Sandra Finley

Mar 122016
 

These are from Lois and Gerry Hawke.  There’s one somewhere from Penny. And some others.  I presume Ashu is desperate:  he needs evidence for court that I have bad-mouthed him.   That’s not my style, thankfully.

MARCH 31, 2016

———- Forwarded message ———- From: Ashu M. G. Solo <amgsolo@mavericktechnologies.us> Date: Thu, Mar 31, 2016 at 5:10 AM Subject: RE: communication exercise To: Lois Mitchell <grammalo.mitchell6@gmail.com>
Without Prejudice

Lois, if you want to avoid being sued, you should immediately turn over to me all of your communications about me with Sandra Finley and the person using the fake name of Elvin Lau to spread lies about me, so I can see any defamatory statements made about me to you and what caused you to start spreading lies about me.

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MARCH 10, 2017

From: gerry hawke  Sent: March 10, 2017 7:14 PM To: Sandra Finley  Subject: Re: most recent affidavit

Hi Sandra,

(update on Motion to Strike)   . . .

In the meantime, mr. Solo sent me a Request for Particulars.  As silly as ever.

Solo is still panicked about you and Tonia so his request is cluttered with demands I tell him all the details about you and Tonia.  Here’s a couple of examples:

Solo demands:

(a).  The particular acts of criminality alleged to have been carried out by the Plaintiff against Jane Doe “Tonia Zimmerman.”

Here’s a good one:

(c).  The identity and real name of Jane Doe “Tonia Zimmerman”.  After the Plaintiff made a criminal complaint against Jane Doe “Tonia Zimmerman,” for false information and defamatory libel, the Saskatoon Police Service found that “Tonia Zimmerman” is a fake name used by someone with a fake profile.

().  The dates, times, locations, of each particular act of criminality alleged to have been carried out by the Plaintiff against Sandra Finley.

(). The sources of information, means of communication of this information, and content of these communications for each particular act of criminality alleged to have been carried out by the Plaintiff against Sandra Finley.

().  The sources of information, means of communication of this information, and content of these communications for each particular threat alleged to have been made by the Plaintiff against Sandra Finley.

None of these requests have anything to do with his claim against me.  And he knows it.  My opinion is that Solo is worried about his claim against you so he is desperate to scavenge any information that may help him.   . . .

 

 

Mar 112016
 

Three items on the same story, each with a different contribution.

Item #3 (youtube) is more comprehensive, takes more time.

  1.  Under 3 minutes, youtube NEWSCAST from RT,  Snowden re the FBI / Apple court fight:    https://youtu.be/UITZVlxCBJg
  2.  Text report:  Snowden: FBI’s claim about unlockable iPhone is ‘bulls***’

    (http://www.cnet.com/news/snowden-fbis-claims-about-unlockable-iphone-are-bulls/?ftag=CAD090e536&bhid=20145214483259223425769339227594  )

    The FBI is lying about its inability to hack into an iPhone used by a shooter in December’s San Bernardino massacre, says the NSA whistleblower.

                by Katie Collins

    The latest figure with an opinion on the fight between Apple and the FBI is none other than NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.

    His conclusion? The FBI’s claim that only Apple can bypass the security of the iPhone used by a terrorist is bogus.

    “The FBI says Apple has the ‘exclusive technical means’ of getting into this phone,” Snowden said Tuesday.

    Snowden called the claim malarky, without using such a polite term. “Respectfully, that’s bulls***,” he said.

    The former National Security Agency contractor, who fled the US and lives in Russia, made the remarks while speaking via a video link from Moscow at advocacy group Common Cause’s conference in Washington DC.

    Snowden is the latest voice to weigh in on the FBI’s effort to force Apple into providing the agency with a backdoor to the iPhone’s security, but his insight lends credence to the tech community’s fears about compromising encryption. After exposing details of US and UK mass surveillance programs to the world, Snowden remains a controversial but an influential voice. Now, that voice is accusing the FBI of lying directly about its technical capabilities.

    The FBI argues that the protections put in place by Apple cannot be overcome and that the iPhone 5C used by shooter Syed Farook is critical to its investigation of the December attack that left 14 people dead and another 22 wounded in San Bernardino, California.

    Snowden followed up his comments by tweeting a link to a blog post from the American Civil Liberties Union that asserts the FBI is attempting to mislead the courts and the public about its ability to crack into the iPhone. In the post, ACLU technology fellow Daniel Kahn Gilmor calls the FBI’s case against Apple a “power grab.”

    “The FBI wants us to think that this case is about a single phone, used by a terrorist,” Gilmor said. In fact, it is an attempt “to weaken the ecosystem we all depend on for maintenance of our all-too-vulnerable devices” and to ensure that future software updates contain “deliberately weakened code.”

    The blog post also asserts that the FBI is misrepresenting the “auto-erase” feature it wants Apple to bypass and shows how the FBI could work around it.

    The FBI’s press office could not immediately be reached for comment. Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

  3. Edward Snowden Interview on Apple vs. FBI, Privacy, the NSA, and More

 

 

Mar 042016
 

Guardian analysis of leaked papers will show how influential people including heads of government have exploited tax havens

Juliette Garside, Holly Watt and David Pegg

The hidden wealth of some of the world’s most prominent leaders, politicians and celebrities has been revealed by an unprecedented leak of millions of documents that show the myriad ways in which the rich can exploit secretive offshore tax regimes.

The Guardian, working with global partners, will set out details from the first tranche of what are being called “the Panama Papers”. Journalists from more than 80 countries have been reviewing 11.5m files leaked from the database of Mossack Fonseca, the world’s fourth biggest offshore law firm.

The records were obtained from an anonymous source by the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and shared by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists with the Guardian and the BBC.

Though there is nothing unlawful about using offshore companies, the files raise fundamental questions about the ethics of such tax havens – and the revelations are likely to provoke urgent calls for reforms of a system that critics say is arcane and open to abuse.

The Panama Papers reveal:

  • Twelve national leaders are among 143 politicians, their families and close associates from around the world known to have been using offshore tax havens.
  • A $2bn trail leads all the way to Vladimir Putin. The Russian president’s best friend – a cellist called Sergei Roldugin – is at the centre of a scheme in which money from Russian state banks is hidden offshore. Some of it ends up in a ski resort where in 2013 Putin’s daughter Katerina got married.
  • Among national leaders with offshore wealth are Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan’s prime minister; Ayad Allawi, ex-interim prime minister and former vice-president of Iraq; Petro Poroshenko, president of Ukraine; Alaa Mubarak, son of Egypt’s former president; and the prime minister of Iceland, Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson.
  • In the UK, six members of the House of Lords, three former Conservative MPs and dozens of donors to British political parties have had offshore assets.
  • The families of at least eight current and former members of China’s supreme ruling body, the politburo, have been found to have hidden wealth offshore.
  • Twenty-three individuals who have had sanctions imposed on them for supporting the regimes in North Korea, Zimbabwe, Russia, Iran and Syria have been clients of Mossack Fonseca. Their companies were harboured by the Seychelles, the British Virgin Islands, Panama and other jurisdictions.
  • A key member of Fifa’s powerful ethics committee, which is supposed to be spearheading reform at world football’s scandal-hit governing body, acted as a lawyer for individuals and companies recently charged with bribery and corruption.
  • One leaked memorandum from a partner of Mossack Fonseca said: “Ninety-five per cent of our work coincidentally consists in selling vehicles to avoid taxes.”

The company has flatly denied any wrongdoing. It says it has acted beyond reproach for 40 years and that it has had robust due diligence procedures.

The document leak comes from the records of the firm, which was founded in 1977. The information is near live, with the most recent records dating from December 2015.

Three hundred and 70 reporters from 100 media organisations have spent a year analysing and verifying the documents.

The British prime minister, David Cameron, has promised to “sweep away” tax secrecy – but little has been done. He is planning a summit of world leaders next month, which will focus on the conduct of tax havens.

The prime minister set out his line in 2011 when he said: “We need to shine a spotlight on who owns what and where the money is really flowing.”

Panama Papers reporting team: Juliette Garside, Luke Harding, Holly Watt, David Pegg, Helena Bengtsson, Simon Bowers, Owen Gibson and Nick Hopkins

Feb 132016
 

FROM THE VISIONING COMMITTEE

The University of Saskatchewan has recently launched an initiative to renew our university’s vision, mission and values. President Stoicheff has formed a committee composed of members from across our community, on campus and off, to help with the development of a new vision, mission and values statement for the university.

The visioning committee wants to hear from you on what you see for the future of the University of Saskatchewan to help shape the vision of our university. We hope you can take the time to complete an online survey being distributed internally and externally. Below is a message that was shared with the campus community late yesterday (Feb 4)  with a link to the survey. Our visioning committee looks forward to a detailed conversation on this initiative . . . .

 

All the best,

Brent Cotter and Liz Harrison

Co-chairs, University of Saskatchewan visioning committee

 

The visioning committee wants to hear from you on what you see for the future of the University of Saskatchewan to help shape the vision of our university.

To provide our entire community with the opportunity to have a voice, an online survey will be available until February 25, 2016. This survey can be completed in less than 15 minutes and is anonymous.

Information collected through this survey, along with meetings and other consultations taking place over the next month, will be used to assist the visioning committee in writing a first draft of a new vision, mission and values statement for the university. Expect to see another survey this spring providing an opportunity to provide feedback on this draft.

Thank you in advance for taking part in the conversation.

 

For more information on this initiative, please visit: usask.ca/ourvision

Feb 092016
 

I would say that Daniel Turp, Law Professor, teaches his student by DOING.

BACKGROUND:

  • In 2002, Daniel Turp and students brought an action in the Superior Court of Quebec for a declaration that members of the Canadian Armed Forces violated the Geneva Conventions by turning people detained in Afghanistan over to the custody on the US forces in circumstances where they knew the detainees would or might, be transferred to Guantánamo Bay. The action was dismissed (6 March 2003) on the basis that Mr. Turp and his students didn’t have standing to bring the action and on the basis that the interpretation of the Geneva Conventions involved the prerogatives of the state to defend Canada.

Now, 2016:  Ottawa to face court challenge over $15 billion Saudi arms deal, G&M

  • Manufacturer and beneficiary of the $15 billion dollar sale of the armoured vehicles:  General Dynamics from the American military-industrial complex through a subsidiary they set up in Canada.

 

  • The violations in Saudi Arabia that would make it illegal under Canadian law to export weapons to Saudi:
    • “violations arise across the full range of rights enshrined in international law, including torture and ill-treatment, women’s equality, unjust and secretive executions, religious freedom, freedom of expression, the rights of human rights defenders, press freedom, fair trials and arbitrary detention. “

 

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2016-02-05   Ottawa to face court challenge over $15 billion Saudi arms deal, G&M

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-to-face-court-challenge-over-saudi-arms-deal/article28631497/http:/www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-to-face-court-challenge-over-saudi-arms-deal/article28631497/

By Steven Chase, Ottawa

Opponents of Canada’s $15-billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia are taking Ottawa to court in an attempt to block shipments of the combat vehicles, a move that could force the governing Liberals to explain how they justify the sale to a human-rights pariah under weapon-export restrictions.

Daniel Turp, a professor of international and constitutional law at the University of Montreal, is leading the effort, supported by students and a Montreal law firm with a record of class-action work and anti-tobacco litigation.

He will announce the legal challenge on Saturday and intends to file it with the Federal Court within three weeks.

Mr. Turp and his group are calling on critics of the deal across the country to rally behind their challenge, which they are calling Operation Armoured Rights, pointing to how poorly Saudi Arabia treats its own citizens and the civilian carnage of the Saudi-led bombing campaign in Yemen.

There is evidence Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is out of step with the majority of Canadians by refusing to cancel the deal. The manufacturer, General Dynamics Land Systems in London, Ont., is still gathering material for production.

A poll by Nanos Research suggests most Canadians consider the massive arms sale out of line with Canada’s values and believe human rights should trump jobs. The survey showed nearly six in 10 feel it is more important to ensure arms go only to countries “that respect human rights” than it is to support 3,000 jobs by selling weaponized armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia.

A spokesman for Foreign Affairs Minister Stéphane Dion declined to comment on the poll on Friday.

The Canadian government is the prime contractor in the deal to sell combat vehicles with machine guns and anti-tank cannons to the Saudi force that protects the Mideast kingdom’s monarchy from internal threats. The deal is expected to include upward of 1,000 fighting vehicles, plus service and training.

The watchdog organization Freedom House regularly ranks Saudi Arabia among the “worst of the worst” on human rights.

The Federal Court challenge will argue that the Canadian government is violating its own arms-export rules by permitting the armoured vehicles to be shipped to Saudi Arabia. It will ask the court to rescind any export permits that have been granted for the fighting vehicles and block any future ones.

Canada’s export controls place restrictions on sales to countries with a “persistent record of serious violations of the human rights of their citizens.”

The federal government is supposed to assure itself the Saudis will not turn the light-armoured vehicles (LAVs) on civilians. The rules say shipments cannot proceed “unless it can be demonstrated there is no reasonable risk that the goods might be used against the civilian population.”

Mr. Turp, a former Bloc Québécois MP who later was a Parti Québécois MNA, said he finds it hard to believe Mr. Dion, once a professor at the University of Montreal himself, really believes the Saudi deal is appropriate.

The Trudeau government has rebuffed repeated requests to spell out how it justifies export of these arms, saying this might hurt the “commercial confidentiality” of the deal.

“The idea that military equipment made in Canada could contribute to human-rights violations against civilians in Saudi Arabia and neighbouring countries is immoral. But we also believe that the authorization to export armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia is illegal,” Mr. Turp and the legal campaign’s supporters write in an open letter.

Follow on Twitter: @stevenchase

Feb 082016
 

A small bit of background first.  or, just scroll down to the article.

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Mike Duffy said during his trial:

. . . Basically what happened was that they used robocalls to misdirect NDP voters, to split the vote and allow Gary Lunn to win . . .    (the 2008 Election)

 

Bryony Penn (Liberal) and Elizabeth May (Green Party) were the candidates wronged by these robocalls, not to mention the electorate in Saanich-Gulf Islands, BC.

By Briony Penn March 5, 2012

My name is Briony Penn — I am a journalist and lecturer, and I ran as a political candidate in the 2008 federal election. My other claim to fame is apparently being the first “victim” of illegal robocalls.  more

 

Many thanks to Sebastian Silva, a resident of SGI.  He wrote to Elections Canada following the Duffy revelation, to question whether their investigation would re-open in light of the new evidence.

And thanks to THE TYEE for covering the story.

 

http://thetyee.ca/News/2016/02/08/Watchdog-Duffy-Testimony/

Watchdog ‘Aware of’ Duffy Testimony Related to Election Fraud Cold Case

Commissioner’s office may have reopened probe after senator alleges that Tories robocalled in 2008.

By Andrew MacLeod, Today, TheTyee.ca

The Commissioner of Canada Elections has taken a second look at a seven-year-old election fraud cold case from British Columbia and may have reopened its investigation thanks to court testimony made by Sen. Mike Duffy in December.

“We are aware of Mr. Duffy’s recent testimony,” senior director of investigations Eric Ferron wrote in a Jan. 19 letter responding to Sebastian Silva, a resident of Saanich-Gulf Islands who worked on the Liberal campaign in the riding in 2008.

“Our office takes all allegations of wrongdoing under the act very seriously, and the [Commisioner of Canada Elections] has always maintained that should any new information be uncovered or disclosed to us, it would be carefully considered and all appropriate action taken,” Ferron wrote.

Former senator Mike Duffy

In December, Sen. Mike Duffy alleged Tories ‘used robocalls to misdirect voters’ in 2008.

The case goes back to Oct. 14, 2008, when on the eve of the federal election automated phone calls were made to people in the riding encouraging them to support the NDP candidate, Julian West. The calls went out even though West had withdrawn 20 days earlier. He’d dropped out too late to have his name removed from the ballot.

Recipients said the calls appeared to be coming from NDP riding association president Bill Graham’s phone, but Graham insisted they had nothing to do with him or the party.

When the ballots were counted, West had received 3,700 votes, significantly more than the margin of 2,625 votes that separated Conservative cabinet minister Gary Lunn from his nearest challenger, Liberal Briony Penn.

The office of the Commissioner of Canada Elections investigated complaints about the calls, as Ferron confirms in his letter to Silva, but was unable to determine whether the calls had influenced anyone’s vote or to discover the source of the calls or who had made them.

‘Black ops’ group involved: Duffy

There it stood until December when Duffy — who is facing 31 charges, many of them involving travel he billed to the Senate — described in court the rationale for a 2009 trip to help Lunn.

“He’d had a close call during the previous election, and it was only through the divine intervention of [late former senator and campaign manager] Doug Finley’s black ops group at Conservative headquarters that he managed to get himself re-elected,” Duffy reportedly told the court.

“Basically what happened was that they used robocalls to misdirect NDP voters, to split the vote and allow Gary Lunn to win,” Duffy said. “He knew nothing about it, except that they phoned him afterward and said ‘You’re welcome Gary.’ He said ‘What?’ [They said] ‘We got you in.'”

Following Duffy’s testimony, Lunn told the Canadian Press that he never knew who made the misleading calls and never told Duffy that it was Conservative headquarters.

Finley died in 2013 after a long battle with colorectal cancer.

In his letter to Silva, Ferron said the Commissioner of Canada Elections’ policy is to neither confirm nor deny whether an investigation has been opened or is ongoing. “Our evaluation with respect to any new information in this file will not be made public,” he said.

Feb 062016
 
From books.google:
Propaganda and the Ethics of Persuasion,  by Randal Marlin.
Revised Second Edition 2013

 

This book aims to develop a sophisticated understanding of propaganda. It begins with a brief history of early Western propaganda, including Ancient Greek classical theories of rhetoric and the art of persuasion, and traces its development through the Christian era, the rise of the nation-state, World War I, Nazism, and Communism. 

The core of the book examines the ethical implications of various forms of persuasion, not only hate propaganda but also insidious elements of more generally acceptable communication such as advertising, public relations, and government information, setting these in the context of freedom of expression. 

Propaganda and the Ethics of Persuasion examines the art of persuasion but it also hopes to establish a “self-defense” resistance to propaganda. As Jacques Ellul warned in 1980, any new technology enters into an already existing class system and can be expected to develop in a way favourable to the dominant interests of that system. 

The merger of AOL and Time-Warner confirms the likelihood of corporate interests dominating the future of the Internet, but the Internet has also opened up new possibilities for a politically effective counter-culture, as was demonstrated at the meeting of the World Trade Organization in Seattle in late 1999 and numerous similar gatherings since.

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About Randal Marlin:  Wikipedia    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randal_Marlin
Feb 062016
 

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS     (My replies are italicized)

STUDENT FROM PHILOSOPHY CLASSTRUTH AND PROPAGANDA

(Reference  “Propaganda and the Ethics of Persuasion”, by Professor Randal Marlin)

RE your statement:    former Chief Statistician agrees with the premise of your second reason (Charter Right to Privacy). He states that while the mandatory collection of personal information is in violation of the charter right, however it is a ‘legitimate violation of the right’ (the idea that rights may be rescinded for a social good) because it is a recognized necessity as outlined in the statistics act.

MY REPLY:

Yes, the Government may rescind the rights of an individual.  However,

  1. The Statistics Act does not give the Government the authority to do that.  StatsCan cannot just declare that this is so.
  2. In order to override the Charter Right of an individual, the Government has to pass the “Oakes Test“.

If StatsCan wishes to take away Canadians’ Charter Right to Privacy of Personal Information, it would have to make an application to the Court to do so, supplying the Court with the arguments to satisfy the Oakes Test.   It has not done that.   So the Charter Right stands.

REFERENCE:

Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Section 8 Privacy – Case Law: The Queen Vs Plant protects a “biographical core of personal information” from the state. Oakes Test to override.

Excerpt

(3)  DOUBTFUL THE GOVERNMENT CAN MEET THE “OAKES TEST” TO OVERRIDE THE CHARTER RIGHT TO PRIVACY IN RELATION TO THE CENSUS

. . .   I have a constitutional right not to be forced to hand over “a biographical core of personal information”.  Legislation that forces me to do so (the Statistics Act) is unconstitutional, unless it can pass the  Court test for an override:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._v._Oakes

The Court presents a two step test to justify a limitation (INSERT: of an individual’s Charter Rights and Freedoms) …

  • First, it must be “an objective related to concerns which are pressing and substantial in a free and democratic society“, and
  • second it must be shown “that the means chosen (INSERT: 3 months in jail and a fine of $500) are reasonable and demonstrably justified“.

 

The second part is described as a “proportionality test” which requires the invoking party (the Government) to show:

  • First, the measures adopted must be carefully designed to achieve the objective in question. They must not be arbitrary, unfair or based on irrational considerations. In short, they must be rationally connected to the objective.   (i.e. 3 months of jail and a fine of $500 must be shown to have a logical connection to the objective of the Census)
  • Second, the means, even if rationally connected to the objective in this first sense, should impair “as little as possible” the right or freedom in question.
  • Third, there must be a proportionality between the effects of the measures which are responsible for limiting the Charter right or freedom, and the objective which has been identified as of “sufficient importance”.

(example using two actual questions on the Census long form – –   it is of sufficient importance that the Government know  what language I spoke at home when I was 5 years old, and how many bedrooms are in my home – – it is important enough that they can impose 3 months in jail and a $500 fine (“the effects of the measures” responsible for limiting the Right to Privacy)  if I refuse to give up my Charter Right to Privacy of personal information.)

Note:  this is about the Census.  It is not about StatsCan “Surveys” because the Statistics Act says that surveys are not mandatory – – no matter what StatsCan might tell you.  See  Are StatsCan “surveys” mandatory?

 

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RE:   What are your primary reasons for opposing the mandatory census? 

–       Initially it was the out-sourcing of StatsCan work to Lockheed Martin Corp, the largest arms manufacturer and player in the American military-industrial-congressional complex (today, “-university” is added to the handle).  They flaunt Canadian and International Law, they corrupt democracy through the huge dollars they spend on lobbying.  They are a prime mover in what was once called the North American “Security and Prosperity Partnership” that takes decision-making out of the public arena, moving it to backroom deals between Government and Business officials. They are corrupt, very corrupt with ample documentation to prove it.  As time passes more is learned:  on top of their other sins they were the number one contract interrogator in the illegal outrages of torture committed at offshore American prisons like Guatanamo, Abu Ghraib, etc.

       My second reason for opposition is the Charter Right to Privacy of Personal Information which the Census long form, along with Lockheed Martin’s involvement at StatsCan, are in breach of.  I believe that Charter Rights are extremely important to the citizenry of a democracy, they exist for important reasons, and it is incumbent upon us to fight to get them back when they are infringed.

To Clarify: Initially the case of Lockheed Martin; but the second reason is your main reason. The long form census, through its agents (Statistics Canada and lockheed martin) is a violation of the charter right to privacy by  instituting a mandatory collection of personal information.

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Follow up; So in this case your second reason debates the fundamental existence of the mandatory census. In an open letter for the long form census, former Chief Statistician agrees with the premise of your second reason. He states that while the mandatory collection of personal information is in violation of the charter right, however it is a ‘legitimate violation of the right’ (the idea that rights may be rescinded for a social good) because it is a recognized necessity as outlined in the statistics act. Am I correct in stating that your second reason is ethically, morally and legally opposed to this line of thought?

The answer is “yes”, and you can add “rationally”.   Please see  2016-03-18  Does Lockheed Martin Corp have a role in the 2016 Census?  which points to the aspect of census collaboration between countries under Lockheed Martin’s “steerage”.   It is about International Surveillance driven by the American NSA.  

9/11 became a vehicle for fomenting fear of “terrorists”, a justification for taking away citizen rights.   

But the CAUSES of “terrorism” are not addressed.   American imperialism plays a pivotal role – – there is a long list of examples from which to choose.  See 2016-03-22 There are two sides to the story. Why do we hear only one? (Terrorists & Context: CIA – examples Mossadegh, Lumumba, Arbenz, Guevera, Allende . . .)   

Essentially, what Westerners know and don’t know is subject to the tools of propaganda.

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If the census were to be processed entirely by our government, would you oppose a mandatory census?

The considerations in arriving at a “yes” response:

       Do the questions create profiles of citizens?   Our Charter Right to Privacy of Personal Information exists for a compelling reason.  You do not allow Governments to create detailed files on its people;  such files are the tools of police states.  I always recommend Edwin Black’s book “IBM and the Holocaust” if there is any doubt in a person’s mind.  Past or present it makes no difference, the practice is the same.  The historical record is clear.  Current events are clear.  It is the reason why we have the Charter Right to Privacy of Personal Information.  Detailed files on citizens are verboten in a democracy.  

I further believe that critical examination of the reasons trotted out in support of the alleged necessity for taking away the Charter Right are insubstantial.  You may want to take a look at:

2016-05-21 I lose myself. “A perfection of means, and confusion of aims, seems to be our main problem.”

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Follow up; This is a very difficult question to answer, and yes, that is a shocking story with IBM and the holocaust I am quite familiar with it.

I know that there are standard practices in place to prevent access to citizen profiles. In certain census subdivisions (geographically and demographically similar areas) data is suppressed if there are too few residences there. However, what Statistics Canada implies is that the collection of data in these areas must take place first before it can be determined what data is suppressed.

The crux of the problem is this  …   

   The remainder of the Question, and the Reply now a separate postingPlease see  http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=16581    

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Do you think that the press presented your case fairly?

A few did, local journalists were more likely.  Others did not.  The most egregious example of failure was the New York Times.  They changed the coverage by the Times reporter in Ottawa to eliminate the name “Lockheed Martin”, stating that the small opposition in Canada to the Census was due to involvement of “an American technology contractor”.   Americans generally know who Lockheed Martin is. Canadians especially then, were more unlikely to know.  Portraying Lockheed Martin as a “technology contractor” is misleading journalism.

It was frustrating trying to get the main reason for the non-compliance, Lockheed Martin, into the news coverage partially because the “newsiness” of the story was the court case which strategically used the Charter Right to Privacy to defend against the charge of non-compliance.  It was also difficult to get Lockheed Martin’s name onto the Court record, for various reasons.

Follow Up;  It is interesting to see some varied reports, there is a lot to be said in not only omissions, but emphasis and phrasing as well. One consistent factor that I have seen is that these cases are reported too individualistically. Several I have come across have never included the rates of non-participation, statistics on persons charged with not completing the census, nor even linked to similar cases of persons charged with non-compliance despite the fact that these details would be relevant to the story.

Feb 062016
 

Amy Goodman, I love that woman, covered   “A Significant Victory”: Julian Assange Hails U.N. Panel Calling for His Freedom,

At bottom, the link to the actual UN Report.

In response to  CTV News Coverage  of this important development for democracy,  I used their “Error Report” button to submit THREE FACTUAL ERRORS.

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THREE FACTUAL ERRORS.   (submitted to CTV News.  Three days later the report has not been corrected.)

I hope my input will help improve media coverage:

  1.   RE Assange has consistently denied the allegations but has refused to return to Sweden to meet with prosecutors

Assange has consistently offered to meet with the Swedish prosecutors.  And according to The Guardian, a pact was signed in December whereby Assange will be questioned by the prosecutors in the Ecuadorean Embassy:

Dec 17, 2015, Reuters in Stockholm, The Guardian

http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/dec/17/swedish-prosecutors-new-request-question-julian-assange-rape-allegations

. . .   On Sunday, the Quito government said Ecuador and Sweden had signed a pact after half a year of negotiations that would allow Assange to be questioned at the embassy, where he has been holed up for more than three years.

 2.    RE   British and Swedish officials maintain the panel’s finding has no legal force, but it represents a public relations victory for Assange

Context: the UK and Sweden are both signatories to the U.N. Convention on Civil and Political Rights.  Assange’s lawyers sought remedy within that framework, so I assume any person in a similar situation in any country is free to do that.  A hearing of the case by the duly-constituted U.N. body found that Assange has been “arbitrarily detained”, he should be allowed to walk free, and compensated for his years of arbitrary detention.

Failure to provide the readership with context, and Reuters’ complicity in mere parroting of officials, reducing Assange’s situation to a “public relations victory” amounts to not-so-subtle propaganda.

If this U.N. body had made this finding in similar circumstances, against the Governments of countries in the southern hemisphere, the brave Foreign Secretaries and officials would shout loudly for upholding the outcome of a process they helped to establish.

INSERT, Feb 8th:   See at bottom, excerpt from the actual U.N. Report, their Statement on whether their decisions are legally binding.  The Reuters/Associated Press/CTV Coverage is also propagandist when it quotes officials who announce, without qualification,  that the UN Panel’s findings are not legally binding.

 

3.    RE: The 44-year-old computer hacker’s lawyers

Assange is an investigative journalist and founder of Wikileaks. Reuters chose dismissive words (tool of the propagandist), characterizing Assange as a “computer hacker”.  In spite of  intense surveillance, his work continues.

 

I will check back later  (to the CTV News Coverage)  – – I hope to see these errors corrected. Thanks!

(3 days later no corrections have been made.)

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Full text of UN judgement in Julian Assange’s case (No. 54/2015)  http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Detention/A.HRC.WGAD.2015.docx  (.docx)

More: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=17013&LangID=E 

Feb 062016
 
IMPORTANT VIDEO

Click on   http://www.democracynow.org/2016/2/5/a_significant_victory_julian_assange_hails 

A United Nations panel has officially concluded WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been “arbitrarily detained” and should be allowed to walk free. Assange has been holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London for more than three years. He wants to avoid extradition to Sweden over sex crimes allegations, which he has repeatedly denied and for which he has never been charged. He fears Sweden would extradite him to the United States, where he could face trial for WikiLeaks’ revelations. We air reaction to the U.N. decision from Assange and his attorney, Melinda Taylor, and speak with Mads Andenæs, U.N. special rapporteur on arbitrary detention.   (Transcript below)

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CTV NEWS COVERAGE OF THE STORY

There are THREE FACTUAL ERRORS  I  reported to CTV.

See   “Error Report” sent to CTV news re their coverage of “Significant victory”   

Three days later, corrections have not been made.   The “Errors” add a significant stroke of propaganda.

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FULL TEXT OF THE UN JUDGMENT

Julian Assange case (No. 54/2015)  http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Detention/A.HRC.WGAD.2015.docx  (.docx)

More: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=17013&LangID=E 

TRANSCRIPT, AMY GOODMAN, DEMOCRACY NOW COVERAGE OF THE UN FINDINGS

 

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: A United Nations panel has officially concluded WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been “arbitrarily detained” and should be allowed to walk free. Assange has been holed up in Ecuadorean Embassy in London for more than three years. He wants to avoid extradition to Sweden over sex crimes allegations, which he has repeatedly denied and for which he has never been charged. He fears Sweden would extradite him to the United States, where he could face trial for WikiLeaks’ revelations.

AMY GOODMAN: Seong-Phil Hong, the rapporteur of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, spoke this morning.

SEONGPHIL HONG: The working group maintains the arbitrary detention of Mr. Assange should be brought to an end. And his physical integrity and his freedom of movement should be respected. And finally, if necessary, he should be entitled to an enforceable right to remedy—for example, compensation.

AMY GOODMAN: The U.N. panel’s judgment is not legally binding. British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond dismissed it as “ridiculous.”

PHILIP HAMMOND: Well, I reject the finding of this working group. It’s a group made up of laypeople, not lawyers, and they are—their conclusion is flawed in law. Julian Assange is a fugitive from justice. He’s hiding from justice in the Ecuadorean Embassy. He can come out onto the pavement any time he chooses. He’s not being detained by us. But he will have to face justice in Sweden, if he chooses to do so. And it’s right that he should not be able to escape justice. This is a—frankly, a ridiculous finding by the working group, and we reject it.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: At a press conference at the Frontline Club in London this morning, Julian Assange’s attorney, Melinda Taylor, discussed the significance of the ruling.

MELINDA TAYLOR: So, finally, we have the verdict of the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. And they issued a very detailed opinion, which considers all arguments from Sweden and the United Kingdom. And this decision dispels the myth that Mr. Assange is either a fugitive from justice or that he could just walk out of the embassy. It is a damning indictment of the manner in which this case has been handled. It further affirms that Mr. Assange is a victim of a significant miscarriage of justice that is attributable to the action and inaction of both Sweden and the United Kingdom. It further emphasized Julian’s continued willingness to cooperate with the investigations in this case at all stages of the procedure.

Now, today I’m going to first address why we brought a complaint before the United Nations working group and, secondly, what are the findings of this working group. In terms of why we brought the complaint, there are two main reasons. First, he is and has been detained now for five years, one month and 29 days. And to put it bluntly, that’s a hell of a long time to detain someone, someone who has never been charged and has never even been questioned by the Swedish authorities.

AMY GOODMAN: Julian Assange also responded to the ruling just before our broadcast today. He spoke at that news conference at the Frontline Club in London via video stream from the Ecuadorean Embassy in London.

JULIAN ASSANGE: Well, I’ve been detained now without charge in this country, the United Kingdom, for five-and-a-half years. That’s five-and-a-half years where I’ve had great difficulty seeing my family and seeing my children. Today that detention without charge has been found by the highest organization in the United Nations—that is, has the jurisdiction for considering the rights of detained persons—to be unlawful.

AMY GOODMAN: That’s Julian Assange speaking just minutes before we went to broadcast through a video stream at the Frontline Club. He’s been holed up at the embassy in—the Ecuadorean Embassy in London for three-and-a-half years, where he got political asylum.

Joining us now is Mads Andenæs. He is the former U.N. special rapporteur on arbitrary detention and the chair of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. He’s a professor at the University of Oslo and a visiting professor at All Souls College in Oxford. And that’s where we’re speaking to him right now.

Mads Andenæs, thanks so much for joining us. Can you explain the ruling of the U.N. committee?

MADS ANDENÆS: So, the U.N. committee holds that this is a violation of the prohibition against arbitrary detention. Mr. Assange has been deprived of his liberty for a five-year—more than a five-year period. He was initially arrested and detained in isolation. The isolation was completely groundless. He was afterwards in house arrest under, again, very strict restrictions. He was then threatened with actually being extradited to Sweden. And you’ve spoken about the consequences of that. And that would negate his basic human rights. He had no other choice than to go and seek refuge, and he did that in the Ecuadorean Embassy. That was not his choice. That was not his volition. It was the only way he could uphold his own rights in this situation.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Mads Andenæs, I wanted to ask you—The Guardian newspaper had an editorial basically not backing—not backing Julian Assange, and saying that the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, that this latest opinion, is simply wrong. It says, “He is not being detained arbitrarily. Three-and-a-half years ago, he sought refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in order to avoid extradition to Sweden to face allegations of sex offences. … ‘Arbitrary’ detention,” The Guardian says, “means that due legal process has not been observed. It has. This is a publicity stunt.” What do you say to that?

MADS ANDENÆS: Well, first of all, due process has not been upheld, and that’s what the U.N. working group very clearly shows—a series of procedural mistakes on the Swedish side, no proportionality review on the U.K. side. And the alternatives here—there were alternatives. Under the European Arrest Warrant system, he could have been interviewed, interrogated in England, in London. That’s how we normally do these things in Europe. In these kind of cases, Swedish officers could have traveled to the U.K. He would—Mr. Assange would have been interviewed in an English police station. That’s how we usually do it, and it wasn’t done here. It was a highly irregular procedure. This was nothing like due process. And it is obvious to the U.N. group and, after this ruling, obvious that this did not serve the purposes of the case, the way it was explained. This was to achieve other aims and illegitimate aims. And it was clearly not a part of a due process.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to go back to Julian Assange speaking this morning after the U.N. ruling became public.

JULIAN ASSANGE: It is now the task of the states of Sweden and the United Kingdom, as a whole, to implement the verdict. Now, while there can be attempts for the media, for the popular press, to look tough and attempt to undermine that, a serious attempt, not just for show, would have the effect of undermining the U.N. system. And there are consequences of doing that. And Sweden and the U.K. know full well that there are consequences. Those consequences include not merely weakening a human rights and international law instrument to which both countries have signed binding treaties, but rather it will have the diplomatic effect—and diplomats know it. The diplomatic effect will be to make life difficult for Sweden and the United Kingdom to be treated seriously as international players that obey their international legal obligations.

Their attempts, if they proceed to undermine the U.N. system, will see various enforcement measures that can be taken by the U.N. Those, initially, of course, can include their removal from U.N. committees, the movement against those states in various voting processes, and, ultimately, up to and including sanctions. Now that’s, of course, a matter for the U.N. to decide about how it’s going to enforce its decisions, and a matter for Sweden and the U.K. to think, do they really want to go down that path?

AMY GOODMAN: So, that is Julian Assange speaking at the news conference today, albeit by video stream because he is in the Ecuadorean Embassy. If he steps foot outside, he’ll be arrested by British authorities. We’re talking to the former U.N. rapporteur on arbitrary detention, Mads Andenæs. I was watching CNN this morning, and a reporter was standing outside the Ecuadorean Embassy and saying, “Despite Sweden’s efforts to question Julian Assange in the embassy, Ecuador has prevented them from doing this.” This was exactly the opposite. This was not true, what the reporter said. Ecuador has said that the Swedish authorities could come in. Even a court in Sweden has reprimanded the prosecutor for not questioning Julian Assange. Mads Andenæs, can you say what happens from here?

MADS ANDENÆS: Well, it’s now for the U.K. and the Swedish authorities to find some way of abiding by this opinion. This U.N. body is the only body or the one U.N. body dealing with arbitrary detention. And they come with this very clear ruling. Sweden and the U.K. are bound by the U.N. Convention on Civil and Political Rights. And it’s now for them to find a way of complying.

And what you mentioned there is part of the substance of the case. There are, of course, lesser—much lesser measures, less intrusive measures that could have been chosen. For instance, they could have interviewed him in the U.K. And it’s not true that Assange has not offered that, as far as I—well, I think it’s absolutely clear, although you have this reporter that you just mentioned. To the contrary, it’s absolutely clear that Assange and his team has offered to answer—that he should offer—he had offered to answer questions by Swedish police in the U.K. That’s beyond dispute. And that offer has not been taken up. And as you mentioned, Swedish courts have been very critical of the prosecutor, of the Swedish prosecutor, for this. And if you read those judgments closely—they’re in Swedish, of course—you will see that it is as strong a criticism as you can expect possible from a Swedish court against the way that the prosecutors have proceeded here.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Mads Andenæs, we only have about 30 seconds or so, but your sense of how public opinion, both in Britain and in Sweden, is in respect to how their governments are dealing with the Julian Assange case?

MADS ANDENÆS: Well, it’s split. It’s split. But no country likes to get a ruling for arbitrary detention, to be censured by the U.N. like this. But if you don’t abide by it, you fall into the category of countries we don’t like to compare ourselves with, who do not abide by these rulings. And it’s very important for the international human rights systems that countries like the U.K. and Sweden do actually go for—show a good example and do follow these rulings, because, in the end, they are bound by the conventions. And there’s no more authority body to interpret and apply the Convention on Arbitrary Detention than this working group, which is established by the U.N. And—

AMY GOODMAN: Mads Andenæs, we’re going to have to leave it there, but I thank you so much for being with us. He is the former U.N. special rapporteur on arbitrary detention and chair of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, now professor at University of Oslo, a visiting professor at All Souls College in Oxford, where we just spoke to him.