In connection with his upcoming Bill C-10, aimed at regulating social media and the Internet (as well as adding more regulation for radio, television and online news), Guilbeault told a Commons committee in February that he wanted a new regulatory agency to have the power to block postings that might “undermine Canada’s social cohesion.”
And he wanted to protect Canada’s “world-renowned public servants” from online criticism.
Guilbeault, like most “progressives,” always claims such regulations are not censorship. And he, particularly, likes to hide behind claims he is only trying to make the Internet safer for families and children, and to block disinformation that would harm our democratic process.
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