Mr. Speaker, I had a lot of appointments made in advance when the bill suddenly came up and so I was not here to vote on first and second reading. I assure the House I am here to stay now until the bill has been completed at both report stage and third reading and that I am clearly voting against the bill. I will be voting in favour of the amendments but I do not expect to get much support for that from the majority of Liberals opposite.
They suggest this is a free vote. I think we should clarify this. I do not think there can be any argument on that side that it is a free vote. Had it not been a free vote they would have had just about the same number of Liberals voting against it in any case, which would have presented tremendous problems for the Prime Minister in light of recent actions on their side, their own peculiar version of Liberal democracy.
It is interesting that despite the fact there is a free vote, there is an extremely restricted right of free speech on the Liberal side. We have witnessed that and I am sure we will continue to witness it as the the debate carries on.
I am opposed to various types of discrimination, much of which has been stated in the bill. The problem with the bill is that it does not deal solely with those areas of discrimination. It opens up broad doors where someone can say that is not what they meant, and someone else could say they think it means this or they think it means that.
We know the kinds of problems that happens to legislation, even good legislation, which I would not categorize this as at all. After continuous lobbying, the Minister of Justice finally agreed to pass legislation banning the drunken defence. What happened? The courts said that is not quite the way they interpret the Constitution in any case. There have been cases where that has been overturned. Despite the fact that the entire House passed legislation, the courts have made their own interpretation. When we put something like this in the open and deal with the courts we open up an incredibly bad can of worms.
Some of the amendments deal with clarifications of various concerns that people think the bill may come to represent, things like alterations to the Criminal Code or ways to circumvent the
Criminal Code, possible situations where there will be special programs because of sexual orientation. These are things people are concerned about, particularly in my riding.
The previous speaker said he has to vote the way he thinks is right. I have to vote the way my constituents think is right. They did not elect me to be their ruler. They elected me to be their representative. Every member of the House as the elected representative of the people of their riding should represent the will of those people.
Some people in my constituency are very concerned about some things that are already happening. I will read from a pamphlet funded in part by the federal government. It found its way into schools and the community college in my riding under the guise of AIDS literature. I assure the House that I will restrict and censor the way I read this, but the House may still find it offensive. It is not my intention to offend anyone. If the Chair sees fit to intervene at any time because it sees this as offensive, I fully understand. Keep in mind this is after censoring has been applied to a government funded document.
This states choices for, in my word, fornication. It mentions things like fisting. Fisting is the insertion of the entire hand inside someone's body: "Fisting can create serious tears in the anus or vagina. In the interest of safe sex the safe choice for fisting is to wear a rubber glove". This is from the Man to Man Society, funded by the government.
It mentions toys. I will not get into what it suggests should be done with these toys. It is suggested how to have safer sex with toys: "Make sure you clean the toys you share".
It also deals with shaving, piercing and branding. It suggests that when branding with a knife, ideally a disposable scalpel be used. It suggests that branding with heat, a branding iron, is much safer because the heat kills the virus. It talks about how to use electric torture. The safer choice for electric torture: "Thoroughly clean anything exposed to body fluids and blood". This is a bad document. I have trouble reading some of the things in here.
I think the point has been made. This is just one of several documents. This is not a document I found somewhere in some obscure specialty bookstore. This is a document in the public school system in my riding. That is why people in my riding are mad, upset and concerned.
I have many constituents, not a huge majority obviously, I want to make that clear, who are part of the homosexual community. These are not rampant people like in Gay Pride and in some of these strange parades promoting the homosexual lifestyle. These are regular citizens who contribute to the economy of our area. They participate in community events. They run businesses. The people in my riding have no problem with people simply because a man happens, through choice or otherwise, to fall in love with another man, or a woman a woman. That is not what is at issue.
What is at issue is the bill is loosely written, so wide open, people are afraid of how it will be interpreted by the courts. I explained what happened with the drunken defence after it left here a good bill. They are concerned about this kind of garbage ending up in our school system, about the promotion of their right to promote an alternate life style openly to things like marriage benefits for same sex couples.
I live in a rural community. I live in a western, outdoors, rural community. It has a beautiful hunting area and everything. I belong to a trap and skeet club. I am active with it. It is a very prominent activity in my riding. When Bill C-68 came out, it got tremendous response opposing it.
Since I became a member of Parliament I received correspondence on all things, with more opposition for the possibility of marriage benefits to same sex couples aspect alone in Bill C-41 than I have for any other things, including Bill C-68.
To date there has been a short amount of time available to people to mobilize, something I really object to. The previous NDP government in Ontario came out with a bill like this. It had free discussions and a free vote. The difference was it did not rush it through committee or debate. Closure was not used.
It gave the citizens in the communities of this province the time to mobilize to let their elected officials know where they stood. It is my opinion the Liberal government is rushing this through in order not to allow people not only in Ontario but in the rest of the country to mobilize. That notwithstanding, they have.
To provide balance, I will read from the file I have from people who are in favour. I want to be balanced. Because I want to be complete, I will read both of them. One suggests they are writing to support quick passage of Bill C-33 because it fulfils a commitment. That is the strongest argument they use in their letter. In the other one they want to make it clear that they view sexual relationships between consulting adults as a personal matter. So do I.
What people do in the privacy of their homes, within reason, is a general concept I have no difficulty with. I can give more from this pamphlet. It suggests we should go into the homes a little.
I do not think we should refuse to hire someone, fire them or refuse to allow them to rent an apartment simply because their orientation is different from ours if we care to define it.
I cannot remember the official name of it, but there is the man-boy love society. Pedophilia is a sexual orientation. That I am
completely and totally against. I hope everybody in the House is. If it is not defined, if one just says sexual orientation, it leaves us open.
Allow me, because I have a lot of opposition to this, to read a couple. One says: "Each Canadian as a person is already protected. Why must what happens in the privacy of one's bedroom need the protection of the law?"
Another says: "This is an immediate and grave threat to the natural family. A homosexual as a person is entitled to respect because of his humanity, not because of his sexual behaviour".
The protections are there. If we need to clarify then it should be clear. This bill is not clear. This bill is incredibly vague. The amendments proposed now at report stage attempt to clarify many aspects of the bill. They were made by people who object to this bill. They are saying that if we must have this bill, let us at least make its intent clear. Let us have what the government says it means but has not said in the bill.
I urge members opposite to seriously consider accepting the amendments that have been put forward. Without these amendments the House can be assured I will vote against Bill C-33.