Neil Seeman article's on our double standard for administering
justice, one for native Indians and the other for everybody else is
worth of attention. Mr. Seeman compares the case in which aboriginal
Tanis Gladue stabbed fatally her husband and got away with a three
year sentence, while former Saskatoon policemen Dan Hatcheen and Ken
Munson can face up to 10 years in prison for their conviction of
unlawful confinement of an intoxicated aboriginal man.
I am strongly opposed to any double standard of justice, however
how can we socially justify the depraved predicament of most native
Indians? Our native Indians have lost any culture, they are poor,
they are discriminated against, they have been abused, they have
lost their souls and they live in an environment of violence. As I
mentioned, I am not supporting a double standard of justice, but
whenever society is unwilling to address the social predicament of
native Indians, then I certainly agree with our judges and have a
double standard of justice.
Mr. Seeman knows that male treaty Indians are 25 times more
likely to be incarcerated in a provincial jail as non-natives, and
sarcastically he puts it down to "systemic" racism. Not happy of
this putting down, Mr. Seeman equates the native "systemic" racism
to the systemic sexism experienced by men as they make up 98 percent
of the criminal population while they compose 49 percent of the
general population. We want to remind Mr. Seaman that not all people
are born with equal social opportunities and this is especially so
for our native Indians. I specifically remember Alberta Judge John
Reilly saying that crime in native communities reflects both the
corrupt behavior of their leadership and their dysfunctional
environments.
We must congratulate again our judges as they keep identifying
the wrongs of our society. Yesterday, they recognized the need of
awarding punitive damages to employees wrongfully dismissed and
abused by their employers, and today they recognize the special
predicament of our native Indians.
Personally, I look forward when we will have one justice system
for all as that means that native Indians will have a social chance
to live meaningful lives as anybody else.
References
Two kinds of justice is no justice at all, by Neil Seeman,
December 6, 2001 The Globe and Mail
We remember Pamela George, by Injusticebusters. In December 1995,
Pamela Jean George, a 28-year-old mother of two, was beaten to
death. Steven Kummerfield and Alex Ternowetsky were convicted by
jury of manslaughter for the murder and sentenced to 6-12 years...
The verdict infuriated Chief Lindsay Kaye of the Sakimay Indian
band, who told reporters outside the courtroom "All this goes to
prove to me is that there are two justice systems. One justice
system for white people and one justice system for the Indian
people. It's all right for a white person to kill an Indian person.
Nobody cares if an Indian person dies." http://injusticebusters.com/index.htm/Saskaoon_police_sex.htm#anchor1872248
Our Saskatchewan Justice System Is Rotten to the Core, by Mario
deSantis, February 19, 2000 http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2000/desantis%20122/JusticeSask.html
Racism in the Justice System http://www.crr.ca/EN/MediaCentre/FactSheets/eMedCen_FacShtRacismInJusticeSys.htm
Judge John Reilly is a hero: a reaffirmation of individual
rights, by Mario deSantis, September 6, 2000 http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2000_200/desantis222/judgereilly.html
Editor's note: Neil Seeman is a Toronto lawyer who studied public
health at Harvard. He was a member of the National Post editorial
board and a prominent conservative and associate of Steven Harper.
He posts his writing very widely on various conservative and right
wing publications and you might get some basic idea about his
outlook on life by looking over this odd piece on intellectual
equality. http://webhome.idirect.com/~mbealle/oqe/lenin.htm |