『Episode 106: Yes, you could be JAILED for memes if C-9 passes. Plus, shocking letters to B.C. home owners.』のカバーアート

Episode 106: Yes, you could be JAILED for memes if C-9 passes. Plus, shocking letters to B.C. home owners.

Episode 106: Yes, you could be JAILED for memes if C-9 passes. Plus, shocking letters to B.C. home owners.

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On Episode 106, we explain why the proposed hate speech law C-9 really could lead to jail for your memes, we discuss whether the Liberals' proposed tough-on-crime legislation will be constitutional, and we talk about some shocking letters handed out to B.C. property owners.

Stories and cases discussed in this week's episode:

  • Bill C-9, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (hate propaganda, hate crime and access to religious or cultural places)
  • B.C. politicians hopeful after Ottawa promise of bail-reform bill (CBC News)
  • Carney will introduce legislation next month to tighten bail system (Globe and Mail)
  • Woman jailed for race hate post says she was political prisoner (BBC)
  • Man jailed over racially aggravated posts (BBC)
  • Maryport man jailed over racist online post (BBC)
  • Police make 30 arrests a day for offensive online messages (The Times)
  • Richmond property owners worried after First Nations land claim (Global News)
  • Court Issues First-Ever Jail Sentence in Canada for Holocaust Denial (FSWC)

Not Reserving Judgment is a podcast about Canadian constitutional law hosted by Josh Dehaas, Joanna Baron, and Christine Van Geyn.

The show is brought to you by the Canadian Constitution Foundation, a non-partisan legal charity dedicated to defending rights and freedoms. To support our work, visit theccf.ca/donate.

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