Sunday, May 05, 2019

Israeli Soldiers Shoot Bound, Blindfolded Palestinian Teen Trying to Flee 
The minor was detained for suspected stone throwing in the West Bank, then shot in the groin. Palestinians managed to evacuate the suspect to receive medical treatment after arguments with the soldiers 
Yotam Berger
Apr 21, 2019



The next time someone complains about how poorly treated Israel is or how could those Palestinians have done something heinous, or worse

Share this with them

 Remember this is a daily occurrence in occupied Palestine 
This is illegal under international law and standards of Human Rights

https://bdsmovement.net/

For those you know who claim (falsely) 
That #BDS is anti Semitic (like our PM Justin Trudeau does)

Jan 17, 2019 - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has reaffirmed his opposition to the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel

Apr 2, 2019 - Israeli President Reuven Rivlin met in Ottawa with Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and thanked him for our country's strong stance ...
#BDS is not only fuelled by hatred, but is counterproductive to peace. Its' obsessive campaign against exclusively one country and one community can only be described as #antisemitic. Watch his full statement here: https://bit.ly/2FxfNng 

Justin Trudeau's pack of lies about BDS | The Electronic Intifada 2019

Justin Trudeau Conflating BDS With Anti-Semitism Is Dangerous ...

Nov 15, 2018As Canadian scholars, we urge Trudeau to retract his wrong-spirited comments that demonize the work students, community members and ...







TRUDEAU HAS BEEN CONSISTENT AS ALL WESTMOUNT LIBERALS ARE ON DEFENDING ISRAEL AS HE SAID SPRING 2015 WHICH WAS AN ELECTION YEAR

Justin Trudeau on Twitter: "The BDS movement, like Israeli Apartheid ...


Share this with them 

Then ask them to say two words; #FreePalestine 
Bet they can't






#Islamophobia is just the flip side of #Antisemitism 

The white supremacist & the right winger despite
their protestations to the contrary hates both equally

The average person whose ideas are those of the
Ruling class sides with Israel with no idea about
the Palestinians

Share this with them







FORD NATION 

Ontario terminates compensation for victims of violent crimesDeirdre McDade, CALC’s Co-Director of Legal Services, says the cuts are regressive, draconian and an attack on the province’s most vulnerable.

Published on: May 2, 2019 |

TIM MEEKS/THE INTELLIGENCER 



TIM MEEKS/THE INTELLIGENCER Dierdre McDade, the Community Advocacy and Legal Centre's Co-Director of Legal Services, says the Ontario government's plan to dismantle the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board will disproportionately affect women who are victims of crime and who account for two-thirds of CICB applications. JPG, BI

Dierdre McDade, the Community Advocacy and Legal Centre's Co-Director of Legal Services, says the Ontario government's plan to dismantle the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board will disproportionately affect women who are victims of crime and who account for two-thirds of CICB applications. 

Plans by the Ontario government to terminate the compensation program for victims of violent crime, currently administered by the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board (CICB), will cause even more pain and suffering, say advocates.


The Criminal Injuries Compensation Board currently provides victims of violent crime with up to $25,000 to cover therapy, lost wages, medical bills, funeral expenses and intangible costs for pain and suffering. However, the province plans to cap awards for pain and suffering at $5,000 for all victims, even if they have suffered extensive childhood abuse, sexual assault, or were the target of domestic violence.

According to the board’s 2017-18 annual report, pain and suffering accounted for almost $33 million of the compensation claims it paid out in a year that saw 3,569 cases resolved at a hearing.

By comparison, if each of those cases had resulted in a maximum payment of $5,000, the board would have paid out less than $18 million.

Compensation for pain and suffering accounted for 95 per cent of the board’s payments in 2017-18.For 30 years the Community Advocacy & Legal Centre (CALC) has helped local victims, mostly women, to recover up to $25,000 to help compensate for pain and suffering they experienced at the hands of their abuser.

Deirdre McDade, CALC’s Co-Director of Legal Services, says the cuts are regressive, draconian and an attack on the province’s most vulnerable.

“We recover approximately $1 million annually for victims of domestic violence, child abuse and sexual assault. The average compensation received for pain and suffering is $20,000. These awards are life-changing and allow victims to receive trauma therapy, cover medical expenses, and move on with their lives after receiving official recognition that they were victims of crime and their recovery is recognized as important,” McDade said.

“Locally we represent about a hundred people a year and across the province they handle about 5,000 files a year,” she said.

“The really draconian thing about it is that in the past drastic changes to programs like this didn’t affect the people already in the system having their files dealt with. They just continued on through the process and it only affected new files. But this will actually change as soon as the Budget Bill receives Royal Asscent in probably in June or July. It’s really unusual to change the process for people who are already in the middle of it and who had a reasonable expectation that there would be a different outcome than there was,” McDade said.

The budget also proposed increasing the total available funding for one victim to $30,000, however, McDade said that is to cover potential expenses for victims.

“The maximum is now $5,000 and the maximum is usually set aside for children of murder victims, the most catastrophic incidents. So who knows, people could get $500.

“They’re only going to put $16 million into the new system, so they know they’re going to save money. They’ve probably over budgeted on the $16 million, I don’t think that will actually get spent because the $30,000 maximum they said they would give people is for expenses and nobody has $30,000 in expenses. We have people who had a prescription for a hundred bucks or physio for $500, nobody is going to get $30,000 in expenses because they’re probably not going to incur it. The pain and suffering reduction is the big loss,” McDade said.

McDade, who also co-chairs the government’s CICB Practice Advisory Committee, said the provincial committee was not consulted about this change or any other threatened changes, including dismantling of the CICB.

“Under this new proposed system, victims will now get significantly less compensation and will no longer have an opportunity to have their case heard before an impartial adjudicator,” she said. McDade, also observed that hearings provide victims with a sense of justice they have often been denied, noting these hearings help provide an opportunity for victims to heal.

“The CICB’s current victim-centered trauma-informed approach will soon be replaced by a bureaucratic system that reduces compensation for the most vulnerable,” she said.


The dismantling of a system that has worked well since 1971 will disproportionately affect women who are victims of crime and who account for two-thirds of CICB applications.
CALC has met with Bay of Quinte MPP and Government House Leader Todd Smith, and asked for further information about the proposed changes, and asked him to ensure that the voices of victims and their advocates are heard about these unjust changes.

“If the government cares about victims, their rights, and fair treatment and compensation, why are they making these regressive changes?” asked McDade.

The next big hit McDade is expecting comes May 14 when they find out how much is being slashed from Legal Aid.

“The government said they’re cutting 30 per cent, but we don’t know how much that is to the clinic side and we’ll find that out. We cover all of Hastings, Prince Edward and Lennox and Addington, we’re already stretched, we’re not a big bureaucracy with hundereds of staff,” she said, adding it will result in reduction of services.

The Community Advocacy & Legal Centre (CALC) is a non-profit community legal clinic principally funded by Legal Aid Ontario. The clinic was founded in 1980 and provides poverty law services to low income residents of Hastings, Prince Edward and Lennox & Addington counties. The clinic’s main office is in Belleville, with satellite locations in Trenton, Picton, Tyendinaga, Napanee, Amherstview, Tweed, Madoc and Bancroft.

For more information, visit CALC’s website at www.communitylegalcentre.ca.

FORD NATION BRING BACK THE GUILLOTINE




John Clarke

5/5/2019

At the risk of running into guillotine fatigue, I must offer one more comment on the matter. The use of this symbol of popular retribution on the lawns of the Ontario Legislature has sparked 'controversy' and, for that reason, has assumed some importance. The point is that the Tories have seized on this little incident because it gives them an opportunity to test the vulnerabilities of those who oppose them. They must have been pleased to see Andrea Horwath offer an apology for being photographed with someone whose protest sign included the words 'Fuck Ford.' The fake blade gesture offered a means to apply a bit more pressure and see how it worked. When Ford denounced the guillotine as if it were a serious threat to his life, he wanted to see who would dutifully fall in line and issue denunciations. He could not have been disappointed with the results. In the unlikely event charges are laid in this matter, the accused will count themselves lucky that NDP MP, Charlie Angus, won't be the judge because he sent out a tweet presenting their actions as an evil attack on 'civil society' itself. He was not alone in this kind of reaction.

The whole point here is that Doug Ford can't be allowed to set the boundaries for the movement of opposition against him. If it wasn't the guillotine, it would have been something else. Any union leader who talks of strike action, any social activist who makes a militant speech will breech the highly restrictive Tory rules on respectable dissent. If we are going to stop their austerity attack, we're going to have to build a movement that acts in ways that has Doug Ford gnashing his teeth and the editorial boards foaming at the mouth. We'll need to unleash social action that empties the workplaces and fills the streets and that makes a guillotine replica look like a friendly gesture.


Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan premier plans to appeal carbon tax decision to Supreme Court

Court rules 3-2 in favour of federal government; but dissenters say carbon tax wholly unconstitutional

THIS IS A WASTE OF TAXPAYERS MONEY, ALBERTA HAS THE BEST CARBON TAX WHICH IS PROVINCIALLY REDEEMABLE FOR 60% OF THE POPULATION
THIS LEGAL CHALLENGE WILL GO NOWHERE AS DID THE PROVINCES CHALLENGES TO THE FEDERAL GUN REGISTRY (EP)


Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal ruled in favour of the federal government by a margin of 3-2 in a legal battle against the federal carbon tax. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says the province will appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. (Michael Bell/Canadian Press
Saskatchewan's Court of Appeal has ruled that the carbon tax imposed on the
province by the federal government is constitutionally sound and falls within the
legislative authority of Parliament. The ruling was released Friday.

Premier Scott Moe said the decision will be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada. The province has about 30 days to appeal, according to Saskatchewan Attorney General Don Morgan. The provincial government would act as intervenor in other court challenges against the carbon tax. 

"I remain hopeful for a different outcome," Moe said in the aftermath of the decision's release.
"No one in this nation should confuse climate action with a carbon tax."
Lawyers for the provincial government had argued the tax is unfair and unconstitutional. The 155-page decision was not unanimous. Three judges ruled in favour of the federal government while two ruled the law was wholly unconstitutional.
Justices Ralph Ottenbreit and Neal Caldwell were the dissenting opinions as they argued Part 1 of The Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act,which imposes a charge on greenhouse gas-producing fuels and waste, is invalid and an unconstitutional delegation of Parliament's law-making power. 
Environment and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna speaks in the foyer of the House of Commons in Ottawa on Friday. McKenna called out political opponents of the carbon tax, challenging them to 'stop the partisan games and join in on serious and effective climate action.' (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)
Moe said Saskatchewan, and the rest of Canada, will be able to have their say on the federal carbon tax when the next general election rolls around. He pointed out that the carbon tax became a hot button issue in recent provincial elections and will be a factor again in October.
"It was forced on the provinces across the nation ... by the prime minister of Canada," Moe said of the carbon tax. "The only effectiveness this tax has is ultimately moving jobs out of our jurisdiction into other areas of the world, and we won't stand for that."
Saskatchewan had introduced its own carbon plan, Prairie Resilience, but did not place a price on carbon. The federal government's carbon price starts at a minimum of $20 a tonne and is to rise $10 each year until 2022. 
Federal Environment and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna praised the court's decision to uphold Ottawa's jurisdiction. 
"It confirms that putting a price on carbon pollution and returning the revenues to Canadians through the Climate Action Incentive rebate is not only constitutional, it is an effective and essential part of any serious response to the global challenge of climate change," McKenna said in Ottawa on Friday.
McKenna challenged opponents of the carbon tax to "stop the partisan games and join in on serious and effective climate action." She re-emphasized the court's findings that a price on carbon is "an essential aspect or element of the global effort to limit GHG emissions."
Brett Dolter, an economics professor at the University of Regina, said the decision means the Saskatchewan government must now look at how it should modify its own made-in-Saskatchewan carbon reduction plan — whether it's similar to the federal plan, or offering rebate cheques, or moving the revenue to other sectors of government which could use the funding.
Watch CBC Saskatchewan's special coverage:
"The policy can be designed to ensure people don't fall behind. That's the message I want people to realize," said Dolter. "We often talk about carbon pricing as if it's just this cost — and we often forget about the money coming in that could offset this impact."
Ontario has also launched a court challenge against the carbon tax, which was implemented by the federal government on April 1 in provinces that did not have their own carbon pricing plan that satisfied criteria laid out by Ottawa.
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said in a statement that the decision from the Saskatchewan court is "far from the broad victory the federal government sought." 
Kenney also said Alberta would be joining Saskatchewan's case as it appeals it to the Supreme Court. Kenney touted his province's plan, which includes carbon-capture storage but does not mention phasing out coal. Alberta's plan instead looks at emissions targets that could force some coal plants to close or switch to a cleaner fuel to remain profitable.
"We believe that our strong plan makes a federal carbon tax redundant and that a consumer-punishing retail carbon tax — whether imposed by the NDP or by Justin Trudeau ­— is the wrong way to go. It's all economic pain and no environmental gain," Kenney's statement reads.
New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs said he's disappointed by the decision, and that the province would consult its attorney general to "determine the most effective means to continue our opposition."
"The unfair federal tax does not, and will not, work within the strategies developed in New Brunswick to address one of the most pressing issues of our times," he said in a statement. 
Manitoba's Premier Brian Pallister has said his province will also launch its own court challenge.
There's also the possibility that the Supreme Court may not hear the case if courts in Saskatchewan, Ontario and Manitoba come to similar conclusions about the constitutionality of carbon pricing, according to experts.
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Mass. Judge Refuses to Halt Pro-Palestinian Event at UMass Featuring Roger Waters & Linda Sarsour
STORY MAY 03, 2019

Watch Full Show

GUESTS
Sut Jhally
professor of communication at the University of Massachusetts and founder and executive director of the Media Education Foundation, which organized the event, “Not Backing Down: Israel, Free Speech, and the Battle for Palestinian Human Rights.”
Rachel Weber
attorney and member Jewish Voice for Peace, Western Massachusetts chapter.

LINKS
Not Backing Down Event Details
Jewish Voice for Peace

“Not Backing Down: Israel, Free Speech, and the Battle for Palestinian Human Rights.” That’s the title of an event set to take place Saturday at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. After three anonymous UMass students filed a lawsuit to stop the event, a judge ruled Thursday the event can proceed, saying, “There’s nothing that comes even close to a threat of harm or incitement to violence or lawlessness.” We get an update from Sut Jhally, event organizer and professor of communication at the University of Massachusetts, and Rachel Weber, attorney and member Jewish Voice for Peace, Western Massachusetts chapter.


British Columbia

'I realized how much power I held': Climate change workshops offer high school students hope for the future

Program intends to rollout in schools across Vancouver this fall

UBC Grace Nosek, in red, sits at a table of students including 15-year-old Nina Rossing, pictured at the computer. They are working together to combat climate change. (Submitted by Grace Nosek)
The project, which is in its pilot phase, was created after its organizer, UBC PhD law student Grace Nosek, visited students around Vancouver to ask them how they felt about climate change.
She says her questions were overwhelmingly met with pessimistic outlooks.
"Extinction, the end of the world and the death of all animals," was the general response from students, Nosek said, speaking with Stepehn Quinn, the host of CBC's The Early Edition.
She says she wanted to give young people hope and a way to affect change.
"We feel like there's a moral prerogative to give them a sense that there's a future...that they can have agency on climate," she said.

Inspiring climate ambassadors

Nina Rossing, like many of her friends at Prince of Wales Secondary, has known about climate change for a while but never felt she could really make a difference until she joined the workshop.
"I realized how much power I held and how much power this generation holds. That could change the world," said 15-year-old Rossing.
Hundreds of students walked out of classes Friday afternoon to protest government inaction on climate change in downtown Vancouver. ((Evan Mitsui/CBC))
She says simple decisions like buying less clothing and changing the type of light bulb used at home could make a significant impact if everyone were to commit to making a difference.
Since taking part, Rossing has also reached out to her local MLA, Melanie Mark, as well as Education Minister Rob Fleming to demand more education on climate change in B.C. schools.
"We do learn the science behind climate change, but we're not really told how we can act [to fix it], she said.
"That is, I think, a huge problem."

'The scale of hope'

The program launched two weeks ago and Nosek says she has already noticed the effect empowering one person has on others.
Students rally in downtown Vancouver Friday to call for government action on climate change. ((Evan Mitsui/CBC))
She says she has watched Rossing inspire hundreds of other students to take ownership over the planet.
"The scale of hope is the is the only thing, in my mind, that takes on the scale of the crisis," said Nosek.
In the fall, she intends to launch workshops in schools across Vancouver.