Yeah, all is well there, isn't it? A bastion of peace, tolerance, diversity and unity, eh?Quote:
Originally Posted by NeedKarma
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Dog lovers mistaken for abusers
A dog-loving Chinese-Canadian couple are pleading for understanding after a case of mistaken identity has left them dealing with threatening and racist phone calls...
"I'm scared," said Qing Li, 35. "People leave the message, say 'Go back to your country,' and then many of the bad words I can't say. So I'm scared. Why? ... I didn't make the mistake, I didn't make the trouble."
University of Windsor student Qu Li is accused of choking, kicking and slamming a four-month-old Husky puppy, hurting the dog so badly that it had to be euthanized.
But Qing Li and her husband, who live on Randolph Avenue, have nothing to do with the alleged animal abuser -- other than a common country of origin and similar initials. "I don't know who the heck he is," said Chen, 45.
One of the obscenity-laden messages left on the couple's answering machine on Tuesday told them: "You're not gonna live to see the (expletive) light of day tomorrow... You just see what happens to you tonight, (expletive)."
Another male caller stated: "I know where you live. I'm coming over to your house, and I'm gonna bring a shovel and beat you with it."
A female caller said that "if you're the Peking that beat the dog, go back to your country. You don't know the laws in this country. Go back to your country and stay there. We don't want you here... Go back to hell."
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REAL Women Demands Canadian Taxpayer Funding of Obscene Films Must Stop
Bill C-10, an omnibus bill of amendments to the Income Tax Act, contains a government proposal to amend the Income Tax Act that would allow the Heritage Ministry to withhold federal tax credits to Canadian film and television projects it deems offensive...
"No other industry has ever enjoyed such carte blanche immunity from corporate responsibility and public accountability," she said in a Globe and Mail report.
She explained that the film American Psycho, based on the book of the same name that "was considered a how-to manual for convicted serial killer Paul Bernardo, received $120,000 in Canadian tax credits."
In a report by the Hill Times, Rev. Charles McVety of the Canada Family Action Coalition warned the Conservative government that it will "pay a price", in the way of a grassroots rebellion, if it gives in to pressure from the film and television industry and amends or waters down its provision to deny government tax credits for offensive screen productions.
"If they want to capitulate to David Cronenberg so that he can make a few hundred more million dollars, then they don't deserve to be in government and they won't be in government for very long," Rev. McVety told The Hill Times. "If the government loses common sense and says that, 'We're going to continue funding films such as "Young People F-ing" and other such movies,' then they will pay a price for that. That's not good government and the grassroots will rebel."
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India lodges protest with Canada
India has lodged a very strong protest with the government of Canada over letting Indo-Canadians to organise a Baisakhi parade where Indira Gandhi's assassins were glorified. After the Congress and other parties expressed their shock and horror over the parade, New Delhi today (April 15) lodged a formal protest with the Canadian authorities.
Minister of State for External Affairs, Anand Sharma said, “Well I have conveyed to Canadian Minister of Sate for External Affairs, Helena Georges India’s anguish and concern over the parade that took place in the city of Surrey and the fact that assassins of the Late Prime Minister and beloved leader, Indira Gandhi were glorified in the posters and were declared martyrs.”
Charge Canadian polygamists to protect childrenQuote:
More youths in gangs
Less than 48 hours after Toronto Mayor David Miller launched a national push to have handguns banned by the federal government, his city recorded three more shootings.
Elsewhere last week, Calgary police appealed for tips following two shootings that injured two young men.
Neither shooting was a random act, Calgary police said, summing up the gunplay as just the latest example of the "blatant disregard gang members have for innocent members of the community who could have been hit by errant bullets."
Michael Chettleburgh, author of Young Thugs: Inside the Dangerous World of Canadian Street Gangs, warns of a rise in the number of young people joining gangs and says the increasing gunplay on Canadian streets is a symptom of a burgeoning drug trade.
Disgruntled Chinese Rally in Ottawa
Yet another Indo-Canadian youth dies in gang violence
And of all things...
We should be changing hockey; the violence is so unCanadian