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Will Justice Be Served?

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  • Will Justice Be Served?

    The Mark, Canada
    May 6 2011


    Will Justice Be Served?
    by The Mark Newsroom


    First Posted: May 06 2011 14:05 PM
    Updated: about 2 hours ago


    New crimes, bigger prisons, and Supreme Court appointments will be a
    big part of the Tory legacy.

    Stephen Harper's majority allows him to pass a crime bill that is the
    basis for spending as much as $5 billion on new prisons. Brian Lilley
    of the Sun chain questions the wisdom behind the bill's provision that
    makes it illegal to link to any website with hate speech on it. `Will
    websites promoting Israeli Apartheid Week, now a staple on university
    campuses across Canada, land someone in jail?' asks Lilley. `What
    about web postings on the Armenian genocide which the Armenians blame
    the Turks for but which the Turks dispute?' Sentences for such
    offences can garner up to two years in jail, which Lilley calls `a
    ridiculous proposal that has no place in a country that claims to
    cherish freedom of expression.'

    A commentator on the opposite side of the political spectrum, Ian
    Mulgrew, comes to a similar conclusion about the bill in the Vancouver
    Sun. Pointing to public opinion polls in favour of the tough-on-crime
    legislation, Mulgrew wonders why `no matter the evidence of a decade
    of declining crime rates, the nation feels less safe and the Tories
    say that requires broad changes and a legal cultural shakeup.' Justice
    was the one of very few areas in which the Tories vastly differed from
    their rivals, says Mulgrew, an aberration of questionable spending in
    an otherwise restrained platform. It's the same mentality behind
    justice policies in Arizona, Mulgrew points out, where the population
    in prison grew tenfold over the past 30 years, while the total
    population only doubled.

    The Tories could alter Canada's justice system permanently through the
    Supreme Court. The Ottawa Citizen's Dan Gardner examines what Harper
    might do with the four new judges he'll appoint to the country's
    highest bench. `Quite conceivably, Stephen Harper will determine the
    character of the judiciary for a generation,' writes Gardner. Harper's
    two previous selections, Marshall Rothstein and Thomas Cromwell, are
    universally considered excellent choices. But with an emboldened
    majority, and worrying comments from Immigration Minister Jason Kenney
    condemning the courts for not following the Conservatives' political
    agenda, Gardner says jurists are rightly concerned over whether `the
    reasonable moderate or the partisan zealot' will be the one making
    those appointments.

    http://www.themarknews.com/articles/5082-will-justice-be-served




    From: A. Papazian
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