I agree with you that the definition of terrorism, particularly as employed by various governments, is broad, vague and often biased. However, I didn't address it as it is not the focus of this bill, or this discussion.guddylover said:Funny how you did not address my second point. Simple question. What if the terrorist is someone like the one in Quebec mosque shooting, should they keep their citizenship or get deported where? since you will likely claim that bill c-24 doesn't create a two-tier citizens
In the Quebec case, if the shooter is convicted of terrorism, there is nowhere to deport him to under international law. So, circumstances and international law dictate the so called "two-tier citizenship", not the Canadian government.