Judge orders kids to state-run daycare

A Cyber Arena in which Home Schoolers may congregate for opinionating and perhaps for announcing upcoming events and the like.

Postby planter » 05/ 14/ 11 11:24 am

We've gone so far downhill as a society that I'm thinking that Edward has the best take on this. The hell with them all! I don't care what the idiots like this judge have to say. Let them try and take my kids and then let the chips fall where they may.
planter
 
Posts: 651
Joined: 06/ 20/ 03 8:05 pm
Location: Nova Scotia

Postby Edward Kennedy » 05/ 14/ 11 12:01 pm

liber wrote:It was just referring to the homeschooled kids but I do believe that the judge overstepped big time ordering the kids into daycare. I think he overstepped with the homeschooled kids too.


...in short the law is an ass or the judge is an ass or both.
User avatar
Edward Kennedy
 
Posts: 29636
Joined: 04/ 14/ 05 7:39 pm

Postby WestViking » 05/ 14/ 11 12:10 pm

liber wrote:On a homeschooling list that I am on, one of the posters said that the problem is that Quebec law is based on Napoleonic code and not common law which is very dogmatic and this is why the justice went to great lengths to explain this wasn't about their right of religion, right of choice etc. It was simply about their failure to meet the requirements of the laws regarding homeschooling and in particular the law regarding the protection of children.

this is how he explained it....

The trouble with Napoleonic code legal systems is that the legal system then
becomes black and white. So for example, if they declared that homeschooling is illegal except under certain conditions, then if you don't follow those conditions then you've broken the law. It doesn't matter that you didn't meet condition X for religious reasons ... you simply broke the law. End of Matter. You want to argue the matter, you have to prove that the law violates some higher law.

Common law or case law legal systems, on the other hand offer defense where laws and rights clash on a case by case basis. For example "colour of right" defence ... a typical example of which is you grant me the use of your car to go to the store, but enroute, I have a call that my great aunt in New Brunswick is on her death bed, so I, knowing that you won't need your car for a few days, take it to New Brunswick. You assume I stole your car, so I face a theft charge. I can claim defense by "colour of right". I knew what I did was wrong, but I thought you wouldn't mind based on a "greater good."


The problem is that the explanation offered does not fit the case. The parents face no charges of any kind. They do not appear to have breached any law.

It appears that the Quebec Child Protection Agency petitioned the court to have the children sent to school because in the opinion of its bureaucrats, the children required 'socialization'. I strongly doubt that there is any law requiring that children be 'socialized' or that there is any legal definition of the term.

One definition of 'socialize' is to make something publicly owned - in this case, 'something' being 'children'. Quebec is a long way down the road to becoming a socialist republic.

I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.
The most effective way to stifle democracy is to transfer decision-making from the public arena to unaccountable institutions: activist judges, human rights tribunals, parliamentary committees, civil service bureaucrats and political party hacks.
User avatar
WestViking
Member
 
Posts: 21606
Joined: 12/ 14/ 01 2:01 am
Location: Winipeg, MB

Postby styky » 05/ 14/ 11 1:08 pm

WestViking wrote:
liber wrote:On a homeschooling list that I am on, one of the posters said that the problem is that Quebec law is based on Napoleonic code and not common law which is very dogmatic and this is why the justice went to great lengths to explain this wasn't about their right of religion, right of choice etc. It was simply about their failure to meet the requirements of the laws regarding homeschooling and in particular the law regarding the protection of children.

this is how he explained it....

The trouble with Napoleonic code legal systems is that the legal system then
becomes black and white. So for example, if they declared that homeschooling is illegal except under certain conditions, then if you don't follow those conditions then you've broken the law. It doesn't matter that you didn't meet condition X for religious reasons ... you simply broke the law. End of Matter. You want to argue the matter, you have to prove that the law violates some higher law.

Common law or case law legal systems, on the other hand offer defense where laws and rights clash on a case by case basis. For example "colour of right" defence ... a typical example of which is you grant me the use of your car to go to the store, but enroute, I have a call that my great aunt in New Brunswick is on her death bed, so I, knowing that you won't need your car for a few days, take it to New Brunswick. You assume I stole your car, so I face a theft charge. I can claim defense by "colour of right". I knew what I did was wrong, but I thought you wouldn't mind based on a "greater good."


The problem is that the explanation offered does not fit the case. The parents face no charges of any kind. They do not appear to have breached any law.

It appears that the Quebec Child Protection Agency petitioned the court to have the children sent to school because in the opinion of its bureaucrats, the children required 'socialization'. I strongly doubt that there is any law requiring that children be 'socialized' or that there is any legal definition of the term.

One definition of 'socialize' is to make something publicly owned - in this case, 'something' being 'children'. Quebec is a long way down the road to becoming a socialist republic.

I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.


I believe Quebec never signed on to that particular item
Click here for FREEDOMINION FORUM RULES
All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice; honor; duty; mercy; hope ~ Sir Winston Churchill
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
User avatar
styky
Member
 
Posts: 120244
Joined: 03/ 10/ 03 9:21 pm

Postby Dogpatch » 05/ 14/ 11 1:21 pm

Connie Fournier wrote:Canadians are sheep. I've talked to a couple of random people about this and, invariably, their position is, "Well, the family must have been doing something wrong."

The default position of most Canadians is that the government and the police can do no wrong. Is someone's freedom is taken away, they must have deserved it.

I am very depressed for my country.


and

WestViking wrote:
liber wrote:On a homeschooling list that I am on, one of the posters said that the problem is that Quebec law is based on Napoleonic code and not common law which is very dogmatic and this is why the justice went to great lengths to explain this wasn't about their right of religion, right of choice etc. It was simply about their failure to meet the requirements of the laws regarding homeschooling and in particular the law regarding the protection of children.

this is how he explained it....

The trouble with Napoleonic code legal systems is that the legal system then
becomes black and white. So for example, if they declared that homeschooling is illegal except under certain conditions, then if you don't follow those conditions then you've broken the law. It doesn't matter that you didn't meet condition X for religious reasons ... you simply broke the law. End of Matter. You want to argue the matter, you have to prove that the law violates some higher law.

Common law or case law legal systems, on the other hand offer defense where laws and rights clash on a case by case basis. For example "colour of right" defence ... a typical example of which is you grant me the use of your car to go to the store, but enroute, I have a call that my great aunt in New Brunswick is on her death bed, so I, knowing that you won't need your car for a few days, take it to New Brunswick. You assume I stole your car, so I face a theft charge. I can claim defense by "colour of right". I knew what I did was wrong, but I thought you wouldn't mind based on a "greater good."


The problem is that the explanation offered does not fit the case. The parents face no charges of any kind. They do not appear to have breached any law.

It appears that the Quebec Child Protection Agency petitioned the court to have the children sent to school because in the opinion of its bureaucrats, the children required 'socialization'. I strongly doubt that there is any law requiring that children be 'socialized' or that there is any legal definition of the term.

One definition of 'socialize' is to make something publicly owned - in this case, 'something' being 'children'. Quebec is a long way down the road to becoming a socialist republic.

I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.


Well said Connie and WV. Liber has a very good point.

WV - Quebec is a pro-socialist and pro-union province. Quebec also has its own charter of rights - and since education is provincial, the appeal will have to use it

I mentioned this story to my wife (she works in the English school board here) and she initially assumed the parents must have did something wrong. After she read the articles about this outrage, then she changed her tune.

But I think it will be a hard battle for the parents - because the "best interests" of the children will be the battle cry for child protection and they (supposedly) are the experts

Child protection are the experts :roll:
User avatar
Dogpatch
 
Posts: 7617
Joined: 07/ 22/ 07 12:54 pm

Postby Kate Shaw » 05/ 14/ 11 6:04 pm

Connie Fournier wrote:
Narrow Back wrote:
Connie Fournier wrote:I know someone that, I think, would agree wholeheartedly with what you just posted, Narrow Back...if she didn't know where it came from.


You know my sister??? :lol:

I think there are many people who embrace these failed ideas that have no idea where they come from and therefore have never considered the consequences. It's like the Soviet Empire never existed for them.


If I have to hear "it takes a village to raise a child" one more time, I might just shoot myself in the head.


Actually I believe that originally referred to community standards held in common; that is, the neighbours had the same rules at their house as your mother and father had, so they would enforce those standards just as your parents would, and you would expect to behave in their house just as you would behave at home. In the Fifties this was a good thing.
"The line separating good and evil passes not through states, not between classes, nor between political parties, either but right through every human heart." Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Image Support Israel!
User avatar
Kate Shaw
 
Posts: 24729
Joined: 12/ 07/ 04 2:21 pm
Location: Toronto

Postby Harry » 05/ 14/ 11 6:54 pm

Quebec just gets wackier every day. Maybe we should cut them free and save a bunch of money.
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men and women to do nothing
User avatar
Harry
 
Posts: 3886
Joined: 04/ 28/ 03 12:02 pm
Location: west van

Postby WestViking » 05/ 14/ 11 7:37 pm

styky wrote:
WestViking wrote:I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.
I believe Quebec never signed on to that particular item.
Various Quebec politicials have claimed that the constitution does not apply to them as they refused to sign on, however, nine of ten provinces representing 75% of the population did. Quebecers are poor losers unwilling to accept the will of a democratic majority. Moreover, Quebecers have filed dozens of court appeals and challenges under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms which is part of the constitution they claim to ignore.
The most effective way to stifle democracy is to transfer decision-making from the public arena to unaccountable institutions: activist judges, human rights tribunals, parliamentary committees, civil service bureaucrats and political party hacks.
User avatar
WestViking
Member
 
Posts: 21606
Joined: 12/ 14/ 01 2:01 am
Location: Winipeg, MB

Postby Dogpatch » 05/ 15/ 11 12:02 pm

WestViking wrote:
styky wrote:
WestViking wrote:I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.
I believe Quebec never signed on to that particular item.


Various Quebec politicials have claimed that the constitution does not apply to them as they refused to sign on, however, nine of ten provinces representing 75% of the population did. Quebecers are poor losers unwilling to accept the will of a democratic majority. Moreover, Quebecers have filed dozens of court appeals and challenges under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms which is part of the constitution they claim to ignore.


WV, I'm surprised that you are generalizing.

It is actually the Quebec politicians who are the poor losers.

Joseph and Marie Poutine can and do use the Charter for whatever reason as is their right as citoyen(ne) canadien(ne)
User avatar
Dogpatch
 
Posts: 7617
Joined: 07/ 22/ 07 12:54 pm

Postby WestViking » 05/ 15/ 11 8:40 pm

Dogpatch wrote:
WestViking wrote:
styky wrote:
WestViking wrote:I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.
I believe Quebec never signed on to that particular item.


Various Quebec politicials have claimed that the constitution does not apply to them as they refused to sign on, however, nine of ten provinces representing 75% of the population did. Quebecers are poor losers unwilling to accept the will of a democratic majority. Moreover, Quebecers have filed dozens of court appeals and challenges under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms which is part of the constitution they claim to ignore.


WV, I'm surprised that you are generalizing.

It is actually the Quebec politicians who are the poor losers.

Joseph and Marie Poutine can and do use the Charter for whatever reason as is their right as citoyen(ne) canadien(ne)
I apologize - you are correct. However, a number of Ottawa politicians have gone along with the Quebec constitutional sham. It is time to stop the madness.
The most effective way to stifle democracy is to transfer decision-making from the public arena to unaccountable institutions: activist judges, human rights tribunals, parliamentary committees, civil service bureaucrats and political party hacks.
User avatar
WestViking
Member
 
Posts: 21606
Joined: 12/ 14/ 01 2:01 am
Location: Winipeg, MB

Postby Charles J. White » 05/ 15/ 11 8:45 pm

Connie Fournier wrote:That is DISGUSTING!!! If that was my family, I would be out of that province tomorrow! :x


People wanted the welfare state, now they will choke on it
Image

Red Ensign, The True Flag

I Support Canada
User avatar
Charles J. White
 
Posts: 6442
Joined: 10/ 15/ 07 8:46 pm
Location: Saint John New Brunswick

Postby Charles J. White » 05/ 15/ 11 8:49 pm

We all know what they say, 'It takes a village to raise a child'...
Image

Red Ensign, The True Flag

I Support Canada
User avatar
Charles J. White
 
Posts: 6442
Joined: 10/ 15/ 07 8:46 pm
Location: Saint John New Brunswick

Postby Dogpatch » 05/ 15/ 11 10:50 pm

WestViking wrote:
Dogpatch wrote:
WestViking wrote:
styky wrote:
WestViking wrote:I submit that the judge's order can be fought on two grounds - first, that the original petition had no basis in law and should have been thrown out of the court; and second that the children's and parent's freedoms and rights guaranteed under the charter contained in the constitution have been violated and the constitution overrides provincial laws.
I believe Quebec never signed on to that particular item.


Various Quebec politicials have claimed that the constitution does not apply to them as they refused to sign on, however, nine of ten provinces representing 75% of the population did. Quebecers are poor losers unwilling to accept the will of a democratic majority. Moreover, Quebecers have filed dozens of court appeals and challenges under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms which is part of the constitution they claim to ignore.


WV, I'm surprised that you are generalizing.

It is actually the Quebec politicians who are the poor losers.

Joseph and Marie Poutine can and do use the Charter for whatever reason as is their right as citoyen(ne) canadien(ne)
I apologize - you are correct. However, a number of Ottawa politicians have gone along with the Quebec constitutional sham. It is time to stop the madness.


Well, the good thing is harper doesn't need Quebec votes and will now govern properly. (hopefully)
User avatar
Dogpatch
 
Posts: 7617
Joined: 07/ 22/ 07 12:54 pm

Postby Connie Fournier » 05/ 16/ 11 5:16 am

Charles J. White wrote:We all know what they say, 'It takes a village to raise a child'...
:hangem:
"Some of my policing friends would be horrified by the fact that I`ve come to speak to an Anti-Racist Action conference this morning. Some of you are probably horrified by the fact that I just used the words `police`and `friends` in the same sentence." - Richard Warman, July 6, 2005
User avatar
Connie Fournier
Member
 
Posts: 20386
Joined: 01/ 06/ 01 2:01 am
Location: Kingston, Ontario

Postby backhoe » 05/ 16/ 11 5:43 am

"For the sake of the children,
we had to destroy the village
in order to save it..."

I keep telling you folks, it's time for tumbrels & guillotines.

I denounce myself!
Just a Merry-Hearted Keyboard PirateBoy, Plunderin' his way across the Internet....
Image
User avatar
backhoe
 
Posts: 32536
Joined: 01/ 20/ 01 2:01 am
Location: Angel of the 7th Station

PreviousNext

Return to Home Education

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests