View Full Version : The most noticeable acts against Human rights in your country ..
MM357
11-29-2007, 05:51 AM
In my country policemen and their relevant treats people as if those policemen are kings and all other people are their servants.
I see this s the most noticeable act against Human rights in my country .. but there much more acts which is far away worse than that but may not be noticed if you are not thinking in the matter of Human Rights.
Mitch
11-29-2007, 01:25 PM
I think there are some problems with Human Rights in Canada, and most people do. It mostly has to do with the treatment of the Aboriginal peoples; they live like people in Africa in Canada! The don't get clean water and get treated like s**t from the government.
Horus
11-30-2007, 03:01 AM
The new generation are generally treated one in the same; we're PROBABLY hooligans, and PROBABLY are up to no good. It's a shame for the degree of us who aren't, because we're then labelled as the same. This is turned into a human rights issue by the police and local politicians who discriminate against the teenage demographic.
Cattraknoff
12-07-2007, 09:14 PM
I think there are some problems with Human Rights in Canada, and most people do. It mostly has to do with the treatment of the Aboriginal peoples; they live like people in Africa in Canada! The don't get clean water and get treated like s**t from the government.
Well the problem is in the fact that while the government does devote significant money to aiding them, most of them don't wish to assimilate into the rest of Canadian society. They want to keep their old way of life, which means they will contribute little to the rest of us (in the way of economic output and the like) whilst still wanting to receive healthcare and other benefits.
I would think the fact that we allow the US to kidnap, deport, and torture our citizens is quite a pressing issue.
Also, in the US itself, there's the patriot act, which allows the government to strip anyone of their citizenship, ship them to another country, torture and kill them, all on suspicion that they might be a terrorist.
Remember that as soon as anything of this nature is allowed against ANY person, be them terrorist or not, it also opens the door to abuse against anyone that gets in the way of the ruling class.
Constitutions worldwide are being annihilated, and all we, the people do is sit by and watch.
The war on terror is more like a war on freedom, human rights, and sanity.
Mitch
12-07-2007, 09:19 PM
That's why I refuse to become an American citizen, even though I may have to live/work there some day. Luckily I would have dual citizenship and if I run to Canada, you can't catch me :D
Human rights are always an issue in every country. There is not a single country out there free of acts against human rights. Racism in Belgium, Capital Punishment in US, everywhere you look.
Cattraknoff
12-07-2007, 09:40 PM
That's why I refuse to become an American citizen, even though I may have to live/work there some day. Luckily I would have dual citizenship and if I run to Canada, you can't catch me :D
Human rights are always an issue in every country. There is not a single country out there free of acts against human rights. Racism in Belgium, Capital Punishment in US, everywhere you look.
The problem is the fact that the US government is actively working to destroy human rights. And don't fool yourself into thinking that US policies won't eventually spread wholly to Canada.
Mitch
12-08-2007, 02:35 AM
The problem is the fact that the US government is actively working to destroy human rights. And don't fool yourself into thinking that US policies won't eventually spread wholly to Canada.
Oh, of course US policies will flow to Canada, they always do eventually. But it depends if a president finally steps in to change it (HA!)
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