Nov 011996
 

Contents:
Freedom Party on the Internet The Big Switch and the Power of the Internet; FP Supports Government Initiative on Referenda; Ontario Human Rights Commission Appeals Board of Inquiry Ruling on Elijah Elieff; Freedom Party Files Freedom Of Information Request on Human Rights Commission; FP’s Robert Vaughan Campaigns For Freedom Of Choice In Education; Harris Agenda ‘Too Liberal’; Freedom Party launches World Wide Web Site; Freedom Briefs, and more! Continue reading »

Dec 051994
 

1994-12-05.lfp-domm-thumbDescription:
On December 3, 1994, Freedom Party of Ontario held a dinner in London at which former police officer come free speech/justice activist Gordon Domm was a guest speaker. Two days later, the London Free Press published this report, which made reference to Freedom Party’s dinner event. Continue reading »

Dec 031994
 

1994-12-03.gordon-dommVIDEO – DESCRIPTION:

On December 3, 1994, Freedom Party held a dinner featuring speaker Gordon Domm: a retired OPP officer who had violated the publication ban that had been imposed on the Karla Homolka sex slayings case. This video includes that dinner, but also includes a summary of the events that preceded and followed the dinner. The summary of events – without the dinner footage – was produced by Paul McKeever. Titled “Helpless Homolka”, it is available on McKeever’s youtube channel (it runs approximately 10 minutes): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TnfM8zGMF0M

Watch, and see how radical leftist, feminist ideology was used to characterize Karla Homolka’s criminal activities as the act of a helpless victim of battered wife’s syndrome. Learn how a publication ban helped cover-up radical feminist attorney general Marion Boyd’s so-called “deal with the devil” until after the election of 1995. Continue reading »

Dec 011994
 

1996-xx-xx.fp-logo-media-release-thumbOn December 1, 1994, Freedom Party of Ontario notified the media that former police officer Gordon Domm and journalist David Helwig would be guest speakers at the party’s December 3, 1994 dinner in London, Ontario.

 

 

 

 

 

Document Details:

Document: Media Release
Document Dated: December 1, 1994
Publisher: Freedom Party of Ontario
Author: Robert Metz
Document Type: Letter
Number of Pages: 1
Page dimensions: 8.5″ x 11″
Color/BW: Full colour

Archive format: .pdf (searchable exact); size: 7.0 MB; URL: https://freedomparty.on.ca/archive/documents/dinners/1994-12-03.gordon-domm-dinner/1994-12-01.media-release.pdf

Sep 091986
 

1985-fpo-radio-thumbAUDIO – DESCRIPTION:
On September 2, 1986, Ontario’s provincial Advisory Committee on Liquor Regulations – which had been put together by Liberal Consumer Minister Monte Kwinter to consider revisions to Ontario’s drinking laws – commenced hearings. On the first day of the hearings, Ontario’s socialist New Democratic Party (NDP) issued a policy statement calling for a ban on the advertising of beer, wine, and liquor both on TV and radio, and in printed media. The NDP said that, after unemployment, excessive alcohol consumption was “the number one social problem in society”.

As a result of the NDP’s pro-censorship proposal, on September 9, 1986, Wayne McLean, host of AM980’s Hotline talk show asked his listeners: Should there be a ban on alcohol advertising, and does advertising cause an increase in consumption?

Freedom Party president Robert Metz called in, followed – during a rapid-fire poll – by Freedom Party member Gord Mood. Both opposed censorship, and advocated individual freedom.

Robert Metz Excerpt

Gord Mood Excerpt

Complete Episode
Continue reading »