The case for the seeing-eye horse

What if a blind man with a guide dog had taken on a Muslim bed-and-breakfast owner?

by Mark Steyn on Thursday, October 1, 2009 12:50pm - 105 Comments

The case for the seeing-eye horseWhat’s new in the exciting world of Canadian “human rights”?

Well, the other day Kelly Egan of the Ottawa Citizen reported the story of a gay bed-and-breakfast owner allergic to dogs who got hauled in for “mediation” by the “Human Rights” Tribunal of Ontario after he turned away a blind man with a Seeing Eye dog. Douglas McCue, 68, of the CornerStone B & B in Perth, Ont., suffers from acute sinusitis aggravated by exposure to canines. Ian Martin, a blind diabetic, responded with a lawyer’s letter and a demand for compensation that started at two grand and quickly escalated into five figures.

As a notorious homophobic disablist, I don’t have a dog in this fight. Unfortunately, neither did Mr. McCue. After “mediation,” he cut the plaintiff a cheque for 700 bucks and expressed his “sincere regret,” which is to say it was entirely insincere but mandated by the state. And then he closed his bed and breakfast. No longer will Ontario vacationers face the scourge of caninophobic homosexual innkeepers.

Perhaps Mr. Martin could buy the CornerStone from Mr. McCue and run it happily as a non-discriminatory B & B celebrating the diversity of Canada’s guide-dog mosaic. At least until a litigious imam shows up and complains to the HRTO that having to put up with a filthy mutt wandering round the dining room is grossly offensive to him as a Muslim, and that as tolerant progressive Canadians we need to send a strong signal to Islamophobic blind hoteliers.

After all, why does he need a dog? Earlier this year, Mona Ramouni, a blind Muslim from Dearborn, Mich., began taking her seeing-eye horse on the bus with her. Dogs “violate ritual purity,” a spokesperson for the Council on American-Islamic Relations explained to the Chicago Tribune. So Cali, a three-year-old miniature former show horse who started training with Miss Ramouni last November, is the perfect compromise, acceptable to Muslims, the blind, and dog-fearing gays alike. A “human rights” tribunal genuinely committed to “mediation” would surely have ordered the government to replace all guide dogs with publicly funded seeing-eye horses by the spring of 2010. The superfluous pooches could be retrained as guard dogs at the new detention facility for equinophobic bus drivers.

A few months back, at an appearance in Ottawa with my fellow free-speech campaigner Ezra Levant, I conceded that, as a couple of right-wing blowhards, we did not make very fetching victims, and that, if you were casting this thing for maximum public appeal, you’d ditch Ezra and me and replace us with David Suzuki and Margaret Atwood. But the truth is that most of the victims of the Canadian “human rights” racket are very appealing. Mr. McCue isn’t an extremist nut like yours truly: he’s a nice gay. What did he do to deserve being put out of business by the government of Ontario? What did Gator Ted, the Burlington bar owner in the interminable investigation into the “human right” to smoke marijuana on someone else’s property, do to merit his years in Ontario “human rights” hell? Or John Fulton, the St. Catharines fitness club owner who expressed misgivings about letting a pre-op transsexual (i.e., still flying the old meat and two veg) use the ladies’ shower because his female clients might not be comfortable with it. Two years on, the plaintiff is now a full-blown plaintifette, having relocated to Ottawa and ditched the wedding tackle en route, and the “human rights” regime remains determined to do the same, metaphorically, to Mr. Fulton: cut his nuts off.

Let’s take it as read that, as the Ontario “Human Rights” Commission made clear in its drive-through verdict in the Maclean’s case, I’m a hater. Hate is my business. Hate is my middle name. Hating is where I’m at. I love to hate and I hate to love. “Hate-monger, hate-monger, mong me some hate,” I trill to myself in the mirror every morning. So, when Barbara Hall, Chief Commissar of the OHRC, decides to catch my eye, I couldn’t be happier, or hatier.

But Gator Ted and Douglas McCue aren’t in the hate biz. They’re not even mildly “right-wing.” They’re just fellows trying to keep their heads down and make a living. For years John Fulton co-sponsored the annual St. Catharines AIDS walk. Does that sound like some frothing Steynian homophobic bigot? Well, a fat lot of good the LGBT outreach did him come the day the “human rights” enforcers showed up to ruin his life. Put yourself in the shoes of these defendants: a guy wants to smoke medical marijuana on the premises of your restaurant. Do you refuse and get plunged into a “human rights” nightmare? Or do you string along with his hitherto unknown “human right” and get sued when the trucker sitting on the bar stool next to him fails his drug test? Do you decline to let the pre-op use the ladies’ changing room and get a “human rights” complaint? Or permit the Big Swinging Dick to have the run of the shower and get a whole bunch of other suits from his outraged female members? Do you rebuff the Seeing Eye dog and lose your business? Or do you let him in and lose your clientele? (Mr. McCue keeps hypoallergenic bedding in his guest rooms for some of his regulars, and, as I understand it, gay men are more prone to sinusitis.)

The reality is there is no correct answer to any of the above: as I said a couple of weeks back, tyranny is always whimsical. Which is exactly how the social engineers of the “human rights” nomenklatura like it. Because it legitimizes the state as the only valid mediator of social relations. And so in the cause of invented rights of near parodic absurdity, a profoundly wicked “human rights” apparatus is happy to destroy utterly the lives and livelihoods of blameless individuals.

The Ottawa Citizen’s report on Mr. McCue’s travails was headlined “When two rights go wrong,” although what followed never quite spelled out what rights were at issue here: the right to vacation while blind vs. the right to inn-keep while gay? The Citizen’s headline writer didn’t seem to mean anything more than that the two parties both belonged to approved victim groups. At which point the whole “human rights” racket starts to fall apart. It used to be simpler: Jews vs. neo-Nazis? Muslims vs. Steyn? Gays vs. Christians? Easy calls all. The last time gays, B & Bs and the “human rights” commission were in the news was a couple of years back, when Dagmar and Arnost Cepica closed their bed and breakfast rather than comply with a P.E.I. HRC ruling that they rent the room to a homosexual couple. We all knew who to root for back then: obviously if the uptight squaresville Christian couple are that hung up on the godless sodomites going at it like the clappers in their premium rental unit they shouldn’t be in the B & B business at all.

What goes around comes around. But, in the dog-bites-gay case, the upshot seems to be that persons with sinusitis no longer enjoy the human right to run a B & B. Which may not seem a big deal, but is certainly at odds with the “human rights” establishment’s deference to say, Micheline Montreuil, the transgendered lawyer and serial plaintiff against the Canadian Forces and other transphobic putative employers. But what it ultimately portends is the death of “public accommodation,” the concept by which the state claims the right to regulate what goes on in your health club or restaurant. As many readers point out, we homophobic Islamophobic haters are a dying breed: any day now I’m bound to keel over from a massive stroke, and thereafter gays, Muslims and Seeing Eye dogs will gambol and frolic in harmony throughout the peaceable kingdom. Yet the shifting hierarchies of multiculturalism are not too hard to discern: in Britain, an educational establishment gung-ho about forcing the kindergartners of evangelical Christians to be taught the joys of same-sex marriage crumbled in nothing flat when Muslim parents in Bristol objected. If it’s a choice between Heather Has Two Mommies or Heather Has Four Mommies And A Big Bearded Daddy Who Wants To Marry Her Off To A Cousin Back In Pakistan, bet on the latter. Any gay couple or blind man with a Seeing Eye dog who takes on a Muslim bed-and-breakfast proprietor will get short shrift from the “human rights” commission. The OHRC is currently champing at the bit to force gay altar servers on Ontario Catholics. At the local mosque, no imam need worry about such state encroachments on religion.

The “human rights” bureaucracy has had a grand run sticking it to Christians and other unfashionable groups. The internal contradictions of the rainbow coalition will prove harder to negotiate.

Bookmark and Share
  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

    So much for the concept of government not belonging in the bedrooms (or bed&breakfasts) of the nation.

    Once people are no longer considered equal in the eyes of the law then legal decisions boil down to determining which individual holds higher social rank. You can't obey this kind of "law"; there's no way to determine whose cause is favoured without putting it to the caprice of a court/tribunal. In short it's tyranny.

  • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

    So much for the concept of government not belonging in the bedrooms (or bed&breakfasts) of the nation.

    Once people are no longer considered equal in the eyes of the law then legal decisions boil down to determining which individual holds higher social rank based on their victim class. You can't obey this kind of "law"; there's no way to determine whose cause is favoured without putting it to the caprice of a court/tribunal. In short it's tyranny.

  • David G.

    Wow, so true. Society does have very different standards when it comes to what rights Christians have and what rights Muslims have. Shouldn't these be identical?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/robert_mccl6309 Robert McClelland

      Sorry David, but Mark is occupying the cross right now so you'll have to wait your turn.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/PaulHuedepohl PaulHuedepohl

      Ah, another person new to the "Human Rights" game! I could explain the hierarchy of who's rights trumps who's, but I only have a free hour!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/DanielShays DanielShays

    If you could only be a blind,black lesbian dwarf who converted to Islam you could rule the world

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/PaulHuedepohl PaulHuedepohl

      And it would be an eternal position- once you convert you can never go back!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      There are no gays in Islam. We have Iran's Ammadindahead's word on it. And the Arabic word for black means "slave".

      So some of those identities will jostle hostilely with the others.

    • Bob A

      Thanks for the laugh Daniel and for making me spill my coffee! All very true.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

    I had the privilege to work with Doug McCue as a colleague. He is a good person who does not deserve this. Mark Steyn is absolutely right to point out that the abuses of Human Rights Commission rulings need to be addressed on behalf of all Canadians, not just the latest aggrieved group.

    • wheelie

      So you'd call the disabled the latest aggrieved group? Seriously? I use a service dog as a wheelchair user-he is my hands. While I agree with you that Mr. McCue does not deserve this, my bigger worry lies in the misuse of the HRC for what I'd label trivial complaints. For some of us in the disability community, the HRC is one of the stepping stones to social equality. And as an aside, I'm not sure how this could have been resolved. If you don't know what its like to rely on a caregiver, service animal, mobility aid etc, its really difficult to imagine what our reality is…

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

        I was a full time caregiver to a disabled person for over two years myself and know very much what it takes, including having to give up my own job.

      • Rob H

        I don't care if you use a service dog. If I don't want dogs in my hotel you should go somewhere else and quit whining about your rights. You choose to use a service dog, you don't have to and it is not necessary.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

        For someone suffering severe allergies to dogs, this is something of a handicap. Interesting how someone disabled like yourself has so little sympathy for someone else with a different problem. Where's the tolerance that you expect for yourself? Perhaps you think it's self evident that there's a hierarchy of disabilities i.e. blindness trumps allergies.

        In the case where there are other options, (e.g. you don't have to stay at this particular bed and breakfast), your insistence on making EVERY bed and breakfast accessible is not the stance of a reasonable person, but an extreme activist. Everyone's sorry you're blind. Why take it out on others? From your lack of charity toward this innkeeper, it's likely you wouldn't be too accommodating to the blind either if you were sighted. You're hardly a role model for tolerance.

      • dkite

        Let me imagine a resolution to this. The b&b owner states that he is unable to handle dogs in his premises. But there is another quality B&B not too far away, that gives good service at the same price. Let's call them and make an arrangement.

        Not too hard do you think?

        But you and the HRC have an assumption that there is evil afoot, and the full blunt instrument of government must be used to put an end to it. In this case quite successfully. This gentleman will no longer refuse service to a blind person with a dog. He is no longer in business.

        Victory.

        Derek

      • http://tyrannysentinel.com GeronL

        Easily resolved, Go to a different B&B where the owner is not allergic to dogs, Simple.

        The problem is that people want to be offended instead of doing the normal thing.

        • http://Rightonblog.com Tim

          To quote the great Orwell, “all pigs are equal, except some pigs are more equal than others”. Those that squeal the loudest get to set the equality rules.

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/PaulHuedepohl PaulHuedepohl

            Also getting to set the equality rules are those who threaten to blow up the barn if they are provoked by equality. And you all know what I'm talkin' about.

    • wheelie

      Yikes…I'm not sure I said anything that extreme to warrant the bashing. Am I an activist? Hardly…Oh I'm not blind either. Hmmm was it my choice to use a service dog? I guess so, kinda like it was my choice to use a wheelchair. Now had it been me, and there was another accessible B and B in the same area thats what I would have done-gone to the other B and B…But the bigger issue, and the frightening one, is how I'm getting a message that persons with disabilities don't deserve equal rights. Not in B and Bs, thats trivial. I likely wouldn't be in one as most are inaccessible…but there are bigger issues here…employment (I am a teacher), transit, getting into a courthouse or govt building. Folks…90% of disabilities are garnered thru life, not at birth. Tomorrow any one of you could wake up disabled….like I did.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

        All I am asking for is common sense and that is not alwasys evident in HRC rulings. Who said anything about people with disabilities not havng rights? My wife was disabled and needed assistance to move about. But she had self respect and did not complain constantly when help was needed to get into a building or onto a commuter train or bus. It was a fcct of life and we dealt with it. All she wanted was common sense and decency.

      • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

        All I am asking for is common sense and that is not alwasys evident in HRC rulings. Who said anything about people with disabilities not havng rights? My wife was disabled and needed assistance to move about. But she had self respect and did not complain constantly when help was needed to get into a building or onto a commuter train or bus. It was a fact of life and we dealt with it. All she wanted was common sense and decency.

        • wheelie

          I absolutely agree with you Two Yen…and I hate anyone who uses the HRC for trivial complaints. My only point was that sometimes the HRC is necessary for reasonable accomodations…reasonable being the operative word. All I want is for future builds and transit purchases to be accessible. Believe me, one learns very quickly to 'deal with it".

      • Garry Eaton

        Human legislators will never solve the contradictions inherent in the world in favour of a mythical ideal of human rights. We conflict. If we want our own rights protected, we have to learn to be less intolerant of the contradictory rights and points of view of others. The guy with the guide dog is an intolerant moron, and to allow his human rights suit was folly, because it shows how little he himself has for the gay innkeeper's human right to protect himself from disease. Jesus, people, grow up!

        • Gfield

          Great article, Steyn. However, I don't think at this point you merit your own adjective. How long did Dickens have to wait for Dickensian? How long did Keynes have to wait for Keynesian? And how long did Armen have to wait for Armenian? Teehee on that last one.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/adb215 adb215

      I think the long and the short of it is, nobody disagrees that persons with disabilities should have equal rights – they should be able to use transit, get into public spaces, government buildings, courthouses, etc. I was "temporarily" disabled when I severely broke my ankle this summer and used crutches and a wheelchair when I went out. Yes I "chose" to use the wheelchair, but that was because I couldn't go more than a few minutes on the crutches. The world is scarily unaccommodating for the disabled. But at the same time, when "rights" such as the one in this story are given credence by the HRCs, ALL rights are trivialized. I think the expression is "reasonable accommodation". Here, accommodation would not have been reasonable so the guy should have just gone to another B&B, not put this poor guy out of business. Now the "backlash" is that people are up in arms about what happened to the poor inn owner, and they want to "stick" it to all people with service dogs. Nobody wins! When rights are trivialized, all rights suffer.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/apeteryx apeteryx

      This case is a reason why one should not ever, ever, have human rights laws. Mr McCue is running his inn. He does not want animals. He is a member of the rainbow league. If I love to travel with my cat, I need not go there. I appreciate that the gentleman who cannot see needs an inn to stay — but there is an open market. I'm sure that there is a pet friendly place in Ottawa (if not, there is now an Inn that can cater for this).

      There are three correct responses to these laws. One is to laugh. The second is to break them — treat them like speed cameras (useful as targets when setting up your paintball gun(. The third is to destroy the laws and those who make them, for it is the duty of all men to resist Tyranny.

      And the HRC are the new Tyrants.

  • KEITH

    MARK STEYN IS ALWAYS RIGHT AND NEVER LIES.

    • DPIGS

      Keith,
      The reason all of your letters are so big is because you have the caps lock turned on. If you press the button under the tab key on the left side of your keyboard once then your problem will be fixed. Its ok though, I know computers are tricky.

      • Meh

        What an insightful post!

  • Cronnie

    love it. Mr. Steyn is a treat

  • Socratease

    I don't know, the bias seems to follow a consistent pattern: If you're making money in the deal, you're guilty.

    • Realist

      Aha! Socratease has figuered it out. The class war lies at the root of all multicuturalism conflicts and will always determine the true villian and victim.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/PaulHuedepohl PaulHuedepohl

        A good hypothesis Socratease, but may I point out the flaw? You'r not guilty if you are making money at the HRC end of the issue!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      One consistent bias is that Christians can only be defendants. Their complaints end up in the round file. Conversely, Muslims can only be complainants. A complaint re a Montreal imam preaching death to Jews went nowhere.

      I'm referring to cases taken on and advanced in the HRC, not the initial complaint which anyone's free to make, but certain groups are wasting their time and others are guaranteed paydirt.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/janicemaerose janicemaerose

    It would be interesting for someone to conduct a formal study/statistical research on how Canadian and other G8 (G20?) countries' human rights decisions, say over the past 5-10 years, are biased and in what specific ways. It would help us all, maybe even Steyn, understand the direction we're moving in.

    • Matthew M

      The money for such a study would be better spent on a helicopter for the forces in Afghanistan. (Outfitted with medical evac equipment if Canadian and air-to-ground missiles if American… oops that was before Jan 20, 2009)

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

      There was an excellent book called Common Sense or something like that which highlighted US decisions.

  • J Willock

    Brilliant, hilarious and absolutely devastating.

  • Bill D, Cat

    What if a blind man with a guide dog had taken on a Muslim bed-and-breakfast owner?

    I don't think they go in for B&B''s , it's hundred roomers or nothing .

  • Jeffersonian

    A tour de force, Mr. Steyn. The Left has been brilliant in its jujistu-like use of "rights" to destroy an actual right, that of private property. The erosion has been slow but definitely noticeable, with the State empowered with each bulwark of liberty to collapse. Eventually, the only right we'll have will be to commandeer everyone else's commercial property to our use, in which case no sane person will ever open a business.

    Doug McCue was terribly wronged here.

  • Erik Larsen

    Hmm, how to show the gesture for kissing my fingers, with a subsequent petal opening gesture, as a heterosexual white male, without inviting acrimony of others?

    Mmmm-muwuhh!!!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

    Do we live in a free country or not? These cases are absurd and are an affront to freedom.

  • Mohan

    Canada, with a predominantly christian population has capitualed its right to express the good wishes with the traditional “Merry Christmas” in public places, replacing it with the insipid “seasons greetings”. The country is on a regressive mode moving towards the Saudi model in terms of civic freedom where civic rights are defined, monitored and enforced by the state. Even in a country like the UAE where even the non muslims are forbidden from eating or drinking in public during the moth of Ramadan, it is OK to express the greetings as Merry Christmas in malls and public places. Freedom and human rights are not achieved by curbing the rights of some to accommodate some other. Canada is on a multicultural misadventure guided by political correctness and tokenism. This statement should carry some meaning coming from an Indian new immigrant to Canada, like me, who have lived in the Middle East for a long time. Mark is right in a million ways and i just wish there were more like him to stand up to the unrelenting attack on ordinary human beings in the name of Human Rights.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Stergeye Stergeye

    Reductio ad absurdum is no longer possible.

  • Oscar not so Wilde

    I guess it is contempt of court to tell the human rights judge to go jump and take his stupid law and shove it somewhere painful.

    We must reclaim the land from the left.

  • peimac

    Damed if you do, damed if you don't. R.I.P. Common Sense previously deceased by Good Sense.

  • Brenda

    Another brilliant piece of writing from Mr. Steyn. God help our children and their future!

  • Charles

    Canada sounds like one seriously screwed up place.

    • http://mooseandsquirrel.ca/ Natasha

      Hey, Canada isn't the only screwed up place (see above):

      "Earlier this year, Mona Ramouni, a blind Muslim from Dearborn, Mich., began taking her seeing-eye horse on the bus with her."

      • Barb Johnston

        I actually don;t see why it's such a big deal that she wanted to take her miniature pony on the bus. I ride the bus daily and I think it would be awesome if there were a pony on it. Or is it the Muslim on the bus that you don't like?

        • Nick

          Barb, your reading comprehension is terrible. Either try and re-read the article or sign yourself up for some adult literacy classes.

          • Barb Johnston

            Oh, heavens! I meant horse, not pony. No need to get pedantic there, Nick!

      • Mr. X

        I have a feeling Steyn is being sarcastic about the horse thing, but if you're like me and don't have a weird feel that everyone's always hatin' on the white man then it might actually sound like a good idea. They are apparently quite good for people who are allergic to dogs and people with physical disabilities. I don't know what those adorable creatures did to deserve Steyn's wrath.

  • http://www.knewshound.blogspot.com/ knewshound

    Bravo Mr. Steyn.

    When the State is in the business of determining which group is more offended than another, they are well and truly doomed. Every time I think California has become a screwed up, PC ridden mess, I read something like this and I have to think to myself, "At least we aren't Canada….yet". Thank you Mr. Steyn for yet another tour de force of common sense and humor.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Grahampink Grahampink

    This must be a first, everyone seems to be in agreement with our man Steyn. Weird.
    Or haven't the trolls got out of bed yet.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/YYZ YYZ

      Actually, I think you'll find that people on the "left" "middle" "right" whatever generally agree with Steyn on this issue.

      I don't agree with most of Steyn's views – but on this HRC issue I think he's bang on and I think there are lots of moderate people who think so too.

      As an aside, can anyone tell me how many individual cases Canadian HRCs have heard? Is it hundreds or thousands or tens of thousands?

  • cold canadian

    Correct me if I am wrong, but didn’t the muslim complaintants against Steyn and Levant lose?

    I understand that the process is the punishment and all that, but one of Steyns arguements is that “Any gay couple or blind man with a Seeing Eye dog who takes on a Muslim bed-and-breakfast proprietor will get short shrift from the “human rights” commission”, but technically, the muslim complaintants aren’t faring any better these days.

    I love Steyn’s writing and I quite often agree with him, but his ruling and that of Ezra seem to indicate that muslim complaints don’t seem to rate the full tyrany of the system either. I could be wrong about this, and maybe thisis only true of hate speech complaints.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

      I think his point is that such a case would get dismissed in short order, while the opposite case grinds through the entire process before finally being decided – recently in the defendant's favour, but there's no way to know before the court exposes their whim of the day. As you acknowledge, going through the process as a defendant is a very expensive and stressful process. Going through it as a plaintiff is free and has no downside.

    • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

      I think his point is that such a case would get dismissed in short order, while the opposite case grinds through the entire process before finally being decided – recently in the defendant's favour, but there's no way to know before the court exposes their whim of the day. As you acknowledge, going through the process as a defendant is a very expensive and stressful process. Going through it as a plaintiff is free and has no downside (other than living with the knowledge that you bankrupted someone because they wouldn't let you impose on them).

    • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

      I think his point is that such a case would get dismissed in short order, while the opposite case grinds through the entire process before finally being decided – recently in the defendant's favour, but there's no way to know before the court exposes their whim of the day.

      As you acknowledge, going through the process as a defendant is very expensive and stressful. Going through it as a plaintiff is free and has no downside (other than living with the knowledge that you bankrupted someone because they wouldn't let you impose on them).

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/TwoYen TwoYen

        Precisely. The very fact of the complaint was sufficient to put Doug McCue out of business.

        • Really?

          If the situation was reversed, could Mr. McCue have taken the couple before the Human Rights Tribunal for not offering a dog-free environment?
          It is unfortunate that the couple with the dog and the Human Rights Tribunal were so insensitive to Mr. McCue's situation. Instead of trying to find a reasonable solution, the couple escalated this unnecessarily and Human Rights Tribunal was left pitting one condition against another. It appears that they took the easy route and supported the visible disability (excuse the pun) and discounted Mr. McCue's condition.
          Thank you for putting a spotlight on this injustice – perhaps public ridicule and shame will help the Human Rights Tribunal understand their shortcomings and prevent a repeat of this silliness!

        • Kate

          McCue's being gay has nothing whatsoever to do with this case; it has nothing to do with why he didn't accept the customer with his seeing eye dog. Isn't that pretty obvious??

          • Britney

            So, violence is a bad idea because it doesn't help the cause?

    • wayne moores

      Well, not exactly. If I recall correctly as to how it went down, when Steyn and Levant stood their ground and it appeared obvious they had the resources to see it though the "human rights" weasels sort of pleaded no contest(this has to be another crazy first in jurisprudence) and more or less stayed procedings. They finally realized they were attracting far to much notice and bad press. Rather than continue to look like horses asses they quit. Styen and Levant were not exonerated and the kangaroo court implied they were guilty as hell, just coudn't prove it and told them to "watch it" as big brother was keeping an eye on them. By this time the complaitants had disappeared as they had gotten their "grievance" heard for nothing and went back to doing what ever it was they were doing before, at no cost to them.

  • andrew

    The point is, Steyn Mcleans and Levant won because they had privileged access to media and deep pockets- they could afford the punishment of the process in a way that hapless joe citizens cannot. So as Steyn says- he can commit ' hate crimes' every day of the week, say anthing he chooses, and the HRC's will simply avert their eyes- afraid to lose another confrontation and be open to public ridicule. However, ordinary citizens still remain vulnerable until the laws are changed

    • http://anatomyofculture.blogspot.com/ R.B. Glennie

      ummm -

      Mike T. – *Too bad the only source on the matter we have is Mark Steyn, because we'll never get a decent look at the issue that way. *

      and Mike T., you should have read those two paragraphs a little more closer, particularly when the FIRST full paragraph reads as such -

      *the other day Kelly Egan of the Ottawa Citizen reported the story of a gay bed-and-breakfast owner allergic to dogs who got hauled in for “mediation” by the “Human Rights” Tribunal of Ontario after he turned away a blind man with a Seeing Eye dog…*

      but, Mike T., you're the hero who doesn't have to bother to read more than two paragraphs to get it all wrong…

      • Mike T.

        I take your point but I was thinking more along the lines of primary sources such as an actual determination from the tribunal instead of a settlement. Media coverage of human rights tribunals has been very poor (possibly on purpose) and in many cases atrociously misleading.

        As for Steyn, two paragraphs is usually more than enough.

        • http://anatomyofculture.blogspot.com/ R.B. Glennie

          *As for Steyn, two paragraphs is usually more than enough.*

          For you at least…

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/fporretto fporretto

    I am powerfully reminded of a passage from C. S. Lewis's immortal That Hideous Strength:

    "But what do you want me to do, sir?"
    "My dear young friend, the golden rule is very simple. There are only two errors which would be fatal to one placed in the peculiar situation which certain parts of your previous conduct have unfortunately created for you. On the one hand, anything like a lack of initiative or enterprise would be disastrous. On the other, the slightest approach to unauthorised action — anything which suggested that you were assuming a liberty of decision which, in all the circumstances, is not really yours — might have consequences from which even I could not protect you. But as long as you keep quite clear of those two extremes, there is no reason (speaking unofficially) why you should not be perfectly safe."

    Food for thought.

From Macleans