- Reaction score
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- Points
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Posted by Wyn van der Schee <vandersw@cadvision.com> on Mon, 6 Dec 1999 20:40:15 -0700
There was an article on page A4 of the 2 Dec 99 issue of the National Post
headlined "Reform MP seeks to decriminalize wearing of kin‘s war medals."
The gist of it is that some woman named Ballantyne in Victoria wants to
wear her father‘s medals publicly at Remembrance Day ceremonies, which of
course contravenes the Criminal Code. She has convinced John Reynolds MP to
table a private member‘s bill to remove the offending section from ther
Criminal Code.
Fortunately private member‘s bills seldom if ever get enacted into law, and
it is doubtful if this one will pass. The insidious part of her little
campaign though is her statement that "Britain, Australia and New Zealand,
other commonwealth countries that once had similar laws now allow next of
kin to wear the service medals of their relatives." Surely this is a gross
untruth.
Can any knowledgeable person resident in the UK or the Antipodes and who is
on this means assure me that such is not the case.
I only receive the digest so please send your responses directly to me as
well as to the newsgroup the digest seems to arrive only once every couple
of weeks.
Wyn van der Schee
Calgary, Alberta
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to remove, with the line "unsubscribe army" in the
message body.
There was an article on page A4 of the 2 Dec 99 issue of the National Post
headlined "Reform MP seeks to decriminalize wearing of kin‘s war medals."
The gist of it is that some woman named Ballantyne in Victoria wants to
wear her father‘s medals publicly at Remembrance Day ceremonies, which of
course contravenes the Criminal Code. She has convinced John Reynolds MP to
table a private member‘s bill to remove the offending section from ther
Criminal Code.
Fortunately private member‘s bills seldom if ever get enacted into law, and
it is doubtful if this one will pass. The insidious part of her little
campaign though is her statement that "Britain, Australia and New Zealand,
other commonwealth countries that once had similar laws now allow next of
kin to wear the service medals of their relatives." Surely this is a gross
untruth.
Can any knowledgeable person resident in the UK or the Antipodes and who is
on this means assure me that such is not the case.
I only receive the digest so please send your responses directly to me as
well as to the newsgroup the digest seems to arrive only once every couple
of weeks.
Wyn van der Schee
Calgary, Alberta
--------------------------------------------------------
NOTE: To remove yourself from this list, send a message
to majordomo@cipherlogic.on.ca from the account you wish
to remove, with the line "unsubscribe army" in the
message body.