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Someone needs to explain the difference between a right and a privilege to members of the Canadian Sikh Association.9 U0 i9 r4 E1 `) [
During a recent meeting in Mississauga, members of the association revealed they intend to push Queen’s Park to introduce new regulations allowing turban-wearing motorcyclists to ride their bikes without wearing a helmet, as the law now requires.
# m5 W2 M4 _/ @/ h) jThey are presenting their case as a human rights issue.
9 Y% Y/ `8 ?* u“Safety is not an issue. It’s the issue(s) of equality, fairness and freedom of religion,” said Manohar Singh Bal, director of the organization. c# c1 p, d" s
With all due respect to Mr. Bal, this is in no way a question of human rights.
1 |$ I' i5 }9 `6 r3 mAnd safety most certainly is at issue.
* w; D. D M. E3 ]* X3 c6 M+ ]/ D3 gIn Ontario, the law requires all motorcycle drivers to wear a helmet. That law, like all laws, must be applied fairly and equally across the board to all segments of our population.
& A! g, p$ D) v+ YOne of our readers summed up the situation best when he pointed out that: “There are no religions in the world which require a person to ride a motorcycle as a part of their faith, belief system or method of worship. Riding a motorcycle is neither a human right, a religious right nor a Charter right; it is a licensed privilege.”
`; k. D1 X6 _# n! J8 G% K% DAnother of our readers asks if Sikhs who sustain head injuries in a crash will pay for their own medical care? Or, do they consider universal healthcare to be another inalienable human right?
. ]8 o3 W' E( C! S! zFinally, the last word goes to yet another reader, who writes: No helmet + no insurance = buy a car. |
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