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Speak your mind even if your voice shakes

The Star

Omar Khadr

01/07/2008 by Debra

Two stories in The Star today about Omar Khadr.

One on a video tape that was released to the press, despite not having been allowed to be aired in court. Oops wonder how that happened?

The lawyer for detained Canadian terror suspect Omar Khadr accused the U.S. government yesterday of abusing the legal process after CBS News broadcast for the first time a controversial video recording which allegedly shows his client manufacturing explosive devices.

“I think it’s outrageous that this tape has been released without the approval of the court,” lawyer Dennis Edney said in Edmonton.

Long seen as a key piece of evidence against Khadr in the eyes of the prosecution, Edney believes the U.S. government leaked the video after stalled proceedings prevented it from being shown in court.

The courtroom airing of the 12-minute tape, which allegedly shows a 15-year-old Khadr planting land mines and assembling bomb timers, was delayed during a hearing Nov. 8. The recording was broadcast Sunday on the CBS newsmagazine show 60 Minutes.

[Read more…] about Omar Khadr

Filed Under: america, Canada, Politics, war Tagged With: Afghanistan, aid, Canada, children, democracy, Harper, human rights, The Star

Targeting Reality

01/06/2008 by Debra

Carol Goar has an article in The Star titled, “Targeted child care misses mark”. In the article she details how many children are not being served because care is targeted to low income homes and children who are thought to be ‘at risk’ because they come from poverty.

Doherty, a child development psychologist, has spent 30 years as an educator, provincial policy-maker and researcher. She has just completed a study for the Institute for Research on Public Policy (www.irpp.org) that pulls together the lessons she has learned:

The first is that most developmentally delayed children come from middle-income and affluent families. The incidence may be higher among economically disadvantaged kids, but numerically, the vast majority of vulnerable children are neither poor nor distinguishable from their peers.

“Many people are unaware of this,” Doherty says. “The problem is much bigger than people realize and it cuts across income groups.”

The second is that programs designed to change the behaviour of low-income parents – to improve their child-rearing skills or get them into the workforce – have little impact on their offspring.

“These interventions may benefit parents,” Doherty says, “but they generally have negligible effects on children’s development.”

The third is that vulnerable kids do best in structured, full-day programs. Less formal types of care reduce their odds of succeeding at school and becoming healthy, self-supporting adults.

“Poor quality child care is not simply a missed developmental opportunity, it is known to be detrimental to all children’s development,” Doherty says. “Canada cannot continue to treat this service as simply a safe place for children to stay while their parents work.”

Her final overarching conclusion is that universal programs are a better investment of public funds than initiatives targeted at kids that “everybody knows will have difficulty.

[Read more…] about Targeting Reality

Filed Under: Canada, Politics Tagged With: Canada, children, education, food, Harper, housing, Ontario, The Star

“Well, you’re not going to solve the problem if you even refuse to say what it is.”

11/04/2007 by Debra

War on WomenThe Star carried this article yesterday about The War on Women: Elly Armour, Jane Hursham, and Criminal Domestic Violence in Canadian Homes, by Brian Vallée.

Stephen Lewis wrote an impassioned foreword for the book, urging the creation of a fully funded United Nations international agency for women that would provide “a tremendous force for advocacy and intervention” and would “inevitably move toward the recognition that domestic violence is its own holocaust….We’re not just fighting for women’s human rights; we’re fighting for women’s lives.”

[Read more…] about “Well, you’re not going to solve the problem if you even refuse to say what it is.”

Filed Under: violence, women Tagged With: Canada, children, domestic violence, human rights, Ontario, police, The Star, violence

Hope I die before I get old

07/30/2007 by Debra

While this song had a different meaning at the time, the generation who listened to it may well have the same sentiment.

In an article in todays Star we learn of the horror of ending up in a nursing home.

There you will be provided with the best meals that $5.57 a day can buy. But worry not! Over the “next several years” this will increase to $7 a day! This genius is topped by the $1.20 a day alloted for those with incontinence. Which means the average person is provided with 3-4 protective briefs per day.

Imagine the uproar if a parent left a child in soiled diapers changing them only 3-4 times a day. Why is it acceptable to do the same for adults?

It is a sad reflection on how business oriented every aspect of our lives is becoming when a persons most basic needs, including the need for dignity, is considered less important than saving a buck. [Read more…] about Hope I die before I get old

Filed Under: General Tagged With: aging, nursing homes, ONT, Smitherman, The Star

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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