Free Speech in Canada
John Leo in USA Today US News & World Report (oops):
'Canada is a pleasantly authoritarian country," Alan Borovoy, general counsel of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, said a few years ago. An example of what he means is Bill C-250, a repressive, anti-free-speech measure that is on the brink of becoming law in Canada. It would add "sexual orientation" to the Canadian hate propaganda law, thus making public criticism of homosexuality a crime. It is sometimes called the "Bible as Hate Literature" bill, or simply "the chill bill." It could ban publicly expressed opposition to gay marriage or any other political goal of gay groups. The bill has a loophole for religious opposition to homosexuality, but few scholars think it will offer protection, given the strength of the gay lobby and the trend toward censorship in Canada. Law Prof. David Bernstein, in his new book You Can't Say That! wrote that "it has apparently become illegal in Canada to advocate traditional Christian opposition to homosexual sex." Or traditional Jewish or Muslim opposition, too.
The whole article is worth reading.
April 14, 2004 09:07 AMI just read an article in US News and World Report that discussed this very topic, and was going to post about it.
On another note, is it possible to make my baltiblog account post archive URLs similar to how TheBaltiblog does, using dates in the URLS and such. I tried to change my template, but I think I need write permissions on the directories, or something. If this is a hassle, please don't worry about it.
Pondered by Greg at April 14, 2004 10:32 AMOops. I meant to say US News and World Report, not USA Today. That's fixed now.
I took a look at your blog and I think I know what's going on. I'll email you.
Pondered by maphet at April 14, 2004 10:47 AMIn that case, we read the same article.
Pondered by Greg at April 14, 2004 02:44 PMIn light of this, isn't it "ironic" that Alanis Morrisette thinks Canadia is less censor-happy than America?
Pondered by gosey at April 14, 2004 03:41 PM