我不明白加拿大到底怎么了😡
@preta_6 @CBC
Amy Eileen Hamm,一个专业的护士,只是因为说了句“男人不是女人”这样一句基于生物事实的话,就被BC省护士协会处罚,并且被温哥华沿岸健康局解雇,连遣散费都没有!?
这公平吗?这合法吗?她没有伤害任何人,没有歧视任何人,只是表达了自己的观点,就失去了工作和生计。
特别是:加拿大现在专业的护理人员是多么多么多么的短缺?你们难道不知道吗?解雇专业人士至少要按相应比例赔偿损失费,我在网上查了一下,Amy应该获得的实际补偿金额(根据实际情况可能会略有偏差)
1,法定最低:若 Amy 服务7年,在BC法定下她有权获7周工资(约合1.75个月)。若月薪5000加元,则为 8750加元。
2,普通法:若法院判6至12个月,则为 3万至6万加元。
3,无补偿情况:若雇主声称“有因解雇”(如 BCCNM 认为她职业不当),则可能一分钱不给——这正是 Amy 案例的争议点。
问题是,Amy是个专业的护士,在她的职业生涯里从没有过被投诉和职业不当行为!
反之那些乱性、吸毒、甚至强奸儿童的人,在加拿大往往被宽容,罪犯甚至都不需要蹲监狱!
然而,一个敬业的护士的言论却要被如此严厉打压?你们提倡的到底是什么?你们到底要保护什么?!
这还是曾经的加拿大吗?说好的言论自由呢?说好的“最包容的国家”呢?
法律的矛头现在对准的是普通公民,而不是真正的罪犯。处罚 Amy 不但不合理,还暴露了一个可怕的趋势:你敢说真话,就要付出代价。
我很愤怒!加拿大正在走向哪里?一个护士连自由说话的权力都没有,这个国家,还有什么正义可言?!
I don’t understand what’s wrong with Canada anymore! 😡 Amy Eileen Hamm, a professional nurse, was disciplined by the BC College of Nurses and Midwives and fired by Vancouver Coastal Health—all without a penny of severance—just for saying “men aren’t women,” a statement grounded in biological fact! Is this fair? Is this legal? She didn’t harm anyone, didn’t discriminate against anyone, just expressed her opinion, and now she’s lost her job and livelihood.
Especially when: Canada is facing such a severe shortage of professional nurses—don’t they realize this? And when firing a professional, they’re supposed to pay severance based on a reasonable standard. I looked it up online, and here’s what Amy should have received (amounts may vary slightly depending on specifics):
1Statutory Minimum: If Amy served 7 years, under BC law, she’s entitled to 7 weeks’ pay (about 1.75 months). At a $5,000 monthly salary, that’s $8,750.
2Common Law: If a court awards 6 to 12 months, that’s $30,000 to $60,000.
3No Compensation: If the employer claims “just cause” (like the BCCNM alleging professional misconduct), she might get nothing—this is the crux of the controversy.
The thing is, Amy is a professional nurse who, throughout her career, has never been complained about or found guilty of professional misconduct!
Meanwhile, people who are promiscuous, abuse drugs, or even rape children are often treated with leniency in Canada. Yet a dedicated nurse’s words are met with such harsh punishment?
Is this still the Canada we knew? Where’s the so-called freedom of speech? Where’s the “most inclusive country” they promised?
The law is now targeting ordinary citizens instead of real criminals. Punishing Amy isn’t just unfair—it reveals a terrifying trend: speak the truth, and you’ll pay the price.
I’m furious! Where is Canada headed? A nurse can’t even speak freely—where’s the justice left in this country?!