OCLA Calls on the Government and Media to Exercise Calm, Reason and Objectivity

The Ontario Civil Liberties Association (OCLA) calls on the government and media to exercise calm, reason and objectivity in civil rights matters.

Civil rights are unjustly abated by reacting governments and opportunist media corporations in times when terrorist events have a potential to cause widespread outrage.

The breadth and intensity of public outrage are often disproportionate to actual danger, have a biological origin in the collective fright and flight response of social animals, and are exploited and amplified by media using narrow and selective coverage.

Frenzies can result, which lead to witch hunts, free rein of enforcers of social norms, and hastily drafted unwise legislation. In addition, society-wide artificially induced outrage and fear can alter an insecure or vulnerable individual’s view of society, in a direction opposite to trust and community.

Several cases of such “cooperative outrage” are listed below, which are presently playing out in Ontario, in which civil rights are threatened and violated.

In all cases, unpopular individuals and groups are supressed by the state. Dominant popular positions are not suppressed and do not require special interventions of civil-rights protection.

  • Professor Jordan Peterson (University of Toronto) organized political resistance against laws that enforce socially correct language and the government cut funding to his internationally recognized scientific research.
  • Editor James Sears (Your Ward News) publishes a satirical political magazine that offended influential individuals and the government barred him from using the public postal service.
  • Social-media pundit Kevin Johnston organized against Muslim accommodation in public institutions and was charged pursuant to section 319(2) of the Criminal Code, a “hate speech” provision that violates the International Covenant for Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) ratified by Canada. Johnston was also sued by a wealthy government supporter, pursuant to civil defamation law, a common law that is also non-compliant with the ICCPR [1].
  • A memorial was organized to be held at a Toronto public library following the death of civil rights lawyer Barbara Kulaszka and the Toronto mayor asked the library to cancel the event, trustees motioned a school board to bar its venues from memorial organizers, while the media presented one-sided characterizations of Kulaszka’s “holocaust-denying” former client [2].
  • Toronto-based journalist Faith Goldy (The Rebel News) reported on relative reactions of the state to anti-fa (and Black Lives Matter) and alt-right (and white nationalist) demonstrators and was summarily fired following media-reported high-profile expressions of outrage. The particular pretext given by her employer was not anything she said but rather an asserted unacceptability of the social-media venue in which she said it.
  • Long-time Canadian resident Issam Al-Yamani made a political comment at a Palestinian rights rally in Toronto and the government actuated a deportation procedure that would separate him from his home and family [3].

These Ontario events occur in a background where the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is under attack for defending the civil rights of white nationalists, and where Manitoba politician Steve Ashton has recently called for a bill to criminalize “racist and homophobic slurs”, thus bringing us full-circle back into the Middle Ages when governments and powerful individuals could prosecute insults.

The OCLA calls on the government and corporate media not to act so as to degrade civil rights, and instead to recognize that strong civil rights are a necessary condition for democratic social contracting.

The OCLA calls on public intellectuals to resist an emerging pseudoscience of “a scientific basis for hate”, as a eugenics-like artifice in the service of state oppression and disastrous social engineering.

Endnotes

[1] “Release: OCLA Asks Attorneys General to Make Canadian Defamation Law Compliant with International Law”, 2016-02-05, https://ocla.ca/release-ocla-asks-attorneys-general-to-make-canadian-defamation-law-compliant-with-international-law/

[2] The media was silent on relevant international civil rights law: “Laws that penalize the expression of opinions about historical facts are incompatible with the obligations that the Covenant imposes on States parties in relation to the respect for freedom of opinion and expression. (116) The Covenant does not permit general prohibition of expressions of an erroneous opinion or an incorrect interpretation of past events. Restrictions on the right of freedom of opinion should never be imposed and, with regard to freedom of expression, they should not go beyond what is permitted in paragraph 3 or required under article 20.” – General comment No. 34, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Human Rights Committee, 102nd session, CCPR/C/GC/34, http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrc/docs/gc34.pdf , para. 49

[3] “Letter: Canada’s record regarding the civil rights of Mr. Issam Al-Yamani”, 2017-07-04, https://ocla.ca/letter-canadas-record-regarding-the-civil-rights-of-mr-issam-al-yamani/

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Petition to defend the civil rights of Kevin Johnston

OCLA has launched a petition to the Attorney General of Ontario, The Hon. Yasir Naqvi, asking for the retraction of his consent for criminal proceedings against Kevin Johnston under the “hate speech” provisions of Canada’s Criminal Code.

The petition site is at the link here.

Posted in Petitions, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Petition to defend the civil rights of Kevin Johnston

Letter: Canada’s record regarding the civil rights of Mr. Issam Al-Yamani

The OCLA has sent a letter today to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, concerning Canada’s record regarding the civil rights of Mr. Issam Al-Yamani.

The letter is posted here and embedded below:

Posted in Letters | Comments Off on Letter: Canada’s record regarding the civil rights of Mr. Issam Al-Yamani

Informational note: Privacy Caution on the Use of WiFi

The following informational note was prepared anonymously for the Ontario Civil Liberties Association (OCLA) by an informed industry professional.

Privacy Caution on the Use of WiFi: Trading your privacy for a little bit of Wifi

Did you never wonder how Facebook pays the bills? Have you sent them a cheque recently? Did you think those lame adds they show you for something you already bought last week were keeping the lights on? Did you think there was money in posting cute kitten videos on the Internet?

If you go to a mall or restaurant, and they have free Wifi, and you use your Facebook credentials to use the “Free” wifi, then you are the product. Your personal information is what they sell.

When you sign in to “free” wifi and use your FaceBook, or Google account as a credential to get access, you are compromising your privacy.

Wifi is “free” in the same way kittens are “free”. You can be sure there will be a cost down the road. In the case of Wifi, if you use credentials to sign in, the cost is your privacy.

The owner of that facility that provides the Wifi can buy your details from FaceBook and now knows just about everything they need to know about you. Name, Age, Sex, Phone Number, Where you live, who your friends are.

Every time you go to the mall, the Wireless Access Points (WAP’s) will see the MAC address of your phone. Even if you don’t sign in. Most people don’t turn off Wifi on their phones when they leave the house, they leave it on, meaning that wherever they go their phones are pinging off Wi-Fi access points, effectively leaving a digital footprint. (MAC is an acronym for Media Access Control, not “Macintosh”. It’s the unique 48 bit number burned in to every network chip in every network device ever made. The first 6 digits identify the manufacturer and the rest are a unique serial number. Every device has a unique serial number.)

If you go to a different mall owned by the same company, they will see you walking in. They will see that you have an iPhone, or an Android device from the MAC address, and the unique serial number ties it to you.

Do you remember the old Family Circus cartoons where little Billy took an indirect route home, and it was illustrated by the dashed lines all over the neighbourhood? Well, you can do that with any Wifi enabled device, but if you sign in with Facebook, now I can attach the name “William (Billy) Keane” to the ant track, and I can see where William Keane goes in the mall. Where he sits, for how long, where he meets friends, and if your friends sign in to the “Free” wifi, then I know who he is meeting. I can watch them all go to dinner or a movie together.

If you combine this information from closed circuit television streams, then they can literally watch you.

I can track how often you go to the mall, how long you stay, and which stores you go into. I know if you took the subway, or if you drove based on where I first see your device on the property. If I target you and your demographic with advertisements on Facebook, I can track how effective the advertising campaign is, because I can actually determine who comes to the store after the campaign has run.

That is information that mall owners use. If someone wants to open a store for teen fashions, I can prove to them that the teens come off the subway, go to food court, and then hang around the fountain for hours. That makes it easier to sell them a location near the fountain and have them pay more to be in the right spot. Foot traffic in a mall determines rents. Being able to target that information and get analytics down to the personal level means additional revenue for the mall owner.

Mall owners take a percentage of sales from all the stores, so it’s in their best interest not to put the teen fashions and the ice cream kiosk at the wrong end of the Mall near the Sears store or the bank, or some other boring old person’s store. It makes sense to cluster it with the other venues that cater to teens.

Individual retailers can watch you move through the store and see the hot and cold spots, and redesign the layout of the store to match foot traffic and demographics.

If you use your Facebook credentials to sign in to anything “Free” then you are selling your identity, your anonymity, and your friends list. You are the product. Given how ubiquitous Wifi has become, it’s possible that you can be tracked from your front door, through your city’s wifi network, through the “free” wifi on the transit system, through the mall you walk through on the way to work, and all the way to your destination.

“Using just one GPS observation per day per person allows us to estimate the location of, and subsequently use, WiFi access points to account for 80% of mobility across a population.”*

You are leaving little ant trails everywhere you go. We have all willingly strapped a parolee’s ankle bracelet to ourselves.

This might also get you thinking about how Google Maps knows that there is traffic congestion up ahead.** Your phone is always sending information about where you are over the cellular LTE connection. Exactly how anonymous is that information? Who knows?

There are a few retail organizations that are sophisticated enough to manage the analytics, and coordinate wifi, bluetooth, cell, cctv video, loyalty cards, credit cards, shop cards, proximity sensors and people counters, but not many in Canada.

The transit agencies are constrained by PIPEDA [The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (federal)], MFIPPA [Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (Ontario)], and government privacy policies. They are mostly concerned with aggregated anonymised data to analyze foot traffic and commuter patterns to figure out the placement of ticket machines and kiosks, and figure out how people get from A to B. Having worked in Public Transit, I can tell you they certainly aren’t capable of doing the big brother stuff people think they are doing.

The security services however certainly can.

Endnotes:

* Sapiezynski P, Stopczynski A, Gatej R, Lehmann S (2015) Tracking Human Mobility Using WiFi Signals. PLoS ONE 10(7): e0130824. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130824

** Stenovec T (2015) Google has gotten incredibly good at predicting traffic — here’s how, Business Insider
http://www.businessinsider.com/how-google-maps-knows-about-traffic-2015-11

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OCLA’s 2016 Year in Review


 
Dear OCLA Supporter,
 
It has been a busy year for our small, dedicated and volunteer-based organization! We have made many interactions and contacts, concentrating on the most egregious Ontario cases that do not easily receive attention from other rights associations. Here are examples of our visible work in 2016.
 
Dr. Bruce Allan Clark Receives the 2016 OCLA Civil Liberties Award
 
Lawyer and aboriginal rights activist Bruce Clark received the 2016 OCLA Civil Liberties Award at a public event held in Ottawa, Ontario, on October 14.
 
Dr. Clark spoke about his life’s work of trying to obtain judicial recognition that Canada’s violations of aboriginal land rights stemming from the Indian Act of 1876 are unconstitutional. Dr. Clark’s determination to have this legal argument heard by Canada’s courts led to his eventual disbarment and imprisonment on a charge of contempt of court. The courts never allowed the argument to be heard.
 
Bruce’s wife Margaret and friend and former client Chief Gary Metallic spoke about the painful professional and personal costs that Bruce, his family, and his clients were subjected to because of his struggle for justice. And Bruce participated in a deep and wide-ranging discussion with attendees.
 
Much more information, including a February 2016 video interview with Bruce Clark can be found starting at the following link: https://ocla.ca/ocla-civil-liberties-award/
 
A video about the October 14 award event is currently under production by filmmaker Peter Biesterfeld.
 
Opposition to Anti-BDS Bill and Motion in Ontario’s Provincial Parliament
 
On May 19, the OCLA sent a letter to all Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs) calling for the rejection of a proposed law (Bill 202, Standing Up Against Anti-Semitism Act, 2016) intended to punish participants and supporters of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement that seeks to influence the policies of the State of Israel. The bill was voted down later that day.
 
On November 30, the OCLA again wrote to Ontario’s MPPs urging the rejection of a motion (Private Members’ Notice of Motion No. 36) denouncing the BDS movement. The OCLA argued that any such motion denouncing a citizens’ social movement constitutes an attack on freedom of speech. The motion was passed on December 1.
 
Intervention re: Unconstitutionality of Canada’s “Hate Speech” Criminal Code provision (R. v. Topham)
 
The OCLA wrote to The Honourable Mr. Justice Butler of the Supreme Court of British Columbia to argue that the s. 319(2) “hate speech” provision of the Criminal Code of Canada is unconstitutional and incompatible with the values of a free and democratic society.
 
Our argument centred on the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent determinations that Canada must provide at least as much protection for basic freedoms as those found in the international human rights documents that Canada has adopted. The “hate speech” Criminal Code provision does not require the Crown to prove any actual harm, and therefore fails to meet the “strict test of necessity and proportionality” set out in the international human rights documents.
 
You can read the OCLA’s intervention letter at the following link: https://ocla.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/2016-01-13-Letter-OCLA-re-R-v-Topham.pdf
 
Letters about Mohamed Harkat and Hassan Diab
 
The OCLA contributed letters to support campaigns about two important and deeply disturbing cases of abuse of individuals by the Canadian state:
 
1) OCLA letter to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness asking for a stay of the deportation proceedings against Mohamed Harkat: https://ocla.ca/ocla-letter-canadas-threatened-expulsion-of-refugee-mohamed-harkat/
 
2) OCLA letter to the Minister of Justice of Canada asking for the return to Canada of Dr. Hassan Diab: https://ocla.ca/ocla-letter-hassan-diab-case-and-protection-of-canadian-citizens/
 
OCLA Director Speaks at Got Law? Mini-Course and “Charter for Children” Book Launch
 
OCLA Executive Director Joseph Hickey was a guest speaker at the “Got Law?” mini-course taught by Barbara Ann Vocisano of Legal Education Consultants at Carleton University on May 3, and at the launch of the French translation of Dustin Milligan’s book series “The Charter for Children” (“La Charte pour les enfants”) at the Ottawa Public Library on May 14.
 
OCLA in the News
 
• May 19, 2016: “Overcoming ‘Divisive Politics of Fear’, Ontario Rejects Anti-BDS Bill”, CommonDreams: http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/05/19/overcoming-divisive-politics-fear-ontario-rejects-anti-bds-bill
 
• Apr. 19, 2016: Interview (in French) re: OCLA petition to allow cameras in Ontario’s courts, TV Rogers Ottawa: https://youtu.be/yEfq2SDoycQ
 
• Feb. 8, 2016: Interview re: DNA order in animal abuse case, Talk Radio AM640, Toronto: https://ocla.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/2016-02-08-Talk-Radio-AM640-Toronto-Ryan-Bonnar-DNA-dog-case.mp3
 
Full list of media articles at: https://ocla.ca/our-work/media-coverage/
 
How to Stay Connected and Donate to the OCLA
 
Website: https://ocla.ca
Twitter: @oncivlib
 
The OCLA is an independent, volunteer-run organization. Donations help cover operating costs such as booking rooms for public events, printing promotional material for campaigns and events, and paying for court filing fees and court document production costs (copies and binding) for court and tribunal interventions on civil liberties issues.
 
As we are an entirely volunteer-run organization with a very small budget, we do depend on donations to continue our work, and appreciate any contribution you can make.
 
Donations can be made in two ways:
 
1) Through Paypal, by clicking the “Donate” button in the top-right corner of https://ocla.ca; or
 
2) By sending a cheque to “Ontario Civil Liberties Association” to our mailing address:
 
Ontario Civil Liberties Association
180 Metcalfe Street, Suite 20
Ottawa, Ontario
Canada K2P 1P5
 
Thank you for your support!
 
Yours truly,
 
Joseph Hickey
Executive Director
Ontario Civil Liberties Association (OCLA) https://ocla.ca
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Email: MPPs must vote down motion censuring BDS to protect free speech

The OCLA sent the following email this evening to Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs) of Ontario:

[scribd id=332848311 key=key-dNyDUq55RcXS8DWjU5w5 mode=scroll]

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Photos and report from the 2016 OCLA Civil Liberties Award — Bruce Allan Clark

The OCLA was honoured to present its 2016 Civil Liberties Award to Dr. Bruce Allan Clark at a public event in Ottawa, Ontario on Friday, October 14, 2016.

Dr. Clark gave an address (text available here) about the central constitutional question at the heart of his life’s work of researching and defending aboriginal land rights in Canada, summarized in the following paragraph from his speech:

The legal truth is that the settled constitutional aboriginal right is the power of veto over provincial development of crown land, based upon the Royal Proclamation of 1763, section 109 of the Constitution Act, 1867, and the leading precedents St. Catherines Milling, 1888 and In re Indian Claims, 1897. The lie, recently invented by the Supreme Court of Canada in wilful blindness, is that the aboriginal right is no more than “the right to be consulted:” Haida Nation v. British Columbia in 2004; R. v Van der Peet in 1996; Delgamuukw v British Columbia in 1997; and Mikisew Cree First Nation v Canada (Minister of Canadian Heritage) in 2005. Each of these was in the Supreme Court of Canada.

The enormity of Dr. Clark’s contribution of exposing the injustice of the Canadian legal system’s violations of aboriginal land rights and the painful price paid by himself, his family, and his clients, became apparent in a deep and wide-ranging discussion with attendees, Dr. Clark, and speakers Chief Gary Metallic and Bruce’s wife Margaret.

A few photos from the event are below. A video montage from the event is currently in production, and will be made available in some weeks.

bc1

Bruce Clark’s address, 2016 OCLA Civil Liberties Award

panel1

Speakers Chief Gary Metallic (left), Margaret Clark (centre), and Dr. Bruce Clark (right) answer questions from the audience

eagle-feather-presentation

Sherry Condo (left) presents Bruce Clark with an Eagle Feather

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Communiqué : Le Dr Bruce Allan Clark recevra le prix de l’Association des libertés civiles de l’Ontario 2016

(OTTAWA, le 11 octobre 2016) – L’Association des libertés civiles de l’Ontario (ALCO) décernera son prix annuel au Dr Bruce Clark lors d’une réception publique à Ottawa, Ontario, vendredi le 14 octobre à 19h00 (édifice de l’Alliance de la Fonction Publique du Canada, 233 rue Gilmour, Ottawa).
 
Le Dr Clark a consacré sa vie en tant qu’avocat, académicien et activiste à l’avancement de l’argument légal que les violations des droits fonciers autochtones commises par le Canada et découlant de la Loi sur les Indiens de 1876 sont inconstitutionnelles. Le Dr Clark prononcera un discours à ce sujet. La détermination du Dr Clark d’avancer cet argument légal devant les tribunaux canadiens l’a mené à être radié du barreau et emprisonné pour outrage au tribunal. Les tribunaux n’ont jamais permis que cet argument soit entendu.

Le Chef Gary Metallic, des territoires non cédés du bassin hydrologique de la rivière Restigouche, ami et ancien client de Bruce Clark, viendra de la réserve de Listuguj (dans la péninsule gaspésienne) et fera une introduction avant le discours du Dr Clark. John Shaver, un autre ami, viendra de Toronto et fera une introduction à propos des conséquences personnelles et professionnelles subies par Dr Clark.
 
L’ALCO espère que cet événement, gratuit et ouvert au public, sera une occasion de se réunir et de discuter de ces enjeux fondamentaux.
 
Plusieurs ressources à propos du travail du Dr Clark, y compris les titres de ses livres et des liens à ses articles, sont disponibles à la page web du prix de l’ALCO (en anglais) : https://ocla.ca/ocla-civil-liberties-award/
 
L’ALCO a produit une entrevue vidéo avec le Dr Clark l’hiver dernier. Un extrait de 5 minutes est disponible au lien suivant (en anglais) : https://youtu.be/wd-SVbA4wYM
 
Les récipiendaires des derniers prix de l’ALCO étaient M. Harry Kopyto (2013), Mlle Terri-Jean Bedford (2014) et Mme Connie Fournier (2015).
 
À propos de l’ALCO
L’ALCO défend les libertés civiles à une époque où les droits fondamentaux subissent une érosion systémique dans toutes les sphères de la vie sociale. L’ALCO s’oppose à toute décision qui prive l’individu de sa liberté individuelle ou qui l’exclut des fonctions démocratiques de la société.
 
Contact :
 
Joseph Hickey
Directeur exécutif
Association des libertés civiles de l’Ontario (ALCO) https://ocla.ca
 
Co-sponsor de l’événement :
 


Centre de ressources autochtones, Université d’Ottawa
Posted in Press Releases | Comments Off on Communiqué : Le Dr Bruce Allan Clark recevra le prix de l’Association des libertés civiles de l’Ontario 2016

OCLA Newsletter – Spring 2016

Dear OCLA Supporter,

This email is to give you an update about the OCLA’s work so far in 2016.

Letter to Ontario MPPs opposing Bill 202, “Standing Up Against Anti-Semitism Act, 2016”

On May 19, the OCLA wrote to all Ontario MPPs calling for the rejection of legislation proposing to punish participants and supporters of the “Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions” movement. An NDP MPP responded that the NDP would not support the bill, and it was killed at second reading later that day, on a vote of 39-18 against.

Our letter can be read at the following link: https://ocla.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/2016-05-19-OCLA-to-ON-MPPs-re-Bill-202.pdf

Video Interview with Dr. Bruce Clark

The OCLA has produced a must-see video interview with Bruce Clark, an expert on aboriginal rights jurisprudence and a dedicated advocate for aboriginal land rights in Canada. From defender of Aboriginal rights before Canadian and international courts to being jailed and disbarred for advancing legal arguments, Dr. Clark’s struggle is itself a mirror of Canada’s genocidal crimes.

• 5-min video excerpt: “Lawyer Bruce Clark – Canada’s Genocide”: https://youtu.be/wd-SVbA4wYM

• Full 1-hr video interview: https://youtu.be/lp97_pKafC0

Petition: “Allow Cameras in Ontario’s Courts”

“Ontarians want to see their judges in action, want to see Crown attorneys make their arguments, want to see police witnesses testify under oath, and want to see the full court procedures. Likewise, litigants in family and civil courts, many of whom are self-represented litigants, want to know that they have the security of an actual open court.”

The above quote is from our petition statement calling for cameras in Ontario’s courts, as a needed measure to improve Ontario’s justice system. Please read and sign the petition at the following link: https://www.change.org/p/madeleine-allow-cameras-in-ontario-s-courts

Intervention re: Unconstitutionality of Canada’s “Hate Speech” Criminal Code provision (R. v. Topham)

The OCLA wrote to The Honourable Mr. Justice Butler of the Supreme Court of British Columbia to argue that the s. 319(2) “hate speech” provision of the Criminal Code of Canada is unconstitutional and incompatible with the values of a free and democratic society.

Our argument centred on the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent determinations that Canada must provide at least as much protection for basic freedoms as those found in the international human rights documents that Canada has adopted. The “hate speech” Criminal Code provision does not require the Crown to prove any actual harm, and therefore fails to meet the “strict test of necessity and proportionality” set out in the international human rights documents.

You can read the OCLA’s intervention letter at the following link: https://ocla.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/2016-01-13-Letter-OCLA-re-R-v-Topham.pdf

Letters about Mohamed Harkat and Hassan Diab

The OCLA contributed letters to support campaigns about two important and deeply disturbing cases of abuse of individuals by the Canadian state:

1) OCLA letter to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness asking for a stay of the deportation proceedings against Mohamed Harkat: https://ocla.ca/ocla-letter-canadas-threatened-expulsion-of-refugee-mohamed-harkat/

2) OCLA letter to the Minister of Justice of Canada asking for the return to Canada of Dr. Hassan Diab: https://ocla.ca/ocla-letter-hassan-diab-case-and-protection-of-canadian-citizens/

Article: “Canadian Defamation Law is Noncompliant with International Law”

Dr. Denis Rancourt prepared a critical article about Canada’s law of defamation for the OCLA. The article was published online on Feb. 1, 2016, and is available at the following link: https://ocla.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/DGR-Canadian-Defamation-Law-Violates-ICCPR-for-posting.pdf

From the article:

“SUMMARY: Defamation law in Canada is contrary to international law, in both design and practice. (…) With Canadian civil defamation law, the state has unfettered discretion from an unwritten common law that provides presumed falsity, presumed malice, unlimited presumed damages, and broad gag orders enforceable by jail, using a subjective judicial test for “defamation” without requiring any evidence of actual damage to reputation. (…)”

OCLA Director Speaks at Got Law? Mini-Course and “Charter for Children” Book Launch

OCLA Executive Director Joseph Hickey was a guest speaker at the Got Law? mini-course taught by Barbara Ann Vocisano of Legal Education Consultants at Carleton University on May 3, and at the launch of the French translation of Dustin Milligan’s book series “The Charter for Children” (“La Charte pour les enfants”) at the Ottawa Public Library on May 14.

OCLA in the News

• Feb. 8, 2016: Interview re: DNA order in animal abuse case, Talk Radio AM640, Toronto: https://ocla.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/2016-02-08-Talk-Radio-AM640-Toronto-Ryan-Bonnar-DNA-dog-case.wav

• Apr. 19, 2016: Interview (in French) re: OCLA petition to allow cameras in Ontario’s courts, TV Rogers Ottawa: https://youtu.be/u1XuzHuOwqM

• May 19, 2016: “Overcoming ‘Divisive Politics of Fear’, Ontario Rejects Anti-BDS Bill”, CommonDreams: http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/05/19/overcoming-divisive-politics-fear-ontario-rejects-anti-bds-bill

Full list of media articles at: https://ocla.ca/our-work/media-coverage/

How to Stay Connected and Donate to the OCLA

Twitter: @oncivlib
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/110883345731728/

The OCLA is an independent, volunteer-run organization. Donations help cover operating costs such as booking rooms for public events, printing promotional material for campaigns and events, and paying for court filing fees and court document production costs (copies and binding) regarding court and tribunal interventions on civil liberties issues.

As we are an entirely volunteer-run organization with a very small budget, we do depend on donations to continue our work, and appreciate any contribution you can make.

Donations can be made in two ways:

1) Through Paypal, by clicking the “Donate” button in the top-right corner of https://ocla.ca; or

2) By sending a cheque to “Ontario Civil Liberties Association” to our mailing address:

Ontario Civil Liberties Association
180 Metcalfe Street, Suite 20
Ottawa, Ontario
Canada K2P 1P5

Thank you for your support!

Yours truly,

Joseph Hickey
Executive Director
Ontario Civil Liberties Association (OCLA) https://ocla.ca
joseph.hickey@ocla.ca

Posted in Newsletters | Comments Off on OCLA Newsletter – Spring 2016

OCLA letter to MPPs re: Bill 202 “Standing Up Against Anti-Semitism Act, 2016”

The OCLA sent a letter (here, and embedded below) to all Ontario MPPs this morning calling for rejection of legislation proposed to punish participants and supporters of the “Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions” movement.

The bill was killed at second reading early this evening, with a vote of 39-18 against.

OCLA letter to ON MPPs re: Bill 202, Standing Up Against Anti-Semitism Act, 2016 by Ontario Civil Liberties Association

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