@Living_One_Pcnt@TheoFleury14 Big corp is an extension of the gov. Corps get their authority from the gov. Constitutional scholar Bruce Pardy has created a free nation where there is only a tiny gov & the power is NOT with the gov..
https://t.co/EsoLVgX25N
TONIGHT: We sit down with Professor @PardyBruce to unpack his bold vision for a new constitution in the event of Alberta’s separation. Pardy argues that Canada’s system has produced a managerial state—one that prizes order over freedom.
Watch here, 6:00PM MT: https://t.co/1g9u8GzDCn
@realCTZN@davidjaredcraig@Prest_Jeremy@RightsProbe
#cdnpoli #FreeSpeech
Alexander Brown, Director of the NCC, is joined by renowned law professor, Bruce Pardy, who explains that legal equality has morphed into equity, where laws treat people differently to achieve group outcomes, eroding the rule of law and creating a hierarchy of rights based on identity rather than individual merit, fostering division.
Watch Not "Sorry": https://t.co/uaS11xizj6
@johnwtomkinson John, prosperity for a socialist, managerial state wont help the PPL.
[Its never the PPL who benefit from socialism..]
Unless Independence is for individual freedom, there is no point in exiting.
https://t.co/EsoLVgX25N
TONIGHT: We sit down with Professor @PardyBruce to unpack his bold vision for a new constitution in the event of Alberta’s separation. Pardy argues that Canada’s system has produced a managerial state—one that prizes order over freedom.
Watch here, 6:00PM MT: https://t.co/1g9u8GzDCn
@realCTZN@davidjaredcraig@Prest_Jeremy@RightsProbe
#cdnpoli #FreeSpeech
@StayFreeAlberta@Speaking4m Individuals differ. Their capacities and characteristics are not "equal". They do not have "equal outcomes". But in a free country, they have the right to "equal treatment" of the law. They are subject to the same rules, and have the same roster of rights as everybody else.
@arsenalist@realCTZN@PardyBruce 2/ The constitution was built to protect the state not the PPL. There's no separation of powers & no checks & balances. The PM handpicks the lawmakers/senate & the judges..
Cda operates under westminster system & there is no political mechanism to fix. There's more reasons..
@arsenalist@realCTZN@PardyBruce Huh? U asked for an example. U have 1.
If that could happen 5yrs ago it could happen again today. "Get over it"
It exposes the managerial state.. No one held accountable & courts doubling down on enslavement
There are many other constitutional errors..
@CanadaDefiant@StayFreeAlberta@PardyBruce "All men are created equal" is from the Declaration of Independence..
It's meaning is that everyone possesses the same natural rights by virtue of being human VS like in Canada where 2 tier rights apply the PPL are divided w/ diff
rules / laws..
@CanadaDefiant@PardyBruce@StayFreeAlberta So the question for Mitch @StayFreeAlberta is... does Mitch's path keep the same 2 tier society & justice that Canada /Alberta has w/ 2 tier rights or will Stay Free Alberta treat all the same under the law w/ same rules & laws in a new nation?
@TrainGreatWest@PardyBruce@StayFreeAlberta Yes definitely on a personal level & each person born w/the same universal value. "All men are created equal" is true & for the legal sense from the Declaration of Independence where Justice is blind & all PPL are equal under the law.
Cda's biggest flaw, assigning 2 tier rights
@RAM649211@PardyBruce@StayFreeAlberta Not sure what you mean? Even though PPL are different & have different potentials & outcomes, it doesn't change the reality that "all men are created equal"... and should be treated the same under the law VS having 2 tier rights/justice.
@StayFreeAlberta@PardyBruce Still waiting for proof that all men aren't created equal..
Differing outcomes, capacities /potentials of human beings do not prove that all men are NOT created equal.. They are!
There are (at least) three stages. One is the referendum. The second is negotiations. The third is actual independence.
The day after a successful referendum, everything legally remains as it was. Alberta is still a province. The Canadian constitution still applies. But Albertans have "repudiated the existing constitutional order." The referendum result has given Alberta a mandate to negotiate its departure from Canada.
During these negotiations, Alberta is still a province. The Canadian constitution continues to apply. Everything legally still remains the same. But because Alberta has repudiated the existing constitutional order, the Canadian constitution does not define the scope of the negotiations. The outcome of the negotiations need not conform to what the constitution requires. Everything is on the table. In these negotiations, there will be "no conclusions predetermined by law on any issue." ANY ISSUE.
At the moment Alberta actually becomes independent (after the negotiations that lead to Alberta's consensual departure, or following a unilaterial declaration of independence if Canada refuses), the Canadian constitution no longer applies. Alberta will establish its own constitution, governance system, laws and so on. (It may need a transition period to shift from one to the other.) It will be free from Canadian constitutional requirements. After all, it is an independent country. In its new constitutional order, Alberta might choose to keep or adapt some things and discard others. But those will be choices, not requirements (depending also on the outcome of the negotiations).
Alberta’s Future: 3 Constitutional Models
Live: Monday, May 11 @ 5 PM MT
What could an independent Alberta look like?
This is not a debate. This is a forward-thinking conversation exploring possibilities, not conclusions.
Featuring:
• Matthew Rowley — Commonwealth Westminster model @mrowley1987
• Dennis Kalma — Republic-style system @DennisKalma
• Bruce Pardy — “Flipped default” constitution @PardyBruce
Presented by Alberta Women’s Independence Network @ABWomensNetwork
Hosted by Jason Lavigne from @TheLavigneShow
Join the conversation. Links below.