You forget that the people writing these Bills are all trained in legal writing to some extent. They know, or ought to know, better than to use multiple words to convey the same meaning. When they deviate from this convention, it is almost invariably with some ulterior motive.Using "unborn" in place of "preborn" is one issue. That you connected that issue with (your argument) that (paraphrasing) "therefore it is a foundation for future anti-abortion legislation" is false.
In this case, as I've already stated, the term "preborn" is used exclusively by anti-abortion advocates — in fact, they coined the term. So anyone attempting to give that particular term legislative credence must inherently have an anti-abortion agenda, especially considering the term "unborn" already exists in the legislation to say the same thing as "preborn" is being used to say in this Bill. It makes no sense to include new terminology unless there is an intent for that terminology to take on a different meaning from the existing terminology.
These people clearly want their term codified in law so that it is available for use in future legislation, and the most effective way to do so is to introduce it in a piece of legislation, like C225, that is inoffensive to the layman, who does not understand these particular nuances of law.
I have made no arguments as to what would convince people to accept the Bill. Most people, of all political stripes, oppose legislation on the basis of political bias. They don't typically read legislation. Even if they did, they have little to no training in reading legislation, so they might think that the use of terms viewed as effectively synonymous in a non-legal context is not an issue. The fact is, their perception of the legislation is based on what their trusted sources tell them the legislation says.I can say that with a fair degree of certainty because, I suspect that those opposed to C225 would still be opposed to it (on erroneous grounds of "abortion rights") if the Bill actually used the term "unborn" instead of "preborn". I would wager (if I were a bettting man) that you would also agree that such would be the case (i.e. those opposed to C225 would oppose it regardless of word choice). So, with respect, your argument is one of pure semantics for the sake of saying "you are wrong" while making a false assertion that word choice (i.e. "preborn" instead of "unborn") would assuage those that opposed the Bill.
In the case of C225, those who support pro-choice policy were told the Bill is a backdoor to anti-abortion legislation. There's a tidbit of truth to that, but it's mostly a misrepresentation of the Bill's content. This is a common tactic of the NDP and Liberals — overblow a minor point of contention to kill the whole Bill.
On the other hand, conservative sources often outright lie about the content of opposing legislation. See the claims that the Online News Act censors social media. Having read the Bill, all I saw was social media companies being forced to abide by the Broadcast Act and pay content creators for the use of their content. There is nothing unreasonable about this, and nothing that censors media. The former, in particular, is sound competition law — forcing a level competitive playing field in which all competitors are subject to the same regulations, rather than some having a regulatory advantage, in which case government would then be picking winners and losers. It is Facebook's PR team that has created the narrative of Canadian media censorship under C18, as it has chosen to sell Canadians that messaging in order to protect its profit margins. Facebook has an internal policy to fight all regulation. The reality is that, if there are any issues caused by C18, they stem from the Broadcast Act and the CanCon regulations that have been made under that piece of legislation, but the anti-Trudeau crowd don't want to hear that — and make no mistake, I am no fan of Trudeau myself, but you won't catch me voting Conservative, particularly given the current iteration is dominated by the former Reform Party (Harper was one of the original group of PC members to defect to the party on its founding, and Poilievre got his start in politics selling Reform memberships for Jason Kenney's campaign to run as the party's candidate in the 1997 election).
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