Thursday, October 22, 2015

“CANADIAN MASS MEDIA ACCOMPLICES OF CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY”

Toronto Sun has hidden the article Of Michele Mandel: "Death footage seen" of Thursday 22, 2015                                                                                         CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM AND THE STRUGGLE AGAINST IMPUNITY...                                                        Again the circus of
impunity has started, with the mainstream media manipulating the public opinion, the judicial system with 13 honorable jurors very well selected, a "Honor's Roll" that are debating inside of the courtroom of the impunity, and a family who is grieving and desperately is claiming justice for his son.   


                                  THE NAZIS AND THEIR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
 Like in the Nazi Germany the Gestapo feared police, were given huge powers to commit all kinds of crimes. Likewise in Canada the Toronto police have developed a policy of intimidation, fear, brutality and death. The public execution and tasering of Sammy Yatim by Officer James Forcillo and his partner proves the murderous instinct of the Toronto police officers. How are they trained to commit heinous crimes; and the manner that the Toronto police force administrates the law with their own hands? 


                                                         

Saturday, October 17, 2015

"Canadian Justice System Is One of the Most Corrupt in the World"


As long as the Canadian justice system; is founded on injustice, the rule of law should be uphold fairness. But when the judges they are more unfair and sadists in the courtrooms, more respectable would be seem. 
- Nadir Siguencia 
 
Bikos 1
Professor Toth
Sociology 3360F
December 14, 2013
The Canadian criminal justice system prides itself on its adherence to the rule of law and unbiased justice for all within a framework of integrity and tradition. Law enforcement is an integral part of the criminal justice system, the current principles of which were created within a structural functional framework in the 1950’s era that considered social order as the most valuable norm to society. The structural functional framework works within the ideology that if one part of the system is broken, then the system as a whole is dysfunctional. Structural functionalists believe that in response, the system will morph into a new, improved version that will resolve any apparent dysfunctions. It is clear that society’s norms and values have changed since the 1950’s, as evident in evolving gender roles, increased cultural acceptance, and tolerance. Why then has the criminal justice system, well documented in its continued support of
White male domination, been so slowly to catch up with new social norms? This essay will examine the systemic structural problems inherent within the policing system of Canada and the pervasive inequality and corruption that it perpetuates. I will examine the variables of public perception, along with police deviance and culture to outline a framework response around the issue of structural deficiencies and its prevention of social equality within the Canadian criminal justice system. 

Friday, October 16, 2015

“There is no more dangerous menace to civilization than a government of incompetent, corrupt, or vile.” - Ludwig von Mises



The best way to perpetuate poverty is by spending on arms and military, and the best to fight terrorism is by fighting the basic needs of humanity, because hunger and poverty perpetuate crime.
  .- Oscar Arias

Opinion / Readers' Letters

Refugee crisis: charity begins at hom

Re: Academics urge ‘radical expansion’ of refugee aid, Oct. 13
Academics urge ‘radical expansion’ of refugee aid, Oct. 13
In the same issue of the Star where a very small minority of “academics” call for expansion of Canada’s dollar commitment to bring more people here from Syria, there is an article that states that “here” we have between 9 per cent and 29 per cent child poverty.
I live in Toronto. Every day I see homeless persons – men, women and sometimes children – begging for money. Again, begging for money. Thin emaciated, with rotting teeth, from poverty. Behind the Eaton Centre, in the shadow of a church, are the names of homeless persons in Toronto, who died on the street, many without identity on them, unknown persons. Many frozen to death.
At times it feels like I am in the Rohinton Mistry novel, “A Fine Balance.” Not to mention the deplorable conditions for Canadians on reserves.
A different approach to the refugee crisis would be for Canada to put pressure on countries around Syria to accept more refugees. For example, how many have been accepted by Saudi Arabia?
The balance of what would have been spent to bring and resettle hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees to Canada could then be used to eradicate poverty and homelessness in Canada. For our own citizens, no less.
I am an academic and I do not urge radical expansion of refugee aid before a radical expansion of aid to Canadian homeless persons and a radical expansion of aid to Canadian persons living in poverty.
Small groups of “academics” led to sign petitions, do not speak for the majority of “academics,” nor for the majority of Canadians. And they most certainly do not speak for me.
Mario C. Estable, Associate Professor, Department of Biology, Ryerson University
The 400 protesters correctly state that “offering aid to displaced people [is] written into Canadian DNA” and cited how we helped fleeing Hungarians, Czechs, Vietnamese and Kosovars.
To that list we can proudly add what our ancestors did, at great risk to themselves, to rescue slaves via the Underground Railroad.
Terry Poulton, Toronto
Four hundred academics are asking for substantially more aid to refugees. At the same time, the headline of the GTA section of this newspaper reads that “one in four children live in impoverished households” in Toronto.
There is a saying in French: “Charité bien ordonnée commence par soi-même.” The message is clear: aid should be given at home first. A government’s responsibility is to its own citizens first.
Likewise, let the oil-rich Middle Eastern countries look after their own.
May I suggest to those academics that they are welcome to look after the refugees themselves.
Claude Gannon, Markham
Thank you Joe Fiorito. Stephen Harper’s inability to bring Syrian refugees under threat of death to Canada now reminds me of our government turning back Jewish refugees during World War II. Have we learned nothing about how to treat minorities?
C. Roach, Toronto