Media group wants journalists legally protected from online comments

One of the organizations in charge of distributing millions in Liberal media bailout funds has come out in support of the pro-censorship bill, C-36, and has called for the law to provide legal protections for journalists who face harassment online.

According to Blacklock’s Reporter, News Media Canada offered its support for the bill in a submission to the Department of Canadian Heritage.

“This is not about limiting democratic expression. It is about protecting it, and its most precious guardians, journalists. And it is about ensuring all publishers including internet intermediaries are held accountable for harmful content,” wrote News Media Canada CEO Paul Deegan.

Does that include David Menzies?

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More media hysteria on the PPC

What the rise of the PPC says about Canada in 2021

TORONTO — While the People’s Party of Canada did not manage to gain any seats this federal election, its accruing of the popular vote has experts saying the rise of the far-right populist party cannot be ignored.

Maxime Bernier, who failed to win his own riding of Beauce, Que., said Monday that he will remain as party leader despite the defeat, telling CTV News’ Genevieve Beauchemin at his Saskatoon rally that he views the election outcome as “a huge victory.”

Hysteria is not too strong a descriptor.

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The Star’s editorial board endorses Liberals for 2021 federal election

The election campaign that ends on Monday has been unnecessary — a $610-million distraction in the middle of the worst public health crisis in a century. The vast majority of Canadians, according to recent polls, do not believe it should have even been called in the first place.

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Is Justin Trudeau Elected– Or Planted As Canada’s Prime Minister?

Perhaps it is the microscopic degree in which Cultural Action Party has followed Canadian politics for the past six years. To what extent our opinion on federal politics is shared remains an open question.

Is it our imagination, or does the current election smack of a previously experienced process of “going through the motions?”

Nowhere is this more prevalent than within media presentation. A five-week campaign period. To feign neutrality, Globe & Mail, National Post and the rest present Erin O”Toole’s Conservatives as the front runner. This being a logical extension of the data pollsters like Angus Reid and Nanos project upon the public.

As if scripted in a CBC television production, over the final two weeks Justin Trudeau’s Liberals begin to gain momentum As it occurred in 2015 and 2019, Toronto Star and such begin to roll out uncut gems designed to crush the opposition.

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The CBC is the media arm of the Liberal Party of Canada

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau joined the CBC for a town hall with undecided voters on Tuesday night. This provided the perfect contrast to show how differently the CBC and host Rosemary Barton treat Trudeau, versus how they treated Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole one night earlier.

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‘No more nonsense’: Ontario Liberals call on government to get tough on anti-vaxxers

Ontario’s Liberal Party is calling on the provincial government to make vaccines mandatory for transit passengers, as well as eligible students and employees who interact with customers as the fourth wave of COVID-19 continues to climb.

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Media coverage of Trudeau protests far exceeded Afghanistan issue, research shows

In the memo, which sought to track how misinformation impacted the protestors crashing Trudeau’s campaign events, researchers noted that Canada’s media heavily featured the anti-Trudeau protests in their election reporting at the cost of other election issues.

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Hidden By Media: The Silent Globalist Agenda For The Conquest Of Canada

In contemporary politics, circumstances unfold in a manner under which an impartial observer could believe the process is fixed. Perhaps it always has been this way.

If not the case, six years of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suggests this to be a reasonable conclusion. More than ever, federal politics seem to be going through the motions to arrive at pre-destined conclusions.

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CBC town hall shows why O’Toole must defund the CBC

The Debates Commission has been a complete disservice to Canadians. It’s an insult to voters that we had three debates this election — two in French and all three in Quebec.

The CBC could have made up for it through their town hall sessions with the party leaders. It could have been a good opportunity for Canadians to get to know their party leaders.

Instead, as Candice details in the latest episode of her show, the entire premise was based on partisan Liberal spin and a far-left woke worldview.

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Protests at Trudeau rallies an evolution of far-right ideology, says expert

The protests that have dogged Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s election campaign for weeks shouldn’t come as a surprise after months of demonstrations against COVID-19 restrictions, says one extremism researcher.

“These people have been protesting against COVID for a long time. People were kind of shocked at the vitriol and the violent rhetoric — and the violence itself — that these people are bringing to the campaign trail,” said Evan Balgord, executive director of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network.

“We’re not surprised by it because these people, these COVID conspiracy types, have been very violent for months.”

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Idiot Working For CBC

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The media is failing Canadians when it comes to COVID-19

When it comes to coverage of COVID-19, the legacy media is failing to inform Canadians on integral information that would help the public understand the virus better.

As a result, many Canadians are unwilling to learn to live COVID-19 and obsessed with case numbers and strict public health measures, such as vaccine passports.

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The future of CBC/Radio-Canada is at stake in this election

Canada’s national public broadcasting services are in a position of unprecedented vulnerability. In 2019-20, the CBC had advertising revenue of $253,754. Decades of cuts have affected the nature of much of the CBC’s television programming, making it less distinctive and pushing the CBC into increased competition with private broadcasters for commercial revenue.

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