France Considering New Laws

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France moved yesterday towards the creation of a new law which would make sexist or homophobic comments illegal and forbid job discrimination against homosexuals.

After a muddled late-night debate, in which a number of governing-party deputies made starkly homophobic declarations, the National Assembly gave a second reading to a bill that would create a “high authority” to fight discrimination of all kinds. The bill, which will become law if approved unchanged by the Senate, the upper house, later this month, extends existing penalties for racist abuse to all insults made for reasons of “gender or sexual orientation or handicap”.

If the bill is passed, anyone found guilty of making such remarks, verbally or in writing, would risk a one-year prison sentence and a fine of up €45,000 (£31,000). The law, which would make penalties against homophobia and sexism stronger in France than almost any other EU nation, has been pushed very strongly by President Jacques Chirac.

It was, however, stoutly resisted by right-wing members of the President’s own centre-right party, the UMP, one of whom said that he could see nothing wrong in homophobia.

Christian Vanneste, the UMP deputy for the Nord département (the Lille region), said that the idea of making “homophobia” illegal was a “contradiction in terms … This will bolster the notion that homosexual behaviour has the same value as any other kind of behaviour, when, in fact, it is obvious that it is a threat to the survival of humanity.”

Christine Boutin, another UMP deputy who has campaigned against homosexual rights, succeeded in persuading deputies, against the advice of the government, to amend the draft law to add insults against “the handicapped”.

Mme Boutin’s intention was, in part, to imply that homosexuality was a kind of handicap. In the context of a law also forbidding sexist insults, the amendment could also be read to imply that to be a woman is also a kind of handicap.

news.independent.co.uk/europe/story.jsp?story=591175
 
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cestusdei:
The PC crowd will be the death of me someday…literally.
I remember a young Karol Woytla responding to veiled threats smiling and saying “well we’ve been in the catacombs before” - there are days when I think we’re heading directly for them.

Around the same time frame a visiting Irish prelate quietly asked him if there was any “future” for the women’s ordination movement, and the response was “It’a long, Long Way to Tipperary”. I always thought that summed it up pretty much.
 
France and the rest of “Christian” Europe are an embarassment to the faith. These once devoted people now attend Mass in smaller numbers than we do in the USA. Also, countries such as Italy have such a low rate of live births that their identity is in danger. More and more workers must be brought in from other countries to just carry on the routine work. Europe use to send Catholic Missionaries all over the world, now Europe needs to bring in missionaries from all over the world.

Deacon Tony
 
Deacon Tony560:
France and the rest of “Christian” Europe are an embarassment to the faith. These once devoted people now attend Mass in smaller numbers than we do in the USA.
Deacon Tony
Do you have a link for the statistics of Mass attendance around the world?
 
A so-called “patients’ rights” bill will allow French doctors, acting at the request of patients and their families, to end medical treatment that is seen to be maintaining life artificially.

The bill, called by French lawmakers a “passive” form of euthanasia, is not, they insist, similar to the situation in the Netherlands and Belgium, where doctors are not prosecuted for actively ending the life of a patient. In the case of the French law, the measure deals mainly with acts of omission, CNS News reported.

newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/12/13/120827.shtml
 
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