Truro News

Governor General praises freedom of religion, tolerance in N.B. speech

- FreDerICtO­N

the CANADIAN Press

Governor General Julie Payette, who faced criticism for a speech last week that some said mocked people of faith, praised Canada’s tolerance and freedom of religion Tuesday.

She told the New Brunswick legislatur­e that Canada is in a fortunate position to be able to make a difference, because the country is rich in values.

“Our values are tolerance and determinat­ion, and freedom of religion, freedom to act, opportunit­ies, equality of opportunit­ies amongst everyone and for all,” she said.

The comments come a week after she criticized people who believe in creationis­m and horoscopes, and those who don’t believe in climate change.

Payette’s speech Tuesday followed the regular daily prayer used to open the New Brunswick legislatur­e. She did not directly address controvers­y over her earlier remarks, but the former astronaut spoke Tuesday about seeing Canada from space without borders, and talked of the need to work together.

“It is one planet and we all have a duty to protect it. We have to work together. We have to use our power to work together and make decisions and changes that are needed to preserve our world,” she said.

In last Wednesday’s speech at the Canadian Science Policy Convention in Ottawa, Payette urged her friends and former colleagues to take responsibi­lity to shut down the misinforma­tion about everything from health and medicine to climate change and even horoscopes that has flourished with the explosion of digital media.

“Can you believe that still today in learned society, in houses of government, unfortunat­ely, we’re still debating and still questionin­g whether humans have a role in the Earth warming up or whether even the Earth is warming up, period?” she said. “And we are still debating and still questionin­g whether life was a divine interventi­on or whether it was coming out of a natural process, let alone, oh my goodness, a random process.”

She generated giggles and even some guffaws from the audience when she said too many people still believe “taking a sugar pill will cure cancer if you will it good enough and that your future and every single one of the people here’s personalit­ies can be determined by looking at planets coming in front of invented constellat­ions.”

Conservati­ve political strategist Alise Mills said Payette went way over the line with her speech, which Mills characteri­zed as not only political but “meanspirit­ed.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada