Rightwing activist decries tax credits for gay film
FEDERAL POLITICS / Breakfast with Scot trains kids to be gay: McVety
Brent Creelman / National / Thursday, April 17, 2008
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Films that "proselytize children to be homosexuals" should not receive government tax credits, a rightwing activist told a Senate committee studying Bill C-10 Apr 16.

"Go watch Breakfast with Scot," said Charles McVety, president of the Canada Family Action Coalition. "Tell me that's not training a child to be a homosexual."

McVety grabbed national headlines in Feb when he took credit for the clause in C-10 that would deny tax credits from films with "gratuitous" sex and violence.

Accompanied by the group's executive director Brian Rushfeldt, McVety dodged senators' questions about his meetings with Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, Justice Minister Rob Nicholson, and officials in the Prime Minister's Office.

Liberal Senator Wilfred Moore asked McVety point blank whether he had met with the government, yet McVety would not give a yes or no answer. He said he had spoken with many MPs over the years, including Day, but then minutes later denied meeting with any of them.

"We didn't even know about this until it was on the front page of the Globe and Mail," said McVety.

Throughout the committee meeting, senators pointed out inconsistencies and fact-twisting in the group's presentation.

Rushfeldt claimed that a colleague of his could not receive funding to care for her autistic child, because "billions" had been spent subsidizing films, including what he calls "pornography."

"There's never been a tax credit for a pornographic film as per the current rules," Liberal Senator Pierrette Ringuette later noted.

McVety also presented a poll that showed low support for public funding of pornography, and he tried to say that it showed the public supports the proposed film content guidelines in C-10.

But Liberal Senator Yoine Goldstein was quick to point out McVety's manipulation of fact.

"Have you seen Angus-Reid survey that deals with the guidelines?" he asked in a heated tone. "48 percent of Canadians agree that C-10 should not be passed with the powers it now has."

McVety and Rushfeldt were followed by presentations from arts industry groups, all of which spoke out against the film clause.

Presenters noted that the current tax credit system works fine as it is. They said that new, vague content guidelines could destabilize funding for the film industry, because tax credits are not awarded until after a film is done production. Banks would be less likely to fund edgy films if they believe that the film may be denied a tax credit under new restrictive guidelines.

The committee is scheduled to hear from more of the arts industry Apr 17.

One thing is certain: the committe's chair, Conservative Senator David Angus, will be sure to turn his microphone off when he's finished speaking. Angus was caught on tape at the Apr 10 committee meeting, when he accidentally left his mike on and said that Heritage Minister Josée Verner "hates" C-10. No such slip-ups at the Apr 16 meeting.

"The meeting is adjourned," he said. "And the microphones are off!"

Read more about C-10:


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Reader Comments


 
Just let him talk!
Harper may be able to muzzle his caucus, but he can't muzzle McVety. It's great. Let him talk. Poke him a bit, and I am sure he'd be happy to illuminate us about the "homosexual agenda." He's already been the cause of his own undoing. The provisions in C-10 were supposedly about rooting out pornography, but now they're about banning family-friendly romantic comedies involving gay men. What should we ban next?
Ariel Troster, Ottawa ON
04/17/08 1:56 PM EST
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C-10
There is no doubt that Harper has been effective at muzzling his caucus, most of the time, but his religious right Masters are proving to be another story. That's good. Mr. Layton thinks he is the official opposition to the Liberal Party and Mr. Dion is so afraid of an election it makes me want to gag. McVety does not speak for Canadians, unless you count Stockwell Day. The more he speaks the better. Let Canadians see what this "Conservative" party is really about and maybe Mr. Dion and Mr. Layton will find the courage of their convictions, if, indeed, they have any. Peter Bochove
Peter Bochove, Toronto Ontario
04/18/08 9:40 AM EST
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Anything But Friendly
McVety & Rushfeldt are the kind of right-wing sideshow freaks that never cease to amaze us with the depth of their stupidity, and remind us all of the need for further separation of church & state. The Canadian Family Action Coalition should focus their energies on more pressing matters that directly affect them like family violence, adultery, divorce, homeless & orphaned kids and improprieties committed by their priests. But then again I guess it is harder to point their almighty fingers at themselves and their own dirty laundry than it is to bully gay people over trying to promote tolerance which they then twist into 'training young people to be gay', which anyone with half a brain can figure out is blatantly false. Right-wing priests have done more 'training in gay sex' to young people, yet these morons still try to claim it is all a gay conspiracy. It just goes to show how weak minds come together. Canadians are smarter than this religious cult mentality from south of the border.
Don, Vancouver British Columbia
04/19/08 6:19 PM EST
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