Chris Selley’s thinking “epitomizes the rape culture”

Anonymous dissects the National Post “moron” who is indifferent to what happened to Rehtaeh:

“…he’s a moron. Let’s slow down for one second and assume that I did release the names of those rapists… what law am I breaking? I suppose they could sue me for slandering them. Of course, to do that they’d have to prove I was lying.

This gets worse: he says we should ignore the photo being spread around the school because it probably happens all time. We can’t expect the legal system to punish everyone that’s passing around photos of women being raped, now can we? It’s ‘fairly routine adolescent behaviour.’

Chris Selley’s article epitomizes the rape culture. Selley is equating a traumatic rape with a picture of a girl’s breast she took in a mirror and sent to her boyfriend.”


Harper, and the Internet, on Rehtaeh (updated twice)

Quote:

“I think we’ve got to stop using just the term bullying to describe some of these things. Bullying to me has a kind of connotation … of kids misbehaving. What we are dealing with in some of these circumstances is simply criminal activity. It is youth criminal activity, it is violent criminal activity, it is sexual criminal activity and it is often internet criminal activity.”

Harper, here, gets it. It is disgusting that Chris Selley, Parker Donham, Dan Gardner and their ilk have seemingly dismissed Rehtaeh’s case as one of just “bullying” – when, in fact, it’s a case of rape.  Their implied indifference to her fate – and their preoccupation with defending a provincial “justice” system that utterly failed her and her family – sickens.

The response of the Dexter regime, the RCMP, the school board, the school, and the Crown, has also been sickening. Their response, until late Tuesday, had been a collective shrug. They should all be fired; ultimately, I suspect they all will be over this case.

I wrote what I did because, in the Steubenville outrage, social media played a key role in forcing the authorities to bring those young rapists to justice. If the authorities in Nova Scotia don’t care what happened to the victim of a gang rape, as in Steubenville, then we need to use people power to change their minds.

Online activism is effective because it harnesses the power of the people, and helps to address injustice. What happened to Rehteah was a terrible injustice. And it’s incumbent on all of us – every single one of us – to raise our voices in protest, and work to bring wrongdoers to justice. If Anonymous (like Crimestoppers and the like) can help achieve that, so be it.

Mewling about ‘vigilantism’ is what the powerful frequently do when they are caught making a decision that is unjust. To them, I continue to say: too bad. People wouldn’t be upset if the Nova Scotia legal authorities had made the right decisions from the start.

It’s the Internet age. People aren’t content to just let things lie anymore. If a terrible wrong is done – and a terrible wrong has been done to Rehtaeh Parsons and her family – the people will use the Internet to speak up.

That isn’t vigilantism – that’s democracy.

UPDATE:  Now read this.  Oh, and look: the authorities made arrests.

UPDATED AGAIN:  Anonymous issues another report, here. If you thought they sound more sensible and restrained than their puny band of detractors, you’d be right.


Wherein Hurricane Hazel becomes the Mendacious Mayor

To wit:

“McCallion also testified Thursday — repeating her testimony at the Mississauga Judicial Inquiry in 2010 — that she did not know at the time of the vote that her son was a principal of the World Class Developments or that WCD could have qualified for the lower fees being grandfathered in by Fennell’s motion. McCallion said it was “very dark” in the restaurant where, in January 2007, she signed as witness to a document naming her son as a shareholder in WCD.”

What a load of crap. Even Rob Ford didn’t spin tales like that, at his own conflict of interest hearing – which, ironically, involved far less money and had far less damning facts.

Time to join the new Century, Mississauga. Get rid of her.


Calling all federal Liberals for a favour

Son One, age fourteen, has the political bug. He was a proud Pupatello delegate in January, and wants to come with me to the convention in Ottawa on Sunday, where the new leader will be announced.
Dad – who will be doing pro-Liberal media, and is old and forgetful – forgot to get him a ticket. It is now sold out.

Can any Liberal (campaign or otherwise) use the help of a strapping 14-year-old who wants to be Prime Minister one day? He’ll work for convention access. Also, he is smarter than his father.

Help!


JT: inspiring

Here’s a real poll, from a real polling agency, unlike the detritus the Star regularly publishes.

What’s it mean?  It means Justin Trudeau is for real, in the words of my friend at Ipsos, Darrell Bricker.


Anonymous responds (updated)

Sent along by a few readers.  It’s impossible to determine if it’s authentic, of course, which isn’t surprising – they’re anonymous, after all.

 

UPDATE: Chronicle-Herald story here. We look forward to Messr. Gardner and Selley’s stirring denunciation of the mob-like vigilantism of, say, Crimestoppers.  (Oh, and to Selley: it isn’t just a case of bullying, you fatuous imbecile.  It’s a case of rape.)