Mr. Speaker, before I deal with the real issue, I wish to draw the attention of the Chair to the fact that expressions such as "unhealthy lifestyle", which are used somewhat lightly by very light-headed Reformers, have no place in a debate like this one.
I can accept that people say they do not understand homosexuality, or that they have not been in contact with homosexuals. However, I believe that Reformers should be a little more polite and certainly more careful in their comments. I do realize that this is asking a lot from people who have been very biased since they set foot here, this according to their own leader.
Let us now turn our attention to the object of this debate. We are discussing a bill which seeks to prohibit any form of discrimination based on sexual orientation. All the amendments before us will only create confusion. They are intended by their authors, who have made a career of exploiting bias, to create an unhealthy, conservative and reactionary confusion. As we know, it is easy for certain parts of the country to exploit bias.
First, the amendments moved in this House create confusion between the notions of couple and family. As an individual and a homosexual, I am certainly aware that two people, whether they are from the same sex or not, do not form a family. No one claimed that two people who do not have children form a family. Why is it that today we are seeing this nonsense, I would even say dishonesty, this attempt to confuse Canadians with two distinctly different concepts? Again, who wins in this House by continuing to exploit this confusion?
For once and for all, let us try to be clear. What does the Minister of Justice say? He says: "We know that there exists, in some work places, discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation". Who can forget that the reason the Minister of Justice is in the process of amending the Canadian Human Rights Act is because in 1990 an individual named Mr. Haig was kicked out of the Canadian Armed Forces because he admitted to his superior that he was a homosexual.
This is discrimination and it is unnecessary to know whether Mr. Haig had a family, whether he had children, or from what sort of family he came. What we should be looking at right now is the discrimination that is still rampant in the work place, or any other
form of discrimination to which people receiving services from the federal government could be subjected.
When I see, for example, the Reform member, who shall remain nameless, I believe she represents the riding of Port Moody-Coquitlam, when I see people who take their responsibilities as parliamentarians so lightly and set out to make amendments on marriage, the family, spouses, I repeat, I find that dishonest. I do not believe that serves the cause of human rights.
As parliamentarians, we must be able to make distinctions between types and sexes. We have before us a bill, the purpose of which is to end discrimination. Of course, when they form a couple, and are refused certain benefits, income supplement, paid bereavement leave, and the like, certain courts of common law and certain administrative tribunals throughout the country have required employers to pay those benefits. Not because the people in question formed a family, but because they formed a couple.
When will we in the House have the capacity, the open mindedness, to understand that there is no place for discrimination, whether a couple is homosexual or heterosexual. I trust that the hon. members in this House will grasp that.
I want to ask the Reform members something. As you know, when it comes to human rights, they are way back in the horse and buggy days. What I would like to ask is this: Do they seriously believe that, for a homosexual, being in love is different from what it is for a heterosexual? Do these people believe that, as a citizen who pays taxes and is entitled to benefits, a person deserves to be deprived of those benefits because he is homosexual? Could there be two different tax systems in this country? Is there anyone among them who can stand up and state that an income tax return is different depending on whether it is filed by a homosexual or a heterosexual taxpayer? No one can.
Just look at the insubstantial arguments being used. Those who are opposed, those who are presenting the amendments we are addressing at this time, have nothing more to say than to rehash the old traditionalist line, incapable of making a decision on legal merit, incapable of the slightest legal logic. These people know very well that their legal arguments do not hold up.
When people are unable, like most of the people presenting amendments today, to rise in this House and argue on legal grounds, they haul out their prejudices. I repeat, they haul out prejudices which have only one aim and that is to sow confusion in the minds of Canadians and of Quebecers.
I repeat, and mine I think is a respected voice in this House, no one among us is claiming that a man and a woman, or a woman and woman or a man and a man constitute a family if there are no children.
I do not see the relevance at this point of members of the Reform Party or the "Flintstone" wing of the Liberal Party making amendments that could, once again-you know how good they are at developing prejudices and using their particular talent of saying one thing and thinking another, creating confusion, whenever they have the opportunity. We would have hoped such a talent was on the way out.
Correct me if I am wrong, but the Canadian Human Rights Commission is not headed by the Bloc Quebecois. It is an independent commission, comprising people with a public mandate accorded them by this House. They have executive power. How is it these people overlook the fact that, since 1979, the Commissioner of Human Rights has, report after report, year after year, in words that can leave no doubt, recommended an end be put to discrimination.
Discrimination has a very clear legal definition. It means treating someone differently because of a specific characteristic, a distinction that is not justified because, may I remind you, homosexuals also fill out their tax returns and send them to Revenue Canada. There are not two kinds of taxation, two kinds of money, two kinds of tax returns in this country.
There are some concerns that discrimination may prevent us from treating people differently at the fiscal level. These people cannot understand. Both their minds and their hearts are closed. They would rather shut themselves off in their mean, cheap, narrow little worlds and try to make fun of us because we are different.
That time is over. The majority of people throughout Canada and Quebec, whatever their religion, their profession and their vision of family, share our view that, as parliamentarians, we must do all we can to end discrimination. One day, those who continue to discriminate will have to account to Canadians and Quebecers. They will have to explain their actions. And I know that the Canadian people will judge them quite harshly because most of them understand that discrimination is unacceptable.
Again, this is what this bill is all about. The Minister of Justice was very clear in committee; he was very clear when he made a statement at second reading here in this House. The purpose of this bill is to end discriminatory practices. True, ending discriminatory practices means accepting differences.
What will we, as parliamentarians, have to do? What will the Canadian people have to do to make this hard-core group understand they are not doing anyone any favours by continuing to convey a message that is no longer necessary, that borders on hatred, that suggests we must be guilty just because we are different? That is what the amendments moved by the Reformers and some-thankfully not all-members of the government majority are all about. What is it that bothers them about adding in a
statutory provision that no discrimination shall be made on the basis of sexual orientation?
Are there members in this House or among the motions' sponsors who are not comfortable with their sexuality? Are there members who are unable to imagine that someone could be attracted to someone of the same sex? People who are at peace with themselves, happy to be who they are, well adjusted and generous do not mind that others are different.
Let us try to understand why members are unable to accept that others can be different in that way. Why are they feeling threatened to the point of having to band together, forming some kind of a watch guard? They band together, get together, make statements, present petitions, then develop an action plan, a plan whose sole objective is to undermine the right that individuals have in this society to be different.
Let me tell you what one witness told us in committee when we studied Bill C-33 at report stage.
We have been told that, in Canada-not just in Quebec, Prince Edward Island or Western Canada, but across Canada-two million people commit suicide every year. In the 15 to 24 age group, suicide is the second leading cause of death, second only to traffic accidents. Sixty per cent of the young people between the ages of 15 and 24 who commit suicide kill themselves because they are having problems coming to terms with their sexual orientation. This is what we were told by a University of Calgary paediatrician, who is represented in this House by a Reform member, which only adds insult to injury.
Will these people finally realize that this bill before us is designed to ensure that discrimination will stop, thus making people realize that, while being different, they have their place in society-