http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/sup...ry-minimum-sentences-for-gun-crimes-1.3031847
It took about 7 years to make illegal the punishment which was obviously 'cruel and unusual' in the first place for any sane person. How many people were prosecuted (persecuted?) based on the barbaric law during that period? Canadian 'democracy' at work...
In this case it's all about real crimes which should be prosecuted - it's just the punishment that was way unreasonable. C-36 is different: it's all about persecuting knowingly innocent people for consensual sex with adults based on a bizarre extremist ideology, which never had any roots in this country. The fate of C-36 is easily predictable - it will be quashed by the Supreme Court as unconstitutional... well... in a number of years. So for the time being the inherently persecutory 'law' is aimed solely at persecuting a clearly identifiable group of people for something as innocent as adult consensual sex. Should the UN definition of a convention refugee now include this category?
My point is: how come it takes so long to get rid of something obviously and knowingly unconstitutional (or even outright criminal) in a supposedly 'democratic' country? And how come there is nothing in place to prevent the corrupt government from easily implementing knowingly unconstitutional 'laws'? If a proposed law is so controversial, why can't it be reviewed by the Supreme Court BEFORE in comes in force?
It took about 7 years to make illegal the punishment which was obviously 'cruel and unusual' in the first place for any sane person. How many people were prosecuted (persecuted?) based on the barbaric law during that period? Canadian 'democracy' at work...
In this case it's all about real crimes which should be prosecuted - it's just the punishment that was way unreasonable. C-36 is different: it's all about persecuting knowingly innocent people for consensual sex with adults based on a bizarre extremist ideology, which never had any roots in this country. The fate of C-36 is easily predictable - it will be quashed by the Supreme Court as unconstitutional... well... in a number of years. So for the time being the inherently persecutory 'law' is aimed solely at persecuting a clearly identifiable group of people for something as innocent as adult consensual sex. Should the UN definition of a convention refugee now include this category?
My point is: how come it takes so long to get rid of something obviously and knowingly unconstitutional (or even outright criminal) in a supposedly 'democratic' country? And how come there is nothing in place to prevent the corrupt government from easily implementing knowingly unconstitutional 'laws'? If a proposed law is so controversial, why can't it be reviewed by the Supreme Court BEFORE in comes in force?





