The Argentinian creep leads the way:
CBC News asked the office of Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez what it would do. The party released a statement at 1 p.m. on Monday saying it "has and always will respect the independence of the press." The office said an independent press "is fundamental to our democracy" and called it "the best defence against disinformation."
The bridle of the publicly-funded CBC gets to do what it wants, he means.
**
A representative for the tech giant Meta said Monday that the company plans to block access to Canadian news content on its platforms if Parliament passes Bill C-18, which mandates that the company pay news publishers for hosting content.“Ultimately, this legislation puts Meta in an unfavourable situation. In order to comply, we have to either operate in a flawed and unfair regulatory environment, or we have to end the availability of news content in Canada. With a heavy heart, we choose the latter,” Kevin Chan, Meta’s global policy director, said before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage on May 8.“As the Minister of Canadian Heritage has said, this is a business decision. It’s not something we want to do, but it is what we will have to do.”
Bull. Sh--.
This is exactly what the Argentina creep wants.
A news cycle that resembles a North Korean struggle session does not include criticism of the government, the catching of the aforementioned in obvious lies, and Chinese interference.
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