Posted: Sat May 06, 2006 6:29 pm
[QUOTE BY= Marcarc] There is no such thing as 'racism' under the canadian criminal code. I can be as racist as I want to be, that's part of the price of living in a free country. Perhaps you are thinking of this:<br />
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" s. 181 of the Criminal Code, which provides that "[e]very one who wilfully publishes a statement, tale or news that he knows is false and causes or is likely to cause injury or mischief to a public interest is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment . . ."<br />
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No, I'm thinking of sections 318 and 319. "Hate speech"<br />
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318. (4) In this section, "identifiable group" means any section of the public distinguished by colour, race, religion or ethnic origin.<br />
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319. (1) Every one who, by communicating statements in any public place, incites hatred against any identifiable group where such incitement is likely to lead to a breach of the peace is guilty of:<br />
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<a href='http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/c-46/41491.html'>Link</a><br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
I don't give a rat's ass who locks the threads, or even if they do, this is not personal. It was StThompson who locked the other thread, and there was no 'racism' evident there at all. There is one or two lines where that idea can come from, but as said, the lines have more to do with immigration than race, and anybody doing research on Canada's immigration policies knows there is LOTS there that deserves to be openly discussed. <b>But if every time it is brought up, somebody says 'that's racist', then clearly it won't go far.</b><br />
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And that's exactally my point here. Susan felt that thread was racist, as did I. I saw no point in dignifying that thread with a response, and the editors did recieve complaints about that thread. So, Susan locked it.<br />
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It's not personal, I'm just trying to establish ground rules for everyone. Because a couple words can be attributed to standard 'white power' mantra, does that make the person racist? Does that make the comments they made racist? Does every post by that particular person need to be moderated as such in the future?<br />
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We can't have discussions about racism and how to combat it without using such words, just like we can't have discussions about political ideologies if people consider that the discussion about those ideologies is directed at the people who practice them, and thereby to be racist. Non-sequitr.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
"Anglosphere" is far from improper english, it is very common usage among white supremacists and racists, just type it in your browser and see what comes up.<br />
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Be that as it may, does that make the rest of his argument irrelevant? In order to be considered <a href='http://www.vivelecanada.ca/multifaq/index.php?topic=&qt_id=105&getlevel='>unacceptable</a> it needs to meet certain criteria. He may have used "Anglosphere. That portion of the world community that speaks English and subscribes to certain principles of law and human rights." but that does not provide the pre-requisite discrimination because it is defining a certain population or area of the world.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Whether moderation means actively closing a thread or just making the mention that it is racist-or even borderline racist, after the site just went through a two week period where 'moderation' was everywhere seems worthy of mention. [/quote]<br />
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Again, my point. A couple words and phrases does not make this thread racist. It still goes back to intent, and all I see is someone who, while possibly misguided in other areas, just wants to discuss his love of democracy vs the portrayal of opression represented by fundemental Islamists that the movie "Flight 93" highlights.<br />
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And, yes, heavy moderation does tend to come in cycles. We try not to be overbearing, but with the whole 'Census' thing, we needed to be squeaky clean from a legal standpoint. By promoting and allowing the promotion of total non-compliance with the Census this month, we may be opening ourselves personally to charges of promoting the comission of a crime. Vive needed to be absolutely beyond reproach everywhere else.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
I got suspended for just saying the word "locked", which has nothing to do with racism at all. <br />
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Racism? I was hoping you understood what happened there. If you go out in public, dressed in an RCMP uniform, driving a reproduction police cruiser and start arresting people - it's not a joke. While I and everyone else knows you were kidding, someone else didn't think you were. Determining it's not a joke by the written word is much more difficult that the case of the fake police officer. There had to be limits set to maitain the trust and integrity of the moderators here by the general readership. That's why you were asked to stand in a corner for a while.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Like I said, everything can be open to interpretation, I can make derogatory remarks about any race and claim its just 'bad english'. As said, the difference is in the threads that get locked, and the ones where nothing is said at all. [/quote]<br />
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No, as above, derogatory remarks about a particular 'race' are quite clear. The difference in these threads<br />
is no one chose to dignify the other one with a response.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Even terms like 'islamofascists' are convenient uses of racism. <br />
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Again, you may choose to equate 'Islam' with Arabs, and therefore with a particular 'race', but I've known many muslims who weren't Arab, therefore I don't make that connection. Just as I don't equate 'english' with 'caucasians'. I also don't subscribe to the concept of 'race', as it's simply a social construct used to describe people with general physical attributes, nothing more.<br />
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I use 'Islamofacism' as a description of a particular political ideology and the people who wield it over others, not of the people who are subject to it.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Freedom fighters are of course exactly what the term denotes, they fight for freedom. You fight for freedom with whatever means are necessary. <br />
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Uhhh, no. 'Freedom Fighting' is as you say, fighting for one's freedom. 'Guerllia Tactics' are what is used when one is fighing a vastly superior force. When you start using 'whatever means nessecary', you cross the line away from 'Freedom Fighter' to 'enemy of the people'.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
If civilians are killed, then a muslim knows they are going to heaven- people DIE no matter what, its just a question of when and how.<br />
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As above, when 'whatever means nessecary' becomes 'Ok to target non-military targest, civillians, women, children' then it's a line that shouldn't be crossed. <br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
If in a war zone those fighting against occupiers had to make plans of "OK, we'd better use tranquilizer darts in case some civilians are hit because we need their sympathy", that would be stupid. The occupiers are under no such guidelines and during the advance killed indiscriminately. [/quote]<br />
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Please see: Geneva Convention.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
The argument also misses the key point that we have no idea what goes on in these countries, we get news through numerous filters, most of which are heavily editrialized. [/quote]<br />
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You may get your news filtered (although not near as much as you might suspect), but I have 'inside lines'.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
In Afghanistan just about every attack and suicide bomber has been going where troops are, not in crowded marketplaces killing children. [/quote]<br />
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To their credit, they are following the 'Freedom Fighter, Guerella Rules'. They see what is going on in Iraq, and how it's turning the Iraqi people against their own. The troops know they are targets. It's the civillians who should be left alone.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
If you even think you have any idea of what 'hamas' is about, clearly you've never been to Palestine and know only what you read in newspapers.<br />
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Hehehe. Well I was going to leave this subject well alone, because I don't believe ethier side is has any moral high ground to stand on, but let me say: no one has been to palestine, because no such place exists.<br />
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I have been to Isreal, and you're right, no one here can comprehend what it's like to be there. Myself included. But Isreal, unlike Hamas, is not calling for the genocide of an entire people.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Again, its all interpretation, you may call people 'islamists' who want occupying forces out, and may see it as a distortion of the quran, but I'm thinking you haven't actually READ the quran. <br />
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I have, translated in English. My Arabic, what little I have, sucks.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
There is no 'theory' of pacifism in there. The term islamist makes no sense, I don't even know what it means, every muslim is an islamist.<br />
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Traditionally, the follower of the religion 'Islam' is the 'Muslim' (eg: Judaism - Jew, Christianity - Christian). The 'Islamist' refers to the hard line Muslim, those who follow a rather extreme interpretation of the Q'uran. (Shi'ite vs Sunni) eg: a womans hair should be covered exept in the home, vs A woman must be covered totally, even the ankles, and escorted by a male family member when outside the home. Since the Q'uran says 'To kill one innocent man is as bad as killing all of mandkind' and 'to be tolerant of the christian and the jew' (forgive the paraphrasing here, I'm a little rusty) but it also says 'to kill an infidel [unbeliver] is riteous' one could say these are conflicting ideologies; one calling for pacifism and harmony, the other to kill any non-muslim on sight.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
As far as the concept of suicide missions, just because 'our' side doesn't call them that, doesn't mean they don't exist. <br />
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Again, because the odds of survival are low, does not make it 'suicide' or that soldiers don't perform selfless acts in their service (falling on a grenade to protect their comrads, for example). The difference, is the mission is not intended to be a one way trip, and a sucessful outcome is where the soldier does return. Homicide bombers have no such intention.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
It comes down to a question of odds, if you are dumb enough to think that the odds of you dying in your car in the morning, are about the same as advancing across a field in a war zone to gain a stronger position, then clearly there is no arguing with such delusions-or paranoia, depending how scared you are of your car in the morning.<br />
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Having been in the Balkans, and Edmonton rush hour, I'd give you better odds in Serbia. I've nearly been rear-ended by gravel trucks several times this spring.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Take during the second world war, there are even more examples in the first world war, in fact the first world war was literally suicide mission after suicide mission.<br />
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That was normal warfare, for those times. Just like the advancing line of riflemen was standard tactics in the 1700's until the invention of the Tennesee Sniper.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Extreme numbers of soldiers were needed because of the new use of the gatling gun. ...<br />
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Again, examples of old tactics. But still not 'suicide' missions. <br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
In the british military even during the second world war you had a guy whose only job was to carry a flag and walk in FRONT of everybody else. When he was shot, then another soldier dropped his weapon and picked up the flag and continued on. <br />
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Yep. The piper, and the flagbearer go back thousands of years in combat. But times change. Just as the Lancer obsoleted the Cavalry rider, thngs change. You won't find the front line piper post WWI.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
Man, if THATS not suicide we've got very different ideas of what suicide is.<br />
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Being a symbol of courage for your comrades has come a long way. But strapping explosives to your chest and walking into a crowded market is still my definition.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
During the second world war, here's how british infantry was done. ...<br />
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No, you're thinking 1st WW. That type of trench warfare ended the day Canadian Generals commanded Canadian troops, and we invented the 'creeping barrage'. Look it up.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
I think I heard one canadian soldier was killed with an axe, but that might not be true. <br />
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It's not. He lived. He was negotiating with the villiage elder, and took of his helmet and set down his gun as a sign of good faith and respect. One of the villiage teens hit him from behind with an axe. Since nothing happens in small villiages without the knowledge and permission of the elder, then the elder knew it was coming. Not friendly at all. So, the teen was of course worm food (should not have brought a knife to a gunfight). But the villiage is now no longer a stop for relief supplies.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
In Palestine it is far more common because these people are outside a giant wall and literally have no way to get at the people opposing them. So again, 'suicide missions' are not relegated to islamic groups, they have a LONG history. [/quote]<br />
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Indeed, they do. However, not so far back as 'the Art of War'.<br />
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[QUOTE BY= Marcarc]<br />
The difference in the west is simply in semantics and idealogy-they didn't TELL the soldiers it was suicide, which perhaps says a lot about it.[/QUOTE]<br />
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No, your incorrect. A soldier is told (in Western armies anyhow) the odds of survival, and asked to volunteer. Typically.
Take the Kama Sutra. How many people died from the Kama Sutra as opposed to the Bible? - Frank Zappa