Liberals believe nobody—except conservatives and corporate leaders—should be penalized. All penalties are excessive. It’s no wonder they find “torture” under every rock.
Liberals believe all criminals should be released back into society. Their favorite words are words like “reintegrated”, and “parole”. “Rehabilitated”—with the help of two dozen or more unionized federal bureaucrats and social workers. Unfortunately, it’s often unionized policemen who end up dealing with the evil ones again, and of course ambulance paramedics, pathologists, and undertakers.
Liberals are weak on law and order. They only recently came to understand that conservatives have been right about law and order forever. Now they’re trying to catch up. But their legacy lives on, even while others die, and get robbed, and raped, harassed, and beaten. Liberals think that the answer is simply more social workers and government funding. Free housing. Drug injection clinics. Multiculturalism. Entitlements. Educating society (who is ultimately to blame, to their way of thinking), to understand these people.
And now here’s a story of a man who was released on parole —in the National Post (and other CanWest Mediaworks papers), in which once again no questions are or will be asked about the mindset of liberals:
Cheema deportation order was dismissed
Husband Of Slain Principal ‘Prone To Abuse’: Board
Kim Bolan, CanWest News Service, with files from James Cowan
Published: Wednesday, July 18, 2007Despite a criminal record and a deportation order, Paul Cheema was allowed to stay in Canada after winning an appeal, the Immigration and Refugee Board said.
Mr. Cheema was arrested last weekend in connection with the July 5 slaying of his new wife, Surrey school principal Shemina Hirji. He was released after 24 hours without being charged after a lawyer advised him to not answer questions about her death.
Mr. Cheema was told he had to return to his native England after being convicted of forcible confinement, uttering threats and attempted kidnapping in an attack on his former fiancee in 1994. But Melissa Anderson, of the IRB, said he won a stay of the deportation order in October, 1997, for a three-year period.
After his record remained clear, the deportation order was dismissed in October, 2000.
Police have not publicly identified Mr. Cheema as the man they interviewed over the weekend. But Mr. Cheema’s sister-in-law told the Vancouver Sun it was upsetting to see him arrested and a local television crew filmed Mr. Cheema leaving the police station after questioning.
Police have been unable to find evidence supporting Mr. Cheema’s claim that a trio of burglars killed his wife. “We have not been able to substantiate there was a home invasion and that there were these three other suspects,” Corporal Dale Carr of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team said yesterday. “Our primary focus and primary suspect is the male that was identified over the weekend.”
The British-born 34-year-old Mr. Cheema arrived in B.C. in 1991, sponsored by his brother Bob, a Surrey businessman.
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- Say something. - Friday October 25, 2024 at 6:03 pm
- Keep going, or veer right - Monday August 26, 2024 at 4:30 pm
- Hey Joel, what is “progressive?” - Friday August 2, 2024 at 11:32 am