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April Reign

Speak your mind even if your voice shakes

Canada

How Harper celebrated Women’s History Month

10/29/2007 by Debra

As we near the end of Women’s History Month it is time to pause and reflect on the way our ignoble PM celebrated with us.

Red Jenny tells us of a new bill

The Harper government yesterday introduced legislation requiring all voters – including veiled Muslim women – to show their faces before being allowed to cast ballots in federal elections.

A Creative Revolution informs us of his support for women in the north

The Status of Women cuts that the UnReal women of Canada so lauded and cheered about like a bunch of mindless maroons, the ones that killed NAWL funding, have had an even harsher effect in the real great white north.

Women in the Yukon are 2.9 times more likely to experience sexual abuse, or be killed by a spouse than women in other parts of Canada. The Organizations that seek to help them are being forced to scramble for alternate funds through bake sales and garage sales.

Mere days before WHM we saw the passing of National Association of Women and the Law

Close Harper friend and advisor Tom Flanagan speaks;

Flanagan calls funding cuts to Status of Women Canada and the elimination of the Court Challenges Program a “nice step,” asserting without equivocation that Conservatives will “defund” all equality-seeking groups – with feminists at the top of the list. He goes further, clarifying that Conservatives also plan to choke-off these groups’ supposedly privileged access to government by, for example, denying “meetings with ministers.” But for strategic reasons, Flanagan notes, this will all happen incrementally. To avoid the perception of mean-spirited retribution, he says, “incrementalism is the way to go.”

Avoid the perception yet not the reality.

And the PM Statement section? Still reads, “forthcoming”.

Of course Harper is proving that actions do speak louder than words.

That’s ok Stevie we’re not waiting for your call…we’re just not that into you.

Filed Under: Canada, feminism, Harper, Politics, women, women's history month Tagged With: Canada, conservatives, equality, Harper, NAWL, SWC, Tom Flanagan, women's history month

Code Blue for Canada?

10/24/2007 by Debra

Code Pink In a stunning move of synchoanty, Canada denied access to both Ann Wright and Medea Benjamin because they were on an FBI list of undesirables.

Today the Globe and Mail is carrying Ms Benjamin’s response to this occurrence.

If Canada’s policy of excluding those who have committed non-violent civil disobedience were truly enforced, the results would be absurd. It would block 14 members of the United States Congress, including Holocaust survivor Rep. Tom Lantos for his arrest outside the Sudanese Embassy in 2006 protesting genocide in Darfur. The list of banned Americans would be populated by Nobel Prize-winners, members of clergy, writers, scholars, actors, musicians, activists and the thousands of Americans who have been arrested protesting the Iraq war.

I’ve taken out the link to the petition as some dumb fuck has linked it to a young porn site.

Filed Under: Canada Tagged With: Canada, Code Pink, Government Stupidity, peace

Democracy takes another hit

10/24/2007 by Debra

Bene Diction Blogs On writes today on how parliament has managed to disinfranchise 4.4% of Canadian voters.

Voters now need a residential address with a street name and number before casting a ballot, because of an amendment to the Canada Elections Act that Parliament enacted four months ago.

But more than one million rural Canadians have no proper residential or civic address. Many of them use post office boxes, and on some native reserves residents only use the name of their community. (CTV)

Perhaps when we finally lose our right to have a say voters will sit up and take notice.

Filed Under: Canada, Canada Elections Act, voting Tagged With: Canada, Canada Elections Act, voting

Atwood proves Pen is mightier than the sword

08/16/2007 by Debra

longpen.gif

The device – built by Atwood’s Toronto-based company Unotchit – comprises a video screen and digital writing pad at one location and a video screen and automated pen at another.

The LongPen™ allows you to be in one part of the world and sign something in a completely different part. Cutting down vastly on intercontinental travel.

Estimates are, “the device has already saved more than 40 tonnes of carbon emissions by cutting down on celebrity jet-setting.”

You can see the LongPen™ in action in both still frame and video here

Story Link

Filed Under: Canada Tagged With: Atwood, environment, Inventions, LongPen, Technology

Wishing on Facebook

06/23/2007 by Debra

The Great Canadian Wish List on Facebook has been taken over by the So Cons.

It seems to some, a silly thing that pro choicers care about this endeavour.
I would ask those people to consider the situation to the south of us.

Media regularly gives the crazies the floor. Christianity is no longer associated with love and charity, but with hatred, bombs and people who actually deride other christians for caring about the poor.

In a country facing mounting military deaths from an illegal and unneeded war, poverty, domestic terrorism, declining standard of living, the main election platform issue is whether or not you are pro choice. [Read more…] about Wishing on Facebook

Filed Under: abortion, america, Canada, General Tagged With: anti choice, CBC Wish, feotus fetishing, pro choice, So Cons

Freedom from Religion

05/28/2007 by Debra

True story: man kills wife, stabbing her in the neck 19 times with a steak knife, is convicted of first-degree murder and appeals on basis that she was unfaithful and, as a devout Muslim, he was protecting family honour.

Nice try, and maybe elsewhere in the world Adi Abdul Humaid might have been acquitted. But the United Arab Emirates citizen made the mistake of murdering Aysar Abbas in Ottawa in 1999 and, ultimately, the Ontario Court of Appeal rejected his appeal.

Superior Court Justice J.A. Doherty said that had Humaid killed his wife for religious beliefs, that alone would have been “a motive for murder.” But it was a moot point because Doherty didn’t buy Humaid’s new religious devotion and, in his 2006 ruling, concluded the story lacked credibility.

Nevertheless, the judge was concerned enough about the nature of the defence argument to write: “The alleged beliefs are premised on the notion that women are inferior to men and that violence against women is in some circumstances accepted, if not encouraged. These beliefs are antithetical to fundamental Canadian values, including gender equality.”

[Read more…] about Freedom from Religion

Filed Under: america, Canada, feminism, General, Politics, women Tagged With: catholicism, choice, domestic violence, fundamentalism, justice system, Olivia Chow, patriarchy, pope, Religion, religious intolerance, The Star

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