-
harpist give a speech on human right
0
July 31st, 2010UncategorizedHere it is, given one? Sat in Winnipeg and now featured front-and-center on the premenstrual syndrome land site He really gave it a special twist highlighting quite prominently the Canadian bill of Rights. Because information technology the bill of Rights. 50th anniversary, don’t you know Right, you didn’t. Probably because that document was a statute and did not have constitutional position And because no one dialogue about it anymore. Not after the charter of right and freedom was adopted, which enshrines our right and freedom as constitutional rights. Yep, that would be the charter our very own version of a Magna Carta, looked to the world over.
That should have been the proper direction of a address on human right recognition in Canada, especially one given in the Queens presence. At the very least it should have been mentioned at a dedication of a human right museum and with a rock from the field where the Magna Carta was signed, posing in the background But as we know, a progressive government brought us the Charter. Enough said and better to look in the way back machine to old Conservative Dief to rescript history by giving such prominence to the long forgotten bill of Rights. What an incredible omission.
Anyway, here what harpist said in one part:
“The Canadian bill of right reflects a first harmonic truth that human rights, by definition, must be linguistic universal There can be no exceptions.
“The mental test of a free country is whether it recognizes this truth. Whether it is a country with a moral sense A country where someone are not categorized by power or prejudice, but simply recognized as our chap human beings. And where failure to do so are eventually brought to light.
IT so easy to say in a speech, but not so easy to apply those human right universally without exceptions. At least, not for this present authorities harper failing his own test, consider yesterday rebuke to the Harper government by the Federal Court, again, over the ongoing breach of a Canadian right that mister harpist will do nothing about. Where’s Canada sense of right and wrong on that one?
