Preach Christ by all means and always with
gentleness and respect so that none can criticize you. As far as it is possible,
live at peace with one another.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, May 16, 2005 10:19 PM
Subject: Re: [TruthTalk] TRUTH TALK Most
Dangerous man in Canada
CW other ways to bring the gospel to the people.
Like your puppet ministry at church?
The PC crowd has no tolerance for hate
literature. No ACLU in Canada, remember. Either the Evangelist will choose
fines and jail (and jail is frequent in some countries like China) or he
will find other ways to bring the gospel to the people.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, May 16, 2005 9:10
AM
Subject: Re: [TruthTalk] TRUTH TALK
Most Dangerous man in Canada
$17,000 fine for handing out literature?
The PC crowd is very INTOLERANT even of words!
But to hear them talk that is a different story, they love to tell
you how open they are! Terry Clifton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
And
I thought the USA was a Godless country.
Kevin Deegan
wrote:
Note: forwarded message attached.
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Whatcott ordered to stop anti-gay
flyers |
Last Updated May 13 2005 09:02 AM
CDT CBC News |
REGINA – A Saskatchewan human rights
tribunal has ruled a former Regina man incited hatred against
gays and lesbians and has ordered him to pay more than $17,000.
|
Bill Whatcott CBC file
photo | In 2002, four people filed complaints
against Bill Whatcott and a group called the Christian Truth
Activists. They objected to pamphlets distributed in
Regina and Saskatoon that referred to homosexual men as
"sodomites" and called same-sex relationships "filthy". One of
the flyers said: "Sodomites are 430 times more likely to acquire
AIDS and three times more likely to sexually abuse children!"
Brendan Wallace, one of the
complainants, testified in 2002 he was angry and fearful as a
result of receiving the material at his home.
READ THE
DECISION |
Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission
Tribunal: Wallace et al vs.
Whatcott
(Note: CBC does
not endorse and is not responsible for the content of
external sites. Link will open in new window)
| "Initially he thought it
was a personal attack on his partner and himself," the tribunal
decision said. "He related some of his life experiences as a gay
man and wondered how others would react, including members of
his own family." Whatcott has been ordered to pay $17,500 to
Wallace and the three other complainants for hurt feelings and
loss of dignity and self-respect. And the tribunal has ruled
that Whatcott and his group can no longer distribute material
that promotes hatred against people because of their sexual
orientation. On Thursday, Wallace said he was pleased the
tribunal agreed spreading this kind of material is wrong, but he
doubts Whatcott's group will stop. "Only two weeks ago, we
received some similar hate mail distributed to our house from
the same man and the same group," he said. Whatcott could not be
reached for comment. |
|
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