Find Experts & Sources
Sources Home

Bookshelf

Title Index Author Index Subject Index
    Home     News Releases Calendar     Contact        

Sources Bookshelf


Shakedown
How Our Government is Undermining Democracy in the Name of Human Rights

Levant, Ezra
Publisher:  McClelland & Stewart, Canada
Year Published:  2009  
Pages:  232pp   Price:  28.99   ISBN:  9780771046186

Please see our media profile in Sources:
  Sources Select Resources

Part memoir, part investigative journalism, this is a shocking and controversial look at the corruption of Canada's human rights commissions.
"On January 11, 2008, I was summoned to a 90-minute government interrogation. My crime? As the publisher of Western Standard magazine, I had reprinted the Danish cartoons of Mohammed to illustrate a news story. I was charged with the offence of "discrimination," and made to appear before Alberta's "human rights commission" for questioning. As crazy as it sounds, I became the only person in the world to face legal sanction for printing those cartoons."
As a result of this highly publicized event, Ezra Levant began investigating other instances in which innocent people have had their freedoms compromised by bureaucrats presuming to protect Canadians' human rights. He discovered some disturbing and even bizarre cases, such as the tribunal ruling that an employee at a McDonald's restaurant in Vancouver did not have to wash her hands at work. And the human rights complaint filed by a Calgary hair stylist against the women at a salon school who called him a "loser." In another case that seemed stranger than fiction, an emotionally unstable transvestite fought for - and won - the right to counsel female rape victims, despite the anguished pleas of those same traumatized victims. Human rights commissions now monitor political opinions, fine people for expressing politically incorrect viewpoints, censor websites, and even ban people, permanently, from saying certain things.




© Sources 2023. The information provided is copyright and may not be reproduced in any form or by any means (whether electronic, mechanical or photographic), or stored in an electronic retrieval system, without written permission of the publisher.