
Ms. Perron writes:
I agree with the police who are tying to find the perpetrators of the vandalism to Gill’s sign. Racism is an ugly snake that pokes its head out sometimes, but the rest of the snake is hidden. If there is racism on the sign, you can bet there is a lot more hidden in Edmonton as well as throughout Canada.
I don’t think it is a teenage prank. I think it is an adult amd probably a Conservative who is trying to scare people off from voting for Ms. Gill because she is not white and male. The whole city should be trying to find out who did this.. not only the police.
I’m willing to believe that Racism exists in many corners of Canada, and to be fair I’m actually also willing to give people the right to express racist sentiments, so long as in their expression they do not cross the line into incitement of violence. I’m a freespeecher, so of course I’d say that.
Note, O Reader, that just because I think racists should be allowed to preach their filth does not mean I agree with them, anymore than I agree with Commies or socialists (who I believe also have every right to talk nonsense in public forums). It just means I think they have a right to say what they want to say…so that the rest of us can either choose to listen to them or (more likely) choose to ignore them, or to demonstrate that we do not agree with them or their bigotry in some manner which a) is legal and b) does not interfere with their right to free speech.
Of course, there are many forms of bigotry, and let us pause in the discussion for just a moment to note the bigotry in which Ms. Perron herself engages. She assumes the perpetrator to be “a Conservative”. Notice the capital ‘C’, O Reader: Ms. Perron assumes that the vandals are registered members of the Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta. Because clearly, only a Conservative party member would ever dare to deface a Liberal election sign.
She also expresses her conviction that the motive for the vandalism was because Aman Gill is “not white and male.” In other words, she assumes that the perpetrator was a white, male member of the Progressive Conservative party who acted out of racism and sexism.
Ms. Perron’s bigotry, then, is the assumption that members of the Conservative party are a) sexist and b) racist by definition. I don’t point this out, incidentally, to excuse what was done to Aman Gill’s election sign — my intent is simply to remark on the fact that Ms. Perron is every bit as much a bigot as the men she decries.
The fact of the matter is, there are many female MLAs. There are many MLAs who are members of ethnic minorities. Surprisingly, some of them are even members of the Conservative party! These people include Cindy Ady, Pearl Calahasen (the first Métis woman elected to public office in Alberta), Gary Mar, Hung Pham, Shiraz Shariff, and Janis Tarchuk. There are many female members of the Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta, and many members thereof who are from ethnic minorities. It’s a…what’s the word?…diverse group. Yes, it’s probably mostly comprised of whites…but then, that would make it representative of the population of Alberta, wouldn’t it? And yes, it may well comprise more men than women (certainly this is true when one looks at elected MLAs; I don’t have membership data for the party as a whole), but this is not a fault of sexism — it’s just a reflection of the fact that fewer women than men feel moved to enter the realm of politics as a career.
I think, then, that the claim that this vandalism against Ms. Gill was motivated by racism and/or sexism within the Conservative party of Alberta is specious at best, and outright false more likely.
It’s just much more likely that this act of vandalism was indeed a teenage prank — heck, for all we know, the perpetrators weren’t even white (they may not even have been male, but I think that might be assuming too much). This is Mill Woods overall, which in many cases has become a community of (and for) ethnic minorities in Edmonton.
But that’s not the point either. The point is that, while the racism is detestable, in the end it’s just the word “Paki” spray-painted on an election sign. There’s no incitement to violence here, and no permanent damage done. If anything, Ms. Gill will benefit from this incident — she’s certainly not going to hurt for the publicity it has given her, and it might even cause a few voters to shift their support to her out of sympathy or solidarity.
Meanwhile (and again, I cannot stress enough that this is Mill Woods, a.k.a. Mill Hood), I’m sure that were the police to go not five blocks in any direction from where this vandalism occurred, they’d find a drug pusher or a pimp. Okay, I’ll be charitable — ten blocks. Point is, there’s a lot of “hard” crime that EPS could be dealing with; compared to any example thereof, this sole act of vandalism is a non-starter.
The “whole city” shouldn’t be trying to find out who did this. The “whole city” should be trying to banish every drug pusher and pimp from within the Greater Edmonton Area, clamouring for the incarceration (and, if possible, deportation) of those men and women whose chosen trade has turned this city into a country-wide leader in the category of violent death.
Edmonton police priorities
February 25, 2008
Edmonton leads the nation in gun-related murders (most of which are likely drug or gang-related), but our boys in blue (grey, actually) are devoting themselves to tracking down the dangerous vandals who spray-painted the work “Paki” onto an election sign for Edmonton MLA Aman Gill.
Oh, don’t get me wrong — I’m no fan of racism. Still, in the grand scheme, this kind of seems a non-starter, and was probably just a couple of junior high kids with nothing better to do whilst cutting class thinking it’d be good for a laugh to draw a penis on an election sign. It’s not really worth going after the little brats when, especially in Mill Woods, one can probably find a lucrative drug-pushing operation less than five blocks in any direction from where this act of vandalism took place.





