Judeophobia: coming to your neighbourhood

MEMRI TV has compiled this videodocumenting the rising antisemitism and Judeophobia:

Disgusting…

We cannot pretend that it is not happening.  The best way to fight back against bigotry is through education and by publicly exposing what is happening.  A good place to start is by watching ‘Unmasked:  Judeophibia’.  Here is the trailer:

‘Unmasked:  Judeophobia’ will be shown worldwide:  check to see when it is coming to your neighbourhood.  In Ottawa, the movie will be screened during the 2nd annual Freethinking Film Festival on November 13th, 2011: here is the flyer.

It is easy for prejudice to spread.  Only by exposing it for what it is will we be able to challenge it.

Chivalry is well and alive in Ottawa

At the beginning of September, my friend was hit by a truck while she was riding on her motorcycle.  Both of her legs were broken, one of them very badly, requiring surgery.  As she cannot drive, I have been coming with her to her medical appointments.

Today, we were going to the Ottawa hospital to decide if she needs another skin graft.  Usually, by mid-morning, all the hospital parking lots are full.  As one of these was closed for re-paving, the parking situation was much worse than usual.  It took a while, but I did find a spot about 4 blocks from the hospital.

After the appointment (which went well – she is healing faster than expected), we were returning to the car:  she held my purse as I pushed her wheelchair, making jokes about pushing her around…   It would have been a very enjoyable walk/roll, had cold drizzle not began to fall on us a block into out stroll.  I wanted to return her to the hospital and fetch the car myself, but she would have none of it.  I may push my friends around every now and then, but always in the direction they want!

My friend has a very excellent sense of humour.  You know that proverbial line that people don’t cross?  She thinks it is the ‘start’ line!  Put that together with my superior punning skills and even cold rain cannot dampen our spirits.

There we were: I, limping down the street pushing my bff in her wheelchair (both legs in cast-type-thingies), cracking jokes as we are being drenched by freezing drizzle…

As we were crossing the street, we noticed a charming gentleman looking at us:  he had that puzzled expression on his face that I have often noticed in people who are wondering if they should speak to strangers or not…like, as if they think they might know them from somewhere but aren’t sure and can’t make up their minds whether or not to speak their thoughts aloud.

Then he did something very simple yet noble.

He offered to give us his umberella!

This stranger empathized with us and, even though he was going in a direction opposite to ours, he offered to shelter us from the cold rain, simply for the reward of doing something good for other human beings.  (At this point, we were mere meters from our parking spot, so it was a mute point – but he did not know that!)

Random acts of kindness like this restore my faith in the human race.

The ‘Warman v. Fournier’ court hearing for a motion in the copyright infringement lawsuit

It has taken me more than a week to write this up – my apologies.  I was hoping the decision would come soon and that I would be able to report it along with what I had witnessed in the courtroom.

This was a hearing for a motion in the lawsuit that Richard Warman is bringing against the Fourniers for infringing his copyright on 3 grounds:

  • inserting an ‘inline link’ to a picture of Richard Warman (the picture remained on Mr. Warman’s site and under his full control, including the ability to remove it and/or to block inline links to it)
  • re-posteing a newspaper article which Mr. Warman had subsequently acquired copyrights of in an out-of-court settlement (the article was re-posted before Mr. Warman had copyright control over it and was removed as soon as his lawyers had demanded this)
  • posting public court documents which included sentences from the abovementioned article as part of the public record

The full background to this post is here.

The motion hearing was my first experience in Federal Court – so far, all my spectating has been done in Ontario Provincial Court.  I must admit, the atmosphere is a bit different, the security a bit more along the lines of what one might expect.  The courtroom, however, was not at all equipped for spectators:  instead of the benches with built-in headphones (for translation, if the case was being tried in French), 10 office chairs were placed along the back wall of the courtroom, appearing more as an afterthought than anything else.  Most of these were occupied by people waiting to present future cases – their particular type of grooming suggested they were lawyer-types and/or their aides.  I would appear to have been the lone spectator on Courtroom #2 that October 6th morning.

The motion hearing was presided over by the Honourable judge R. Aronovitch.

Mr. Richard Warman was represented by the ever-charismatic Mr. Katz.

Mrs. Fournier spoke on behalf of herself and her husband, as they were representing themselves.

This was not a long hearing:  each side made a short presentation of how they saw the situation and an even shorter rebuttal.

(As it is easier to follow what happened if I focus on each thread of the argument and follow it rather than report on the proceedings sequentially, I will jump back and forth in time in order to follow each ‘thread’.)

Mr. Katz was the first to speak; he was presenting the reason for this motion:  Mr. Warman had filed the copyright lawsuit against the Fourniers and they had filed their statement of defense (OK – there are proper legaleese terms for these, but I am not trained in the law whatsoever, so, please, do not take what I write as anything more than an untrained person’s observations – and if you can correct me on some points I got wrong, please, I would be grateful if you did).

When the Fourniers filed their statement of defense, this document included some phrases that, according to Mr. Katz, were irrelevant and prejudicial – and which should, therefore, be removed from their statement of defense.  If I recall  Mr. Katz’s words correctly, their primary argument was that these paragraphs (named in the motion) are clearly not relevant and are simply character assassination of his client.

Mr. Katz asserted that some of the these paragraphs are describing actions of third parties and not those of Mr. Warman, others are simple hearsay and would better be addressed in the cross-examination rather in the submission.  There was a little back-and-forth with the judge on the salient points of hearsay and cross-examination.

Mr. Katz also said that Mrs. Fournier had originally agreed to longer cross-examination time, then reneged on her word:  Mrs. Fournier seemed surprised by this claim and said she is agreeable to setting the cross-examination time to whatever length the judge would like to specify.

The Fourniers’ main argument was that it was best left up to the judge who would preside over the lawsuit itself to read the evidence and then to decide what is and what is not irrelevant.  Removing the offending paragraphs earlier would prevent the judge from making that decision – and this is why it should all be left in.

Mr. Katz said that the Fourniers were making claims that by bringing this copyright infringement lawsuit is somehow an abuse of judicial process, that he is being disingenuous and harassing them – when his client is only trying to protect his rights to the literary work (the article).  He charged that it was not his client but the Fourniers who were abusing the judicial process by trying to have this motion dropped.

Mrs. Fournier defended their position by pointing out that Mr. Warman had initiated 64 lawsuits/actions similar to this one, several of these against themselves, many still under way.  It was important to their defense to paint a complete picture of Mr. Warman’s activities related to these lawsuits/actions, including his openly and publicly stated desire to sue people he finds annoying.

(If I am not mistaken, the phrasing was somewhat along the lines that the more annoying Mr. Warman finds someone, or the more fun prosecuting them would be, the higher up his target-list they get moved up, regardless of anything else.  However, the website which documented this quote, along with many other things related to Mr. Warman, has recently been shut down.  This makes it impossible for me to verify the precise wording and reference it, as I normally would.  My apologies.)

Without presenting this full picture, including speeches to radical and militant groups with history of lawlessness and violence, it is impossible to demonstrate how Mr. Warman’s current activities follow the pattern of ‘maximum disruption’ which he has publicly ascribed to himself – and which include the subversion of the courts to promote his own political agenda. (Again, I am paraphrasing, but this, to the best of my understanding, is the main thrust of the Fourniers’ argument.)

It is always difficult for lay people to represent themselves in court.  As such, Mrs. Fournier explained that she put great weight to what the opposing counsel said.  When he had sent them the notification that some parts of their statement of defense were inadmissible from a legal point of view, she gave it great credence.  However, she thought it integral to their case to let the judge who will hear the case see all the evidence and decide for him/herself.  Yet, she never doubted the opposing counsel’s word:  which is why she was surprised to see that only some of the paragraphs that Mr. Katz had told her were inadmissible were no longer being objected to on these grounds.  If they were legally inadmissible at one point, as he had advised her, why were they acceptable now?

At this, the judge leaned forward and asked for clarification:  did Mrs. Fournier mean that there was a difference between what was originally asked to be removed from the record, and what was actually included in the final motion?  Yes, that was it:  only some of the phrases/paragraphs that were in the original motion to strike from the record were in the latest draft, others were no longer being objected to.  This seemed to intrigue the judge – but I am not certain what the legal impact of this difference would be.

Mr. Katz did not, to the best of my recollection (and notes), address this point very clearly.  There was another point which had been raised at that moment which seemed to occupy his attention:  it was to do with costs and Mr. Katz’s role in them.

There is a rule (404, unless I am mistaken) which states that if the opposing counsel makes some mistake which ends up costing people money, then that opposing counsel must pay those costs.  Not the client, but the counsel.

The Fourniers claimed that there was some sort of an irregularity in how they had been served with this lawsuit:  an irregularity which cost them money and which was Mr. Katz’s fault.  If I understand this correctly, this irregularity was also a subject of a complaint the Fourniers lodged with The Law Society of Upper Canada, the body which licenses lawyers to practice in Ontario.

Mr. Katz responded that the complaint was trivial and was dismissed without him having to even attend to it.

Mrs. Fournier disagreed with that, stating she had correspondence from the Law Society of Upper Canada which stated that they will only attend to the complaint based on what the judge’s ruling will be:  if the judge will rule that the irregularity had indeed been Mr. Katz’s fault and awarded Fourniers financial compensation for the damages,  they would look into the complaint.  So, in her words, it was not dismissed but rather will either go forward or be dismissed, based on what the judge finds in the courtroom.  Since it relates to the costs in the lawsuit, it will have to be the judge in this case whose opinion will determine how the complaint proceeds.

Mr. Katz was very focused on this part of the discussion, though he did not seem as cool and collected as he usually appears in the courtroom.  He seemed downright anxious – and, who would not be, with such a serious charge against him?  Once the topic of this irregularity and its consequences was brought up, he focused most of his attention and arguments in that direction.

This was a very interesting – if short – courtroom appearance.  All was over by 10:20, less than an hour from when it started.

To recap:

Mr. Warman charged (through his lawyer, Mr. Katz) that much of what was in the statement of defense was irrelevant and prejudicial and should be excluded from court documents.  The defendants are abusing the judicial process by including inadmissible statements in their statement of defense.

The Fourniers defense had 3 parts:

  • Mr. Warman wanted relevant information taken off because he did not want his own words which demonstrate his record of bad behaviour to become part of the public record and thus widely known
  • in order for his actions to be fully understood, Mr. Warman’s doctrine of ‘maximum disruption’ must be part of this record to demonstrate how he is abusing the justice system to promote his political aims
  • the reason Mr. Warman wants this evidence suppressed is because by having it stricken, he is obliquely depriving them of evidence they had planned to use in their defense in 3 other lawsuits which Mr. Warman has launched against them.

All the evidence should be left in:  if the judge decides it is irrelevant, it can be removed at that point.  This decision should rest with the judge.

We certainly live in interesting times!

CodeSlinger speaks out!

CodeSlinger had left a comment on a post about the ‘Occupy Toronto’ demonstration which I think deserves a post of its own:

Xanthippa:

By contrast, I found the crowd at Occupy Victoria very receptive to my libertarian message.

I didn’t go there to speak. I went to find out, first hand, what these people want. And what I discovered was… they haven’t got a clue.

I heard a lot of crowing about coming together, and a lot of whining about being oppressed, but no one had any idea what to do about it.

I didn’t go there to speak. But I couldn’t help myself.

So I spoke to the crowd about the importance of individual rights and freedoms.

The kind of rights that have nothing to do with what’s written on some piece of paper.

The rights we are born with. The rights nobody can take away from us.

The crowd applauded enthusiastically.

I remarked that we had heard a lot about tyranny and abuses of wealth and power.

But none of these abuses would be possible if we lived in a place that respects the inalienable rights and freedoms of every individual.

The crowd cheered wildly.

I said that we had heard a lot about collective action and direct democracy.

But a collective is made of individuals, and democracy is nothing but mob rule unless it respects the inalienable rights and freedoms of every individual.

The crowd roared its approbation.

I told them that this is the underlying cause and cure for all the diverse concerns of the assembled people.

This is what unites us.

This is the one thing we all need. We need to take back our –

Inalienable. Individual. Rights and freedoms!

And to do that we must set our government one simple task:

Protect the equal rights of every individual equally!

And beyond that – leave us the hell alone!

The crowd thundered unanimous agreement.

I didn’t go there to speak. But I’m glad I did.

Because it proved that these people are not as stupid as they are made out to be. They know truth and sense when they hear it. They just don’t hear it very often.

I went there to find out what this movement is all about.

I came away absolutely certain that now is the time to clearly and forcefully bring the libertarian message to the people of Canada.

The people of Canada are more than ready to hear it.

BlazingCatFur: the one sane man in ‘occupy Toronto’ protest

Plus – he has a loudspeaker!

And HE IS RIGHT!!

UKIP’s Nigel Farage on the Slovak ‘no’ vote

Brian Lilley interviews Bill Whatcott

The Fourniers will set another Canadian legal precedent

It is the nature of laws – at least, in free societies – to be passed in response to new developments in society.  That is why, in the common law tradition, legal precedents affect not only how old laws are applied but also how new laws evolve.

This creates a feedback mechanism:  the laws affect how the rules of society evolve, the rules of society affect how the laws evolve.

Currently, the courts are trying to interpret the existing laws to accommodate the changes due to our ‘communications revolution’.  Since more and more of our public and private communication as well as our public and private information is online, the impact these ruling will have over the coming decades is truly profound.

This makes Connie and Mark Fournier’s ongoing legal battles very important to all of us:  if you are reading this on a computer, then the rulings in their legal battles will affect the rules under which you live your life.  And not just in Canada – the world is fast becoming one electronic family and slowly but surely, internet-affecting legal precedents set in one Western country reverberate in the whole world.

That is why I have started to document the Fourniers’ legal journey – even though I have no legal training and my understanding of what is being said in court is imperfect.  But, if I document it to the best of my ability, perhaps others who are more knowledgable will be able to comment  on what I have witnessed and explain it better to all of us!

Last week, the Fourniers were in Federal court in Ottawa – charged with copyright infringement by Richard Warman.

To my mind, some of the things the Fourniers are charged with are difficult to understand – but one of them is very clear and will very likely set the legal precedent for Canada on a very hot topic: ‘inline linking’.  The legal precedent on copyright issues regarding the insertion of an inline web link has been ruled by the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, clarifying that inserting them does not violate US copyright laws.  For search engines, anyway…

There has not been a comparable ruling in Canada – yet.

Richard Warman has brought a lawsuit against the Fourniers for violating his copyright in 3 separate ways.

One – and, perhaps most important regarding the abovementioned legal precedent – is for having permitted the insertion of an ‘inline-link’ on the Free Dominion forum they operate which linked to a picture of Richard Warman, on his own website.

In other words, the picture was always posted only on Richard Warman’s own personal website and he had full control over it.  An inline-link was posted on Free Dominion which would show the reader Richard Warman’s picture from Richard Warman’s site.  The picture was, at all times, on Mr. Warman’s server and under his complete control – he could have, at any time, blocked inline-linking to the picture…yet he chose to permit inline-links to the picture to function.

Inserting the inline-link on Free Dominion, according to Mr. Warman’s claim, constitutes displaying his image without permission and thus infringes on his copyright.

Therefore, the ruling on this will have important implications for internet use in Canada, perhaps further.  Should the ruling go against the Fourniers, then any time anyone inserts a hot-link when they comment on something on a blog or site you control, you could be liable for copyright infringement.

The other two counts of copyright infringment Mr. Warman is suing the Fourniers for are regarding words, not images, and words which were posted on the Free Dominion site and not words that were simply linked to.

Jonathan Kay had written an article for National Post in which documented how, at various court hearings, it was revealed that Mr. Warman appears to have made some highly inflammatory racist, misogynistic and anti-immigrant comments (specifically targeting Senator Anne Cools) on a white supremacist website/forum.  (I myself have heard the same assertions during the ‘Vigna v Levant’ defamation hearing, where Mr. Levant had clarified that to the best of his knowledge, it was not Mr. Vigna but rather Mr. Warman who was the card-carrying member of a neo-nazi organization and the author of this most vile hate speech directed against our first black female Senator.)

This newspaper article was re-printed (with credit – but it was not stated during the hearing if fully or partially) on the Free Dominion forum.

Mr. Warman sued the National Post for publishing that article and the National Post and he reached an out-of-court settlement with them.  As part of this settlement, Mr. Warman got the copyright of the article.

Once he owned the rights to the article, Mr. Warman’s lawyers contacted the Fourniers and demanded that they remove the article from their website.  This they complied with immediately, as was confirmed by Mr. Warman’s lawyers.

Despite this, at some subsequent time, the Fourniers were contacted by Mr. Warman’s lawyers and were requested to pay some sum of money to Mr. Warman to avoid a lawsuit for having posted the article in the first place.  The Fourniers believed that they had complied with the request to remove the offensive material in a timely manner and therefore did not think they were obligated to pay any money as well.  Subsequently, Richard Warman filed a copyright violation lawsuit against them on these grounds.

The last, third count of copyright violation has me puzzled more than the previous two.

The Fourniers had posted on Free Dominion sections of court documents – public documents, to the best of my knowledge – which had contained the phrases on the basis of which Mr. Warman was taking legal action against someone (the phrases he had found offensive) which had also been published in the article from point two.  Even though the Fourniers had clearly published these phrases as part of a public document, as they were also part of the article which Mr. Warman’s lawyers asked them to take down, Mr. Warman had charged them with copyright infringement for having posted them.

This, in a nutshell, is the background to this particular lawsuit Mr. Warman is pursuing against the Fourniers.

The Fourniers had filed their defense statement with the court – representing themselves.  Mr. Warman’s lawyers had informed the Fourniers that some of the things which they listed in their documents were inadmissible in court and asked the Fourniers to remove them.  The Fourniers refused to do so, because they believe this information to be relevant to their defense and would like the judge in the case to be the one to decide what is admissible and what is not.

Mr. Warman’s lawyers then filed a motion to have parts of the Fourniers defence statements struck from the record (not all the bits they had originally wanted removed, but still a significant amount)- something the Fourniers believe will affect their defense not only in this copyright violation lawsuit but also in three additional lawsuits (for defamation, I believe) that Mr. Warman is pursuing against them.

Last week, there was a hearing in federal court for this motion – a most interesting event in its own right (which I had gone to see for myself and will write up very, very soon, I promise!).

Thunderf00t: My real name is…

This is disgusting!

Yes, there are some people who abuse anonymity on the internet.

Then there are others who eschew it – they believe that attaching their real-life name to an online communication will add weight and respect to it.  This is, to some degree, true:  if their real-life name has some earned public credibility, attaching it to their online persona will add credibility to the online persona.

BUT!!!

Name is just a label.

If a person has built up his or her credibility using an online persona – truly built up credibility – by time and time again providing solid, verifiable, quality information, then their real-life name is really quite irrelevant.

To the contrary:  it is a very useful shield!

Journalists who publish in traditional media have an organization that stands behind them and offers them at least a modicum of protection should they become threatened by those who wish to silence them.

Online communicators do not have this luxury!!!

But ‘online’ is not the beginning of ‘anonymous protest speech’!

No, nowhere near…  Even the most basic bit of research into the history of anonymous protest speech demonstrates brings us to Colonial North America.  Printing presses were used to print anonymous pamphlets which were distributed and which informed the public of facts that the government did not want known and which fostered the atmosphere necessary for the fight for independence.

In fact, most of the works by America’s Founding Fathers were originally published as anonymous pamphlets!

So, let’s not go down the role of silly posturing:  anonymity is essential for free speech!

(Sorry if I am not particularly coherent in this post – I am so angry as I write this, I can hardly keep myself calm enough to type!)

To hear that Thunderf00t’s real-life name has been ‘outed’ by an Islamist group (which claims to be made up of ‘moderate Muslims’), that his job has been threatened, that his address has been published – and now, that his family members are being threatened with physical violence…THAT IS AN OUTRAGE!!!!

I guess all we can do is spread the word…

…and hope for the best.  Because I am at a loss for what else to do to help him.

 

P.S.:  It took me a second viewing to pick up pn it, but it does seem that the online Islamists just may have attracted the attention of ‘Anonymous’.  THAT would be interesting, to say the least!

Salim Mansur: ‘Delectable lie’

In September 2011, Dr. Salim Mansur came to Ottawa to launch his book ‘Delectable Lie a liberal repudiation of multiculturalism’.

I went to hear him speak, and ever since, I have been waiting for the video of the event to be posted on YouTube because Dr. Mansur expresses what is wrong with multiculturalism so eloquently and he delivers his words so passionately that I could not wait to post the video and share it with everyone!

There is a lot I would like to say – but Dr. Mansur does it better!