I’m with Tarek Fatah on this one!

I have long held that it is simply wrong for people to have multiple citizenships and that we must put a stop to it.

In my never-humble-opinion, it is not possible for a person to be loyal to multiple countries.  Sure, they may be allies now, or they may share a monarch at this time, but that does not mean they always will.  If you don’t wish to pledge your loyalty exclusively Canada (and her queen), then we can do without you, thank you very much.

Canada is a great country and people from all around the world wish to move here.  We should be able to select only those new immigrants who are willing to repay Canada by pledging their undivided loyalty to her!

And it does not matter what race or creed (or absence of creed) they are, as long as they are indeed willing to accept our secular laws as fully binding on them – and only if they are willing to be bound by our secular laws!

There are many Muslims who are fleeing from the political system known as Sharia:  there is a big difference between Islam as a religion, and Sharia.

Sure, ‘Sharia’ is known as ‘Islamic law’ – but Sharia as such is a political and judicial system derived from Islam, the religion.  And just as not all Christians are adherent to the Roman Catholic canonical interpretation of Christianity and would never wish for a return to the days when the Roman Church imposed its laws on all the poor souls trapped under its tyranny, so many Muslims do not wish to live under the yoke of Sharia.  And just like we do not permit those who wish to return to the days of the Holy Inquisition to impose Christian laws on other Christians, we should not permit those who wish to live under Sharia to impose Sharia rules on other Muslims!

And one of the core tenets of Sharia is the complete rejection of secular laws in favour of forcibly imposing Sharia on all – Muslims and non-Muslims alike!

We do not permit religious laws to trump our secular laws – and we should not import immigrants who will not respect that – much less ones who openly promote the supremacy of religious laws over secular ones and intend to impose them on others.

Regardless of which religion those laws are derived from!

And, our law-enforcement agencies must not fail to protect anyone, regardless of race or creed or gender, from another person or group of persons who are breaking our secular laws.  That is what rule-of-law and equality-before-the-law mean, and we must never forget it or violate these principles in the name of political correctness, for the fear of offending one special-interest group or another, or indeed in the name of ‘keeping peace’.

Because in the long term, the only peace that will be left if rule-of-law is not fully and equally implemented will be the ‘peace of oppression’.

 

 

Bob Corn-Revere on Defending Student Speech and the Hayden Barnes Case

Gavin Boby spoke in in Ottawa tonight

Thanks to CAIR-CAN’s protest against this event, Gavin Boby’s talk in Ottawa tonight was well advertised – so, together with some 60-80 other Ottawans, I decided to go check it out.

And, we were not disappointed.

Though I missed the protesters outside, I spoke to others who got to see them being interviewed by CBC.  I guess that a February night in Ottawa with temperatures well below -20 degrees Celsius, most outdoor protests will tend to be brief and limited to the length of the interviews…

Mr. Boby spoke for an hour or so and then took questions from the audience.  I will write it all up for tomorrow, when I hope Vlad Tepes will have a teaser video up.

Let me just say that it was a very positive message of reasoned restraint and the rule of law to maintain civil society. He unequivocally condemned anger and hate as motivators. If you happen to find yourself in Montreal on Tuesday, the 5th of February, 2013 or in Toronto on Wednesday, the 6th of February 2013, it is definitely worth it to go hear Mr. Boby speak.

UPDATE: Here is Brian Lilley interviewing Gavin Boby:

Walter E Williams – A Philosophy Of Self-Ownership

ReasonTV: Nanny of the month – January 2013

 

Canadian Constitution Foundation: First Nations taking feds to court

Thomas DiLorenzo – Why The Constitution Had To Be Destroyed

Gates of Vienna has a new home!

This blog – which is most informative about anything political Islam related – has been having trouble at its old home, the Google-run ‘Blogspot’.

It now has a new home!

It’s no longer so easy to shut up dissenting voices….

H/T:  BCF

ReasonTV: Feds Hounded ‘Net Activist Aaron Swartz, Says EFF’s Parker Higgins’

January 18th is ‘Freedom of the Internet’ day: remember Aaron Swartz

Unless you are plugged in to the ‘geek’ community, chances are you have never heard of the brilliant Aaron Swartz, his activism or how he was hounded to death by malicious US prosecutors who wielded the power of the broken US justice system as a club.

I have been racking my brains for days how to write this story, because it is an important one and it needs to get out.  But, I also wanted to make sure that I connected all the dots that, in my never-humble-opinion, need connecting.  I still don’t know how…so I’ll take the brutally honest approach, simply sketching out the ‘skeleton’ and then supplying the links to flesh it out, because otherwise, this post would be a book, not a post…

1.

When you ‘steal’ something, you deprive its rightful owner of its use.  As in, if someone steals your car, you can no longer use it for transportation.  But, if you make a copy of something, you are not depriving anyone else of the use of the original.  Sure, you may potentially limit their ability to monetize it in the future and laws covering that may be necessary.  But, it is not the same action and must not be treated as equivalent.

2.

In the past, the way a person monetized their ideas was by charging for the ‘vessels’ or ‘containers’ which were the only means of distributing the ideas themselves.  As in, a person would not be paying for the ideas themselves but for purchasing the book in which these ideas were contained. In the digital world, this system is not functional and it is unreasonable to attempt to cripple the internet in order to superimpose the outdated means of monetizing ideas onto it.

3.

It is my philosophical position that ideas are not ‘owned’ by anyone – that their existence is independent of us and that to ascribe ‘ownership’ to them in any manner is immoral.  As such, I think that all – yes, all – copyright and the very concept of ‘intellectual property’ are fundamentally wrong and any laws on this very subject are immoral and must be fought against.  Yes, I suspect I am more extreme in my position on this than most people and am rather in line with the ideas of the Church of Kopymism.

Aside:  Not finding what religions are ‘officially recognized as religions’ in Canada on our government’s website, I’ve called around to the relevant government departments and talked to many of the civil servants in the ‘appropriate’ departments.  I know they were the ‘appropriate’ departments because the other civil servants bounced me there…  And, the most informed civil servants on this issue have told me that the Canadian Government does not itself ‘officially recognize’ individual religions:  rather, if something is officially recognized as a religion anywhere on Earth, it is automatically recognized as a religion in Canada.  That means that since Sweden has recognized ‘The Church of Kopymism’ as an official religion, it is legally recognized as a religion in Canada.  This means, of course, in no uncertain terms, that all Canadian laws that restrict the free sharing of information are in direct conflict with our freedom of religion laws.

Why?

This position may seem extreme, but it has taken me many years and much thinking to arrive at it…and the ‘why’ is, perhaps, the most important reason for me taking such an extreme position…

So – why?!?!?

Because it is precisely by the use of laws – any laws – which assign ‘ownership’ to ideas, by enacting and then protecting these laws that our freedom of speech will be limited in the age where most of our communications are internet-enabled.

Please, think about it – I will not go further into this because I consider it self-evident.

In other words, I consider freedom of speech to be a necessary pre-condition (not the only pre-condition, but an essential one) for a free society.

Societies are built through communication.

The most powerful tool of communication ever build is the internet.

Therefore, communication over the internet MUST be free.

It is a pre-condition for us to live is a free society.

Which brings me back to Aaron Swartz.

I think that most people truly and honestly do not understand the salient point he was attempting to make…

Please, bear with me because I think this is very important.

Older scientific papers were in the public domain:  that means that the information they contained was ‘public’ and no longer copyrighted.  Spreading the information contained in these articles was 100% legal.

The problem was that this information was contained in physical journals – the ‘vessels’ I ranted on above.  So, a company decided to digitize them.  Perfectly legal.  They digitized them, housed them on their servers and made them searchable, so that the information contained therein would be easily accessible.  All this work of digitizing and storing and managing the ‘free information’ costs money – and so that company charged money to access their database of this ‘free information’.

They charged different organizations different amounts:  so, an educational institution in Africa would have free access while universities and colleges in richer countries would have to pay. But, once the college or university paid the fee, all its students and staff would automatically be lawfully allowed to access this information for free.

Aaron Swartz was one such person:  he had full free access to all these articles, because he was affiliated with an educational institution that subscribed to this database.  So, he had full, lawful access to this database and all the information in it.

So, he accessed it.

But NOT through the ‘regular’ path.

Instead, he went to a different educational institution, one which also had prepaid access to this database, and downloaded the articles through them.

Consider the implications:  a person who has legal access to public domain information downloaded it through an organization that had legal access to this public domain information – he just did not do it through the organization he belonged to.  (Important point – once an organization paid for access, they no longer had to pay ‘per article’ – so nobody was monetarily disadvantaged by this action.)

This, apparently, is a crime so severe, the prosecutors were seeking to put him in jail for 35 years!!!

This is not a joke!

The company that had digitized the information and from whom Aaron Swartz downloaded it did not want to press charges:  they may have been annoyed, but they did not think any crime had occurred.

Yet, this apparently merited longer jail sentence than rape, murder and terrorism would have earned him.

And people wonder why hactivists are trying to bring attention to just how misguided our laws are?!?!?

Also, if you take the time to read the links below, note not just what is being reported, but how…

OK – that was the ‘skeleton:  here are links to some of the articles about Aaron Swartz.

Federal justice and Aaron Swartz’s death

Aaron Swartz: Idealist, Innovator—And Now Victim

Was Aaron Swartz stealing?

Aaron Swartz’s reckless activism

I conceal my identity the same way Aaron was indicted for

Law Professor James Grimmelmann Explains How He Probably Violated The Same Laws As Aaron Swartz

There’s more, much more….

So, today, on what OpenMedia terms ‘Freedom of the Internet’ day, please, do take a moment and think about it all..

UPDATE:  US Senator Cornyn Questions Holder Over Death of Reddit Co-Founder Aaron Swartz