12. Dec. 2014, a Concerned Taxpayer will be at the Elgin St. Court House – seeking justice, again…

From my inbox:

Invite For Concerned Taxpayers:

On December 12, a concerned taxpayer will convince a Superior Court Judge to make a judicial notice of the legislative fact that the Metrolinx Act grants freedom of choice to TTC and OC Transpo to agree or not agree to Presto.

Upon success, this declaration would be used to prosecute the Ontario Government for taking away that freedom of choice by threats of injury of loss of gas tax, subway and LRT funding. Entering any Court room is 2 (Crown and Court) against 1 (Taxpayers), this  reality is not a reason to do nothing to stop an ongoing crime against taxpayers.

In over 20 Court proceedings, no judge has said or written that this fact commonly known to the community is not a breach of the criminal code.

Lets hope December 12 is independence day for taxpayers!

If you can, come out and show your support.  The show is scheduled to get going at 10 am, but if my previous experience is anything to go by, it will be difficult to locate the courtroom and there will be some waiting to be done…

Justice delayed, and delayed, and delayed…

What It’s Like to Be an Atheist in Palestine: Waleed Al Husseini spent 10 months in prison for being an atheist

We must do all we can to protect religious minorities – and areligious minoritites – living under the yoke of totalitarianism everywhere.  Liberal and free thinkers in the Muslim world are a case in point.

‘I was beaten by prison guards who demanded to know who had made me write against Islam. In their minds, I could only say these things as the result of some plot, some conspiracy. The idea that I might simply want to express my independent thoughts was alien to them.

The 10 months I spent in Palestinian prison were the worse of my life. I faced constant pressure to retract my statements. I was told they had removed my blog and that I must apologize for publishing it. Even once I was freed, I was told I should never again use the Internet, nor meet with the media.
For months after my release, I was harassed by the security services, who further interrogated me and detained me without cause. I received letters from people saying they wanted to kill me.’

Read the rest here.

It takes no courage to speak up and repeat the popular points of view:  we must give absolute protection to freedom of speech even to those voices we disagree with.  And we must support people willing to speak up, even at personal risk, whether we agree with them or not!

As for regimes that limit and oppress freedom of speech:  we must fight them every step of the way!