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JimG
Guest
From the most recent e-letter from Deal Hudson (concerning Canada):
Church officials are concerned that they will be vulnerable to lawsuits when priests refuse to marry homosexuals. There’s already been a lawsuit against the Knights of Columbus in British Columbia in which a lesbian couple accused the Knights of discrimination because the local KOC chapter refused to rent them a hall for their wedding reception.
Indeed, several weeks ago Canadian Justice Minister Irwin Cotler said that he cannot guarantee full protection to religious organizations that refuse to marry homosexuals.
Some gay activists in Canada are promoting the idea that the Catholic Church should lose its tax-exempt status.
You don’t have to commit an act of violence in Canada to be guilty of a hate crime. You only have to be guilty of publicly inciting hatred (Section 319). The law states further that if you make statements in a public place which incite hatred against an identifiable group in such a way that there will likely be a breach of the peace, you can be arrested.
Take the case of Bill Whatcott, a Canadian pro-life activist who heads a group called Christian Truth Activists. The Saskatchewan Human Rights Tribunal told him to stop distributing literature describing gay marriage as sodomite marriage, and he refused. Whatcott’s flyers were termed “offensive” and an “affront on the basic tenets of our society, which is about multiculturalism, tolerance and peaceful co- existence”, according to Steve Camp of the Edmonton police hate crimes unit.
Church officials are concerned that they will be vulnerable to lawsuits when priests refuse to marry homosexuals. There’s already been a lawsuit against the Knights of Columbus in British Columbia in which a lesbian couple accused the Knights of discrimination because the local KOC chapter refused to rent them a hall for their wedding reception.
Indeed, several weeks ago Canadian Justice Minister Irwin Cotler said that he cannot guarantee full protection to religious organizations that refuse to marry homosexuals.
Some gay activists in Canada are promoting the idea that the Catholic Church should lose its tax-exempt status.
You don’t have to commit an act of violence in Canada to be guilty of a hate crime. You only have to be guilty of publicly inciting hatred (Section 319). The law states further that if you make statements in a public place which incite hatred against an identifiable group in such a way that there will likely be a breach of the peace, you can be arrested.
Take the case of Bill Whatcott, a Canadian pro-life activist who heads a group called Christian Truth Activists. The Saskatchewan Human Rights Tribunal told him to stop distributing literature describing gay marriage as sodomite marriage, and he refused. Whatcott’s flyers were termed “offensive” and an “affront on the basic tenets of our society, which is about multiculturalism, tolerance and peaceful co- existence”, according to Steve Camp of the Edmonton police hate crimes unit.