| # | First Name | Last Name | Affiliation | Comments |
|---|
| 1751 | Edwin | Janzen | Fine Arts Student Alliance, Concordia University | Leveling charges against students for practicing their democratic rights is disreputable behaviour, especially for a university. The University of Toronto's administrators, a corrupt gang, have clearly lost touch with reality. I am ashamed for them. |
| 1752 | Aimee | Mitchell | | |
| 1753 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | |
| 1754 | Daniel | Libby | | |
| 1755 | Busayo | Ayodele | | |
| 1756 | Michel | Marion | EASSU | |
| 1757 | Maan | Musleh | | |
| 1758 | Chantal | Tshimanga | | Education is a powerful tool to use in the world. We as a rich and powerful nation should not deny this to any of our residents. Education is already an expensive thing and we should make it possible that those want to go to school can and those who want to stay in school can do that too. |
| 1759 | Katherine | Gordon | | There are real criminals out there and they walk the streets with no problem!!!!! I thought people had the right to protest in this country!!!!! |
| 1760 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | |
| 1761 | Irfan | Ali | | |
| 1762 | Diana Claire | Tkaczuk | CUPE Local 960 | |
| 1763 | Joyce | Daffern | CUPE | |
| 1764 | Marc | Herscovitch | | I am unable to come to the rally due to work but I believe that the administration should be responsible for its actions. The students are acting as a watchdog. |
| 1765 | Maame | A | | |
| 1766 | denise | hammond | CUPE Local 1281 | |
| 1767 | Randolph | Wald | | |
| 1768 | sherice | hiatt | | |
| 1769 | Sabrina | Di Marco | | The pillar of democracy is the right to peaceful protest! |
| 1770 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | |
| 1771 | Amrit | Heer | University of Toronto | |
| 1772 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | |
| 1773 | Laurel | Jamieson | part time student, university of Toronto | |
| 1774 | Jack | Thornburgh | Sidney SeniorCare | Do not stifle dissent: the students make valid points. |
| 1775 | Samantha | Siva | | |
| 1776 | Brenda | Morse | | Students, as well as all members of the public, have ar ight to an opinion, and a right to voice it. The U of T should be ashamed that they are not allowing students to be active and involved in their education by voicing their opinions about thei tuition fees. We are a democracy, we are supposed to teach students to think and question, and we should be more than willing to allow a peaceful protest on campus. |
| 1777 | Anonymous | Anonymous | Student | Ontario's state of tuition is pathetic. U of T administration needs to take a step down of their pedestal and take a good look at how they treat students, women, and workers. |
| 1778 | Adrienne | Baltadjian | | |
| 1779 | Mark | Stewart | HEU | University, like pre-school, should be free, as it takes very little policy change to extract payback from benefitted citizens.
The benefit to society from maximally educated citizens is beyond calculation. Consider Australia. I signed my name to an abolition of post-secondary tuition nation-wide (1978). Australia, today a small nation with less people than Canada, is leading the world in many areas. Naturally, a self-interested autocracy abolished the tuition as soon as they were given the power to pocket a short-lived wind-fall (2004). Autocrats' political self interest often precludes economically sound decision-making, as competition drives grand vision into questionable sacrifice. Aggressive punishment of attempts to support economic progress is typical autocratic criminal activity that is typically supported by corrupt enforcement and corrupt jurisdiction. However a much larger and easily resolved process is at work here.
It is fortunate that we live in a democracy, where the criminal actions of the U of T are clearly visible to the millennia to follow. Democratic transparency also offers autocrats the rare opportunity to devise global gain from social improvement. One attributes greater wisdom to those who manage our nexus social institutions. However, the complicity of a national government is also clearly visible across Canada. It is most sad that the wealthy leaders who grumble at free education are the very ones who do benefit most from free education. Simply put, top-down and nation-wide we need to legislate free education. Being closer to the geophysical center of the Western World, Canada will see an even greater benefit than Australia did.
The compulsion of greed is a great obstacle to economic (and social) progress, for it obliterates sound judgment, replacing sound socioeconomic policy with detrimental degradation of global social resource within the macrocosm of every national economy in the world today. Australia's wise 1978 consideration established greater insularity for a geophysical isolate of Euro-Caucasian culture. Canada might view her potential for wisdom as a counter to her own economic and political isolation under the umbrella of American imperialism. Also consequentially, as a barrier to massive Asian (to be followed by African and South American) economic expansion.
While several hundred years of free education might seem an enormous burden today for the Western World today, a thousand years from today, free tuition will be seen as the backbone of a strategy for dominance that paid well. To the extent that our autocrats benefit from technology, we are a technocratic society. We must align our social nexus and maximize our human resource potential to optimize our technocratic machine.
Cut the fat, get in shape, Canada - help lead our shared culture to a survivable and prosperous future with free post-secondary education. |
| 1780 | Craig | Crow | | |
| 1781 | Alexandre | Lévesque | | |
| 1782 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | Well, I might have to move out of province to finish my education at this rate... why should wealth supersede intelligence in getting an education? This consumerist mentality will be the demise of future intellects in CANADA. The governing council should be ashamed for running this place like a Holt Renfrew store with exclusive corporate labels and heavy-handed security. Most students don't even set foot in that store cause all these types of stores understand is prestige and profit, of which neither are required to develop intelligence. |
| 1783 | Sean | Callaghan | | |
| 1784 | Maya | Nadeem | | |
| 1785 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | |
| 1786 | Shahla | Zendegani | Graduate student Ryerson University | Education is a right. Keep up the fight with the education industry to take their hands off of it. |
| 1787 | andrea | mccabe | Cupe | |
| 1788 | Jessica | Bird | Lakehead University | |
| 1789 | Peter | Mitterhuber | | |
| 1790 | Ian | Thomson | United Steel Workers | |
| 1791 | Jeffrey | Alam | | |
| 1792 | Jacques | Trottier Jr. | Board Member, Student Federation of the University of Ottawa | |
| 1793 | Corinne | Segura | | |
| 1794 | Cody | Hawes | | |
| 1795 | Mina | Hosseinian | | I believe this is absolutley crazy. They have no right to press CRIMINAL charges against these students. It is their right to speak out and be heard. So please, find something better to do instead of pressing charges like that against innocent students. This is not a 3rd world country. This is Canada and everyone is guaranteed the right of speech and peaceful assembly. |
| 1796 | Danielle | Bryan | | |
| 1797 | Jason | Redden | | |
| 1798 | Anonymous | Anonymous | | |
| 1799 | Vian | Varzandeh | | |
| 1800 | Anne | Berentschot | | |