Showing posts with label Ken Dickie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ken Dickie. Show all posts

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Persons from Toronto making an information war about Dr. Dickie: Did their latest move backfire?

I would like to finish up on this theme, however, it seems persons from Toronto are making many efforts to control the flow of information about Dr. Kenneth Dickie. Should this make me stop writing? Well, at least the Freeport News appears to be acting objectively.
.
A Canadian Deadbeat in the Bahamas?
.
In case some of you are just tuning in, I have written four posts about Dr. Kenneth Dickie since February. The first one on February 10th was kind of "tongue in cheek" because I was relying on what the Canadian media was reporting as my only source of information. My issue with Dr. Dickie at the time was that he had seemed to leave Canada for the Bahamas to escape family support obligations and that the bad publicity would make it more difficult for those of us left behind to fix a very broken family law system in Canada.
.
My post of February 24th was more balanced, since it was based on my own interview with Dr. Dickie and the exlcusive radio interview on Chin Radio in Ottawa with Ernie Tannis. I discovered that Dr. Dickie paid $1.25 million to his ex wife over ten years. He had also set up trust funds for all his kids for them to go to university or college after his support obligations expired which is usually when children turn 18. One month before all of Dr. Dickie's obligations were to have been fulfilled, his ex-wife reopened their separation agreement with the help of her lawyer, Mr. Harold Niman, and the rest is history. Dr. Dickie was put in jail for 45 days previously. He is currently in exile in the Bahamas because at the time he couldn't get a bank guarantee to back up 250K in future support payments to his ex wife for his grown children who already had educational trust funds.
.
While you are at it Mr., why don't you also chop off Ken Dickie's hand for stealing a loaf of bread? The unknown circumstances of this case are almost as horrifying as the fact the Canadian media has chosen not to report on them.

Since then, I have had to republish that February 24th article twice, once on March 3rd with a foreword and again on March 9th with a public plea and a call for corporate support via the search engines in not suppressing on the internet the information I wrote telling Dr. Ken Dickie's side of the story.

In my blog of March 9th I explained how all evidence of my previous post about Dr. Dickie had disappeared from Google's ordering program. I presume, correctly or not, that this is being accomplished by the threats of litigation used by those who either specialise in civil litigation or those with a vested interest in restricting freedom of speech and controlling information because financially and reputationally it is worth it for them to do so. Would the large amounts of money that will flow to the legal industry as a result of the Dickie vs. Dickie Supreme Court of Canada jurisprudence warrant them spending time and making efforts in liaising with the search engines to suppress people's access to Views from the Water's Edge?

After my March 3rd post vanished from the ordering program on Thursday, at least this had not happened at Yahoo. I reported about this. And, this is what showed up until earlier today on Yahoo as the top two results when one looks for information about "Dr. Ken Dickie":

1. Views from the Water's Edge... the exclusive radio interview with Dr. Ken Dickie
on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa ... Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon
and alleged "deadbeat dad" who ...viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com - 255k - Cached - More pages from this site

2.Views from the Water's Edge: What do Leper's Island, Debtor's Prison and "deadbeat dad" have in common?: online ... ... the exclusive radio interview withDr.
Ken Dickie on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa ... Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon and alleged "deadbeat dad", who ...viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com/2007/03/... - 83k - Cached- More
pages from this site

If you like, I recommend you go see what shows up when the phase, Dr. Ken Dickie, is searched using Google and what happens when the same words are typed into Yahoo today. Please tell me if you don't think someone is intervening? It would be a relief, so please, though I would first recommend your visiting my other posts on this topic to see for yourself Views from the Water's Edge at the top of Google's search results initially.
.
Why not just shame Dr. Dickie in the Bahamas and make him public enemy #1?
.
I also found out this week that "someone" in Toronto has approached the publisher of two major Bahamian newspapers, the Freeport News and the Nassau Guardian, and asked them to accept a fax containing copies of numerous newspaper articles from Canada - possibly the same information or worse that led me to understanding a "biased" truth when I wrote my first article about Dr. Dickie on February 10th. Was this, as George Bush once said, to "smoke him out of his hole"? When this type of intervention is combined with what I have discovered about persons motivating the search engines to suppress information (possibly via threats), I start to wonder whether this quest is just a movement or a full blown cover-up/conspiracy?
.
Well, at least journalism in the Bahamas seems to be more balanced, as they apparently went to Dr. Dickie to look for his side of the story. As such, Dr. Dickie was given the opportunity to provide them with other information, including my articles at Views from the Waters Edge.

In the name of freedom of speech, gender equality and innocence before guilt, I strongly recommend you check out this article about the Dickie vs. Dickie case by The Freeport News. It puts to shame anything reported by the Canadian media on this topic.

Does anyone else have problem with this? Is anyone else starting to wonder why it is so important to some to control information about Dickie and to suppress his side of the story? Que Bono? What type of society are and journalism are we proponents of here?

Friday, March 09, 2007

Newspeak on Dr. Dickie...great lengths taken to bury the truth: Why?


I wonder if I am the only blogger reading this post who has seriously thought s/he was at risk of having her/his blog "pulled" from Blogger for reasons of censorship and/or self-interest.

This is the scenario:

1. On February 24th I published a post about Dr. Ken Dickie who is the alleged "deadbeat dad" who is in exile in the Bahamas. This is because the Supreme Court's decision to overturn a lower court's ruling will put Dr. Dickie in jail if he returns to Canada. Dr. Dickie told the story in an exclusive interview that suggests he may have been sacrificed in exchange for jurisprudence that should generate $$$ billions $$$ for the legal industry.

That post generated lots of hits and came up near the top of page one on any Google search containing the name: Dr. Ken Dickie.

2. On Wednesday February 28th all evidence of my post (that told the other side of Ken Dickie’s tragic story) mysteriously vanished from Google’s search results. All references to Dr. Ken Dickie in that post were no longer picked up by Google’s ordering program. It was as if I had never written about him - even though the posts were still up.

3. On March 3rd I republished that article on Dr. Dickie in a new post. I added a foreword that raised questions about why it seems my previous post had been censored out of Google’s ordering system. I also started an experiment to see if my re-publish of that post would be “struck” from the search results again. I have been checking each day since more than once in order to report on any subsequent intervention and threat to freedom of speech.

4. Sometime after 3:00 pm (Eastern time) March 8th (approximately 9 hours ago maximum), the post link to my blog http://viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com/2007/03/what-do-lepers-island-debtors-prison.html) stopped showing up in Google searches for the words “dr. ken dickie”. However this time, the information has only been censored partially. Result number 15 is the site viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com. Nevertheless, the specific post has been removed from Google’s ordering sometime in the last eight hours.

15. Views from the Water's Edge- [ Traduire cette page ]
Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon and alleged
“deadbeat dad” who lives in the Bahamas. He was officially placed in exile two
weeks ago by the ...viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com/ - 250k -
En cache
-
Pages similaires

5. Then I checked Yahoo. The top two search results at the moment are similar to the order I viewed earlier today on Google when I enter "dr. ken dickie". The top two Yahoo results are currently my blog and my blog link below so what's up Google?:

1. Views from the Water's Edge
... the exclusive radio interview with Dr. Ken Dickie on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa ... Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon and alleged "deadbeat dad" who ...viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com - 255k - Cached - More pages from this site

2.Views from the Water's Edge: What do Leper's Island, Debtor's Prison and "deadbeat dad" have in common?: online ... ... the exclusive radio interview with
Dr. Ken Dickie on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa ... Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario
plastic surgeon and alleged "deadbeat dad", who ...viewsfromthewatersedge.blogspot.com/2007/03/... - 83k - Cached
- More pages from this site

What is the big deal?

Does anyone else find this creepy? Who is this “big brother”? Why should anyone care about Dr. Dickie’s side of the story or suppressing my blog for that matter? Did someone threaten to sue or is this an order from “on high”? Or, is this the preference of someone inside the search engine? Who gave the word to “pull it”?

If self-preservation rather than the universal principles of (freedom of speech, gender equality and innocence before guilt) were my motive I would probably have “gotten the hint” and I would stop posting on this topic. After all, someone(s) unknown keeps going to great lengths to suppress Dr. Ken Dickie’s side of the story.

Unfortunately, so far Dr. Dickie’s side of the story is represented almost exclusively by this post. Could someone else carry the torch in the event that Google who controls Blogger decides to eliminate my blog? Who then will tell Dr. Dickie's story?

Why would anyone care?

The jurisprudence created by Supreme Court of Canada’s ruling about Dickie v. Dickie is bold and powerful.

1. Does this represent the “nuclear bomb for women in matters of the family?

2. How could our highest court bring back “debtor’s prison” for matters of the family, even though such a concept has been banned in modern times?

3. How could an untold story in a civil matter result in jail when that same situation in a criminal matter would never result in jail?

4. Is there any credibility left in the judiciary after this very bold jurisprudence?

5. Who benefits most? The legal industry? Proponents of patriarchy? Those who seek to preserve the flow of monies in divorce from men to women?

6. Is this type of cover-up the work of “old boys” who presume women’s groups will make less of a fuss about gender inequality if they are given the upper hand in matters of the family? If so, the pursuit of corporate and political gender equality is slowed down because women can instead focus on enjoying the edge they have in family matters while divorced fathers like Dr. Dickie are sacrificed.

What about the Charter of Rights and Freedoms? Shouldn’t gender be taken out so that the objective gender equality is across the board rather than there being some issues that benefit men and others that benefit women?

Will evidence of this post be disappear too?

Perhaps the better question would be this: will someone try to take down my blog altogether? I obviously have not gotten the hint. Stay tuned. If this blog and persona disappears because I went too far, please consider those who seek to conceal information that may exonerate Dr. Dickie have much riding on this. After all, who is charged with concealing the porn and are they as successful?

Once again, in the name of freedom of speech, gender equality and innocence before guilt, I republish the post to balance the information available to the public with an interest in understanding Dr. Dickie and what this Supreme Court decision really means for the rest of us.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

What do Leper's Island, Debtor's Prison and "deadbeat dad" have in common?: online censorship shows that it is mostly about "the spin".

Over the last couple months I have learned a little about search engines and what makes them work. For the most part, information is sorted and is accessible regardless of content (unless objectionable). In the 21st century with so much information being shared by so many persons via much new technology, it is essential that principles such as "freedom of speech" be extended and preserved when these new forms of communication are the media.

Well, last week I told the other side of the story about Dr. Kenneth Dickie, the alleged "deadbeat dad" who is in exile on an island in the Bahamas. This followed the Supreme Court's 9-0 decision to overturn an Ontario Court of Appeal decision about Dr. Dickie, the Court $250,000 bond he was previously ordered to pay to his ex-wife for the education of his grown children. I wrote about the reasons behind his failure to pay following an exclusive interview on Ottawa radio the Thursday before last.

If you type in the words Dr. Kenneth Dickie into Google, you will understand why I needed to write what I did. There are dozen's of articles written explaining why the Supreme Court is right to make "debtor's prison" now appropriate for matters of the family and why Dr. Dickie needs to be locked up. My blog last Saturday reporting on Dr. Dickie's interview is pretty much the only piece of retrievable information by Google that raises questions about the appropriateness of the Supreme Court's decision on Dickie vs. Dickie.

Or, at least it was the only information - now there is nothing. Where last weekend my blog about Dr. Dickie was on page one of any Google search containing his name, by mid-week all links to that post via Google had mysteriously vanished.

Was this caused by someone(s) intervening somehow to ensure that this information was contained? How important is it to some to prevent the popular understanding of Dr. Dickie's side of the story? The vanishing of all links to that post raises further questions about the objectivity of the judiciary. This is especially so in matters where "controversial and highly interventionist" jurisprudence is created by consensus where a primary beneficiary happens to be the legal industry and the well funded special interests who spin until discriminatory words like "deadbeats" becomes a part of our popular terminology where other slurs are frowned upon.

In the name of freedom of speech, gender equality and innocence before guilt, I republish the post to balance the information available to the public with an interest in understanding Dr. Dickie and what this Supreme Court decision really means for the rest of us.

If these universal principles are important to you, please give the post a careful read. If you disagree, please let me know rather than enlisting the search engines in conspiring to commit some type of cover up.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Debtors Prison for Deadbeats: a Nuclear Bomb for women who choose divorce?

Last night I arrived in Toronto from Montreal. I did not plan to write a post, however, on my way to my first appointment this morning, while driving past Queen’s Park, I changed my mind and I took a detour to the Lakeshore and I shot some “views”, including the one attached.

The situation is this: most of us assume that if we play be the rules, we should be able to avoid our being put in jail. After all, if we work hard, act responsibly and honour our commitments, there should be no problems, right?

Sadly, history has shown there are noble causes perhaps where ultimately and in retrospect the State looks foolish or self-interested. When Cassius Clay / Mohamed Ali was put in jail for avoiding military service in the US, this represented a class / race struggle with respect military service that led to change and the objective of racial equality. There are also situations of injustice because of blatant racial biases, such as Nelson Mandela’s life in prison as a result of decisions made by discriminatory governments in South Africa trying to prolong a very unjust status quo. In these cases the State had no regard for equality or human rights and no qualms about locking up certain persons to perpetuate the self-interested agenda of the State or those who represent the State. This is how these decisions are now judged by history.

Well, this week I discovered that Canada’s judiciary may one day be seen in a way similar to how we lament the previous lack of integrity by the US and in South African governments. Because some of the worst family policy in Canada comes out of Ontario (as well as Supreme Court Justices who have the worst “discrimination ratings”) when it comes to the likelihood of women winning and men losing decisions they adjudicate, my hotel in downtown Toronto is the perfect place for me to explain why all men (even those who never foresee them being affected by a divorce) should be on alert.

This week’s Exclusive interview with Dr. Kenneth Dickie from exile in Bahamas

Did anyone else hear the exclusive radio interview with Dr. Ken Dickie on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa hosted by Ottawa lawyer and mediator Ernie Tannis? For those interested in exploring which situations in life could lead to one being wrongly incarcerated, I recommend your requesting a transcript.

In this interview, Dr. Dickie broke his silence about his family law case, following much media hysteria in recent weeks celebrating the Supreme Court’s decision about “deadbeat dads”. This was followed by Olivia Chow’s ignorant comments in the House of Commons this week blaming “deadbeats” for child poverty in Canada. Dr. Dickie finally told his side of the story. More than ever, there is no doubt in my mind term “deadbeat” is a euphemism placed in our terminology to legitimise gender biased public decision making by certain governments and the judiciary.

What’s this all about?

Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon and alleged “deadbeat dad” who lives in the Bahamas. He was officially placed in exile two weeks ago by the Supreme Court's decision 9-0 to overturn an Ontario Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal would not hold Dr. Dickie in contempt for not putting up $250,000 in financial security for the education of his grown children because his claims that he cannot pay had not been heard by the Court. The Supreme Court says that doesn’t matter, so now there is jurisprudence saying that matters of civil contempt when information is still missing by a respondent are now punishable by jail. This is unbelievably bold jurisprudence because matters of criminal contempt would never result in jail under similar circumstances.

Now, Dr. Dickie will be put in jail if the Canadian authorities actually get their hands on him. He has lost his passport, which prevents him from leaving the Bahamas. And, perhaps most importantly, the State has made an example out of him personally so that all Canadian men who might consider getting married and/or having children one day should be on alert that any failure to “pay up“ if one‘s marriage ends up in divorce could mean jail.

Rightly or wrongly, decisions like this should cause a decline in the number of marriages and the number of children who are born. Furthermore, because individuals do not have exclusive control over whether their marriages work or not, it might also be prudent for all married and divorced men to now practice how to prudently and defensively pick up the soap in the shower. Or at the very least to be completely safe, just make sure you never drop that soap again.

Why doesn’t Dr. Dickie not just put up the ‘freaking’ money?

Even if it is ‘way over the top’ to put people in jail for civil matters, why does Dr. Dickie just pay? Could it be true that he cannot? Also, was he always a deadbeat? Did he ever pay for his kids?

Apparently, Dr. Dickie and his ex-wife signed a separation agreement at the time of the divorce in the early 1990s that made him responsible to pay her $1.25 million dollars over 10 years plus a $120,000 educational account for the kids. Both parties had sought independent legal advice at the time.

He contends that he paid his ex wife the agreed $1.25 million and the $120K for the kids education. He also claims that after making all these payments and after the ups and downs of his plastic surgery business in both Canada (which he shut down) and now in the Bahamas, he does not have the money/ equity to secure with a bank a “guarantee” to pay in security another 250K for the future education of children.

If it has been 15 years, how old are his kids? A deal is a deal, right?Dr. Dickie was one month away from having fulfilled that separation agreement when his wife’s legal counsel sought to re-open a ten year agreement on the eve of its completion. After receiving monies from her ex that amount to what many people don’t earn in a lifetime, Mrs. Dickie retained Toronto family divorce lawyer, Mr. Niman, who went after more money to pay for the education of Dr. Dickie’s children. By this point, his kids were all in their late teenage years and early twenties. Some of them had jobs, even though the mainstream media covering the story continues to publish pictures of Mrs. Dickie with young children leading most readers and viewers to believe Dr. Dickie left his family in the lurch.

Dr. Dickie’s lawyer, Rochelle Cantor, explains that Dr. Dickie’s children are now all in their 20s. They have been in and out of school, they all have “trust funds” set up previously by Dr. Dickie to pay for their education. They have all been close to being adults since before Mrs. Dickie sought to reopen the separation agreement - for example, at least one has taken 6 years to pursue 3 year degrees, etc; and another is travelling the world in lieu of attending school using monies from savings and a “trust fund” to fund the experience.

Mr. Niman by reputation is a lawyer who specialises “lifestyle family law“. Some call this the exclusive practice of helping wealthy, sometimes angry divorcees take their ex-husbands for everything they are worth. Because collecting legal fees on a contingency basis is not accepted practice in Canada, Mr. Niman allegedly took on Mrs. Dickie’s case pro-bono. After all, further jurisprudence in family law that would create even more incentives for women to divorce would logically help Mr. Niman’s practice. Would this be an alternative way for Mr. Niman to recover fees in the future for the time put into Mrs. Dickie’s case?

Well apparently, Mrs. Dickie also declared bankruptcy, which, if he were to choose, would have allowed Mr. Niman to write off “paper receivables” from his income tax . So, it seems Mr. Niman not only may pay less tax to Canada and Ontario by representing Mrs. Dickie, he got very valauable jurisprudence (for someone who practices this kind of law) by the Supreme Court of Canada preserving and extending the profitability of his genre of law in the future.

To top it all off, federal monies allocated to the Status of Women funding paid for Mr. Niman to take this case to the Supreme Court. This dangerous jurisprudence was funded by the Legal Education Action Fund (Leaf) which was set up in 1985 following the Charter to push for equal rights for women.

The irony is, this decision makes Canada less equal for men who are “totally exposed” if they choose to marry or to have children. Therefore, federal monies were used to put the interests of women forward at the expense of men who become divorced, which is arguably when advocacy monies become a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The “Nuclear Bomb” for Women and continued profits for the legal industry

According to Rochelle Cantor, one of Mr. Niman’s arguments to the Supreme Court in pleading for them to allow for this jurisprudence via the Dickie vs Dickie case, was that it “gives women a “nuclear weapon in matters of the family”.

Does anyone else have trouble with how this has developed? What is the real point of all of this? Is this really about poor Mrs. Dickie, who is currently working as a nurse in Alberta? Or, is this about those deprived Dickie children who are grown, who have trust funds barely depleted and who are either working or have been in an out of school this entire millennium?

Or, is this about feeding the pockets of the legal industry who have more tools to terrorise further the lives of those men who end up getting divorced, their second families and the children of second families?

After my previously posting this and this about gender bias by our judiciary, I am starting to wonder whether the politicisation of judicial appointments and the controversy surrounding this issue currently raised by the Liberals about the Conservatives does not need to be looked at more holistically. Previous judicial appointments by Liberal governments are failing it seems and are no better than the anticipated results from the current process proposed by the Conservatives to select judges.

If judges individually or collectively make decisions while on the bench implicitly or explicitly because of their own preferences, way of viewing the world, or a subliminal desire to indirectly facilitate more future business to the legal industry at the expense of gender equality, human rights and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the whole system (as well as those currently presiding) requires a complete overhaul.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I repeat again, if you disagree with this post, please let me know. Do not seek to enlist the search engines in conspiring to commit some type of cover up.

Edgewater Views
12:36 am, March 9th, 2007

Saturday, March 03, 2007

What do Leper's Island, Debtor's Prison and "deadbeat dad" have in common?: online censorship shows that it is mostly about "the spin".


Over the last couple months I have learned a little about search engines and what makes them work. For the most part, information is sorted and is accessible regardless of content (unless objectionable). In the 21st century with so much information being shared by so many persons via much new technology, it is essential that principles such as "freedom of speech" be extended and preserved when these new forms of communication are the media.

Well, last week I told the other side of the story about Dr. Kenneth Dickie, the alleged "deadbeat dad" who is in exile on an island in the Bahamas. This followed the Supreme Court's 9-0 decision to overturn an Ontario Court of Appeal decision about Dr. Dickie, the Court $250,000 bond he was previously ordered to pay to his ex-wife for the education of his grown children. I wrote about the reasons behind his failure to pay following an exclusive interview on Ottawa radio the Thursday before last.

If you type in the words Dr. Kenneth Dickie into Google, you will understand why I needed to write what I did. There are dozen's of articles written explaining why the Supreme Court is right to make "debtor's prison" now appropriate for matters of the family and why Dr. Dickie needs to be locked up. My blog last Saturday reporting on Dr. Dickie's interview is pretty much the only piece of retrievable information by Google that raises questions about the appropriateness of the Supreme Court's decision on Dickie vs. Dickie.

Or, at least it was the only information - now there is nothing. Where last weekend my blog about Dr. Dickie was on page one of any Google search containing his name, by mid-week all links to that post via Google had mysteriously vanished.

Was this caused by someone(s) intervening somehow to ensure that this information was contained? How important is it to some to prevent the popular understanding of Dr. Dickie's side of the story? The vanishing of all links to that post raises further questions about the objectivity of the judiciary. This is especially so in matters where "controversial and highly interventionist" jurisprudence is created by consensus where a primary beneficiary happens to be the legal industry and the well funded special interests who spin until discriminatory words like "deadbeats" becomes a part of our popular terminology where other slurs are frowned upon.

In the name of freedom of speech, gender equality and innocence before guilt, I republish the post to balance the information available to the public with an interest in understanding Dr. Dickie and what this Supreme Court decision really means for the rest of us.

If these universal principles are important to you, please give the post a careful read. If you disagree, please let me know rather than enlisting the search engines in conspiring to commit some type of cover up.

Debtor's Prison for Deadbeats: a Nuclear Bomb for women who choose divorce?

Last night I arrived in Toronto from Montreal. I did not plan to write a post, however, on my way to my first appointment this morning, while driving past Queen’s Park, I changed my mind and I took a detour to the Lakeshore and I shot some “views”, including the one attached.The situation is this: most of us assume that if we play be the rules, we should be able to avoid our being put in jail. After all, if we work hard, act responsibly and honour our commitments, there should be no problems, right?

Sadly, history has shown there are noble causes perhaps where ultimately and in retrospect the State looks foolish or self-interested. When Cassius Clay / Mohamed Ali was put in jail for avoiding military service in the US, this represented a class / race struggle with respect military service that led to change and the objective of racial equality. There are also situations of injustice because of blatant racial biases, such as Nelson Mandela’s life in prison as a result of decisions made by discriminatory governments in South Africa trying to prolong a very unjust status quo. In these cases the State had no regard for equality or human rights and no qualms about locking up certain persons to perpetuate the self-interested agenda of the State or those who represent the State. This is how these decisions are now judged by history.

Well, this week I discovered that Canada’s judiciary may one day be seen in a way similar to how we lament the previous lack of integrity by the US and in South African governments. Because some of the worst family policy in Canada comes out of Ontario (as well as Supreme Court Justices who have the worst “discrimination ratings”) when it comes to the likelihood of women winning and men losing decisions they adjudicate, my hotel in downtown Toronto is the perfect place for me to explain why all men (even those who never foresee them being affected by a divorce) should be on alert.

This week’s Exclusive interview with Dr. Kenneth Dickie from exile in Bahamas

Did anyone else hear the exclusive radio interview with Dr. Ken Dickie on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa hosted by Ottawa lawyer and mediator Ernie Tannis? For those interested in exploring which situations in life could lead to one being wrongly incarcerated, I recommend your requesting a transcript.

In this interview, Dr. Dickie broke his silence about his family law case, following much media hysteria in recent weeks celebrating the Supreme Court’s decision about “deadbeat dads”. This was followed by Olivia Chow’s ignorant comments in the House of Commons this week blaming “deadbeats” for child poverty in Canada. Dr. Dickie finally told his side of the story. More than ever, there is no doubt in my mind term “deadbeat” is a euphemism placed in our terminology to legitimise gender biased public decision making by certain governments and the judiciary.

What’s this all about?

Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon and alleged “deadbeat dad” who lives in the Bahamas. He was officially placed in exile two weeks ago by the Supreme Court's decision 9-0 to overturn an Ontario Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal would not hold Dr. Dickie in contempt for not putting up $250,000 in financial security for the education of his grown children because his claims that he cannot pay had not been heard by the Court. The Supreme Court says that doesn’t matter, so now there is jurisprudence saying that matters of civil contempt when information is still missing by a respondent are now punishable by jail. This is unbelievably bold jurisprudence because matters of criminal contempt would never result in jail under similar circumstances.

Now, Dr. Dickie will be put in jail if the Canadian authorities actually get their hands on him. He has lost his passport, which prevents him from leaving the Bahamas. And, perhaps most importantly, the State has made an example out of him personally so that all Canadian men who might consider getting married and/or having children one day should be on alert that any failure to “pay up“ if one‘s marriage ends up in divorce could mean jail.

Rightly or wrongly, decisions like this should cause a decline in the number of marriages and the number of children who are born. Furthermore, because individuals do not have exclusive control over whether their marriages work or not, it might also be prudent for all married and divorced men to now practice how to prudently and defensively pick up the soap in the shower. Or at the very least to be completely safe, just make sure you never drop that soap again.

Why doesn’t Dr. Dickie not just put up the ‘freaking’ money?

Even if it is ‘way over the top’ to put people in jail for civil matters, why does Dr. Dickie just pay? Could it be true that he cannot? Also, was he always a deadbeat? Did he ever pay for his kids?

Apparently, Dr. Dickie and his ex-wife signed a separation agreement at the time of the divorce in the early 1990s that made him responsible to pay her $1.25 million dollars over 10 years plus a $120,000 educational account for the kids. Both parties had sought independent legal advice at the time.

He contends that he paid his ex wife the agreed $1.25 million and the $120K for the kids education. He also claims that after making all these payments and after the ups and downs of his plastic surgery business in both Canada (which he shut down) and now in the Bahamas, he does not have the money/ equity to secure with a bank a “guarantee” to pay in security another 250K for the future education of children.

If it has been 15 years, how old are his kids? A deal is a deal, right?

Dr. Dickie was one month away from having fulfilled that separation agreement when his wife’s legal counsel sought to re-open a ten year agreement on the eve of its completion. After receiving monies from her ex that amount to what many people don’t earn in a lifetime, Mrs. Dickie retained Toronto family divorce lawyer, Mr. Niman, who went after more money to pay for the education of Dr. Dickie’s children. By this point, his kids were all in their late teenage years and early twenties. Some of them had jobs, even though the mainstream media covering the story continues to publish pictures of Mrs. Dickie with young children leading most readers and viewers to believe Dr. Dickie left his family in the lurch.

Dr. Dickie’s lawyer, Rochelle Cantor, explains that Dr. Dickie’s children are now all in their 20s. They have been in and out of school, they all have “trust funds” set up previously by Dr. Dickie to pay for their education. They have all been close to being adults since before Mrs. Dickie sought to reopen the separation agreement - for example, at least one has taken 6 years to pursue 3 year degrees, etc; and another is travelling the world in lieu of attending school using monies from savings and a “trust fund” to fund the experience.

Mr. Niman by reputation is a lawyer who specialises “lifestyle family law“. Some call this the exclusive practice of helping wealthy, sometimes angry divorcees take their ex-husbands for everything they are worth. Because collecting legal fees on a contingency basis is not accepted practice in Canada, Mr. Niman allegedly took on Mrs. Dickie’s case pro-bono. After all, further jurisprudence in family law that would create even more incentives for women to divorce would logically help Mr. Niman’s practice. Would this be an alternative way for Mr. Niman to recover fees in the future for the time put into Mrs. Dickie’s case?

Well apparently, Mrs. Dickie also declared bankruptcy, which, if he were to choose, would have allowed Mr. Niman to write off “paper receivables” from his income tax . So, it seems Mr. Niman not only may pay less tax to Canada and Ontario by representing Mrs. Dickie, he got very valauable jurisprudence (for someone who practices this kind of law) by the Supreme Court of Canada preserving and extending the profitability of his genre of law in the future.

To top it all off, federal monies allocated to the Status of Women funding paid for Mr. Niman to take this case to the Supreme Court. This dangerous jurisprudence was funded by the Legal Education Action Fund (Leaf) which was set up in 1985 following the Charter to push for equal rights for women.

The irony is, this decision makes Canada less equal for men who are “totally exposed” if they choose to marry or to have children. Therefore, federal monies were used to put the interests of women forward at the expense of men who become divorced, which is arguably when advocacy monies become a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The “Nuclear Bomb” for Women and continued profits for the legal industry

According to Rochelle Cantor, one of Mr. Niman’s arguments to the Supreme Court in pleading for them to allow for this jurisprudence via the Dickie vs Dickie case, was that it “gives women a “nuclear weapon in matters of the family”.

Does anyone else have trouble with how this has developed? What is the real point of all of this? Is this really about poor Mrs. Dickie, who is currently working as a nurse in Alberta? Or, is this about those deprived Dickie children who are grown, who have trust funds barely depleted and who are either working or have been in an out of school this entire millennium?

Or, is this about feeding the pockets of the legal industry who have more tools to terrorise further the lives of those men who end up getting divorced, their second families and the children of second families?

After my previously posting this and this about gender bias by our judiciary, I am starting to wonder whether the politicisation of judicial appointments and the controversy surrounding this issue currently raised by the Liberals about the Conservatives does not need to be looked at more holistically. Previous judicial appointments by Liberal governments are failing it seems and are no better than the anticipated results from the current process proposed by the Conservatives to select judges.

If judges individually or collectively make decisions while on the bench implicitly or explicitly because of their own preferences, way of viewing the world, or a subliminal desire to indirectly facilitate more future business to the legal industry at the expense of gender equality, human rights and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the whole system (as well as those currently presiding) requires a complete overhaul.
----------

If anyone has a problem with this post, please let me know why. When one first opts to censor a very important perspective in all of this, it just makes the family law conspiracy seem that much more plausible.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Debtors Prison for Deadbeats: a Nuclear Bomb for women who choose divorce?


Last night I arrived in Toronto from Montreal. I did not plan to write a post, however, on my way to my first appointment this morning, while driving past Queen’s Park, I changed my mind and I took a detour to the Lakeshore and I shot some “views”, including the one attached.

The situation is this: most of us assume that if we play be the rules, we should be able to avoid our being put in jail. After all, if we work hard, act responsibly and honour our commitments, there should be no problems, right?

Sadly, history has shown there are noble causes perhaps where ultimately and in retrospect the State looks foolish or self-interested. When Cassius Clay / Mohamed Ali was put in jail for avoiding military service in the US, this represented a class / race struggle with respect military service that led to change and the objective of racial equality. There are also situations of injustice because of blatant racial biases, such as Nelson Mandela’s life in prison as a result of decisions made by discriminatory governments in South Africa trying to prolong a very unjust status quo. In these cases the State had no regard for equality or human rights and no qualms about locking up certain persons to perpetuate the self-interested agenda of the State or those who represent the State. This is how these decisions are now judged by history.

Well, this week I discovered that Canada’s judiciary may one day be seen in a way similar to how we lament the previous lack of integrity by the US and in South African governments. Because some of the worst family policy in Canada comes out of Ontario (as well as Supreme Court Justices who have the worst “discrimination ratings”) when it comes to the likelihood of women winning and men losing decisions they adjudicate, my hotel in downtown Toronto is the perfect place for me to explain why all men (even those who never foresee them being affected by a divorce) should be on alert.

This week’s Exclusive interview with Dr. Kenneth Dickie from exile in Bahamas

Did anyone else hear the exclusive radio interview with Dr. Ken Dickie on Chin Radio, 97.9 in Ottawa hosted by Ottawa lawyer and mediator Ernie Tannis? For those interested in exploring which situations in life could lead to one being wrongly incarcerated, I recommend your requesting a transcript.

In this interview, Dr. Dickie broke his silence about his family law case, following much media hysteria in recent weeks celebrating the Supreme Court’s decision about “deadbeat dads”. This was followed by Olivia Chow’s ignorant comments in the House of Commons this week blaming “deadbeats” for child poverty in Canada. Dr. Dickie finally told his side of the story. More than ever, there is no doubt in my mind term “deadbeat” is a euphemism placed in our terminology to legitimise gender biased public decision making by certain governments and the judiciary.

What’s this all about?

Dr. Ken Dickie is the Ontario plastic surgeon and alleged “deadbeat dad” who lives in the Bahamas. He was officially placed in exile two weeks ago by the Supreme Court's decision 9-0 to overturn an Ontario Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal would not hold Dr. Dickie in contempt for not putting up $250,000 in financial security for the education of his grown children because his claims that he cannot pay had not been heard by the Court. The Supreme Court says that doesn’t matter, so now there is jurisprudence saying that matters of civil contempt when information is still missing by a respondent are now punishable by jail. This is unbelievably bold jurisprudence because matters of criminal contempt would never result in jail under similar circumstances.

Now, Dr. Dickie will be put in jail if the Canadian authorities actually get their hands on him. He has lost his passport, which prevents him from leaving the Bahamas. And, perhaps most importantly, the State has made an example out of him personally so that all Canadian men who might consider getting married and/or having children one day should be on alert that any failure to “pay up“ if one‘s marriage ends up in divorce could mean jail.

Rightly or wrongly, decisions like this should cause a decline in the number of marriages and the number of children who are born. Furthermore, because individuals do not have exclusive control over whether their marriages work or not, it might also be prudent for all married and divorced men to now practice how to prudently and defensively pick up the soap in the shower. Or at the very least to be completely safe, just make sure you never drop that soap again.

Why doesn’t Dr. Dickie not just put up the ‘freaking’ money?

Even if it is ‘way over the top’ to put people in jail for civil matters, why does Dr. Dickie just pay? Could it be true that he cannot? Also, was he always a deadbeat? Did he ever pay for his kids?

Apparently, Dr. Dickie and his ex-wife signed a separation agreement at the time of the divorce in the early 1990s that made him responsible to pay her $1.25 million dollars over 10 years plus a $120,000 educational account for the kids. Both parties had sought independent legal advice at the time.

He contends that he paid his ex wife the agreed $1.25 million and the $120K for the kids education. He also claims that after making all these payments and after the ups and downs of his plastic surgery business in both Canada (which he shut down) and now in the Bahamas, he does not have the money/ equity to secure with a bank a “guarantee” to pay in security another 250K for the future education of children.

If it has been 15 years, how old are his kids? A deal is a deal, right?

Dr. Dickie was one month away from having fulfilled that separation agreement when his wife’s legal counsel sought to re-open a ten year agreement on the eve of its completion. After receiving monies from her ex that amount to what many people don’t earn in a lifetime, Mrs. Dickie retained Toronto family divorce lawyer, Mr. Niman, who went after more money to pay for the education of Dr. Dickie’s children. By this point, his kids were all in their late teenage years and early twenties. Some of them had jobs, even though the mainstream media covering the story continues to publish pictures of Mrs. Dickie with young children leading most readers and viewers to believe Dr. Dickie left his family in the lurch.

Dr. Dickie’s lawyer, Rochelle Cantor, explains that Dr. Dickie’s children are now all in their 20s. They have been in and out of school, they all have “trust funds” set up previously by Dr. Dickie to pay for their education. They have all been close to being adults since before Mrs. Dickie sought to reopen the separation agreement - for example, at least one has taken 6 years to pursue 3 year degrees, etc; and another is travelling the world in lieu of attending school using monies from savings and a “trust fund” to fund the experience.

Mr. Niman by reputation is a lawyer who specialises “lifestyle family law“. Some call this the exclusive practice of helping wealthy, sometimes angry divorcees take their ex-husbands for everything they are worth. Because collecting legal fees on a contingency basis is not accepted practice in Canada, Mr. Niman allegedly took on Mrs. Dickie’s case pro-bono. After all, further jurisprudence in family law that would create even more incentives for women to divorce would logically help Mr. Niman’s practice. Would this be an alternative way for Mr. Niman to recover fees in the future for the time put into Mrs. Dickie’s case?

Well apparently, Mrs. Dickie also declared bankruptcy, which, if he were to choose, would have allowed Mr. Niman to write off “paper receivables” from his income tax . So, it seems Mr. Niman not only may pay less tax to Canada and Ontario by representing Mrs. Dickie, he got very valauable jurisprudence (for someone who practices this kind of law) by the Supreme Court of Canada preserving and extending the profitability of his genre of law in the future.

To top it all off, federal monies allocated to the Status of Women funding paid for Mr. Niman to take this case to the Supreme Court. This dangerous jurisprudence was funded by the Legal Education Action Fund (Leaf) which was set up in 1985 following the Charter to push for equal rights for women.

The irony is, this decision makes Canada less equal for men who are “totally exposed” if they choose to marry or to have children. Therefore, federal monies were used to put the interests of women forward at the expense of men who become divorced, which is arguably when advocacy monies become a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The “Nuclear Bomb” for Women and continued profits for the legal industry

According to Rochelle Cantor, one of Mr. Niman’s arguments to the Supreme Court in pleading for them to allow for this jurisprudence via the Dickie vs Dickie case, was that it “gives women a “nuclear weapon in matters of the family”.

Does anyone else have trouble with how this has developed? What is the real point of all of this? Is this really about poor Mrs. Dickie, who is currently working as a nurse in Alberta? Or, is this about those deprived Dickie children who are grown, who have trust funds barely depleted and who are either working or have been in an out of school this entire millennium?

Or, is this about feeding the pockets of the legal industry who have more tools to terrorise further the lives of those men who end up getting divorced, their second families and the children of second families?

After my previously posting this and this about gender bias by our judiciary, I am starting to wonder whether the politicisation of judicial appointments and the controversy surrounding this issue currently raised by the Liberals about the Conservatives does not need to be looked at more holistically. Previous judicial appointments by Liberal governments are failing it seems and are no better than the anticipated results from the current process proposed by the Conservatives to select judges.

If judges individually or collectively make decisions while on the bench implicitly or explicitly because of their own preferences, way of viewing the world, or a subliminal desire to indirectly facilitate more future business to the legal industry at the expense of gender equality, human rights and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the whole system (as well as those currently presiding) requires a complete overhaul.