All,
I have been hearing rumblings on Twitter of a different Ontario judge now disagree with the ruling in the Anwar case and upholding the Constitutionality of Bill C-36. The case is subject to a publication ban so it is difficult to find much information about it but it is apparently called R. vs. Macdonald that is being heard by a former crown prosecutor that was just appointed as a judge last year named Giulia Gambacorta. The quote I heard was that Judge Gambacorta said in her ruling in R. vs. Macdonald that Judge Thomas Mackay(in the Anwar case) was simply "wrong" in his application of the law.
Second the Supreme Court of Canada in my opinion looks weaker and weaker in writing Bedford how they did. It is quite obvious that the Supreme Court of Canada was reluctant both during Bedford and now to say that buying and selling is a charter protected activity comparable to selling and buying newspapers or paying unions dues instead trying to pass the political heat from those members of the public opposed to prostitution to Parliament. If it did it would be the first court in the world to basically rule this way, even in the countries with decrim the courts have not actually said there is a human right to buy and sell sex akin to freedom of speech and buying and selling newspapers. However, the aftermath of Bedford now seems to be lower court judges now fighting among themselves and calling each names something which the Supreme Court of Canada claims to want to avoid.
**The Supreme Court of Canada ruled about 15 years that consensual sex including "group" sex and swingers clubs are a constitutionally protected form of freedom of association and "positive source of human expression, fullfillment, and pleasure" there words not mine. Hence Parliament cannot ban all sexual intercourse whether or not money changes hands in the same way Parliament can ban hard drugs whether or not money changes hands something a lot of radical feminists don't seem to understand the difference between. Hence my argument that trying to ban paid sex is like saying Parliament has to allow newspapers to publish what they wish to but Parliament if they wanted could ban newspapers from charging a subscription fee for articles the govt of the day disapproved of.
I have been hearing rumblings on Twitter of a different Ontario judge now disagree with the ruling in the Anwar case and upholding the Constitutionality of Bill C-36. The case is subject to a publication ban so it is difficult to find much information about it but it is apparently called R. vs. Macdonald that is being heard by a former crown prosecutor that was just appointed as a judge last year named Giulia Gambacorta. The quote I heard was that Judge Gambacorta said in her ruling in R. vs. Macdonald that Judge Thomas Mackay(in the Anwar case) was simply "wrong" in his application of the law.
Second the Supreme Court of Canada in my opinion looks weaker and weaker in writing Bedford how they did. It is quite obvious that the Supreme Court of Canada was reluctant both during Bedford and now to say that buying and selling is a charter protected activity comparable to selling and buying newspapers or paying unions dues instead trying to pass the political heat from those members of the public opposed to prostitution to Parliament. If it did it would be the first court in the world to basically rule this way, even in the countries with decrim the courts have not actually said there is a human right to buy and sell sex akin to freedom of speech and buying and selling newspapers. However, the aftermath of Bedford now seems to be lower court judges now fighting among themselves and calling each names something which the Supreme Court of Canada claims to want to avoid.
**The Supreme Court of Canada ruled about 15 years that consensual sex including "group" sex and swingers clubs are a constitutionally protected form of freedom of association and "positive source of human expression, fullfillment, and pleasure" there words not mine. Hence Parliament cannot ban all sexual intercourse whether or not money changes hands in the same way Parliament can ban hard drugs whether or not money changes hands something a lot of radical feminists don't seem to understand the difference between. Hence my argument that trying to ban paid sex is like saying Parliament has to allow newspapers to publish what they wish to but Parliament if they wanted could ban newspapers from charging a subscription fee for articles the govt of the day disapproved of.
R. v. Labaye - SCC Cases
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