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Human rights protections raise new questions for freedom of speech

Photo: Alternative libertaire/flickr

David Bromwich, the incisive American scholar, says free speech has always been an aberration. What a daring thing to say about a basic right that elicits knee-jerk deference. It's a good thing he's free to say it. He claims it existed mainly in a small historical window between the rise of Puritanism and perhaps the Rushdie affair: about 400 years, and it's now in decline.

Free speech was always an arena for individuals; it's different from freedom of religion, which is about collectivities. You can have the latter without the former and you usually do. The case of whether Rev. Gretta Vosper can stay inside the United Church as an outspoken atheist is a good example.

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Columnists

Bill C-16 introduces transgender protections but keeps Harper's damaging human rights legacy

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Photo: KT King/flickr
| May 3, 2016
Columnists

North Carolina passes 'Bathroom Bill' discriminating against transgender people

Photo: Jeffrey Beall/flickr

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Opponents call it "the Bathroom Bill." In a special session last week, the North Carolina state legislature passed HB2, officially called the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act. Gov. Pat McCrory signed the law that night. The new law denies transgender people use of the bathroom, changing room or locker room that matches their gender identity. Resistance to the bill is fierce, and growing daily.

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Sickened by Kenneth Zucker, unsure about whether the CAMH Gender Identity Clinic closure was a good thing?

For years there has been a centralization of funding at the CAMH Child Youth and Family Gender Identity Service, which was run by Dr. Zucker.  Meanwhile other service providers exist across Canada, which support these families through an affirmative approach (that meets current best practices in the field). These affirmative services are drastically underfunded, and new commitments are required from all levels of government to ensure that families with gender diverse children are effectively supported.

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B.C. Corrections amends policy for transgender inmates

Photo: flickr/British Columbia Emergency Photography

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Keep Karl on Parl

In a move applauded by prisoners' rights and LGBTQ advocates, B.C. Corrections has amended its policy on transgender inmates. Now, individuals are to be placed in correctional facilities based on their gender identity, rather than their birth sex.

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Voting While Trans

There have been so many changes impacting transgender Canadians in the past decade.  More than ever, all of us need to navigate the choices and find out who has our best interests at heart.

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| July 10, 2015
| July 8, 2015
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