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Around the blogosphere

A close call for Meryl Yourish and I don’t blame her for being freaked out. Paul recounts his struggle to explain technology to octogenarians. And Damian contemplates life on Mars. (I can think of a few people we could ship there to start colonizing the place, personally. Though I doubt if a spaceship with Michael Moore AND Pat Buchanan would make it to Mars with everyone on board still alive.)

From Israel, Harry has a prayer that you won’t find in any traditional siddur. And Allison has Hamas’s particular brand of “feminism”.

David and Lynn disagree on the appropriateness of the Israeli ambassador’s response to the disgusting “Snow White” art exhibit in Sweden glorifying a Palestinian suicide bomber. Judith posted reactions from a number of other bloggers on the same subject. And Mike Silverman has the poster that puts a whole new meaning on the closing of the Passover seder.

Have a good weekend, everyone!

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Jenny Tonge fired

Yesterday, Damian Penny posted his outrage at British MP Jenny Tonge’s comments that, if she were Palestinian, she would consider becoming a suicide bomber.

Damian was far from the only one to be outraged. Latest reports are that Tonge has been fired for her insensitive remarks:

Liberal Democrat MP Jenny Tonge has been sacked for saying she would consider becoming a suicide bomber if she were a Palestinian, remarks that caused widespread outrage.

Speaking late on Thursday, eight days after a Palestinian woman suicide bomber killed four Israelis at a Gaza Strip border crossing, Tonge said she understood the attackers’ “desperation”.

“There can be no justification, under any circumstances for taking innocent lives through terrorism,” Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy said in a statement on Friday, announcing Tonge’s dismissal as party spokeswoman on children.

“Her recent remarks about suicide bombers are completely unacceptable.”

Nice to see that at least some people in Britain still have a moral compass. I don’t necessarily agree with firing people for their comments – it has that unpleasant odour of censorship – but I do think that there are certain lines that an elected representative of the people shouldn’t cross. And Tonge crossed one of them – to a great enough degree to piss off the Liberal Democrat party enough to fire her from a job involving putting forth party views.

I wonder if Svend Robinson is paying attention…

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Heh

Israeli police have found a new way to get through the work week.

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Just butt out!

It’s National Non-Smoking Week this week, and across Canada, longtime smokers are trying to kick the habit… including two of my coworkers. Can you say stressful?

Still, I say kudos to those who manage to quit, and good luck to those who are trying. I’ve never had an ounce of willpower in my life so I guess it’s a good thing I never started smoking… mind you, giving up chocolate hasn’t proven quite so simple.

In the meantime, ever reinventing the notions of stupidity, the Ontario Lung Association is trying to get all movies with smoking in them rated “R”:

The Lung Association in Ontario is lobbying for all films that show smoking to be given a restricted rating, preventing anyone under 18 from seeing those movies.

[ . . . ]

“This would be an incentive for [filmmakers] to remove the product entirely,” said Susan Berek of the Ontario Tobacco Free Network.

Alan Goluboff, head of the Directors Guild of Canada, scoffed at the idea. He warns such a law would kill Canadian filmmaking. “The whole concept is absolutely ridiculous… placing that kind of creative restriction on the whims of an artist is dangerous.”

Sure, and while we’re at it, why don’t we institute laws preventing anyone under 18 from ever going outside, because they might see someone smoking in the street.

There’s protective and there’s just plain ridiculous. Clearly, this falls into the latter category. Maybe the message to the Lung Association need to be to “just butt out” of the movie business.

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If Canada had primaries

While we’re on the subject below, though, imagine what would happen if Canadian political parties chose their leaders the way US ones do: through province-by-province primaries.

I can just picture it now:

“…As we follow this exciting primary race for the Conservative Party nomination to Quebec, the first province to vote. In this province with a history of a politically independent spirit, the candidate who comes out ahead is not guaranteed to win the leadership, but it will surely set the tone. Front-runner Stephen Harper has elected to skip campaigning in Quebec, shoring up his efforts in his Western Canada stronghold. In the meantime, following her pledge to learn more French, outside candidate Belinda Stonach has been hitting the campaign trail hard… reportedly, she’s managed to learn one phrase: “voulez-vous coucher avec moi ce soir?”.

“…As there are only four registered Conservative Party members in Quebec eligible to vote, the votes shouldn’t take too long to count. And here are the results. Would you look at this! Stephen Harper, considered the sure front-runner, tied with Stronach with only one vote apiece. What a setback for Harper and a boost for the Stronach campaign! But the far and away winner is, with a commanding lead of two votes or fifty percent of the Quebec vote, why, it’s Moman, from La Petite Vie!

“…Next week, Ontario votes, and we will see if surprise candidate Moman can maintain his commanding lead across the country. It looks all over for Harper, though.”

Yeah, okay, primaries are a bad idea.

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My election promise

Okay people, this is it. It’s 2004. And we all know what that means: ENDLESS election coverage from our buddies South of the Border.

Right now it’s the Primaries for the Democrats. Dean versus Kerry versus Edwards versus Lieberman versus Clark versus . . . yes, I know there are more of them. But with all the analysis possible on the issues, the campaign speeches, the voting results, there’s only one overwhelming, all-encompassing truth to the process: it’s BORING as hell!

And to make matters worse, in the Primaries they go state by state. Sheesh, get it over with and pick a leader, would you?

Then, there’s the ad nauseum commentary on everything Dubya does or says, from the State of the Union address to whether he likes milk with his cornflakes, and how it will affect his re-election chances. Who cares what the polls say in January… the election’s not till NOVEMBER!!!

So here’s my promise to you. Seeing as how it’s a long way from now until November, and how practically every blogger in the blogosphere will be endlessly analysing every step of the campaign to death, I won’t. Like CHOM’s promise last November not to play any Christmas songs until a week before Christmas, I promise no US election coverage until September. None. Nada.

(Of course, if something really big happens, all promises are off, like, oh, say, Howard Dean donning a keffiyah. Oh wait, that did happen. Silly me.)

This doesn’t mean I won’t be covering US politics. That’s still fair game. But it does mean no campaign analysis, no Primary coverage, no betting on the odds and for the love of god, no mention of Al Sharpton! (After this one.)

I hope you find this a better blog because of it. And in the meantime, let’s discuss something more interesting politically… like this morning’s discussion on CHOM about whether Belinda Stronach is hot. Yes, it’s a very in-depth, mature radio morning show.

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Update on the Dollard mosque story

It seems I was right and that the issue is much more about childish personality squabbles than I’d realized:

Unfortunately, personality conflicts – chiefly involving Dollard borough Mayor Ed Janiszewski and Al-Jamieh leader Ahmad Chaar – haven’t helped matters. Janiszewski cynically says Dollard’s opposition to the mosque is open to change, but the most likely scenario for that happening, he says, would involve his own death. In other words, over his dead body will al-Jamieh stay open.

Chaar, meanwhile, didn’t help matters when he rejected executive committee Robert Libman’s offer to act as mediator, saying Libman, as a Jew, is naturally biased against Al-Jamieh. This was an unwise and unhelpful comment, especially since one of the most vocal proponents of al-Jamieh’s right to exist is former Adat Reim congregation co-president Peter Nobel.

Hmmm… trading kindergarten-level insults and being obstinate about stupidities? Are these Dollard politics or Concordia politics?

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Churchill’s parrot

I really gotta get me one of these! Immortality via pet-care (via Damian):

SHE WAS at Winston Churchill’s side during Britain’s darkest hour. And now Charlie the parrot is 104 years old…and still cursing the Nazis.

Her favourite sayings were “F*** Hitler” and “F*** the Nazis”. And even today, 39 years after the great man’s death, she can still be coaxed into repeating them with that unmistakable Churchillian inflection.

I wonder what my parrot would say. Hmmm…

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Freedom of religion

France is maybe the most prominent example in the media these days on total idiocy about the concept of freedom of religion… but there are other, smaller-scale examples closer to home.

Today’s Gazette had two stories. One was about a zoning dispute for a mosque in DDO:

Many prayers have been said at 241 Anselme-Lavigne Blvd. in the 15 years the building has had a religious function, but for the current Muslim occupants, the D.D.O. address is proving to be more of a curse than a blessing.

The Canadian Islamic Centre Al-Jamieh bought the property in December 2001 and has been fighting the borough for the right to stay ever since.

The dispute became public in fall 2002 when the borough changed the site’s zoning from residential to institutional, with the aim of moving out the mosque and putting in a day care.

Meanwhile, a group of Orthodox Jews is battling their condo association for the right to build succahs on their balconies:

Several religious organizations will side with five families as they argue that a condo rule barring them from putting huts on their balconies for about a week each year to celebrate a fall religious festival contravenes the Charter of Rights.

The case is considered one of the most significant in the court’s winter session because the outcome could determine whether private contracts can override the charter and human-rights legislation.

These two cases are quite different, of course. The first is yet another example of cities using every iota of red tape and zoning regulation at their disposal to prevent religious centres or houses of worship. I haven’t heard too many large-scale protests against churches, but a synagogue in Outremont is in an ongoing battle to expand, and the mosque in question in DDO used to be a conservative synagogue, which also went through its share of problems with the city. It seems people can only tolerate freedom of religion as long as religions other than their own are being practiced privately in a home, not publicly.

In the second case, I suppose a condo association should be allowed to have by-laws for certain things. But personal politics and petty squabbles usually play more of a role in those condo meeting votes than common sense. On the one hand, a communal succah for the building seems reasonable. But on the other hand, I’m willing to bet that the opposition to the balcony succahs has more to do with childish power jockeying than with any real concerns. Again back to Outremont, the worst case of this that I can recollect recently was a group of citizens lobbying to prevent the large Orthodox Jewish community in the area from putting up an eruv – a small, basically invisible wire that would encircle the area, allowing the religious inside it to “carry” things like baby strollers on the Sabbath. It wouldn’t have harmed anyone. In fact, there’s an eruv in Dollard but I only know about it by having been told. Nobody would notice. And yet, petty squabbles.

The concept of freedom of religion is an interesting one. It guarantees people the right to practice their religious beliefs without harassment. And it also guarantees freedom from religion to those who don’t wish to participate. That means no school prayers in public schools, no forced public worship of any kind, and basically that the government butts out. But it also means that if people want to wear symbols of faith or observe rituals, they should be free to do so, as long as they don’t compel anyone else to. If a Jewish child wants to bring Passover lunches to school for eight days every year, nobody should force him to eat bread. If a Muslim girl wants to wear a hijab to school, nobody should force her not to… assuming that nobody forced her to wear it in the first place, of course.

But how far does the public responsibility extend to ensure that people can practice their religion? Is a city obliged to rezone land to allow houses of worship to be built? Is a condo association obliged to allow succahs? What if I claimed that my own religion required me to play loud music at 2am every night and dance around in tap shoes. Would a landlord be denied the right to evict me for disturbing the neighbours?

The tricky thing about religion is that there’s no clear-cut line between legitimate, recognized religions and fringe ones. Who’s to say that a small group with 20 followers is any less entitled to the protection of the Charter of Rights than a religion with millions of adherents? What about different ideas on how a religion ought to be observed? If a Reform rabbi testified that a succah wasn’t really needed, but an Orthodox rabbi disagreed, who does the judge have to listen to? And how far is the public required to go to be accommodating? Rezoning land to build a mosque is one thing, but is a public place required to actually build and provide the prayer facilities, as student groups in some universities are claiming?

Obviously, there are no clear answers. But in these cases, we should ask ourselves about the intent of the people seking to block something. Are they doing it out of xenophobia or out of a legitimate concern? When a Sikh boy was denied the right to bring a kirpan to school, perhaps the parents who lobbied so hard against him were denying this boy’s freedom of religion and perhaps they were overreacting, but the bottom line was that their concern stemmed from the legitimate desire to protect their children against a perceived threat of a large knife being present in a classroom in the hands of a fellow student. But I suspect that the motives of the few DDO residents complaining about the mosque are not as honest. At the end of the day, I think it’s about making an honest effort to accommodate one another, to a reasonable degree. Unfortunately, the people involved in such squabbles are rarely reasonable or accommodating… and then you end up with news items like these.

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Whazzup wit dos ads?

You may have noticed some rather odd-sounding advertisements cropping up at the bottom of the comments screens lately. Things like “Vote for Bush” or “accept Jesus” or other oddities that those readers who know me would know I would NEVER endorse. It seems Haloscan is making these decisions arbitrarily and, well, I’m too cheap to pay for a commenting system to get rid of them. I’m checking into my options, but in the meantime, consider this a disclaimer that any ads showing up in the comments screens do NOT reflect the views of this website.

Chanks.

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