Actually fine, I started on it yesterday, but I’m publishing it in the wee hours of tomorrow.
The official secrets act is a hideous piece of garbage that can be used to keep people silenced so as to avoid causing the government problems and embarrassment.
It’s 6 months and 24 days before I learn what the future holds for the possibility of my fate.
Am I able to humanely end my suffering?
Or due to a cruel twist of fate will I be sentenced to endure mental suffering for the rest of my days?
I’ve got my fingers crossed, but at the same time I’m not going to get my hopes up too high knowing first hand how quickly the government back-tracked in March of this year and chickened out and backed down in the face of right-wing-christofascist who launched a well orchestrated Astroturf campaign using disabled people as disposable props in their theatre of compassion.
I know that the DOJ, the DND, and the CAF are following my blogs. The lawyers for the DOJ said as much during one of our initial meetings two years ago.
Do I care?
Nope.
Sure, the DOJ, the DND, and the CAF may be using my desire for death and the potential for MAiD for SUMC of Mental Illness being allowed in March of 2024 as a reason to delay this matter. But I don’t care.
The lawyers have more than enough information to keep this matter going after my death.
The DOJ, the DND, and the CAF may outlast me, but they won’t outlast all of the victims of Captain McRae or the other catholic clergy that served on various chapels on the bases across Canada.
Anyways, here’s this week’s podcast.
I really wish I could keep up with these, but the depression kills. It stops me dead in my tracks.
I think there are two main reasons as to why the CFNIS refused to bring any type of charge against the babysitter in 2011.
The Summary Investigation Flaw, and the Three Year Time Bar.
Both of these flaws were removed from the National Defence Act in 1998 with the passing of Bill C-25.
These two flaws would have conspired to prevent the CFNIS from laying charges against Captain McRae.
However, the babysitter wouldn’t have enjoyed the protection of the National Defence act and he could be charged for his crimes.
And this would have been a public relations nightmare for the Canadian Forces. Imagine not being able to charge the man that was ultimately responsible for destroying so many young lives on so many bases, where as his teenaged accomplice could be charged.
In this Podcast I talk a little bit about the CFNIS investigation back in 2011 and how the 1980 CFSUI investigation paperwork and the 1980 Court Martial transcripts show that the entire March to October 2011 CFNIS investigation and the July 2015 to July 2018 CFNIS investigations were nothing more than works of fiction that were designed to never bring charges against the babysitter from Canadian Forces Base Namao.
And no, the CFNIS didn’t do this to protect the babysitter.
The CFNIS did this to protect the Canadian Armed Forces.
And the sad thing is that the CFNIS would have gotten away with this had Master Corporal Christian Cyr not shared with me on May 3rd, 2011 information that could have only come from the 1980 CFSIU investigation paperwork and the 1980 Courts Martial transcripts.
If Mcpl Cyr had kept his knowledge of this paperwork to himself, I never would have discovered the whole sordid truth.
So, in a way I guess I owe Mcpl Cyr a debt of gratitude for pulling the curtains back and exposing the truth about 1980 and about how the Canadian Armed Forces willing threw a bunch of children under the bus to save their public image.
This is the type of response that I’ve encountered when trying to obtain help with the topic of child sexual abuse in the Canadian Armed Forces.
When I started off on this journey back in 2011 I was shortly thereafter given the name of a lawyer from Ontario who had experience taking on the Catholic Church and reaching settlements with the church to compensate the victims of child sexual abuse committed by members of the Catholic Clergy.
This lawyer wouldn’t commit to helping me in my matter.
Why not?
As it turns out he was a member of the Canadian Forces reserves.
I guess he didn’t want to make a bad name for himself in the reserves.
This wasn’t the only lawyer to balk at getting involved with thus matter.
There were three ex-jags who now practice military law in private practice.
Nope. Child sexual abuse in the Canadian Forces was something they were not getting themselves involved with.