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Denis Poitras is a lawyer who has been working on behalf of Students since 1995, and he has taken the case for the protestors arrested in the last few days. Currently he is collecting information, forming all those arrested into one case file.
This is what you should do if you want to participate;
1. contest in writing your ticket (write the infraction number, and “Not Guilty” date and sign it - do not write any other explination, with your full name and contact details.
2. send a copy to;
Correspondance et plaidoyers
Cour municipale de la Ville de Montréal
C.P. 11046
Succursale Centre-Ville
Montréal H3C 4Y2
3. send another copy to Denis Poitras’ office via poitrasdenis@gmail.com or via fax at 514 289 1729 and put “Kettling” as the subject header.
#ggi #qcpoli It goes without saying that in a democratic province that those who do not agree with your cause should never be suppressed in the name of furthering your cause - democracy is about convincing people with words and not force.
Craig Welch - “No Problem” (animated short, courtesy NFB)
victusinveritas:
Today is Famine Remembrance Day in Ireland.
So, in commemoration of the Great Hunger, and all the other famines that swept the land…I leave you with this image of Bridget O’Donnel.
The Sketch of a Woman and Children represents Bridget O’Donnel. Her story is briefly this:— “…we were put out last November; we owed some rent. I was at this time lying in fever… they commenced knocking down the house, and had half of it knocked down when two neighbours, women, Nell Spellesley and Kate How, carried me out… I was carried into a cabin, and lay there for eight days, when I had the creature (the child) born dead. I lay for three weeks after that. The whole of my family got the fever, and one boy thirteen years old died with want and with hunger while we were lying sick.”
Credit: Illustrated London News, December 22, 1849
Without the Hunger, some of my family might not have crossed the Atlantic on their coffin ships, maybe they would have prospered enough back in Ireland that I’d still be there, accent a bit more authentic, standing a bit more tall, I don’t know…what I do know is that the famine killed over a million of my ancestors’ countrymen, women, and children, and that their deaths will never be forgotten or forgiven.
I’ll also suggest pausing and acknowledging all those dying of famine in the world today, and those that have died in the past through what, in the modern age, should be thoroughly preventable…
The Holdomor, the Great Leap Forward, the famines in Ethiopia, Somalia, the Sudan, Belgium, and the Bengal Famine during World War II make Ireland look like just another drop in the overflowing bucket containing our numberless dead…but…well, that drop of water contained some of my family, some names on tombstones and wooden crosses, and…I’ll always pause to reflect on their untimely demise.
(via crashtestdummies)
In 2009 Quebec Citizens paid out $15bn in Federal Tax. In 2010, they received $14.2bn in Equalization #cdnpoli