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Pot calling the kettle black...

3/19/2023

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How often have we heard the saying, "Well that's the pot calling the kettle black!"?  Apparently we have been saying it since the 17th century to those of us who accuse others of things of which we are actually guilty.  In other words, if someone is lying about something, they accuse another of being a liar.  Originating in Spain it spawns from a translation of the novel "Don Quixote".   It's a perfect example of psychological projection.

Projection is when a person unconsciously takes unwanted traits or emotions that they don't like about themselves and attributes them to someone else.  Projection is something we all may do at one point or another. Sometimes it's the result of a stressor that triggers it.  If however it is a pattern of behaviour it may be a mental health issue that runs much deeper than simply a stressful day at the office.

​Projection and paranoia are often partners in mental health conditions.  Paranoia is a state of mind where someone has an irrational mistrust of others and innocent people or situations may be seen as threats. 

A person suffering from paranoia and projection can see situations that to others appear quite normal, and connect it to fears they have experienced in the past or in the moment - and create a story in their mind that causes them to feel threatened in some way. Basic instincts of 'fight or flight' then kick in.  Some run - some will choose to fight.

In a 2021 Ontario Superior Court of Justice decision*  by Justice F.L. Myers - he compared this kind of thinking to that of the protagonist in the novel, Don Quixote.  His opening remarks in his endorsement were:

"
Once upon a time, people who believed in fairy tales, and destroyed their lives on quixotic quests, could be dismissed quaintly as tilting at windmills. In 2021 however, modern fairy tales are called conspiracy theories. People who subscribe to them can harness the overwhelming power of the internet and untiringly harass the targets of their quests."

​Justice Myers compared someone who connects dots that seem to exist in their mind  - to Don Quixote and likened them to conspiracy theorists.  They may see a series of events occur that are unrelated and somehow connect them together through common places or people to create a scenario that they view as 'wrong' or threatening.  Team it up with psychological projection and one can successfully create  a scenario that one see as a very real threat.

​The threat does not have to be a physical threat.  For example - someone may be concerned about the amount of money that they pay in taxes and begin examining practices of the politicians and town employees to see if their taxes are being well spent.  If their belief before they begin is that money is being wasted - they will look only for scenarios that they feel support that belief.  Once they go down that rabbit hole - they find dozens more situations that are unrelated in fact - but that they see as bolstering their understanding of what is happening.


God help the person standing in their line of fire once they begin to conjure up the story. 

Did you know....

...according to Wikipedia the earliest appearance of the idiom "the pot calling the kettle black" is in Thomas Shelton's 1620 translation of the Spanish novel Don Quixote. The protagonist is growing increasingly restive under the criticisms of his servant Sancho Panza, one of which is that "You are like what is said that the frying-pan said to the kettle, 'Avant, black-browes'.  Read more here
WHO IS DON QUIXOTE?

The novel Don Quixote, written by Miguel de Cervantes is about a man of low nobility who reads chivalrous novels to the point that he begins imagining himself a knight who must restore chivalry and justice to the kingdom.  It is all of course, in his mind.  Scholars have long argued that he knew of course he was conjuring up scenarios, while others thought him to be truly mad. And although it is a fictitious novel - it's unnerving the parallels between the writing and the real world of someone suffering from paranoia and projection.
The person suffering from mental health issues that include projection and paranoia can create the most outlandish, bizarre and detailed stories - that grow larger and more complex each time they begin to relate it to someone.  The things that they fear or dislike most about themselves - they project onto others.  Dishonesty.  Misfeasance.  Poor money management. Illegal acts.  As their story grows and changes, they amass more 'proof' that their theory is true and they begin condemning innocent people of committing acts of which they are not responsible.  

Left unchecked - these unproven accusations often turn into legal battles.  The accuser - the modern day Don Quixote - sets out to right all the wrongs that he has uncovered and may use the internet and the legal system to bring the 'battle' to light - so that all may see his good deeds in uncovering the wrongs of the world.

Unfortunately - I have watched this happen - in real time.  The irony is that the person complaining of public servants wasting the taxpayers money is unfortunately himself, the guilty party.  The conspiracy theory he has conjured up is simply a fable where he believes he can right the wrongs committed single handedly and this makes him feel important.  In his mind he is the one person who can right the wrongs of the world - or in some cases of the community.  He is the modern day "knight tilting at windmills".

In the end, the projection of this 'knight' - accuses someone else ( or many others ) of lying - and creates a fantastical story to support it.  Untangling the web that has been created of unrelated 'facts' can take years.  And if the accuser, the modern day Don Quixote has managed to get the complaint into the legal system, the perpetrator of the fantasy will have wasted thousands of taxpayer's dollars accusing others' of wasting taxpayer's dollars.

And that my friend, is a perfect example of the "pot calling the kettle black".
* ​CITATION: Duncan v. Buckles, 2021 ONSC 1158
COURT FILE NO.: CV-18-594616
DATE: 20210216

Note to the reader:

This opinion is not written to discourage anyone from applying sound judgement to civic decisions and critiquing events occurring in their communities.  Discourse surrounding any governmental decision is an important part of our society and part of free speech guaranteed under section 2 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.  Grounded in fact, criticism can set into motion changes that benefit us all and keep our politicians and decision makers on track to do the will of the people.
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Is it - or isn't it ODD?

3/18/2023

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Have you ever encountered someone who simply cannot take direction from a teacher, a parent, a team member or even a Judge? If this same person hostile towards authority figures, is angry and vindictive towards others and cannot control thier emotions - they may be suffering from Oppositional Defiance Disorder. (ODD)

Oppositional Defiance Disorder usually presents in children and is a behavioural disorder.

According to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, "
Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) is thought to be caused by a combination of biological, psychological, and social factors. " In many cases with treatment this disorder is resolved as the child gets older and usually within 3 years. Undiagnosed and untreated it may blossom.

Is ODD something one can carry into adulthood? Yes.

Over our lifetimes many of us have encountered individuals who in our view 'throw temper tantrums like a five year old'. The phrases "Grow up!" or "act your age, not your shoe size" is a pretty good indicator that almost everyone has seen someone act as defiant as a young child, foot stomped, lip out, arms crossed - who rebels against any authority.

"Adults with oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) feel mad at the world, misunderstood, hemmed in, and pushed around. Their constant opposition to authority figures can make it difficult to keep jobs or maintain relationships and marriages. In other words, ODD interferes with patients’ personal and professional lives and it does so without rest." - Read more here: www.additudemag.com/screener-oppositional-defiant-disorder-symptoms-test-adults/

I often wonder when I see people who continually defy authority, insist that the rules are wrong - or being broken all the time - what their end game really is. Do they have a valid point, or are they simply feeling that it is unfair that they have to follow the rules when they think someone else is not.  They feel that the world has treated them unfairly and they need to rail against it.

In any argument or disagreement in life - both sides usually have valid points to make and quite often if both parties are listening they can come to some sort of agreement to solve the dispute or arrive at some kind of understanding. But when someone defies authority - they have already made a decision that there is no dispute - that they are in fact the person who is 'right'.


A person who is unable to view the world except through their own lens, who cannot accept the authority that others may have are generally not aware that they may be the problem.

Some of the behaviours adults with untreated ODD may exhibit are bullying, vindictive behaviour and blaming others for the consequences of their own actions. In addition to this is the inability to accept the delegated authority of others - or continually finding fault with others' decisions.

A recent example of this behaviour I came across, was when an individual because of poor behaviour was banned from attending a dog park with their dog.

Symptoms of Adult Defiance Disorder

Signs that an adult might have the condition include:
  • Temper tantrums
  • Blaming others for their own inappropriate behavior
  • Irritable mood
  • Use of unkind and hurtful words towards others
  • Vindictive and malevolent intent in words and actions
  • Physical aggression towards others and bullying
(From https://www.pacificsolstice.com/ 
Certified by the California State Department of Health Care Services - Certification Number: 300636BP

Instead of recognizing that what they had done was not socially acceptable, they became angry at those who had taken steps to stop their behaviour from affecting others.  Opting to take their dog to an area where off leash was not permitted - their dog while running of leash through the thicket in the woods - impaled itself and died.  The dog owner then blamed the mayor of the town for his dog's death.  Later they also blamed a police officer that was not even involved.  Not once did they realize how they themself had started the dominoes to fall.
Now it could be that this person was just angry at the world and had to find someone to blame for the death of their pet.  But if this behaviour was a pattern of blaming others, combined with not accepting the consequences of their own actions, and a vindictiveness aimed towards others - it might be indicators that they are suffering from ODD, or some other anti-social personality disorder.

Mental disorders in our society have always existed.  But in today's world, the ability of someone suffering from a mental disorder has the ability to find an audience - through the internet.  I often wonder if we as a society are able to distinguish inappropriate behaviour and find a way to curb it - so that the people exhibiting symptons can be stopped before they hurt others.

If it truly is ODD that a person is displaying - they need help from a professional.  If it isn't ODD - and simply bad behaviour, perhaps we need to call them out on it so that the problem does not get worse. 
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Defiance, disdain and disrespect = Contempt

3/16/2023

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Many years ago, I worked with a counsellor who was holding a seminar on marriage reparation.  Over coffee she explained how she could predict if a marriage was repairable. One of the signs she described that indicated to her that the marriage was in serious trouble, was when one of the couple rolled their eyes when the other was expressing a feeling or recounting an event.  She identified this as contempt.

What is contempt?  Defined by many dictionaries, it incudes defiance, showing disdain and disrespect and a disregard of the rules. It also illustrated by a lack of respect for a person or disregard for something that should be taken into account.

In my time in policing, I had the opportunity to attend court well over a hundred times.  I became aware of a criminal charge called "comtempt of court".  Contempt in a criminal court setting is characterized as disobeying the Judge or showing no respect for the Judge's decisions.  A person can also be found in contempt if they show no respect for the rules or decorum of the court.  We have all seen movies where an accused becomes verbally abusive or assaults a guard and a Judge has them removed from the Courtroom and cites them for contempt -  right from the bench.

It was rare that a Judge cited or convicted someone with "contempt of court" as most Judges were aware that people often did not know all the rules or the consequences of showing contempt by disobeying a Judge.  And the accused usually changed their behaviour once they were made aware of the consequences of doing so.

Civil Court however is a little different than criminal court.  Over the last 6 years, I have watched many court appearances in Civil Court - based on torts and not criminal law.  I have also observed many instances of someone showing contempt for the rules of the court, the rule of law, or the order of a Judge.

When someone flagrantly defies an order of a Judge, a motion can be brought before the court to show the Judge how the person defied the order.  When this happens, the Judge may find the person 'in contempt of court'.  Judges however have no interest in jailing someone for contempt in a civil matter and usually the contempt sentencing includes a fine payable to the court.

An example might be - someone is ordered not to repeat certain phrases that defames another person.  If that someone continues to speak or write the words they are ordered not to speak they may be found in contempt.  A Judge will usually rebuke the person and give them time (2 weeks - 30 days) to make reparations - letting them 'purge' their contempt.  When they return to court for sentencing,  the accused then has the opportunity to show how they have purged the contempt.  A Judge is usually more lenient if someone shows true remorse for their actions that resulted the contempt finding.  It is rare that a person is found in contempt more than a couple of times - especially if they end up paying hefty fines.

Jail Time

What if a fine does not deter someone from disobeying the order of a Judge - or Court Order? In these cases, the Judge can order the person to go to jail.  And just like in the game "Monopoly", you do not pass go, do not collect $200 and you go directly to jail - for as long as the Judge sentences you. And that could be until you pay a fine - or do what the Court has ordered you to do.

Once a person is jailed for contempt, certainly not a pleasant experience,  one would hope that a person would learn to respect the orders of the Court.

Occasionally, there are people out there, that think that they are right (about just about everything) and cannot accept the findings of a Judge or the Court.  A person like this is doomed to continue to make the same mistakes over and over when they cannot accept direction from a higher authority.


What if you don't agree with a Judges Order?

Appeal.  That is the only recourse.  After any sentencing or decision rendered by a Judge, the person may appeal the judgement.  Usually they have 30 days to do so.  
Endorsements vs Orders

In civil law, when the Judge renders a decision on a matter before them, they will issue an endorsement.

​The endorsement is like an executive summary for the events that led up to matter including both sides of the argument and finally the decision of the Judge. It can be many pages long and reveal the details of the event that the Judge must decide on.

That endorsement  may say that an order is appropriate and/or they may include part of the order in the endorsement.  It's then up to the lawyers to interpret the endorsement and draft the order for a Judge to sign.  Until the Judge signs that order, the endorsement is the 'spirit' or the intent of the order and can carry equal weight as the order.

If a Court Order has net yet been signed - it is still possible to be found in contempt.  
Not all appeals are accepted at the Court of Appeal.  The person appealing must show that the Judge erred in law.

Rolling ones eyes, repeatedly telling a Judge that he or another Judge has erred or openly announcing that one will defy the order of the Court is asking for a new residence. 

​One where the rooms are quite small, the food is served cafereria style and a 'walk in the park' may be limited to a small courtyard. And if one does it often enough, the stay in this residence can be an extended indefinitely.
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Assault and arrest - the Canadian way.

3/2/2023

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We watch too much American TV.

Just ask any Canuck that you know, what drinking and driving is called and they will say "It's a DUI" No it is not. We are Canadian. It is called "Impaired driving" or "operating a motor vehicle with more than 80 mg of alcohol in 100 ml of blood" - or 'over 80' in slang format.

The other day someone I know got a speeding ticket - and they wanted to fight it because they didn't want a 'felony' on their record. I almost choked on my "Tim Horton's Double Double".

In Canada there is no such thing as felonies nor are there misdemeanors. Criminal offences are categorized as 'Indictable', 'Summary Conviction' or 'Hybrid' offences. Each determining the seriousness of the offence and the legal process it follows.

Yes. We watch too much American T.V. Over the last several years there has been an incredible amount of coverage on American television of poor police procedures that resulted in not only injuries and deaths, but sparked protests, riots and other civil unrest. Canada has also had news coverage of issues surrounding police procedures - but the issues are much different.

In Canada, police officers are trained much differently than the USA - and I don't know of one contemporary police officer in Canada that was hired and began working as an officer without a lot of training. Canada is unlike in the USA in this respect - where state by state and jurisdiction by jurisdiction, the requirements for hiring and training of police officers is very different. Additionally, none of our 'sheriffs' or chiefs are elected. They must have experience - not popularity. It's a much different system.

​Which brings me to 'arrest', the Canadian way.

To be arrested in Canada by a police officer - the officer must have reasonable and probable grounds to believe that the person they are arresting committed an offence. For example if the police receive a complaint of assault - they do not just hop in the car - activate the siren, race to the accused's home, bust down the door and drag the 'perp' out kicking and screaming all while playing "bad boys, bad boys" in the background.

If someone calls the police or visits the local station to file a complaint of assault - the officer taking the complaint will generate an occurrence or report number, and write down the details of the complaint.  They may ask for a written and signed statement to include with the report and may start an investigation.

If however, the officer listened to the story and does not believe the account of the complainant - or investigates the complaint and finds that there was no assault, the complainant will be told that there has not been an assault and the report will be closed.

Either way, there is always a paper trail of the complaint and the disposition.

An arrest only occurs once an officer forms reasonable an probable grounds to believe that an assault has occured.

If the officer determines after the investigation there has been no assault - there will be no arrest for assault.


To meet the definition of assault, force has to be applied intentionally and without consent of the person complaining of the assault.  

​Black's Law Dictionary describes force as "Power, violence, compulsion, or constraint exercised upon or against a person or thing."

So for example, touching a person with a paper, or a ticket could never be considered assault - as there is no force applied.  

Was I just assaulted?

The definition of Assault under the Criminal Code of Canada is as follows:

Assault
  • 265 (1) A person commits an assault when

  • (a) without the consent of another person, he applies force intentionally to that other person, directly or indirectly;

  • (b) he attempts or threatens, by an act or a gesture, to apply force to another person, if he has, or causes that other person to believe on reasonable grounds that he has, present ability to effect his purpose; or
    ​
  • (c) while openly wearing or carrying a weapon or an imitation thereof, he accosts or impedes another person or begs.

The key to determining if an assault has occurred is by following the criminal code and determining if all the criteria has been met.  In subsection (1)(a) it says "applies force intentionally".  Other criteria is "without consent".  There are other subsections - but this subsection covers simple assault.

​Read the Criminal code about assault here.

When you consider the definiton of 'force' and you apply it to say, "being given a ticket that the officer slides between the arm and the torso" - this cannot be called assault as no force was applied.  Especially if the ticket then falls to the ground. Clearly at this point it is safe to assume no force was applied - as the ticket did not remain in the place the officer inserted it.

Other things an officer may consider is the consistency of the complaint that the complainant gave the officer.  If at first the complainant says "the officer shoved it into my man-bag" and then changed the story to "the officer shoved it into my armpit" - the police agency receiving the report may not find the complaint credible.

Either way - if there was no intentional force applied - there was no assault.

How then, can spitting on someone be considered assault?  There was 'force applied intentionally'.  However, if the victim does not complain to the police about the assault - there would be no arrest.  There always has to be a victim in a simple assault.
In closing - if an assault complaint has been investigated and determined not to have occurred by the police - then the  person complained of has not committed assault.  The end.  

Saying, or writing repeatedly in a blog or any other publication that that person has commited assault, or that you had them charged with assault when you KNOW the police determined no assault occurred, is CRIMNAL LIBEL. 

 It is not free speech.  (Read more about that here)

Which is another blog post all together.
Punishment of libel known to be false (under the Criminal Code of Canada)

Section 300
 Every person who publishes a defamatory libel that they know is false is guilty of
(a) an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than five years; or
(b) an offence punishable on summary conviction.
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What is harassment - and when is it criminal?

2/28/2023

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Since the original article came out reporting Justice Pollak's January 3rd 2023 decision which received some press coverage, I have had a number of people call me and tell me their stories of defamation and harassment.  My best advice to them begins by advising them to let the perpetrator know that what they are doing is unwanted attention - and begin to document any further contact or harassment.

As many people know - before I moved forward with launching the lawsuit that I eventually won, I felt harassed.  Many would agree that I was being harassed - and the police, after taking my statement and reviewing the evidence also agreed.  As a result, they laid a criminal harassment charge on the individual.

Many people, both men and women, have in their lifetime - felt harassed.  In general, if they are able - they resolve the issue without involving the police.  In some cases, the harassment is not considered criminal.  There is a distinction between criminal harassment and just feeling harassed.

What is Criminal Harassment?


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"Mightier than the sword"?

2/27/2023

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Is the pen mightier than the sword?  Simply saying those words sets one to pondering whether the effect of putting just the right words together with the intent to harm someone is more effective than a physical violent act.

It's accepted practice to write, criticizing someone as a part of your profession. There are paid journalists who are experts in their fields who write and publish critiques of a person's artistic or athletic performance - just to name a few of the critic's possible assignments. And most of it is opinion and does not get into the personal lives of the people's work they are critiquing.

Additionally, there are artistic works such as plays, songs and poetry and even blogs that criticize ideas, rules and governments in an effort to effect social change.  

Who coined that phrase?

Created by English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton in 1839, indicating that the written word is more effective than violence as a means of social or political change.  Read more on Wikipedia here about the origin of the phrase.
In Canada - this is called free speech - and we are all guaranteed that right - to speak freely and to express opinions.

When is free speech no longer free?


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So really - whats the big deal?

2/26/2023

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"You won your case - so move on."

Yes.  I won the defamation case.  But the fact remains - I am forever changed, wounded and sad for myself and anyone else who has experienced this kind of abusive verbal and emotional violence.

Anyone who knows me - knows that I am a strong and determined woman. For almost six years, I was defamed over and over and over online.  All because one person did not like how I did my job, nor did he like that I did not back down and refused to answer a personal question that I felt he had no right to know. And so he began trolling me - looking into my past and rewriting it to suit his narrative.  He even found one of my daughters and mocked her for winning a criminal court case - where she put a rapist in jail. 

Defamation is really a whitewashed word for what happened to me.  There is no emotion attached to the word.  Neither does the word defamation encompass the harassment, the verbal violence, and the intrusion into my personal life that for me - drove me into silence and hiding.  

When someone starts a smear campaign against you - online - it can be almost impossible to fight back.  There is no way to know how many people have been sent messages that portray you as a liar, a cheater, a psychotic depressive, a child bride, someone who cuckolded their spouse, someone who drinks and drives and someone who is not qualified to work at the job where they are employed.

And when that campaign includes multiple emails to over 800 businesses, your boss, your colleagues, your staff, your former business associates, your organization's Board of Directors - or in my case Councillors and the Mayor - it makes it impossible to look at people and not wonder if they have received the communications and if they believe it.  Worse still - when it is perpetuated online in hundreds of posts - over and over for five or more years - there is no way to know who has read it - and thought - "where there is smoke there must be fire".

There is no way to fight back until we find a way to stop bullies from posting lies online about us under the guise of "free speech".

When a person sets out to destroy a person through destruction of their reputation so that they lose their employment and financial security through the posting of lies and negative innuendo - it is violence towards that person. And even the strongest person may suffer emotionally.  And when I heard the abuse and lies repeated about me over and over - it took incredible internal fortitud to keep from believing it myself.  That internal fortitude and support and love from people who KNOW who I really am - is what kept me getting out of bed in the morning.

I am ok.  I will heal.  And when it's time - I will help others.

What is Cyberbullying?

The following are short excerpts from Wikipedia that explain cyberbullying.  It is quite an extensive article and these are only two short quotes from the article that can be found here

"Cyberbullying or cyberharassment is a form of bullying or harassment using electronic means. Cyberbullying and cyberharassment are also known as online bullying."

Under the "Adult" section is the following:

"Cyberstalking may be an extension of physical stalking,[10] and may have criminal consequences. A target's understanding of why cyberstalking is happening is helpful to remedy and take protective action. Among factors that motivate stalkers are envy, pathological obsession (professional or sexual), unemployment or failure with own job or life, or the desire to intimidate and cause others to feel inferior. The stalker may be delusional and believe they "know" the target."
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Just the Facts Ma'am... (or should we be asking for the truth?)

2/17/2023

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 Did you know that the catch phrase "Just the facts Ma'am" attributed to Joe Friday on the show Dragnet, was never really said by the origial Joe Friday? Is that the truth?  Or is it a fact?  Well the truth is - it is a fact!

I've often thought that 'swearing to tell the truth and nothing but the truth'  in court was a little problematic. One person's truth may not be another person's truth.  Hence conflicting testimony.   What we are looking for in reality is facts.  Facts that illustrate what has happened. (or is happening)  Facts are always supported by 'hard evidence'. 

Unfortunately sometimes despite searching for hard evidence we are unable to find it. 


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Investigator - or Instigator - you decide!

2/17/2023

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I think it is fair to say that I am a trained investigator. The key word is trained. Ontario Police College is one of the best police training centers in North America.

​I not only attended basic training there and graduated at the top of my class - but I also attended advanced training there as well. Add to that other related training in Canada and the USA (Virginia Homicide Investigators Training x 3) and I think you might agree that I have a little more training in investigating and collecting of evidence than most lay people.
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That being said - I would not consider myself a 'top' investigator. There are many courses I did not take and there are thousands (I would think) of police officers with more training and experience than I have.

Over time there have been hundreds of television shows and movies based on investigating crime. From produced shows as early as "Dragnet" to more current shows like "Forensic Files" - they have progressed from showing the dramatized day to day policing to showing the behind the scenes progression of investigations - start to finish.

There is fabulous entertainment value and interest in these shows - or the production companies would stop creating both the fictional and 'real life' versions of investigating crimes.

The danger here - is that occasionally there are those who feel that not only have they learned enough from these shows to 'investigate' perceived 'crimes' or wrong doings, but some of these same people also begin 'connecting dots' of things that they believe are related to perceived wrong doings - and create much bigger stories that they think they have evidence of.  When they are simply critics - we call them 'armchair quarterbacks'.  When they decide - 'hey I can do that" - without any understanding of how to investigate and collect evidence, and then rely on their imaginations, suppositions or opinions of what has happened - we call these people conspiracy theorists and their stories conspiracy theories.  They simply connect dots that do not exist. They weave detailed, fantastical stories with 'facts' they derive from their own imagination.

A rational person asks questions - looks for the factual answers and forms an opinion. If they think something illegal is happening or a crime has been committed - they call a 'trained investigator' to investigate further and collect the evidence to either prove or refute the legality of the event(s).

A conspiracy theorist sees something they think is wrong or that they do not like or agree with and begin looking for evidence to support their ideas or claims. When they cannot find real evidence they use wishful thinking to tie things all together.

Example: A taxpayer does not like a municipal employee - and disagrees with how they do their job. When their complaints are not addressed in the manner they would like or their complaints go unanswered because they cannot be substantiated - they begin looking for evidence of a cover up.  After all - if someone does not see what they see - or agree with what they see, that someone MUST be wrong or worse, covering up!

Surely that employee was a bad hire!  There mustn't have been a job posting and they suppose the employee was hand selected and parachuted into the position. Were they interviewed? They couldn't have been!  How were they hired? Did they provide a police background check? Were references called? Did they get hired because the 'knew' the right person?

One step at a time - they begin to put a story together. They begin to tell others that the municipality must not have done their job! By the time they have 'connected the dots' - every piece of the story they have connected together is incorrect and there are no facts to support their claims.
Investigator - or Instigator?

I have experienced this kind of 'story telling' personally by someone who insists that they have evidence that improper hiring practices took place when I was hired.

The conspiracy theorist insists that I was neither qualified nor hired properly for a municipal job I held by saying:  (facts are in brackets)

  1. There was no job posting. (It was posted in several places nationally including "Municipal World" and "Municipal Information Network" as well as internally.)
  2. I did not 'apply' for the job. ( I applied with both resume and application with references attached)
  3. There was no interview. ( I was interviewed twice by a 3 person panel - and flew 3,000 km for the final interview)
  4. There was no qualifying process ( I took a 60 minute 'qualifying' test through an independent agency and results were submitted to the HR dept.)
  5. I was parachuted in ( I knew no one at the municipality before I applied)
  6. The HR manager was S.M. (The HR manager was D.L. up to 2 years after my hire. S.M. had not yet been hired)
  7. There was no police background check (I completed a police background check that turned up no negative results in the jurisdiction I resided - which is HOW and WHERE a police background check should be done.)

Instigator

Instigator is most commonly used in a negative way to refer to a person who provokes other people or incites trouble—often by instigating arguments or encouraging dangerous actions.

​Synonyms include agitator, antagonizer, provocateur, troublemaker, incendiary, and firebrand.

With permission from Thesaurus.com 
There are more claims that this conspiracy theorist has that in their mind 'proves' I was improperly hired - however similarly to the incorrect claims above - there is no evidence of the claims and the actual 'facts' point to normal and proper hiring practices and policies. But that did not stp them from spreading their theory - trying to incite anger towards the municipality.  Yes - these are the actions of an instigator.

The undoing of a conspiracy theorist's 'story' is simply one thing.  Facts. When one weaves a story with information they hope is true and they do not collect factual evidence - they create a 'theory' that can not be supported with evidence. 
No matter how loudly or how often someone SHOUTS about something of which they have no evidence - without true investigation and collecting of factual evidence - their shouting is simply A LOT OF NOISE.

And the person who makes a lot of noise about nothing my friends, is simpy an INSTIGATOR.
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Sticks and stones, that's not your name and the world is flat!

2/15/2023

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 When I was a little girl, I recall the childhood sing song, "Sticks and stones can break my bones, but names will never hurt me!"  Thank goodness we repeated this and other sing song affirmations, over and over in the playground when bullies called us names or accused us of things we did not do. It helped us to believe in the best of ourselves. 

"Liar,liar, pants on fire!" Oh the childhood cruelties we experienced.  But most of us grew up - and we survived our childhood mini-traumas and emerged stronger as a result.  Unfortunately, some bullies never grow up.  Perhaps this is true of the bully who has been trolling me for many years.

Bullies are often very insecure people. Their focus on others keeps the focus on their own short comings out of the public eye.  Over the past several years, I have been bullied online - and the accusations have been everything from - "she is not who she says she is" to "she was a child bride". (yeah - we can talk about that in another post!)

When hearing and reading things that were said and written about me - I felt that my best defense was to remain quiet.  People will believe what they choose to believe.  Some people in this world still believe that the world is flat - contrary to every bit of evidence presented to them. I know that the people who know me - the important people - know WHO I am.  They have seen the evidence over the years.

And so, this online troll, this keyboard bully insists that I am not who I claim to be.  I'm not sure that he thinks the world is flat - but he continually insists - to anyone who may listen, that Mandie Eddie is not my name.  And claiming to to know exactly how one must change their name, he insists that he has evidence that I have never changed my name legally.

​(Hmmm... I would like to see the evidence) 
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He has blogged about it - accused lawyers of not properly identifying me, told several judges that I am not Mandie Eddie and even insisted that he has evidence that I am not who I claim to be.  

Unfortunately, repeating something over and over does not necessarily make it true.  It may make the person repeating it believe it is true - but simply repeating something that has no basis in fact - cannot change the 'fact'.  

Sticks and stones may break my bones - but your continual insistence that my name is not my name WILL hurt you!  

So let me set the record straight.  For the Bully.. I would draw a diagram - but I am not sure that would help. (chuckle)

As many women can attest to - when we marry - we often assume our husband's name - as I did.  To do this - we simply show our marriage certificate at Service Ontario (If we live in Ontario) and we can have our driver's license and health card changed to our husband's name.  We can ASSUME his surname.

In Quebec - the laws are somewhat different - in that if you want to assume your husband's surname - you must keep your own and then hyphenate your maiden name to the surname of your husband to do this.  In Quebec - I would have been Mandie Eddie-Crawford.  However - I live in Ontario.  And so when I married my husband - I assumed his surname, legally.  I did not legally change my name on my birth certificate.  I had no need to.  I never changed my S.I.N. I had no need to.  Legally I was still Mandie Eddie - "also known as" - Mandie Crawford.

In Ontario, when you become divorced or you chose not to continue to have the surname of your spouse, you can easily revert to your maiden name.  A quick visit to Service Ontario with your birth certificate, your SIN, your marriage certificate and if needed, a divorce certificate will allow you to change your documents to revert to your maiden name - the name you were born with.  With a single form you can revert to your maiden name - the name you were born with, the name that is on your birth certificate.  And similarly, with a trip to a Service Canada site - you can also ensure that your passport has your maiden name on it.  And yes with one form - after producing the proper documents.

There is no need to go through a legal name change process. This is legal - and quite a normal procedure in Ontario.

And on June 5th and 6th, 2017, this is what I did.  I attended a Service Ontario office and presented the required documents, filled in the correct forms and reverted to my maiden name.  The important people in my life knew why.  The "why", really was no one elses' business.
So yes, despite what any bully may say - my name is legally Mandie Eddie.  Never have I legally changed it on my birth certificate to be anything other than EDDIE.  So there has never been any need to to file for an official name change - nor would it have been reported by "The Gazette" or as some say the name change was not "Gazetted".  And yes, I do understand what it means to be listed in "The Gazette"

Interestingly enough - I was once "Gazetted" as a Breathalyzer Technician in Ontario in 1998 - I believe.  (it may have been later - but that is what I recall)

What is the Gazette?

The Canada Gazette is the official newspaper of the Government of Canada. Learn about new statutes, new and proposed regulations, administrative board decisions and public notices.  
So to the Bully who insists I am not who I say I am - it's time for you to learn that the world does not always work they way YOU think it works. 

And - oh yeah - in case you wondered, no, the world is not flat.


Mandie Eddie (always - and from the beginning!)
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    Mandie Eddie

    I've had many different jobs, from lifeguard to Business Owner, to Police Officer and Firefighter , Municipal Manager  and Public Information Officer and finally to being self employed.  Unlike George Santos however - I have never claimed to play volleyball - nor have I claimed to have attended a college I have not attended.

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