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What Canadians really think about Americans
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Toronto, Vancouver Island protests shine spotlight on media access
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Young climate activists beat Germany s government in court. Could it happen here? cbc.ca 1 hour ago Evan Dyer © Sam Nar/CBC A youth climate protester carries a sign at Queen Street West and Bay Street in downtown Toronto on Friday, March 19, 2021.
Young climate activists in Canada have turned to the courts in their fight to goad governments into taking their near-term climate commitments seriously. If the German experience is any guide, they may be on to something.
In a decision closely watched by the 22 young plaintiffs behind two climate lawsuits in Canada, Germany s constitutional court on April 29 sided with nine young Germans against their federal government. The court agreed the country s landmark climate legislation, passed in 2019, put too much of a burden on future generations and didn t take enough responsibility in the present.
Young climate activists beat Germany s government in court Could it happen here?
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Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press
A Quebec Superior Court judge has upheld most of the province’s law banning religious dress in some public-service functions but carved out an exception for the anglophone education system, to the dismay of Premier François Legault and other Quebec nationalists.
Justice Marc-André Blanchard ruled Tuesday that Quebec’s “Act respecting the laicity of the State,” better known as Bill 21, infringes fundamental rights to religious expression under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and its Quebec equivalent. He found Bill 21 has “cruel and dehumanizing” effects on the targeted people.