[Grem] A francia szenátus betiltja az életpárti honlapokat - French Senate Passes Pro-Life Website Ban

Lajos dr Ván lajosvan at gmail.com
2016. Dec. 14., Sze, 19:33:06 CET


Én az igazat megvallva nem is néztem, de klikkeltem a fordításra és az
nekem használhatatlan volt. Az is igaz, hogy nekem seckó jednó, hogy gall
vagy brit. Bátyád.

2016-12-13 15:13 GMT+01:00 KEA <kea at turul.banki.hu>:

> Kedves Báttya!
>
> Sajnos nem volt időm az egész cikket lefordítani, csak az első -- igen
> rövid -- bekezdését. Nem mintha én tudnék franciául, a cikk angol.
>
> Köszönöm szépen a jókívánságot, úgy legyen!
>
> Puszi:
> Andráska.
>
> On 12/13/2016 06:14 AM, Lajos dr Ván wrote:
> > Kedves Öcsém-Uram!
> > Sajnos nem tudok franciául.
> > Leveled olvasásakor - a használhatatlan nyers fordításra gondolok-
> > szomorkodtam el magamon, magunkon.Így utólag kívánunk egyik őseid
> > földjéről Boldog András napok utániakat.(NAPOKAT, heteket, hónapokat,
> > éveket.....)
> > Bátyádék.
> >
> > 2016-12-11 7:53 GMT+01:00 KEA <kea at turul.banki.hu
> > <mailto:kea at turul.banki.hu>>:
> >
> >     A francia szenátus szerdán elfogadott egy törvényjavaslatot, ami
> alapján
> >     bűncselekmény életpárti információkat közzétenni az interneten.
> >
> >     * * *
> >
> >     French Senate Passes Pro-Life Website Ban
> >     Bill could be used to restrict churches from teaching about abortion
> >
> >     Washington Free Beacon, 2016.12.07. -- Bill McMorris
> >     http://freebeacon.com/issues/french-senate-passes-pro-life-
> website-ban/
> >     <http://freebeacon.com/issues/french-senate-passes-pro-life-
> website-ban/>
> >
> >
> >     The French Senate adopted a bill that will make it a crime to post
> >     pro-life information on the internet on Wednesday.
> >
> >     The Senate voted 173-126 to approve legislation that will make it a
> >     crime for any website to publish material at odds with the nation’s
> >     abortion regime. The legislation, which passed the French National
> >     Assembly on Dec. 1, will prosecute pro-life activists for
> “exercising,
> >     by any mean, moral and psychological pressures, threats or any act of
> >     intimidation against people seeking information on a voluntarily
> >     termination of pregnancy.”
> >
> >     Sen. Francoise Laborde, a member of France’s Radical Party of the
> Left,
> >     said during debate that pro-life websites constituted “horrors and
> lies”
> >     and should be prevented from operating. The bill targets those who
> >     operate pro-life websites or provide information about abortion
> >     alternatives. Violators will face up to two years in prison and
> $30,000
> >     in fines.
> >
> >     The Senate approved an amendment that appears to soften the ban by
> >     removing “in a dissuasive aim” from the text of the Assembly bill. On
> >     paper, that amendment will punish “misinformation,” while allowing
> >     pro-life activists to attempt to persuade women against abortion.
> >
> >     Grégor Puppinck said the Senate bill “is better writing, but not
> better
> >     substance.” It will do little to protect the free speech rights of
> >     pro-life activists because the amended language continues to bar
> “moral
> >     and psychological pressure,” a vague term that leaves pro-lifers
> >     vulnerable to accusations from pro-abortion activists.
> >
> >     “Publishing the Christian teaching that abortion is a crime could be
> >     seen as putting pressure on people,” he said. “The simple sharing of
> >     information that might upset moral conscience could be sufficient to
> >     constitute a crime.”
> >
> >     Puppinck is the director of the European Centre for Law and Justice.
> He
> >     said that the wording of the law could extend from explicitly
> pro-life
> >     activist groups and websites and eventually include entire religions.
> >     The Catechism of the Catholic Church, the guiding document for
> France’s
> >     largest religion, calls abortion a “moral evil,” adding that “this
> >     teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable.” Since the
> Catholic
> >     clergy in France cannot change the teaching, they would have to
> remain
> >     silent on the subject or face penalties for communicating its
> position
> >     that abortion is “gravely contrary to the moral law.”
> >
> >     “This law may prohibit the church from publishing its position on
> >     abortion. If you teach that it is a sin then teaching itself would be
> >     sufficient for prosecution,” he said.
> >
> >     The Senate and National Assembly will now enter a process to
> reconcile
> >     the original and amended bills. The National Assembly will have the
> >     final decision on which bill to advance to Socialist President
> François
> >     Hollande—a vote that is expected to occur in the coming weeks.
> >
> >     Pro-life activists intend to take the matter to France and the
> European
> >     Union’s highest courts if necessary. A coalition of 60 lawmakers who
> >     voted against the bill can ask France’s Constitutional Council to
> rule
> >     on the matter before Hollande, whose party championed the bill, can
> sign
> >     it. If that effort is not successful, Puppinck says that the European
> >     Centre for Law and Justice will take the case to the European Court
> of
> >     Human Rights.
> >
> >     He said that the court should follow in the footsteps of the United
> >     States Supreme Court, which unanimously struck down a law that
> prevented
> >     pro-lifers demonstrating outside of abortion clinic sidewalks in
> 2014.
> >
> >     “It’s a real limitation on free speech aimed at mainstreaming
> abortion,”
> >     Puppinck said. “We expect that this court, like the U.S. Supreme
> Court,
> >     will support freedom of speech and recognize that abortion is a
> public
> >     issue that has to be debated freely.”
> >
> >     Dr. Joseph Meaney, director of international coordination for the
> >     pro-life Human Life International, has been working in France over
> the
> >     course of the debate. He said that the Assembly and the Senate are
> >     attempting to limit the information that women debating abortion
> >     receive. The criminal penalties associated with espousing pro-life
> >     views, he said, were some of the most extreme actions taken by the
> >     abortion lobby.
> >
> >     “The main concern expressed was that women seeking abortion not be
> >     confronted with any pro-life information,” he said. “They are
> willing to
> >     make it a crime to have a pro-life website that seeks to help women
> not
> >     to abort.”
> >
> >     --
> >
> >     Üdvrivalgással:
> >     KEA.
> >     _______________________________________________
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> >
> >
> >
> >
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>
> --
> Üdvrivalgással:
> KEA.
> ----
> Keszthelyi András
> e. doc.
> ÓE-(ex BMF, exx Bánki)-KGK-SZVI
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