Mr. Speaker, I would like to point out an obvious contradiction in what the last speaker said.
He began his speech by saying that the family will not change no matter what we do in this House. He went on to conclude that society is changing, that it is making progress and that we should support those changes.
I listened carefully to the remarks he made. If his arguments are valid, it means he would logically support all of the amendments. He would have no problem with the protection of the family and making sure that this does not have an effect on the family.
The events of the last week remind me a lot of a little lizard in the South Pacific when I was there in 1988-89. It was called a gecko. The gecko had a very unusual escape mechanism. When a person went to catch it, if they were not quick enough, the gecko had the amazing capacity to detach its tail. The person would be left with a wildly wriggling tail in their hand and the gecko would escape. The person's attention was diverted from the main stage, just as many Liberals are managing to divert attention from the main issue before Parliament. With their wildly wriggling tongues accusing Reform of being anti-gay and discriminatory, they are diverting attention away from what they are really doing in the House.
Canadians will eventually realize that their attention is being diverted from what is happening here by some of the other issues that have been raised such as name calling and other tactics the Liberals are using. Canadians will eventually see through that. Just as a person realizes after a while when they look at the wildly wriggling tail that the gecko has escaped, Canadians will realize that the Liberals are trying to escape detection on what they are doing here.
The main issue before Parliament is the inclusion of sexual orientation in the Canadian Human Rights Act and the undemocratic nature in which it is being foisted upon an unsuspecting Canadian population. Debate is being stifled by invoking time allocation at every stage. I submit that is probably being done so that Canadians will not become too excited about this and become aware of what is happening. It is hurriedly being shoved through Parliament before people can realize what is happening.
By the way, this is not a Liberal election commitment. It is simply a pledge the Prime Minister made to the gay community in Vancouver. I wonder why it carries more weight than his GST promise.
Let me put this discussion into the context it should be in. Canada may recover in time from the huge financial mess it is in, but the damage that will be caused to Canadian society by changes made this week to the Canadian Human Rights Act will haunt us for many generations to come. Why? The unethical downloading of debt on to our children may be corrected in a generation or two, I hope. However, the irreparable harm caused by creating virtually equal status for gay and lesbian marriages with others will take a lot longer to heal.
We will destroy the very fabric of society by allowing the courts to redefine marriage. Gays and lesbians will be able to adopt children. If we do not believe that to be true, we ought to approve all of the amendments that are being put forward. If we are so sure that is not going to happen, we should approve these amendments.
All the studies I have seen indicate that children develop best when they live with their father and mother. The social crisis we are presently in will be compounded if we approve this legislation. We must encourage parents to make lifelong commitments to the care and raising of children. Society's acceptance of impermanent relationships has caused a great many problems. Many of the problems experienced in education and justice stem from this.
While the public and media look at Sheila Copps and the comments of some Reform MPs, the Liberals are creating changes to society that will cause future generations to ask who was asleep at the wheel when we hit this rock. While the tongues are wildly wriggling, the Liberals will escape the close scrutiny of what has happened in Parliament this month.
Remember that including sexual orientation in the Canadian Human Rights Act will cause the value of traditional marriage to
erode even further. It is not just me saying that; I am reflecting the views of very many Canadians.
The main point that needs to be made in this whole debate on including sexual orientation in the Canadian Human Rights Act is that it will lead to the redefinition of the family in Canada. Just as in algebra where a leads to b , or as in geometry with the logical progression of arguments, one can make the argument that this will lead to the redefinition of the family. Even the highest court in the land has stated that it will have a very negative effect on the basic structural unit of society.
We as parliamentarians are responsible to look at the big picture, the overall effect legislation will have on society. The Liberal government assures us that it does not intend to have these negative consequences, but good intentions do not ensure good results. The court or judge looking at the law reads the letter of the law. They look at what it actually says. They do not read the Liberals' speaking notes.
One of my colleagues across the way said that he was assured this would not happen. Those assurances are not written into the legislation. These amendments would have to be approved in order for those assurances to be genuine. Therefore, I urge all members to approve these amendments.
The speeches being made by the Liberals are no more credible than the promises they made on the GST and NAFTA. We have no hold on those assurances that this will not affect the family. I have grave concerns about the effect this legislation will have if it remains unamended. The amendments Reform proposes try to limit some of the negative effects the legislation will have. Homosexual couples should not be given marriage-like status.
The Most Reverend Adam Exner of the Archdiocese of Vancouver makes this point which I believe reflects the views of many Canadians: "Canadians that are morally opposed to homosexual behaviour must have their rights protected". We as Reformers have tried to make that point in the big kerfuffle of the past week. We should not divide society into groups. We should not have any groups in the Canadian Human Rights Act. The Most Reverend Adam Exner goes on to say that homosexual couples should not be given marital or marriage-like status.
Now let me quote from Reform's interim party policy which has been approved by our caucus and the democratically elected council of the Reform Party:
The Reform Party affirms the equality of every individual before and under the law and the right of every individual to live freely within the limits of the law and with the full protection of the law. Under the charter of rights and freedoms, homosexuals have the same rights and privileges as all other persons in Canada. The Reform caucus supports the continued protection of these rights based on the position of each human being, not on his or her sexual orientation. For these reasons, the Reform caucus opposes as unnecessary and inadvisable the government's announced intention to include sexual orientation as a prohibited ground of discrimination in the Canadian Human Rights Act and in other legislation.
The real question is: What will be the long term effect of including sexual orientation as a prohibited category in the Canadian Human Rights Act?
Many other speakers have already made excellent points, but the one which concerns me most is the one concerning the status or the structure of the basic unit in society. That is the point I would like to make and I hope I have an opportunity at a later time to make it further.