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Meanwhile, when it comes to “media disinformation” as identified by government, Obama and Trudeau lack credibility

Obama and Trudeau Claim Last Word on “Media Disinformation” For Themselves


By Judi McLeod ——--April 25, 2022

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Obama and Trudeau Claim Last Word on Media Disinformation For ThemselvesOn the subject of “media disinformation”, the hypocrisy of North America’s top two authoritarian ‘leaders’, former President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau,, is nothing less than stunning. To date, nary a peep from either government in this era of a society overwhelmed by Fake News.
Obama, who sealed off all personal information from public view when he presented himself for the U.S. presidency with his promise to “fundamentally transform America”, is suddenly concerned about the flow of “disinformation” online? Related: Obama & Clinton Partner Up To Hunt Down Disinformation Ditto for Trust Fund Baby Justin Trudeau, who blew $600-million of Canadian taxpayer dollars to buy off an already government-compliant news media in 2018. Related: Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Buying the Media In Time for 2019 Election Trudeau never had to worry about the few independent media he couldn’t buy off, as social media, led by Google, looked after them for him. The factual trajectory above was basically how Trudeau rose himself up from Leader of the Canadian Liberal Party to the heavy heights of Prime Minister, where he would one day freeze the bank accounts of Freedom Convoy truckers and their supporters. In his third election in September of 2021, Trudeau went into the race in minority status—and came out in minority status.

Last month, the New Democrat Party (NDP) threw in with him, awarding him instant majority status, denied him by electors. The NDP hovers at 18% in voter popularity. Incredibly, Barack Obama, now a private citizen, community activist and ex-president is calling the shots in President Joe Biden’s administration, viewed as his 3rd term in Office. Incredibly, Trudeau was still operating from minority status when he turned Canada over to the dictates of the Klaus Schwab-led World Economic Forum (WEF). The bulk of mainstream and social media do not report on this tragic state of affairs. The Canadian Liberal Government, which patently ignores the Fake News of the media of our day, is still playing with its promised online harms legislation after missing its self-imposed 100-day deadline in early February. Canadian media hints the government’s online harms legislation is “months away”. But is it?

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“Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez shared the news on Wednesday as he announced a newly formed panel of experts who will advise his office as it drafts the new bill. (Global News, March 30, 2022)
“We want to get this right — and you know what, together, we will get this right,” Rodriguez said. “However, getting it right will take far longer than the government had initially promised. Ahead of the 2021 fall election, the Liberals promised that — if re-elected — they would “introduce legislation within its first 100 days to combat serious forms of harmful online content, specifically hate speech, terrorist content, content that incites violence, child sexual abuse material and the non-consensual distribution of intimate images.” “This would make sure that social media platforms and other online services are held accountable for the content that they host,” the Liberal platform said. “That 100-day deadline came and went on Feb. 3 — just shy of two months ago — and now, the government says it will need to wait at least another two months to receive recommendations from its new advisory panel. Only then, Rodriguez said, will the department draft the bill. “All the (advisory panel) meetings have to be held in the next two months, if I’m not mistaken,” he explained. “Then we can take that information, work on the bill, and table it as soon as possible.” “Rodriguez insisted the government has been working on this issue “for a long time” and is not starting from scratch — although that’s exactly what some experts, including a few who have been named to this new advisory panel, have asked it to do.

“That criticism came flooding in when, last June, the Liberals introduced Bill C-36. The bill was stopped in its tracks when Trudeau dissolved Parliament for last year’s federal election, but if it had passed, it would have given new recourse to people worried that another person would commit an offence motivated by “bias, prejudice or hate.” “That “hate” can be based on a number of factors — including race, sex or gender identity — and the aggrieved party would be able to take the issue to a provincial court, provided the attorney general consents. “The bill would have also amended the Canadian Human Rights Act to make it a “discriminatory practice” to communicate hate speech through the internet where it is “likely to foment detestation or vilification of an individual or group of individuals on the basis of a prohibited ground of discrimination.”
Isn’t that what both current American and Canadian governments are doing by branding their own citizens as “domestic terrorists” and “racists”?
“Shortly after introducing the bill, the government published a “discussion guide” and a “technical paper” on its proposals for a future online anti-harm regime. The documents included a wide-ranging plan detailing which entities would be subject to the new rules, what types of harmful content would be regulated, and the rules for those regulated entities and new regulatory bodies. (Global News) “I found that proposal very problematic,” said Cara Zwibel, director of the fundamental freedoms project at the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, told Global News earlier this year. “Zwibel said that if the eventual online harms legislation that will be introduced is based on this technical paper, it would be “really disappointing.”

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“A lot of groups spent time to let the government know where they saw problems and if none of that is considered kind of relevant, it really, really raises a question of why you would ever have a consultation process at all,” she said. (Global News) “She wasn’t alone in her concerns. In a report published in September 2021, Vivek Krishnamurthy — a University of Ottawa law professor who was just named to the advisory panel — said Bill C-36 was “fundamentally flawed.” “As Parliament reconvenes after the recent election, we call upon the new government to reconsider Canada’s approach to online regulation,” he wrote. “Canada needs to reconsider its approach to platform regulation from the ground up. We urge the Government of Canada to engage in significant study and consultation with experts and stakeholders in Canada and beyond.” “That’s exactly what the government now plans to do. The expert advisory group on online safety includes a number of academics who are well-respected in the world of anti-hate and online harm research and advocacy. “The list includes Amarnath Amarasingam, a widely cited Canadian extremism researcher at Queen’s University; Bernie Farber, the chair of the Canada Anti-Hate Network; and Emily Laidlaw, the Canada Research Chair in Cybersecurity Law at the University of Calgary. The full advisory panel is as follows: • Amarnath Amarasingam, assistant professor, School of Religion, Queen’s University • Bernie Farber, chair, Canada Anti-Hate Network • Chanae Parsons, community activist and youth engagement specialist • David Morin, full professor, faculty of arts and humanities, Université de Sherbrooke • Emily Laidlaw, associate professor, faculty of law, University of Calgary • Ghayda Hassan, professor of clinical psychology, Université du Québec à Montréal • Heidi Tworek, associate professor, School of Public Policy and Global Affairs and History, University of British Columbia • Lianna McDonald, executive director, Canadian Centre for Child Protection • Pierre Trudel, professor, faculty of law, Université de Montréal • Signa A. Daum Shanks, associate professor, faculty of law, University of Ottawa • Taylor Owen, Beaverbrook Chair, Media, Ethics and Communications • Vivek Krishnamurthy, Samuelson-Glushko Professor of Law, University of Ottawa.”
How many in this “expert advisory group on online safety” are aware of the Fake News peddled on the masses daily by the mainstream and social media?
“While the government has left its self-imposed deadline in the dust, Rodriguez was optimistic on Wednesday that the new bill will fix the flaws of its predecessor — whenever it’s ready. When pressed on whether he’s open to starting from scratch, the Canadian heritage minister replied that the government is “open” to “all ideas.” (Global)
Wrong! Make that “open” to “all ideas” other than any of those who happen to disagree with the government. Meanwhile, when it comes to “media disinformation” as identified by government, Obama and Trudeau lack credibility.

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Judi McLeod—— -- Judi McLeod, Founder, Owner and Editor of Canada Free Press, is an award-winning journalist with more than 30 years’ experience in the print and online media. A former Toronto Sun columnist, she also worked for the Kingston Whig Standard. Her work has appeared throughout the ‘Net, including on Rush Limbaugh and Fox News.

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