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You are here: Home / Archives for law

law

Mohamed Fahmy and the pipsqueaks

02/14/2015 by the editor

By Frank Moher Make no mistake; Mohamed Fahmy is not safe yet. He’s out on bail, but a re-trial looms. And given the events of the last few days, and months, there’s no reason to suppose it will go according to what Mr. Fahmy’s supporters, as well as our naïve, ineffectual Conservative government, hope is […]

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Al Jazeera, Australia, Canada, Conservatives, Egypt, foreign, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, international affairs, John Baird, journalism, law, Mohamed Fahmy, Stephen Harper

Kinder Morgan: A little uncoordinated

11/28/2014 by the editor

By Montreal Simon They have gathered on Burnaby Mountain to try to prevent the giant energy company Kinder Morgan from drilling a hole through its heart. Dozens of young and old activists have been arrested.   But today they won a big court victory, and Kinder Morgan got a big slap in the face. A […]

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: British Columbia, Burnaby, Burnaby Mountain, Canada, civil liberties, First Nations, Kinder Morgan, law, oil sands, protest, RCMOP, Stephen Harper, Stewart Phillip, tar sands, Trans Mountain pipeline

Del Mastro: Harper’s latest con

11/03/2014 by the editor

By Montreal Simon Uh oh. Beat a drum slowly. Or if you’re in the Harper PMO beat a gong furiously. The Deaner is DOWN !!!! A judge has found Peterborough, Ont., MP Dean Del Mastro guilty of spending too much in the 2008 federal election and falsifying a document to cover it up. Del Mastro […]

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Canada, Conservatives, crime, Dean Del Mastro, law, Office of the Commissioner of Elections, Ontario, Peterborough, Stephen Harper, Vikileaks

The shootings: How the media fed our inner monster

10/29/2014 by the editor

By Montreal Simon You think you know the story. You’ve seen the pictures on TV a million times. Over and over again. You’ve seen how the media have tried to explain what happened, and how they’ve framed the narrative, complete with more heroes than you can count. You know what Stephen Harper wants you to […]

Filed Under: Media Tagged With: addiction, Canada, Canadian Parliament, crime, law, mental illness, newspapers, Ottawa, Parliament Hill shootings, radio, Stephen Harper, television, terrorism

Jian Ghomeshi: Why I was fired by the CBC

10/26/2014 by the editor

Jian Ghomeshi, no-longer host of CBC’s “Q”, today issued the following statement on why he was fired: Dear everyone, I am writing today because I want you to be the first to know some news. This has been the hardest time of my life. I am reeling from the loss of my father. I am […]

Filed Under: Media Tagged With: Canada, Canadian, CBC, celebrity, gender, Jian Ghomeshi, law, radio, sex, television, Toronto, Toronto Star

We won’t be intimidated by the PM, either

10/24/2014 by the editor

By Montreal Simon It was for me, strangely enough, the most terrifying moment of a nightmarish day. Standing in a crowded subway station, waiting for a train to take me home, watching the fear on people’s faces. It was only a few hours after most of them must have heard about, or seen what had […]

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Canada, Canadian Parliament, crime, law, Ottawa, Parliament Hill shootings, Stephen Harper, terrorism

Radio Caroline, all over again

10/22/2014 by the editor

By Jim Henshaw By now, virtually every Canadian is aware of the stare-down going on between Netflix and our broadcast regulators, the CRTC. But there’s a similar confrontation concurrently flying under most of our media’s radar between the self-same CRTC and a group of radio stations in Vancouver. These stations, unlike Netflix, have their offices, […]

Filed Under: Media Tagged With: BBC, Britain, British Columbia, Canada, CRTC, film, law, Netflix, radio, television, Vancouver

Rehtaeh: A father’s questions

09/23/2014 by the editor

By Glen Canning This morning I sat in a Halifax courtroom and listened as one of the young men involved with my daughter’s case changed his plea to guilty. He is guilty of producing child pornography. He is the person who clicked the button on that cellphone, and as simply as that, he ended her […]

Filed Under: Living Tagged With: child porn, children, family, Halifax, law, Nova Scotia, police, pornography, RCMP, Rheateah Parsons, schools

The Vogons assess FIPA

09/19/2014 by the editor

By Alison@Creekside Prior to the enactment of the Canada-China FIPA, the Canadian government pushed two omnibus bills through the HoC which included provisions designed to substantially weaken environment policies and regulations, some of them at the behest of a pipeline lobby group: G&M : Pipeline industry pushed environmental changes made in omnibus bill The Canadian Energy Pipeline […]

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: business, Canada, Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement, China, Conservatives, environmental, FIPA, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, international affairs, International Trade, law, oil, oil sands, religion, Stephen Harper, tar sands, trade

Harper and FIPA: Sell-out on a Friday afternoon

09/15/2014 by the editor

By Montreal Simon He waited until late Friday afternoon to announce that the Cons had ratified their controversial trade deal with China. Hoping that most people wouldn’t notice. Ottawa confirms it has ratified a foreign investment treaty with China, more than two years after the controversial agreement was signed, as CBC News first reported Friday. […]

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: British Columbia, business, Canada, Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement, China, Conservatives, Ed Fast, Elizabeth May, Enbridge, Enbridge Pipeline, FIPA, First Nations, Green Party, international affairs, International Trade, law, Northern Gateway Pipeline, oil, oil sands, Stephen Harper, tar sands, trade

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Fort McMurray: Shopping time!

By Brady Tighe We’re now officially in the aftermath phase of the northern Alberta wildfire crisis. The fire is long gone, and everyone with a home to return to is back in its … [Read More...]

Nathan Cullen

Electoral reform: Hashtag fresh thinking

By Alison@Creekside The most interesting and innovative idea to come out of the first meeting of the all-party Special Committee on Electoral Reform, or ERRE, was Nathan Cullen's suggestion, … [Read More...]

Trudeau on quantum computing

The Trudeau gush fest is getting old

By Jim Henshaw There have been several bewildered as well as angry accounts coming out of the USA lately about how little media time has been spent covering the Democratic Presidential Primary … [Read More...]

Rick Meyers in Nanaimo Pride Parade

My friend, Rick, at the Pride Parade

By Frank Moher On this dreadful day, I don't want to write about the shootings in Orlando. I want to write about my friend, Rick. Rick lives just outside of Nanaimo, a city of about 80,000, … [Read More...]

Stephen Colbert on Late Night set

Triumph of the drama nerds

By Frank Moher Two drama nerds have recently moved into high profile positions. Before I name them (or perhaps you’ve already guessed who they are; or perhaps you’d like to scroll down and look at … [Read More...]

From “Our Rape Blog”: Shooting the Moon

Originally published on Our Rape Blog, the author's account of the aftermath of a violent sexual assault. By Mary Fraughton Have you ever played Hearts? It’s a card game. For our purposes, … [Read More...]

First Nations defending Lelu Island

The video: Lelu Island: “They will come.”

From Creekside: The B.C. provincial government is trying to green light the construction of a massive LNG terminal on Lelu Island in the Skeena Estuary -- Pacific Northwest LNG, backed by Malaysian … [Read More...]

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