Tag Archives: Canada

For my Canadian readers: new t-shirts mocking Jennifer Lynch

You remember her. She’s the Queen of the Harpies at the Human Rights Commission.

Blazing Cat Fur asked me to notify all my readers that t-shirts were available.

He writes:

The “Be Mean to Jennifer Lynch” T-shirts, as endorsed by Mark Steyn and RightGirls Bazooms, are now available for sale!

5 dollars from each purchase goes to the legal defense fund of Ezra Levant, 5 Feet of Fury, Small Dead Animals and Free Dominion. Plus Shipping is Free!

These are quality silk-screened T’s designed by Alexander of Hollywood, who we owe a big Thank You to for so generously donating his time and efforts.

Support Free Speech: Be Mean to Jennifer Lynch!

PS: Alexander will accept Money Orders! Just e-mail him at alexanderofhollywood@gmail.com

T’s available in black on white, yellow on black, & hot pink on black

They look pretty cool! Click through to his site to see the design.

Milt Rosenberg hosts radio debate on health care featuring David Gratzer

First, listen to Canadian Sally C. Pipes for explaining the myths of American health care. (9 minutes)

The debate!

Milt Rosenberg talks to James Milam and Canadian David Gratzer about the problems surrounding American healthcare.

Here is the MP3. (86 minutes, commercial-free)

The bad guy isn’t all that bad – he likes HSAs and high-deductible plans.

Learn more

Understand the right way to reform health care… with short podcasts!

Canadian court rules that Christians MUST perform same-sex marriages

Story from LifeSiteNews.

Excerpt:

Nichols, who served as a marriage commissioner from 1983 after retiring from a 25-year career in the police force, was approached by the complainant, only identified as M.J., in April 2005 to conduct the ceremony.  Nichols informed M.J. that he was available, but when he realized that M.J.’s partner, B.R., was a man, he told them that he could not “marry” them based on his religious beliefs.

[…]Nichols had himself complained to the human rights tribunal in February 2005 after he had been informed in November 2004 by the Saskatchewan Department of Justice that commissioners would be required to conduct same-sex ceremonies after the law changed to allow them.  That case was later dismissed, in March 2006.

He was fined $2,500 by the tribunal in June 2008, which decided that as an official of the government, Nichols was not entitled to have his religious beliefs accommodated.

Nichols appealed that decision to the Court of Queen’s Bench, contending that his right to religious freedom should have been protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. But Justice Janet McMurtry upheld the tribunal’s decision.

Nichols’ religious views are not relevant in how he conducts his job, according to the judge in her 36-page decision.  “In that capacity [as marriage commissioner], his personal religious beliefs do not matter,” she wrote.

So much for the right to religious liberty. What this decision says is that government’s values supercede the values of individual citizens – even if it violates the fundamental right to religious liberty.