Antiquated Defamation Laws and the American way to Insult

Antiquated Defamation Laws and the American way to Insult

 

At the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards, British Comedian Russell Brand ridiculed the current President George W. Bush by referring to him as a “retarded cowboy,” giving rise to a potentially libelous case. 

Brand prefaced this shocking statement by imploring the American public to vote for Obama in the next presidential election. He then went on by saying:

“Some people, I think they’re called racists, say America is not ready for a black president,” he said, going for a naive candid approach. Brand has been known to insult basically everyone, including himself.

What was the result? At first, the audience was uncomfortable, but still a half-hearted roar of laughter shortly ensued. In the next few days, countless online forums streamed critical remarks about Brand’s unconscionable nerve, and the controversial insults he had made to one of the world’s most patriotic nation.

Fearless

Russell Brand: Fearless

 

He also was guilty of self-slander in his comment that his haircut could be interpreted as mental illness, making fun of his giant black mop of a hairdo. 

Brand then continued his jibes by insinuating that American people had lower standards in terms of electing officials:

“But I know America to be a forward thinking country because otherwise why would you have let that retarded cowboy fella be president for eight years?

“We were very impressed. We thought it was nice of you to let him have a go, because, in England, he wouldn’t be trusted with a pair of scissors.”

The fact is, Brand is known for stirring up controversy through his witty half-insults, but he isn’t likely to be sued for it. There’s freedom of expression for you.

The Language of the Law

Most succintly put, defamation happens when something negative is said about a person’s character, insinuating an immoral or degenerate streak in that person’s attitudes, behaviours or actions. We’ve all seen instances of this in local media reports, from a negative review of said politician, to the highlights we see in the tabloids about the lives of our favourite celebrities. 

Such statements need to be published in a medium that reaches a wide audience, and the reasonable identification of a person must be made in order to meet the qualifications of libel. What complicates this legal issue is that statements that insinuate, rather than explicitly defame somebody’s character can also be the subject of dispute.

While defamation is used to denote the entirety of the legal issue, it may be parceled into two types of torts: libel and slander. Libel is when a defamatory situation is printed, broadcast, or realized in a fixed medium that has access to an audience. Meanwhile, slander is understood as the verbal action of defaming a person.

Canadian Law is a dynamic, organic social system that changes and adapts to social patterns and ideas of justice, and defamation like any other legal topic is subject to change and revision to better suit social demands. Originally, the libel laws were instituted to create an environment that gives enough scope and breadth in the discussion of people and their characters, while aiming to create protection against unnecessary injury and distress by the media. The problem is, Canadian law hasn’t reformed its policy on libel, and as a result, we’re pegged into possible lawsuits whenever somebody wants to have a laugh at someone else’s expense.

The Issues

One of the central issues that arises with defamation laws is that it contradicts fundamentally with the principles of free speech, and on some occasions, can prevent the right of the media to free and open discourse of court cases. 

Without quoting the Charter, it is pretty much common knowledge that everyone has the freedom of speech, and there is a more impending responsibility on the media to play the role of the unbiased messenger when it comes to relating news issues. But when egos are wounded this becomes a sticky issue for the crafty journalist who needs to get their point across, without sounding biased or creating new meaning with other people’s words. Whether or not a defendant is guilty of a crime, and their suspicion is published in a news report, the defendant may sue a journalist if their name is reported in a defamatory way.

Similarly, the question of malice arises as another difficulty for both journalists and defamed characters. How does one prove that a journalist honestly published a defamatory statement about an individual knowingly that the information was incorrect, or to be interpreted in a metaphorical way?

In 2007 this issue permeated a widely publicized case involving WIC Radio journalist Rafe Mair and Kari Simpson, a well-known social activist who protested against homosexuals. During one of his editorials, Mair and Simpson debated whether or not the education system promoted tolerance of homosexuals, or that it encouraged the adoption of a homosexual lifestyle. After disagreeing with each other, Mair broadcasted in his editorial that Simpson’s public persona as a homophobe and likened her to Klu Klux Klan and to historical fascist Aldolf Hitler.

Hitler and his trail of hatred

Hitler and his trail of hatred

 

Deeply offended, Simpson sued Mair for defamation on the basis that he insinuated that she would condone or even encourage violence against homosexual individuals. Mair’s defense was use of fair comment, pleading that his comments were intended to convey the opinion that Simpson was intolerant, which is a belief that most could honestly hold in view of her homophobia. 

While Brand got away with calling Bush a developmentally-delayed equestrian, Mair got into a lot of trouble just by calling Simpson a Nazi – which was a comment spurred by her lack of sympathy for homosexuals. If a comment can damage someone’s reputation, that comment is potentially libelous.

While Mair’s intention was to depict Simpson in a truer light that represented far-right wing convictions, what  lost him the case was the insinuation that Simpson would condone violence. Since Mair could not honestly hold this belief, the defence of fair comment failed.  

Defence

Luckily for journalists, there are ways of fighting off libelous accusations. Although Canadian defamation laws are heavily weighed in favour of the plaintiffs, the responsible journalism defence may provide insight onto how matters of interest in the media should be given more leeway. 

Fair comment is often used by defendants because it implies free speech and social values associated with it.  If I publish an article that says “Barry Bonds is a steroid junkie,” why should that be cause for libel? To save face for BALCO? Just looking at the Major League Baseball outfielder over the years, it’s quite fair to say that his body evolved in a way that doesn’t look incredibly natural. On the other hand, this statement, which proved to be true, turned into a big controversy for the athlete, causing reputational loss.

Maybe that’s opinion then. If I wrote “My opinion is that Bonds abuses steroids” then we seem to be in a different playing field here, no pun intended. Opinion as defence would seem the most clear, or the surest way to get out of a libel suit, because it is essentially not falsifiable. In other words, it’s pretty hard to tell whether or not I believe my own opinion, which is an opinion regardless, not based on facts but beliefs rather.

What about the truth? Didn’t Bonds actually take steroids that were undetectable by drug tests? Then why was so much controversy stirred up? Bonds could have argued that he suffered damages from the statements published that he was taking performance-enhancing drugs, but only because such a law exists. 

It’s possible that people only publish defamatory content when they have good cause to, namely strong evidence that supports their statements. Defamation laws undermines this tenet of free speech and human rationality, by protecting people who in most cases are guilty of something else. 

The 200-year old mistake

So Canadian defamation laws haven’t been reformed in two centuries, but so many other interfaces of the law have. In America, the Public Figure doctrine applies special rules for libel cases involving high-profile figures. They must prove that actual malice was the cause behind the publication of a defamatory statement, knowing it to either false, or with a reckless disregard to its truth.

Perhaps it is possible to set aside different grounds for what journalists can and cannot write about without affirmed, positive confirmation. For example, Kari Simpson was unreasonable to point the blame on Mair, because everyone knew that the Nazi comment was metaphorical, not a literal statement that she participated in KKK events. This complain of “supposed reputational loss” seems petty, especially considering Mair’s style of radio broadcasting.

According to the Associated Press, nearly 95% of libel cases reported in the news arise from “run of the mill” local stories, rather than high-profile events. 

Remember the infamous O.J. Simpson trial? Simpson had been well-known in America before the historical trial as an athlete and a public figure. Nearly every day of the trial was on television internationally, as the world watched the court invade nearly every aspect of Simpson’s personal life.

the media offered full coverage

Simpson: the media offered full coverage

 

The American way is that public figures are pretty much fair play in terms of parody, mockery, or general criticism. In 1964, the New York Times Co. vs Sullivan case determined new grounds for proving malice, which has drastically improved the rights of journalists in respecting free speech privileges. 

Russell Brand and the “Retarded Cowboy”

It seems that while Canadian defamation laws are becoming antiquated, and neglect the real issue of guaranteeing free speech and expression of opinion, the Americans seem to have all the real fun in making jibes at public figures. In most cases, the US has a more laid-back approach to slanderous or farcical depictions of public figures in relation to Canada’s legal policies. Such slanderous and mocking attitudes are often adopted most notably in ‘alternative journalistic’ mediums, such as the very popular news shows The Colbert Report and Jon Stewart’s Daily Show. In these cases, writers are given the ability to portray public figures in a satirical, but often true light. 

Nearly a month after the MTV MVA’s, Brand revealed that he received death threats after making jokes about the President. Brand said that he “didn’t expect people to get that annoyed by it,” and that it was a huge jump for a viewer to go from not enjoying his show to wanting to kill him.

These Christian Republicans were watching me and thought, ‘Well, this is no good, I shall do a death threat.”

Brand has possibly spurred the hatred of many people, but all for the sake of comedy.

Defamation can Colour our World

In 1990, a journalist with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation had written a thinly-researched report on mercury content on Colour Your World paints, but the broadcast did not seek a more logical explanation for the lack of evidence in the case, which in the end were untrue. 

Based on the rulings on the fair comment defense, and the issue of malice, Daniel J. Henry of the CBC’s Toronto office said the decision would be appealed. 

More specifically, Henry said that the judge’s ruling that a broadcaster was legally bound to produce a  “balanced” report was a restriction of freedom of expression. The criticism was that failing to create a balanced report of this nature would be proof or evidence of malice.

While our programs have journalistic standards, while we believe that those standards were met in this case, we do not accept that there is any [precedent] that establishes a duty to produce a balanced show,” Henry said. Rightly so, he argued further that journalists and other individuals should be allowed to produce reports in whatever way they feel necessary to express themselves, to add drama, colour or effect to their story.

“If we were all required only to speak in ways that were balanced I think we’d be living in a very strange world,” he said.

Canadians… what are we going to do? A Solution for Journalists?

For journalists, being good at what you do can save make the difference between libel and a good, juicy, error-tight story. Dean Jobb highlights how the responsible journalist can evade legal suits by being a good journalist. 

According to most legal textbooks, the best defence against libel is the power of skepticism. Not only should responsible journalists second-guess themselves and the situations they perceive to be true, but they also take into consideration possible hidden agendas or invisible motives that tipsters or interviews may follow. In the same vein, realism and the constant analysis of information surrounding a story is imperative to avoiding the “libel chill.”

Another defence that is used more often than it should be is the practising of restraint on the part of the journalist. While it is often much better to let off a while and wait for people speak for themselves, writers should be able to practise and enjoy their rights to free speech in their preferred medium. 

We need to change the laws to something more along the lines of the Sullivan case outcome. Journalists and all other writers for that matter shouldn’t have to worry about supposed reputational losses for public figures who should know by now that they’re going to be criticized no matter what they do. Being in the public realm inherently implies that other people are going to disagree with you. If Canada wishes to preserve its standing as a free country, it should hopefully change the law, hopefully within the next two centuries.

The Great Outdoors

Fall

(DDG Records)

Fall, the third EP by The Great Outdoors offers a consolation for summer lovers basking in the afterglow of the falling leaves and rustling sounds of this soft season. Belting out lyrics about ten thousand baby birds amongst a mellow plethora of bluesy sounds, the album shows a softer side of the band whose last work Summer was surprisingly rocky for the folk-blues quintet. The band members are Adam Nation and Steven Wells, who sing and play guitar,  Randy Forrester on keys, bassist Craig McCaul, and drummer Steven Wegelin, and are best described as talented but curmudgeonly. The album starts out with “Under the Sun,” a nostalgic tune about the finality of summer and the progression of time that drifts further and further into a colder place. Frontman Nation sings “Black Water Road” with a Dylan-like intimacy that makes your eyes water. The chorus gets surprisingly loud at one part in “Ten Thousand Baby Birds,” when Wells rips into lyrics like “She’s seen/Better days for me” while shredding his electric guitar. While the band seems at peace with the growing cold, there’s a sense of frustration and anger which is quickly followed by a redemptive softness. At the last track “The Garden,” there’s a chorus singing “will you meet me in the spring time/ when the rain is falling down,” while the strings of a banjo are plucked almost orchestrally. Overall,  Fall has many strengths as a seasonal album, and makes the cold transition a little easier.

Environment is doomed, sustainability experts say

Environment is doomed, sustainability experts say

Guest speaker Stephen Lewis told students that “this planet is doomed” at a conference advocating Students for Sustainability this afternoon at the University of British Columbia. 

The Nobel-Prize winning diplomat, politician, and broadcaster said that all international and other government actions towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions, such as the 1992 World Summit Conference were ways of “getting away with the appearance of movement” in regards to the environmental crisis.

Lewis capitalized on the ineffectuality of the current Conservative government in Canada, and the capitalist framework that developed nations strive to adhere to while ignoring the tell-tale apocalyptic signs of a world in peril. He said the Harper government is one whose “agenda for the future abandoned the environment,” and that it focuses attention on propping up oil and gas companies who further the environmental decline by protecting corporate interests.

Lewis is very concerned for the environment

Lewis is very concerned for the environment

Created by the Sierra Youth Coalition and the David Suzuki Foundation, The Students for Sustainability Tour began last month to educate post-secondary students across the country on how to decrease their carbon footprint. Their message is a tough one: some of the environmental damage that has already been done is irreversible.

Quoting from George Monbiot’s book Heat, Lewis said that something must be done for the environment, otherwise we are doomed to an apocalyptic reality of irrevocable environmental and social damage that will happen within the next 40 years. “We have already seen 150,000 excess deaths due to climate change alone,” he said.

Two sides of the same coin

Motivational speaker Severin Suzuki said that the current global economic crisis is indicative of an old-world capitalist mentality that reflects its own failings, and that the reality of climate change is an impetus for both environmental and economic action. 

“This crisis is an opportunity to understand how our economic system of deregulation and globalization is unsustainable. This economic system has evolved in a way that has resulted in the exploitation and destruction of the environment,” she said.

Suzuki walks the stage

Suzuki walks the stage

Suzuki says that we must think of new ways to create an environmentally-friendly economic system that favors the sustainability niche in the 21st century. “The environmental momentum should not be broken by an economic crisis,” she said.

Cow problem

Unsustainable industries are a large culprit in both the economic crisis and the intensification of climate change, triathlete and author of The Thrive Diet Brendan Brazier explained.

Brazier points to statistics that indicate that the cattle industry is highly unsustainable. While it takes anywhere from 2,000 to 8,000 gallons of water to produce 1 lb of beef, other protein-rich plants such as hemp only require 100 gallons to produce 1 lb of hemp seed, and are resistant to disease and don’t require pesticides. 

The UN published a report in 2006 claiming that livestock animals contribute 38% more greenhouse gasses than all of our transportation combined, and are dooming us all in the environmental and economic sense. 

According to Brazier, 70% of the food grown around the world is for animal feed, and it requires 9-16 lbs of grain to get 1 lb of beef. “We are creating more CO2 than we drive,” Brazier said.

Lewis ended the conference with a fearful, motivational tone. “If we don’t move with supernatural rapidity, I think there’s going to be some kind of cataclysm between 2030 and 2050,” he said.

Student activists note voter apathy at UBC

Student activists note voter apathy at UBC

 

Despite the efforts of UBC’s student activist and political issues groups to raise awareness of the upcoming elections, the resounding message is still “apathy,” said key student activists.

 

Co-founder of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and a well-known student activist, Nathan Crompton says that a lot of students at UBC are apathetic towards politics in general due to heavy workloads and the increasing stress of student debt.

Crompton cites Conservative government policies as part of the culprit for the fact that an average of six out of 10 students in British Columbia are either engaged in part time of full time work, and the typical student graduates with $25,000 worth of debt.

“A certain percentage of the population of the student body who have a certain level of privilege are happy with the way things are in the world, more or less, are satisfied with existing conditions,” he said, accounting for some of the apathy with respect to electoral issues.

NDP Vancouver Centre candidate Michael Byers capitalized on these sentiments in a debate in front of UBC students, criticizing the Conservatives’ post-secondary education fund policies. “This is a system for the rich, for the privileged, for the people who are born with silver spoons in their mouth,” he told a group of nearly 100 students who were amassed at the UBC Student Union Building (SUB) on Sept. 25, as many of them showed their support.

Byers asked how many students presently were working while going to school, and nearly half of the group raised their hands. Byers’ speech on post-secondary funding sparked the approval of all of these students, who were also asked whether or not they depended heavily on student loans and wished they could spend less time working and more time focusing on their academic studies.

 

Despite the enthusiasm for Byers’ support and the number of electoral events on campus, VP of Student Services Rodrigo Ferrari Nunes says that most politicians in both the municipal and federal elections are almost indistinguishable from one another for many students. “As for the federal election, I am still trying to get used to the candidates,” he says.

rodrigo proudly shows off the controversial gss handbook

rodrigo proudly shows off the controversial gss handbook

 

 

Liberal party leader Stéphane Dion was invited by the BC Young Liberals, and the open debate in the SUB was hosted by students of the AMS External, showing the need for students to access politicians directly in order for their questions to be answered.

Interdisciplinary PhD student and member of the SDS, Edward Lee Durgan says that the electoral events on campus were all initiated, coordinated and promoted by students, rather than the political parties directly. “I don’t think the elections are geared towards students,” he said.

When discussing the truth that so many students decide remain apathetic to politics, Durgan said that the candidates and party leaders depend on this kind of willful disengagement. “I think the major political parties count on that, the disenfranchisement or marginalization of that part of the population, and that’s just that many fewer people that they have to influence somehow,” he said.

some of the weirdest stuff i’ve heard…

some of the weirdest stuff i’ve heard…

i don't think these children were ever breastfed

Yolk of the Golden Egg

Dandi Wind
Summer Lovers Unlimited

Dandi Wind’s new album Yolk of the Golden Egg is a sonic journey that challenges every spectrum of electronica. Caught somewhere between a surreal utopic musical vision, and something that could only have been spawned from a ritualistic love orgy between Kate Bush, Bjork and Aphex Twin’s Richard D. James, the record shows no weaknesses. It opens with “The Battle of Verdun,” aptly catching the industrial bustle of its Quebec recording locale, and moves through what seems like a futuristic, cacophonic scene of torture. Raw, edgy and highly textured, the sounds take detours through the complexity of the psyche in a way that could be likened to the spiritual despair and disillusionment of Trent Reznor, but with more emphasis on a clear articulation of ugliness. Never failing to surprise, the song “Johatsu” sounds like a cracked-out late 80’s dance exercise tape, while suggesting the theme that would should all “surrender to the machine.” The album climaxes with the final track entitled “Dance of the Paralytic,” whose bass-rich beat is juxtaposed against an ineffable wet thumping noise that brings amniotic fluid to mind. While overtly corporeal, the album points at an introspective notion in quoting Dostoevsky and the parable of the old dreamer rummaging through his dreams in vain. While its message is not always accessible, Yolk of the Golden Egg is a worthwhile musical venture for those who want something a little more violent in spirit.