The Charter Project (www.JoinTheDiscussion.ca) team filmed filmed and edited interviews with legal experts and others who can offer unique historical perspectives on The Charter, its inception, and how it affects the everyday lives of Canadians. This is the first of four excerpts from our interview with University of Windsor, Faculty of Law professor Richard Moon. His research focuses on freedom of expression, and freedom of conscience and religion. From 2003 to 2005 he was the President of the Canadian Law and Society Association. BIOGRAPHY Richard Moon teaches both private and public law courses. His research focuses on freedom of expression, and freedom of conscience and religion. In 1994 he was awarded the first University of Windsor Humanities Research Fellowship. From 2003 to 2005 he was the President of the Canadian Law and Society Association. He has been the recipient of both the law school and university-wide teaching awards. His recent publications can be found at his SSRN author’s page papers.ssrn.com Key Works: – “Freedom of Religion in the Canadian Courts: The Limits of State Neutrality”, UBC Law Journal, 2012 (forthcoming) – Law and Religious Pluralism in Canada (ed.) (UBC Press, 2008). “Limits on Expression: The Collapse of the General Approach to Limits on Charter Rights” 40(3) Osgoode Hall Law Journal 335-368 (2002). – The Constitutional Protection of Freedom of Expression (University of Toronto Press, 2000). – “The Supreme Court of Canada on the …