From: <info@westernstandard.ca>
To: <coddy@dowco.com>
Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 9:02 PM
Subject: The Western Standard needs your help!
>
> Dear Western Standard reader,
>
> Our magazine has been sued for publishing the Danish cartoons, and I
> need your help to fight back!
>
> As you know, the Western Standard was the only mainstream media
> organ in Canada to publish the Danish cartoons depicting the Muslim
> prophet Mohammed.
>
> We did so for a simple reason: the cartoons were the central fact in
> one of the largest news stories of the year, and we're a news
> magazine. We publish the facts and we let our readers make up their minds.
>
> Advertisers stood with us. Readers loved the fact that we treated
> them like grown-ups. And we earned the respect of many other
> journalists in Canada who envied our independence. In fact, according
> to a COMPAS poll last month, fully 70% of Canada's working journalists
> supported our decision to publish the cartoons.
>
> But not Syed Soharwardy, a radical Calgary Muslim imam.
>
> He asked the police to arrest me for publishing the cartoons. They
> calmly explained to him that's not what police in Canada do.
>
> So then he went to a far less liberal institution than the police:
> the Alberta Human Rights Commission. Unlike the Calgary Police
> Service, they didn't have the common sense to show him the door.
>
> Earlier this month, I received a copy of Soharwardy's rambling,
> hand-scrawled complaint. It is truly an embarrassing document. He
> briefly complains that we published the Danish cartoons. But the bulk
> of his complaint is that we dared to try to justify it - that we dared
> to disagree with him.
>
> Think about that: In Soharwardy's view, not only should the Canadian
> media be banned from publishing the cartoons, but we should be banned
> from defending our right to publish them. Perhaps the Charter of
> Rights that guarantees our freedom of the press should be banned, too.
>
> Soharwardy's complaint goes further than just the cartoons. It
> refers to news articles we published about Hamas, a group labelled a
> terrorist organization by the Canadian government. By including those
> other articles, he shows his real agenda: censoring any criticism of
> Muslim extremists.
>
> Perhaps the most embarrassing thing about Soharwardy's complaint is
> that he claims our cartoons caused him to receive hate mail. Indeed,
> his complaint includes copies of a few e-mails from strangers to him.
> Some of those e-mails even go so far as to call him "humourless" and
> tell him to "lighten up". Perhaps that's hateful. But all of those
> e-mails were sent to him before our magazine even published the
> cartoons. Soharwardy isn't even pretending that this is a legitimate
> complaint. He's not even trying to hide that this is a nuisance suit.
>
> Soharwardy's complaint should have been thrown out immediately by
> the Alberta Human Rights Commission, just like the police did. But it wasn't.
> Which is why I'm writing to you today.
>
> According to our lawyers, we will win this case. It's an infantile
> complaint, without basis in facts or law. Frankly, it's an
> embarrassment to the government of Alberta that their tribunal is open
> to abuse like this.
>
> Our lawyers tell us we're going to win. But not before we have to
> spend hundreds of hours and up to $75,000 fighting this thing, at our
> own expense. Soharwardy doesn't have to spend a dime - now that his
> complaint has been filed, Alberta tax dollars will pay for the
> prosecution of his complaint. We have to pay for this on our own.
>
> Look, $75,000 isn't going to bankrupt us. But it will sting. We're a
> small, independent magazine, not a huge company with deep pockets. All
> of our money is needed to produce the best possible editorial product,
> not to fight legal battles. This is clearly an abuse of process
> designed to punish us and deter other media from daring to cross that
> angry imam in the future.
> One of the leaders in Canadian human rights law, Alan Borovoy, was
> so disturbed by Soharwardy's abuse of the human rights commission that
> he wrote a public letter about it in the Calgary Herald on March 16th.
> "During the years when my colleagues and I were labouring to create
> such commissions, we never imagined that they might ultimately be used
> against freedom of speech," wrote Borovoy, who is general counsel for
> the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. Censorship was "hardly the
> role we had envisioned for human rights commissions. There should be
> no question of the right to publish the impugned cartoons," he wrote
>
>
> Borovoy went even further - he said that the human rights laws
> should be changed to avoid this sort of abuse in the future. "It would
> be best, therefore, to change the provisions of the Human Rights Act
> to remove any such ambiguities of interpretation," he wrote. That's an
> amazing statement, coming from one of the fathers of the Canadian
> human rights movement.
>
> I agree with Borovoy: the law should be changed to stop future abuses.
> But those changes will come too late for us - we're already under attack.
> The human rights laws, designed as a shield, are being used against us
> as a sword.
>
> We will file our legal response to Soharwardy's shakedown this week.
> And we will fight this battle to the end - not just for our own sake,
> but to defend freedom of the press for all Canadians.
>
> .
>
> Yours gratefully,
>
> Ezra Levant
> Publisher
>
> P.S. Remember, Soharwardy's complaint will be prosecuted using tax
> dollars and government lawyers. We have to rely on our own funds - and
> the generous support of readers like you.
>
> P.P.S. Please help us now, at
http://www.westernstandard.ca/freedom
>
>
--
>.)
Unter blinden ist der einäugige könig.
http://worldimprover.net/
WICHTIG / IMPORTANT: islam-info:
http://historyofjihad.org/ -
http://apostatesofislam.com/