Aug 131986
 

1985-fpo-radio-thumbAUDIO – DESCRIPTION:
On August 13, 1986, Ontario Progressive Conservative Party leader Larry Grossman was the guest of the Wayne McLean show. Grossman fielded calls from listeners, including Freedom Party president Robert Metz who challenged Grossman to clarify his position on the injustice or justice of a law that punishes a person for opening his or her retail store on a Sunday. Grossman was in favour of the law as a matter of tradition, but also said he was in favour of making exceptions based upon race (e.g., Chinatown, which laid within his own electoral district), business type (Grossman said he would exempt bookstores, and arguably he did so because the constitutionality of Ontario’s Retail Business Holiday’s Act was being challenged by a Toronto bookseller Edward’s Books and by Toronto furrier Paul Magder, whose fur business was located in Chinatown, in Toronto), and other completely arbitrary things. When Grossman says he doesn’t know how to solve the apparent injustice of allowing store owners in Chinatown to open their stores while other store owners are charged and lose their business to competitors, Metz argues that market forces, not government force, provide the solution.

Robert Metz Excerpt

Complete Recording
Continue reading »

Jul 311986
 

1985-fpo-radio-thumbAUDIO – DESCRIPTION:

In the summer of 1986, the City of London was considering making a bid to host the 1994 Commonwealth Games. Marc Emery and the Freedom Party of Ontario had already successfully campaigned – alone – against London’s bid to host the 1991 Pan Am Games (a bid that would have stuck taxpayers with a tab for hundreds of millions of dollars). So, when London Mayor Tom Gosnell was the guest of Wayne McLean’s London-based radio show, to speak about the Commonwealth Games bid, Marc Emery called in to oppose taxpayer funding for the bid, and a bit of an exchange between himself and the mayor ensued. At the end of the program, McLean held a rapid-fire yes/no poll about whether London should bid for the 1994 Commonwealth Games, and Freedom Party’s Robert Metz – knowing that the bid would again stick taxpayers with a tab to pay land developers and others for the building of white elephants – called in to say “no”. The “no” side won the poll.

NOTE: Ultimately, BC taxpayers were the ones who got stuck with the $142M bill for the 1994 Commonwealth Games, which were held in Victoria.

Excerpt (Marc Emery):

Excerpt (Robert Metz):

Whole Recording:
Continue reading »

Jul 311986
 

AUDIO – DESCRIPTION:

FPO’s President Robert Metz calls into the Wayne McLean radio talk show and asks the show’s guest – anti-capitalist poverty activist John Clarke – how jobs are made. Metz also asks Clarke to describe what he thinks is “the better system”. His answer, without naming it: communism.

 

 

 

Excerpt: Robert Metz’s Call:

 

Whole Recording:
Continue reading »

Jul 151986
 

1985-fpo-radio-thumbAUDIO – DESCRIPTION:
On July 14, 1986, Mr. Justice Dennis O’Leary of the Ontario Divisional Court issued his decision with respect to an Ontario regulation that required government funded schools to open or close each school day with religious exercises consisting of the reading of the Scriptures or other suitable readings and the repeating of the Lord’s Prayer or other suitable prayers. Five families in Sudbury, Ontario, had challenged the constitutionality of the provision under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which had been adopted only 4 years earlier. Having lost at trial, the families appealed to the Divisional Court. Divisional Court Justice O’Leary dismissed the appeal. He held that (to quote Ontario’s Court of Appeal):

“…the religious exercises prescribed by s. 28(1) did not infringe the guarantee of freedom of conscience and religion provided by s. 2(a) of the Charter. Alternatively, he held that, if the Charter freedom was infringed, the infringement was justifiable under s. 1 of the Charter which provides:

1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

He was of the view that the inculcation of morality was a proper educational object and that morality and religion were intertwined. If this resulted in any infringement on minority religious beliefs, it was not substantial. He pointed out that the religious exercises did not have to be Christian and, except in the case of non-believers, could be consistent with the Charter which, in its preamble, recognizes “the supremacy of God and the rule of law”.

London, Ontario’s AM980 news reported that Justice O’Leary’s decision essentially meant that the Charter’s power to defend the rights and freedoms that it lists were largely meaningless.

NOTE 1: The families later appealed the Divisional Court’s decision to Ontario’s Court of Appeal. On September 23, 1988, Ontario’s Court of Appeal granted the appeal, finding the regulation to be unconstitutional. From the decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario:

On its face, s. 28(1) of the regulations infringes the freedom of conscience and religion guaranteed by s. 2(a) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The recitation of the Lord’s Prayer, which is a Christian prayer, and the reading of the Scriptures from the Christian Bible imposes Christian observances upon non-Christian pupils and religious observances on non-believers. The right to claim exemption from religious exercises conferred by s. 28(10), (11) and (12) does not save the regulation. Section 28 imposes on religious minorities a compulsion to conform to the practices of the majority, and the evidence in this case supports this view. Moreover, the exemption provisions discriminate against religious minorities. Harm to individual pupils need not be proved by those who object to s. 28(1). The denigration of minorities’ freedom of religion and conscience by the operation of s. 28(1) constitutes an infringement of s. 2(a) of the Charter which is not insubstantial or trivial.

The regulation is not justified under s. 1 of the Charter, as the purpose of s. 28(1) is religious. Even if s. 1 applied, the Charter infringement cannot be justified, because s. 28(1) fails to impair the appellants’ freedom under s. 2(a) as little as possible. There are less intrusive ways of imparting educational and moral values than those provided in s. 28.

NOTE 2: This recording includes two reports from AM980 that occurred on the same day. For the purposes of dating this archive entry, it is assumed that Metz’s comment was reported one day after the decision was rendered.

Complete Recording:
Continue reading »

Jul 011986
 

Contents:
Openers; Group of Conviction Run By Man With Many Convictions; Action Director Marc Emery Goes to the Polls in London Civic Election; Tax Credit Ceiling Raised; Freedom Party Supporters Help Win a Big Battle for More Freedom for Merv Lavigne and Millions of Canadian Workers; “Teacher wins key case on use of union dues” (newspaper report); Promises, Promises! (socialized medicine); Freedom Party Campus Association Gets Rolling in 1985-1986 Campus Year; “Wage gap blamed on women’s own views” (newspaper coverage); Unemployment – As a Goal in Life; A Four Letter Word Starting With “F” (Censorship Alert campaign). Continue reading »

Jun 201986
 

AUDIO – DESCRIPTION:

Open-line talk-radio debate between (then) Communist Party of Canada’s leader William Kashtan and FPO’s President Robert Metz.

Note: In 1986, Freedom Party promoted this recording as one of its “Hear the Voice of Freedom” cassette series. In the promoted version, the original recording (taken from the June 20, 1986 episode of Hotline, with Wayne McLean) was preceded by an introduction. Links to both the “Hear the Voice of Freedom” production, and to the original Wayne McLean recording from which the production was made, appear below.

 

Hear the Voice of Freedom – Freedom vs. Communism: Part 1 (first hour)

Hear the Voice of Freedom – Freedom vs. Communism: Part 2 (second hour):

Original Broadcast:

Continue reading »

May 011986
 

1986-02-xx.censorship-alert-white-thumbContents:
Sounding the alert!; Censorship: Let us count the ways; Political books seized by Canadian customs; Censorship- A black and white issue; No humans allowed; Still the censor board to us; More censorship has all party support; Smurfs, Jedi manipulate children through sexual stereotyping; Swedish censor board restricts E.T. – The Extra Terrestrial; Four Star Trek episodes deemed unsuitable for children by B.B.C; Thousand and One Nights ruled obscene; Censorship Alert! Contributions tax-creditable; New type of censorship; Toronto Sun publisher finds anti-censorship ad “respulbive, tasteless, and insensitive”; Religious conviction can get you a legal conviction; Pro-apartheid speaker ban sought at Toronto university; Censorship violates all our fundamental freedoms; No nudes are good nudes; Disarmament groups cite hate literature provisions in attack of Red Dawn; women primary market for ‘blue’ videos; Racist trash; Help us soud the ALERT! through newspaper advertising; Censorship aided and abetted; draft of proposed newspaper ad; Rock music & videos under attack; The sounds of censorship; Canadian writers, artists, plead for forced support; Feminist view of men irrational & hateful; Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me!; Sex toys now ruled obscene publications; ‘Disgusting’ objects determined by number on display; ‘Art police’ at work; Brotherhood of censors; Nyetto videos; Artistic fascism; Child pornography: the censor’s favourite myth; Linda Lovelace still a “victim”; Ontario teachers favour censorship; Who’s responsible?: Ideas vs. action. Continue reading »