Sunday, May 11, 2008

Mark Steyn defying the Canadian thought police

Mark on Hugh Hewitt's show:

"I’ve got, as you know, these outstanding human rights complaints. Ontario, which ruled that it didn’t have jurisdiction to try Macleans Magazine and myself, nevertheless said you know, we don’t have jurisdiction to toss these guys in jail, but we would if we could. That was absolutely extraordinary. They said if we had put this on a sign rather than in a magazine, they would have jurisdiction to prosecute us. So I actually, I’ve actually taped the magazine article to a sign, and I’m going to deliver it to the Ontario Human Rights Commission, and invite the relevant thought police to actually go ahead with their threat. I mean, if it’s just the medium, I say bring it on, as John Kerry would say.

Source

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Go Mark Go!

Mobius

PS, when convicted, give our your prison ID, so we can send you care packages

Anonymous said...

Remember when Canada used to be a free country?

Anonymous said...

Civil Disobedience takes a turn. College degree owning white men are, after all, a minority, and becoming more so each year. There is nothing new here, just plain old Tyranny of the Majority.

Anonymous said...

Situations in Canada had gone way out of hand. In where special interest groups were given special treatments, while people who are economically challenged and poor are being squeeze non stop.
Canadian government has a long history of treating its citizens badly. But they would cater to gays, Muslims, terrorists, sickoes, weirdoes, perverts, slanderers, hate mongers, douchebags and so forth,
at the same stamping out any dissenting thought.
A different viewpoint is death for those who dare to think.
Cultural genocide and killing off undesirables are two of many tools of the socialist tactics.

Anonymous said...

They don't actually want to censor Steyn, it's all the little people they want to intimidate.

Anonymous said...

Oh, and don't forget to also include a French translation on the sign, Mark. You wouldn't want to run afoul of the French Language Police, would you?