The government pushes Bill C-63 as one to protect children from harm due to online sexual exploitation. We already have laws against that….so why bother?
What Trudeau and company are pushing is a crime omnibus bill, purporting to be about children and protecting people from things like revenge porn.
Buried within are the parts we need to be worried about.
An age old political trick is to hide such government power overreach behind those reasonable child protections, such that if the opposition parties vote against it the government can come out and say, “Our opposition refuses to protect children.”
It is political gotcha, with our freedoms at stake….& the Libs know they’re out the political door in a maximum of 20 months if not (hopefully) sooner.
“Everyone who commits an offence under this Act or any other Act of Parliament, if the commission of the offence is motivated by hatred based on race, national or ethnic origin, language, colour, religion, sex, age, mental or physical disability, sexual orientation, or gender identity or expression, is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for life,” the bill states.
Trudeau government is desperate to show they are taking the issue seriously but they fail in the execution.
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The creation of a “digital safety commission” composed of government appointees given “vast authority” and “sweeping powers” to “interpret the law, make up new rules, enforce them, and then serve as judge, jury, and executioner. Granting such sweeping powers to one body undermines the fundamental principle of democratic accountability.”
The two Canadian civil liberties organizations that convinced a federal court judge the Trudeau government’s invocation of the Emergencies Act violated fundamental rights — which the feds are appealing — are sounding similar alarms about its new online harms bill. So it would be a good idea for...
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It may be that the online harms bill is simply a ruse — a political head fake. Trudeau’s Liberals can proclaim that they have taken action against online hateful conduct without ever planning to pass it into law. The real objective, perhaps, is to
trap the Conservatives into opposing the bill, which will permit Liberals to say that the Tories don’t care about hate and child exploitation.
“Free speech,” says Salman Rushdie, “is the whole thing, the whole ball game.” “Free speech,” he says, “is life itself.” That feels like a bit of an overstatement. But in Rushdie’s case, it’s probably heartfelt. The British-American author has faced several death threats and assassination...
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online harms act is akin to an omnibus bill that will not only double-down on measures the social-media giants are already being forced to adopt in the United States. Bill C-63 also includes amendments to the Criminal Code, the Canadian Human Rights Act and several other pieces of legislation that have nothing to do with protecting children.
Among other things, Bill C-63 proposes to target “online harms,” including hate speech, with the establishment of a “digital safety” commission, a digital safety ombudsperson, and a digital safety office. The commission would be vested with the authority to investigate social media platforms that allegedly aren’t compliant with the law, levy fines and carry out their proceedings in closed hearings. All these officials will be appointed by the federal cabinet.
Under the proposed act, hate speech complaints against individuals would be directed to the Canadian Human Rights Commission which, unlike the courts, would be exempt from the ordinary rules of evidence. No proof beyond a reasonable doubt will be required for a tribunal to find that the subject of a complaint before them constitutes “hate.” All that’s necessary is the “balance of probabilities” that a violation of the law has occurred.
Just who is going to be vested with these extraordinary powers? What does the Trudeau government really mean when it refers to “hate”?
Who would trust a digital safety commission appointed by this government?
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As much as the Liberals want everyone to believe that their proposed
online harms act is focused almost exclusively on protecting children from predators, and that, as Justice Minister Arif Virani
said, “It does not undermine freedom of speech,” that simply isn’t true.
While the legislation, tabled Monday, could have been much worse — it mercifully avoids regulating “misinformation” — it opens up new avenues to censor political speech.
A person is found “guilty” in human rights law when it’s shown that they are more than 50 per cent likely to have committed a wrong, a much lower standard of proof than required in criminal law.
Truth is no defence under new hate speech rules
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