Calgary police arrest anti-gay activist
CALGARY NEWS / Bill Whatcott distributes 5,000 homophobic flyers
Greg Beneteau / National / Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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An anti-gay campaigner who made headlines last year when he argued before the Supreme Court of Canada for the right to distribute hateful literature about gay and lesbian people is at it again.
 
Anti-gay activist Bill Whatcott was briefly arrested March 6 after distributing homophobic flyers in Calgary.
Bill Whatcott was briefly arrested on March 6 after Calgary police received complaints about flyers distributed in neighbourhoods near the University of Calgary.
 
The Calgary Herald reported that one resident called police after receiving a flyer that included anti-gay statements and pictures of genitalia infected with a sexually transmitted infection.
 
Whatcott did not speak to Xtra for this story, but according to a posting by him on the website Free North America, Calgary police “put me in handcuffs and told me I was being put into preventive detention, as my flyers might cause someone to become violent.”
 
He also claims that police threatened to have him institutionalized in a mental hospital. Constable Bryan Denison of the Calgary Police Service diversity team confirms Whatcott was arrested for breach of peace and taken into police custody.
 
“The problem was that there were people in the neighbourhood getting pretty irate with the material being handed out by Mr Whatcott,” Denison says. “In fear for his safety, he was arrested and taken out of the area.”
 
Denison adds that there is “no mention whatsoever of taking him to an institution” in the arresting officers’ report.
 
Whatcott writes that one person “threatened extreme violence” because of his flyers. And in another case, he writes, a woman identified as a lesbian confronted him and accused him of being homophobic.
 
“I told her she could complain to anyone she wished and I wasn't phobic of her at all, rather I just believe her lifestyle is harmful to her and displeasing to God, and her homosexual agenda is harmful to society,” Whatcott wrote.
 
Denison says police released Whatcott shortly after his arrest because “there were no grounds under which he could be charged with a criminal offence.” He adds that Whatcott could face future criminal charges and therefore encourages anyone who receives one of Whatcott’s flyers to contact police.
 
In his online post, Whatcott writes that despite his arrest on March 6, he and an associate subsequently “truth-bombarded hundreds of mailboxes” south of the University of Alberta. He wrote that he planned to continue distributing flyers in Calgary until he exhausted his 5,000-copy supply.
 
“Parents and children need an advocate willing to speak the truth on these important moral issues and who will challenge homofascist government censorship,” Whatcott wrote.
 
Whatcott received national exposure last fall when he appeared before the Supreme Court of Canada to challenge the hate speech section of the Saskatchewan Human Rights Code. In 2005, the Saskatchewan Human Rights Tribunal fined him $17,500 for distributing hate literature in the province. The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal overturned the decision in 2010. The case before the Supreme Court of Canada is still pending.
 
Whatcott, who lives in Saskatchewan, was relatively quiet until recently. Denison says Calgary police haven’t been contacted about him since 2009. According to Whatcott’s online postings, he became active again to protest changes to Alberta’s Education Act. Home schooling advocates and conservative Christian groups claim elements of the bill, requiring all teaching materials to satisfy the provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Alberta Human Rights Act, would infringe on their religious beliefs.
 
Whatcott claims he is a former gay sex worker and drug addict who converted to Christianity. He has railed against gay people by picketing and distributing flyers in Calgary, Vancouver and Ottawa; has hosted a “heterosexual pride day” in Regina; and has run for mayor in Edmonton.
 
A licensed practical nurse, Whatcott was suspended and fined $15,000 by the Saskatchewan Association of Licensed Practical Nurses (SALPN) in 2005 for picketing outside a Regina Planned Parenthood clinic. The Supreme Court later found that the SALPN had violated Whatcott’s right to freedom of expression.


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Reader Comments


 
understandable
If someone came to my home and put that kind of crap in my mailbox, i couldn't guarantee their safety either.
Raoul, Mtl Qc
03/14/12 3:51 PM EST
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yes and...no
Perhaps I'm a bit jaded as I grew up in Alberta, so I tend to downplay much of the ridiculous press I read from that lovely hotspot of angst and intolerance, but as usual in such stories, one of Whatcott's own published blatherings puts it all into a bit of a bigger perspective: "homofascist government censorship". Then, while I agree with those who keep us apprised of his peculiar brand of crazy, I also change the tenor of my response lest I give credence to his argument by taking him seriously. Not that he isn't to be taken seriously on a "let's keep track of where the crazy violent redneck is right now" sort of way. But I reserve a special brand of scorn and contempt for the slackest of the slack-jawed yokels out there, and he is definitely in that particular circle of hell that begs to be taken seriously and instead must be pointed out to his own peers to be taken out back after church for a public hooting.
Johnny Blackstar, Toronto ON
03/14/12 4:50 PM EST
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Revenge?
Bill Wattcott is an interesting study. He considers himself an "ex-gay". When you read his postings on various internet discussion boards, it appears that he was once an out gay man in the gay community, but suffered social failure. If it's true that he wasn't able to develop lasting relationships or friendships with other gay men, I wonder whether all his anti-gay antics are part of some sort of frustrated, bitter revenge on the gay male community.
Casey, Toronto ON
03/15/12 12:02 AM EST
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Enough
"...I just believe her lifestyle is harmful to her and displeasing to God, and her homosexual agenda is harmful to society." Just that sentence, IMHO, is enough to institutionalized him in a mental hospital
Enzo, Toronto Ontario
03/15/12 11:31 AM EST
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Left wing Tyranny
Liberty is a two-way street. One day, maybe the "progressives" will get it. --gay and libertarian
Mario, Chicago IL
03/15/12 12:31 PM EST
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So what?
What does the pro-gay side fear in these people? Don't you realize that the more you squash free speech, the more you create a right wing counter? Canada is a perfect example of push comes to shove. Canada has more white supremacy groups than any nation in the industrialized world, even more than countries in europe. Sometimes I suspect certain people want to create a war.
Jacob S., Washington D.C.
03/15/12 3:16 PM EST
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Mail boxes
He should be thankful he was NOT doing this in the United States. It is unlawful under federal law for ANYONE but postal delivery workers to put ANYTHING in a private mail box. I for one would PERSONALLY press charges.
Colleen Harper, Parkville Maryland
03/16/12 12:43 AM EST
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So what?!?
"Sometimes I suspect certain people want to create a war." And like another event in history you will just sit back and watch the carnage eh Jacob?
barry william teske, vancouver bc
03/25/12 10:08 AM EST
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