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George Wallace said:So your proposal is that Canadians leave Canada, because Immigrants don't want to abide by the Rules and Laws that Canadians have developed since pre-Confederation? Let's give up and leave it to those who want to bring the environments that they are fleeing from to our country and convert us? Absolutely Brilliant! But you are correct.....that is what Freedom is all about.
George, I don't think I'm following you. :-S (Which is not surprising, I'm kinda slow :clown Which laws do some immigrants not want to follow? My family came here a few generations ago, as refugees from the wars (yup I'm Irish). Are you saying that because my family raised me with Irish values (bringing the environment they were fleeing from) that I am not as Canadian as others might be?
Over the years I've had allot of people try to convert me, Jehovah’s, Muslims, Christians and I even have had a few prodding jokes from my Jewish friends about my impending conversion. Are these well intentioned people part of the problem that should be stopped by increased security restrictions? What restrictions can be put on ‘converting people’? What are the behaviors we are trying to stop and how effective would legal restrictions in this case be?
Earlier in this thread people were saying we need to increase the restrictions for more security. I understand the sentiment but I think of this the same way I understand people when they say "tough on crime". - It is to vague to have real meaning. Can I ask for specific things that we should do that we are not? I only ask because if we keep the conversation on the esoteric level of 'freedom vs. security' the debate is only in how you say things. Where as if I was to say "Information gathered from torture has proven time and again to be unreliable and the use of torture not only flies in the face of what we as a people are supposed to stand for, it ensures not just hatred against us but justification for that hatred". That is a meaty issue that we can dig into. (I wish I could say no pun intended, but it was) Or I could say that “Canada has a legal and moral obligation to protect its citizens from outrages on their dignity and for us to be sitting back while our citizens are being tortured for information in our allies gulags it doesn’t just represent a breach of faith and law (pre and post-confederation) it also represents a justification for terrorist actions against us."
Now on the issue of laws that have existed pre-confederation. Habeas corpus is a great example. http://www.constitution.org/eng/habcorpa.htm Now the right to face your accuser and examine/question the evidence against you has been curtailed because it can fall into the category of national security. This has been done with many checks and independent reviews of the process. In my humble opinion this is a safe temporary measure – for now. The program needs to be very closely monitored for abuses because it is a very small step from a legitimate program for security to a tool used against a group of people for other reasons than the original intent.
CdnBlackShirt, allot (if not most) of the information used to justify the war in Iraq – for example the yellow cake (yum – better with icing) from Africa – was gained through torture. How reliable was that information? I know myself I’d say anything to appease the person water boarding me or doing other unpleasent things. It isn’t that I’m a weak or principle-less person, I just know that unless I kill myself during the torture (something a professional wouldn’t let me do) I will eventually break. Everyone can be broken. Here not to long ago it was information given to us by the local community that stopped our own “Oklahoma city” style bombing. If we loose the faith and goodwill of that community our chances of preventing future attacks drops significantly. (In my opinion of course)