Michael Dorosh
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 410
MissMolsonIndy said:Ok, boys...this is where I stand on the matter:
I agree with the comments that combat_medic has made. You can never know the outcome, until the outcome unfolds before you. I've taken some philosophy in my days...and my general stance lies with a philosopher who believes that you can never really know anything. You may have good reason to believe something is so, but you can never truly "know," until the action/event unfolds.
Now imagine what detectives and policemen go through...they're forced to rely on knowledge and educated guesses in hopes to acheive positive consequences. Pressure.
As far as Military exclusion from the Charter/Human Rights Code...I stand my ground. In taking into consideration all that has been said, along with some of my own research into the area, I've been able to draw the following:
Considering we reside in a reasonably peaceful nation, and are seldomnly called upon in times of war/peace-keeping, I see no reason for full exclusion, or even partial exclusion for that matter, while Canadian soldiers/citizens are free of the atrocities brought about by war. However, in times of war, I believe that it is not possible for the military to abide by the Charter in full. Therefore, I think a decree should be passed by the legislative body, including and excluding the military from specific rights, freedoms and outlaws that are seen/not seen fit with the Canadian Military in times where drastic measures are likely to be taken.
As it stands, I don't see the Charter as interfering with the rights and freedoms of Canadian soldiers...and exluding the military institution from rights and freedoms granted to every Canadian citizen, when it's clearly unnecessary (i.e. when the Canadian military is in no position where they would have to apply force to maintain peace and sovereignty) would upset the equilibrium in our society. In times of war...I agree with a lot of the comments made: it is clear that military conduct comes into direct conflict with the Charter, and ammendments need to be made to the Charter when the situation calls for it. And who's to determine that? I think we may have just found our next topic of discussion...
seldom called upon? We've had soldiers operating continuously in Yugoslavia since the 1990s, in Afghanistan since 2001/2002, and before that had troops continuously in Cyprus since the mid 1970s. Not to mention the UNDOF and MFO missions (and many others). Granted, there has been scarcely little "war fighting" but there were operational deployments in the face of either an armed enemy, or as a buffer between two similarly armed opponents. There has been Oka and the FLQ here at home.
Legislation is not necessary, all we need is for QR&Os and CFAOs to take precedence over the Charter. Is this not currently the case?
As Infanteer keeps saying (and he is correct) - train as hard as you would fight. You can't have two sets of rules for man management, one for "good times" and another for "bad times".
As a soldier, you agree to have some of your freedoms stripped from you, for the greater good of the Army as a whole.
Kim Beattie wrote in DILEAS, his history of the 48th Highlanders in World War Two, that the greatest sacrifice the soldiers made was surrendering to constant invasions of their personal privacy. We also beat the best trained, most highly motivated and most successful army in the history of the world on a consistent basis, and we didn't do it to secure oil supplies, we did it to stop mass genocide. Had we maintained that kind of army and will in peacetime, perhaps the 6 million would have been a few million fewer.