Trash Trump Trash

THE LAST ‘COMMENT’ was in October of 2020 and it asked Trump supporters in the United States, how is it possible for a voter’s moral compass to become so corrupted, that this man ends up in an elective office?  Any elective office!

Donald Trump demeaned his country’s high office of president during his 2017-2021 tenure, he degraded U.S. international prestige and illegally attempted to hold on to an office he hadn’t discharged with integrity and honour. Nonetheless, one third of American voters abandoned reason and their democracy in the 2024 election, humiliating themselves before the world to put Donald Trump back into the White House.

What are we to say?  Donald Trump is an unrepentant career criminal, bigot, racist, misogynist, predator with no concept of truth, a lack of empathy, a voracious capacity for greed, and a preference for wallowing in the gutter.  He was personally responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans during the COVID pandemic.  He may kill thousands more by ignoring the dangers of the climate crisis and stifling research for a response to bird flu. In just the first few months of his new regime he’s revealed a moronic dementia by loosing agents of the abyss upon friend, foe and countrymen in the pursuit of wealth, billions to sate his own lust and gift what have come to be called his “billionaire buddies.”  Donald Trump is not deserving of our respect or deference.

All the while, the United States has been threatening Canada’s sovereignty since at least James Madison’s attempt to drive the British out of North American in the War of 1812.  The U.S. can be a fickle and envious ally, and it is our own fault that we put so many of our trade partnership eggs into one basket.

51st state?  Why forever for?  Americans have worthy but expensive health care, are bled to anemia to profit the mega-medical industry and are menaced by a weak health-care system.  Ours is faulty and in search of champions but is preferable.  Some U.S. educational jurisdictions ban books and intolerance is a widespread watchword.  The gun culture is idiotic, the 2nd Amendment is redundant and the NRA is a domestic terrorist organization.  Politics is toxic and corrupted by special interests.  The United States still imposes a death penalty!  And why would we want to be a part of a country that elected a Donald Trump to anything?  51st state?  Why forever for?

In the end, Trump will be gone.  We will still be here.  They will still be there.  We will be ever changed, hopefully for the better.  Backbones, too?

(Ed. note:  This writer waits for the day when Trump is carried out of the White House with a rage-induced stroke, leaving the walls of the Oval Office covered with half-eaten cheeseburgers.)

‘Population’ is the new segregation.

SO SAY THE MEN AND WOMEN WHO ARE LIVING IT.  SO SAY ADVOCATE/AGITATORS FOCUSED ON ACCOUNTABILITY.

When the federal government passed Bill C-83 in 2019 eliminating “administrative segregation” (solitary confinement) and replaced it with Structured Intervention Units (SIUs), our federal government didn’t do this to right a wrong.  It did this to comply with court rulings that found the established policy to be “draconian” and “cruel and unusual.”  And the settlement of the class action lawsuit brought on behalf of inmates who spent time in solitary confinement is costing taxpayers about $28 million.

The purpose of the SIUs, in the language used for public consumption, is to house inmates who can’t be managed safely in the mainstream population and who would have previously been locked in solitary confinement cells for up to 24 hours every day.  The thrust of the SIU is to provide a more humane and rehabilitative environment with a minimum of four hours daily outside cells, including two hours of meaningful human interaction.

SIUs are intended and expected to provide interventions, programs and healthcare to fit the specific needs of inmates.  The purpose is not only to return inmates to their regular units quickly, but to determine and address the causes of disruptive conduct and improve their prospects upon release from prison.

The legislation did more.  The SIUs would be subject to independent oversight to ensure compliance with C-83 provisions.  Independent External Decision Makers (IEDMs), lawyers, professors, researchers, all professionals with backgrounds and experience in relevant and related areas from criminal justice to human rights to mental health were appointed by the Minister of Public Safety to operate at arms-length from Correctional Service of Canada.

We can only speculate on why the framers of this bill and the parties that vetted the lengthy paragraphs that are a prerequisite to any legislation did not pause at the word “external” when coupled with “oversight.”  Correctional Service of Canada bridles at even the mention of outsiders looking over its shoulders, and it usually couches objections in patronizing arguments for relief.  Perhaps some savvy civil servant was making a play at reform?

But then too, C-83 did CSC a favour as well, and it’s more than probable that those same framers and the vetting process simply missed the obvious blunder.  C-83 was understandably restricted to the issue of close confinement and did not include references to inmates housed in minimum, medium and maximum level general populations.  How the SIUs might impact CSC’s policies and practices overall did not seem to be considered.

Correctional Service of Canada does not like citizen observers ‘interfering’ with its operations, not even those charged to do just that.  A key example is Correctional Investigator Dr. Ivan Zinger’s frustrations with CSC’s national headquarters as he routinely presses for collaborative solutions to his investigations and recommendations.

CSC policies comply with the law, even as its practices are frequently questioned.  The spirit of the law is not usually a consideration but broad interpretations that support a CSC agenda are encouraged.  For instance, there are institutions where inmates in ‘population’ can be locked in their cells for 20 hours a day, weekdays in particular.  Given the four hours a day out of cells, CSC can argue it’s in compliance even without offering the SIU services.

‘Population’ is the new segregation.

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As a by-the-way, are SIUs working as they should?

Look back at February 9th’s “Why OPCAT” to review the second half beginning with “Let’s look at one example of OPCAT’s potential.”  The government has not reacted to the 12 reports it ordered from the Structured Intervention Units Implementation Advisory Panel, a body it established to monitor the progress of the new policy, 12 reports that could kindly be described as ‘negative.’  It hasn’t even complied with its own legislation that a comprehensive review of the SIU program “must be undertaken.”

There’s more.  In October last year, the Senate Committee on Human Right condemned the government’s refusal to stop the use of prison solitary confinement despite what it calls the scathing reviews from the federal government’s own advisory panel.  The Senate quoted from the panel’s July 2024 report which came to the same conclusions as it had in all previous observations.  Namely, “SIUs are not addressing the problems they were designed to address……and there were no meaningful or consistent improvements in operations over four years.”

The Senate committee has called for a meaningful federal response to the abusive and discriminatory CSC practices it identified over five years of study in the Senate’s own report, the June 2021 Human Rights of Federally-Sentenced Persons.  The rules of the Senate allow the Senate to request “a complete and detailed response” from the government to reports adopted by the Senate.  According to the rules, the government must respond within 150 days or explain why it can’t.

After some hemming and hawing from the government front benches, silence.  Nothing.

Quoting the Senate committee: “The government’s inadequate response and the relevant ministers’ unwillingness to defend it shows that the government is unconcerned with public safety, indifferent to the routine violations of human rights in Canada’s penitentiaries, and contemptuous of the parliamentarians and witnesses who contributed to this study.”

This isn’t about politics.  It’s about the advice the government is getting from senior civil servants…..

……don’t open that closet door!  We can’t cover for you if you do.

Ontario jails…..a familiar refrain….

DENY, DENY, DENY…
DEFLECT, ATTACK, ACCUSE…
DISPARAGE, REBUFF, SNUB.

How do our public servants learn to ignore facts with a straight face?
Our federal prison industry’s head office in Ottawa has employees dedicated to do just that.  It should be no surprise then that Ontario’s solicitor general’s office can do the same.  But it does take one aback.  And it should.  How dare our employees treat us as an intrusion, to be sloughed off with any handy expedient.

See March 23, “Corrections or Corruptions….”, and review the content about Ontario.  The Toronto Star published at least four additional Brendan Kennedy contributions in the paper’s series on conditions in Ontario’s provincial jails.  One from March 31, “Watch disturbing video shows jail guards carrying out violent, hours-long retribution at Maplehurst,” links to some of the video from the December 2023 attack on inmates by guards at Maplehurst, videos which were released by court order over ministry objections.

Of course, pictures don’t tell the whole story, so says Janet Laverty, representing the guard’s union.  She hadn’t seen video or images from the incident.  “In any case, videos rarely tell the whole story in context.”  Now that’s sick!  And haven’t we heard that before from other sources about prison film.  Well, then let’s add audio to those surveillance cameras.  Horrors, we can’t do that.  It might tell too much of the story and, besides, it’s not needed, it’s not wanted and there’s no budget.

It seems as well that Chelsea McGee in communications at the solicitor general’s office isn’t concerned about jail conditions or the illegal and unconscionable conduct of staff under her ministry’s jurisdiction.  Where do we find these people?  Are they Trump rejects?

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We passed on comments of our own to Miss McGee and Miss Laverty:-

April 4, 2025

Chelsea McGee, Director of Communications,
c/o The Honourable Michael Kerzner, Solicitor General,
Toronto, ON  M7A 1Y4

Re:       “Ontario’s jails are deadlier than ever….”
Brendan Kennedy, Toronto Star, March 24, 2025

Miss McGee:

“There are government sanctioned human rights violations every day in Canada”.  So reads the deck of “Why OPCAT?” published February 9 of this year in turnoverarocktoday.com, copy enclosed.

When Brendan Kennedy quotes you in the Star on March 24 as saying, “Our message to repeat violent criminals is clear – we have room for you in out jails,” you are endorsing human rights violations in Ontario.  I assume you may have sworn at least one oath before taking the office you hold.  Was there any mention of following the law?

This writer is a federal prison industry specialist, but there are also decades of narrow contacts with Ontario’s Toronto East, Toronto South, and the old Don and Toronto West.  What pride you may have in the operation of the province’s jails can be matched by details and reports far less flattering.

One wonders why Canadians responsible for enforcing the law and administering justice have such a strong opposition to substantive accountability.

Yours truly,

……and on the same date:-

Janet Laverty, Chair,
Corrections Division,
OPSEU,
Toronto, ON  M3B 3P8

Re:       “She thought leaving her nephew in jail would help him…”
Brendan Kennedy, Toronto Star, March 25, 2025

Dear Chair Laverty:

“There are government sanctioned human rights violations every day in Canada.”  So reads the deck of “Why OPCAT?” published February 9 of this year in turnoverarocktoday.com, copy enclosed.

This writer is a federal prison industry specialist but also has decades of narrow contacts with Ontario’s Toronto East, Toronto South, and the old Don and Toronto West.  The Toronto Star series authored by Brendan Kennedy focusing on Ontario jails illustrates a grim and familiar picture. 

The strong defence you make for your members and the difficult work they do doesn’t match the day-to-day reality in the trenches.  The only viable explanation for the difference says that rogue guards who pay little heed to policy and the law, and that for example includes the guards in Lyndsay who murdered Soleiman Faqiri in December of 2016, are not OPSEU members.

Michael Kerzner owes you an explanation.

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“Ontario’s jails are deadlier than ever – and this one is ‘the worst in every respect’” from the Star on March 24 and “She thought leaving her nephew in jail would help him get clean.  His fatal overdose raises hard questions about how drugs get inside” published on March 25 are the other two current entries in the Toronto Star series.

If the ‘rule of law’ and ‘substantive accountability’ apply to inmates, why does it not also govern the behaviour of the keepers?