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Get writing!

July 10, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

The Constitution of the Order of Canada states that any Canadian has the right to make a request to consider the termination of an appointment to the Order of Canada:

A request to consider the termination of an appointment to the Order of Canada may be made by any person in writing to the Deputy Secretary, The Chancellery. After review, if the grounds for termination are considered to be insufficient or spurious, the Deputy Secretary, after consultation with the Secretary General of the Order, will send a reply to the person who made the request to that effect.

The Council is obligated to consider the request if the person in question has been convicted of a criminal offence, and/or has been sanctioned in the past. We all remember Morgentaler’s 10 month stint in jail, don’t we?

If you’re a Canadian, it’s your right to send in an official request. The Council has to respond personally to every Canadian who sends in a request regarding the termination of Morgentaler’s Order of Canada nod.

Get Writing!

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Morgentaler, Order of Canada

Are we starved for leadership?

July 6, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

CTV’s Question Period hosted a discussion between MP’s on the topic of Morgentaler’s Order of Canada appointment. (To watch the clip, scroll down to the bottom right, and click the link.)

Liberal MP Martha Hall Findlay expressed her approval, claiming Morgentaler is “someone who has challenged assumptions; has contributed to the evolution of Canadian society.”

We are a better country for having people willing to stand up…We are better off having people willing to challenge those assumptions. It’s not a question, in fact, whether you agree with the underlying piece or not. I am a huge supporter of anyone willing to stand up and do exactly this.

Wow. Anyone? I can name a few people who’ve stood up — changed perceptions within a nation and contributed to an evolution of their society — whom I’d never call myself a huge supporter of. Names like Adolf Hitler, Tomas de Torquemada, and Genghis Khan come to mind.

I’d boldly argue that the underlying piece indeed does matter a great deal. With a mentality like Findlay’s, not one of us would care where Canada was going, as long as it had strong leadership taking it there.

Obviously, Findlay couldn’t possibly mean what she said. Had she meant it, she would not have begun her rant by emphasizing that “we’ve had the [abortion] debate” already. Clearly, she’s not a ‘huge supporter’ of pro-lifers who are ‘willing to challenge…assumptions’ about abortion.

_____________________________

Andrea adds: All we need are really, really strong leaders–on the one hand it almost rings like a call for dictatorship, as you mention, Tanya. On the other hand, it means we just don’t need Martha. Because she is not willing to comment on the underlying issue–read be a strong leader–for fear it might alienate voters. (Then again, perhaps she did comment, after alll. “The debate is over,” is code for I’m happy with the status quo.)   

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Martha Findlay, Morgentaler, Order of Canada, Question Period

Too good not to share

July 6, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

When it comes to the manner in which Morgentaler was handed his Order of Canada, many cringe (among a ton of other things) at this:

The selection committee even managed to craft Morgentaler’s citation without using the word abortion. He was chosen “for his commitment to increased health care options for women, his determined efforts to influence Canadian public policy and his leadership in humanist and civil liberties organizations.”

There you go, who’s against “increased health care options for women?”

Nothing brings this home like a good old Canadian simile. Read this one on Facebook.

I don’t understand why people try to pussyfoot around the issue. Morgentaler is abortion plain and simple. Not debating the abortion issue over this decision would be like not mentioning coffee and donuts when describing Tim Hortons to a foreigner. They are integral and connected at the very core of the issue.

I know, weird analogy… but you see my point.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Facebook, Morgentaler, Order of Canada, Tim Horton's

Didn’t agree with much

July 4, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

But, within this opinion piece, I did agree with the ending sentiment:

The Order of Canada has over 3,000 living members… Let’s see whether any of these other accomplished individuals care more about what we’re endlessly told is the “taking of human life” than they do about that adorable little metal snowflake in the drawer.

Easy for me or anyone else to say, though, especially when we don’t actually have a medal. Mind you, I’m quite certain I know what I’d do…

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Morgentaler, Order of Canada

A man always finds a reason

July 4, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

My French-Canadian grandfather was always a great resource for the best figures of speech. One of my favorites is “Un homme trouve toujours une raison pour tuer son chien.” (A man always finds a reason to kill his dog.)

In other words, if you want someone hanged, you’ll find something to accuse them of, no matter what.

It just so happens those sought after accusations were a matter of public record in the case of Father Lucien Larré. Though he was awarded the Order of Canada for succeeding “beyond measure in restoring the lost to their rightful place in society,” many seem to be focused on the fact that he has some questionable moments in his past.

Larre said any controversy in his past bears little relation to Morgentaler’s fight for abortion rights.

Two things:

First, Father Larré is fully aware of his own past. Yet he dared to have a light shone on him by being (what I hope will be) the first of many to send back his Order of Canada medal. An assault charge dating back over 30 years ago could have been enough to paralyze him from protesting as he did. We hear one motivational speaker after another tell us not to let our less than perfect pasts get in our way, yet as soon as we see someone put that into practice, as Father Larré has done, we hang him.

Second, I’m not in any way defending Father Larré’s past mishaps. I don’t think anyone needs to, nor do I think we need to hold them up on a scale next to the actions of anyone else. Someone awarded the Order of Canada should be held to a higher standard, but purely on the basis of whether they have left Canada in a better state than they found it. This is precisely why Morgentaler’s award is so controversial. It is absolutely debatable that he’s done any good for Canada. The award makes it out that abortion on demand is a good thing; it assumes the debate is closed. Pish-posh! There is hardly any sort of national consensus to that effect.

As more members of the Order have the courage to send back their medals in protest of the Morgentaler fiasco, they also should expect to have their less that spotless pasts put on display. A word to all you honourable members, inducted by unanimous decision of the committee: Please don’t let any of that stop you.

______________________________

Brigitte is rolling her eyes all the way to her shoulder blades:

Larre was awarded the Order of Canada in 1983 for founding the Bosco Homes for emotionally disturbed and addicted adolescents. He was later convicted of assault and administering a noxious substance, but pardoned for those crimes in 1997. [emphasis added]

He said the assault charge stemmed from an incident in 1974, when he slapped a 19-year-old woman trying to have an affair with a 14-year-old boy under his care. The other change came from an incident when he and a nurse told three teenagers to consume various unidentified vitamins, sugar pills and placebos in an effort to teach them about drugs.

Personally, if an adult was trying to mess with a minor in my care, you bet I’d do something about it. Not sure what to think of the second affair, about the pills, but hey. I have very little experience dealing with “emotionally disturbed and addicted adolescents” so I hesitate to second-guess. In any case, calling Father Larré a “child abuser”, as I am told some pro-choicers are doing, is way over the top.  

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Lucien Larre, Morgentaler, Order of Canada

Mailing back his medal

July 4, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

Is this the first of many?

Lucien Larre, a Coquitlam priest who received the Order of Canada in 1983 for his work with emotionally disturbed and addicted youth, put the award in the mail Wednesday in an envelope addressed to Governor-General Michaelle Jean.

“I wanted to protest to the committee, because when we have the Order of Canada, it has to be given to people that most Canadians can admire and look up to,” Larre said, explaining that many including himself view abortion as murder.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Lucien Larre, Morgentaler, Order of Canada

Apes to gain human rights

July 3, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

Here in Canada, the elitist opinion is loud and clear. Fetuses are nowhere close to being human.

Meanwhile, in Spain, apes are being ascribed “some statutory rights currently applicable only to humans.”

The resolutions, which passed with cross-party support and are expected to be approved as laws by the full parliament within a year, are based on the Great Ape Project, a framework designed by scientists and philosophers who believe that humans’ closest biological relatives deserve the right to life, liberty and protection from torture.

What a world… what a world.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: apes, human rights, Spain

An ABC original scapegoat debut

June 27, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

I mean, ‘original series debut.’ (Wow, those Freudian slips really sneak up on me sometimes.)

‘The Secret Life of the American Teenager‘ premiers this Tuesday on ABC Family. To summarize:

Good-girl band geek Amy is smart, talented…and pregnant. Super-Christian cheerleader Grace wants to wait until she’s married. As their secrets start to spread to the parents and to friends like bad-boy Ricky and wild-child Adrian, everyone’s secrets and stories start to come to the surface.

Having a field day blaming Juno, Jaime Lynn Spears, and Angelina Jolie for the increased rate of teenage pregnancy as of late, these same finger pointers are sure to make this new show the scapegoat of choice, especially if it’s a hit.

Funny thing is, for every finger you point at someone else, there are three pointing back at you (bet you never heard that one before).

Not to be outdone, NBC will present a new reality series this fall. Based on a British show by the same name, ‘The Baby Borrowers‘ is the result of a collaboration between The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy and the television network.

Remember when reality TV was just about getting voted off? Ah, the good ol’ days!

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: The Baby Borrowers, The Secret Life of the American Teenager

Obama: Something begins at conception, Part II

June 27, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

Well thank goodness I’m not the only one who found Obama’s Father’s Day speech contradictory. Tony Perkins of The Family Research Council poses this question in a 30 second ad:

If, as you say, fatherhood begins at conception, when does life begin?…If I became a father at conception, when did Samuel here [points to baby in his lap] become my son?

Between you and me, the question sort of answers itself, don’t you think?

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCm8a5e47Kw&eurl=http://www.frcaction.org/]

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Family Research Council, Obama, Tony Perkins

You call them pollsters, I call them something else

June 24, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

NARAL released the results of what they consider a poll last week. I’ve always understood a poll to be a collection or sampling of opinions. NARAL may have been giving more opinion that they were hoping to collect.

Here are the descriptions used by the pollsters in survey calls made to women between May 29 and June 8:

Obama: “Barack Obama believes that the decision to have an abortion is profoundly difficult for women… As president, Obama… will work to reduce unintended pregnancies through prevention and education…”

McCain: “John McCain is pro-life, and on the issue of abortion, he opposes a woman’s right to choose… As president, he will nominate Supreme Court judges who will vote to overturn Roe v. Wade…”

Doesn’t Obama sound like a stand-up guy, full of proactive ideas? Meanwhile, McCain comes across like a stuffy politician, in the worst sense of the word. Imagine what a pro-life group with as many scruples as NARAL would come up with. Reminding women of Obama’s support of late-term and partial-birth abortion, using terms like ‘killing unborn children,’ would definitely be a priority.

Alas, a pro-life group would never get away with it. But NARAL seems to. We aren’t plagued with this sort of double standard in Canada, are we?

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: NARAL, Obama, poll

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