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Censorship is alive and well in Canada

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    Censorship is alive and well in Canada

    Censorship is alive and well in Canada – just ask government scientists

    Elizabeth Renzetti

    The Globe and Mail

    Published Friday, Feb. 22 2013, 8:27 PM EST

    Last updated Saturday, Feb. 23 2013, 9:01 AM EST

    What’s that you say? The bumper fell off when you touched it? The engine won’t turn over? That’s not so good. Better look under the hood.

    We like to think of censorship as something that happens over there, in the faraway places where men break into houses at night to smash computers, or arrive in classrooms to remove books they don’t like. Not in lovely, calm, respectful Canada. Here we don’t necessarily notice freedoms being eroded slowly, grain by grain, “like sands through the hourglass,” if you’ll allow me to quote from /Days of Our Lives/.

    Just ask Canada’s government scientists. Oh wait, you can’t ask them, because they’ve got duct tape over their mouths (metaphorical duct tape, but hey – it’s still painful). This week the University of Victoria’s Environmental Law Clinic and Democracy Watch asked federal Information Commissioner Suzanne Legault to investigate claims that scientists are being prohibited from speaking freely with journalists – and through them, the public.

    In a report called Muzzling Civil Servants: A Threat to Democracy <http://www.elc.uvic.ca/press/documents/2012-03-04-Democracy-Watch_OIPLtr_Feb20.13-with-attachment.pdf>, the UVic researchers present some chilling findings: Scientists are either told not to speak to journalists or to spout a chewed-over party line, rubber-stamped by their PR masters; the restrictions are particularly tight when a journalist is seeking information about research relating to climate change or the tar sands; Environment Canada scientists require approval from the Privy Council Office before speaking publicly on sensitive topics “such as climate change or protection of polar bear and caribou.”

    You wouldn’t want the average citizen to learn too much about caribou, now. Who knows how crazy he could get with that kind of information? It could lead to panel discussions about Arctic hares, town halls on ptarmigans. The report states that government scientists are “frustrated,” which is hardly surprising. It’s like hiring Sandy Koufax and never letting him pitch.

    The other thing that the report makes clear is how deliberate this strategy is: “The federal government has recently made concerted efforts to prevent the media – and through them, the general public – from speaking to government scientists, and this, in turn, impoverishes the public debate on issues of significant national concern.”

    This is not an issue that’s going away. The Harper government’s heavy-handed control of scientists’ research has raised concerns across the world for a few years, including condemnation from such bastions of Marxism as Nature magazine.

    A couple thousand scientists from across the country marched on Parliament Hill last July to protest cuts in research (many in the highly sensitive area of environment and climate change) and restrictions on their ability to speak freely about their work. They created what might be the best chant in the history of political protest: “What do we want? Science! When do we want it? After peer review!”

    Last week, Margaret Munro of Postmedia News reported that a University of Delaware scientist was up in arms over a new confidentiality agreement brought in by Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans. “I’m not signing it,” Andreas Muenchow told the reporter. What does this mean for bilateral co-operation on research? Nothing good, that’s for sure.

    The Vise-Grip on information is tightening and Ottawa is the muscle. Last month, Canadian Journalists for Free Expression released a report about the dire state of freedom of information requests: “Canada’s access to information system is in a deep crisis and without urgent reform could soon become dysfunctional,” the report noted. That means fewer requests being processed, at a more glacial pace, with more of the juicy bits blacked out by the government censor’s pen. This is the good stuff, people. The stuff the government doesn’t want you to know about. The stuff that’s kept in a filing cabinet in Gatineau under a sign that says, “Nothing here. Nope. Just a three-week-old tuna sandwich. And it’s radioactive.” This is the information we need to keep an eye on the government’s internal gears – and it’s being withheld.

    Canada recently plummeted 10 places to No. 20 in the World Press Freedom Index, which measures how unfettered a country’s media is. Reporters Without Borders, which compiles the index, is concerned about the access-to-information issue and about the protection of journalists’ sources. The beacon we should now follow is Jamaica, whose press freedoms rank highest in the region.

    It’s the perfect time to welcome Freedom to Read Week. There are events all over Canada and countless ways to celebrate our precious liberties. Bring your kids to the library. Read something you shouldn’t. Even better, write something you shouldn’t. A letter to your MP, perhaps?

    Freedom to Read Week begins on Feb. 24, bringing with it the perfect opportunity to kick the tires of democracy and make sure the old jalopy’s still running as she should.

    #2
    If you are part of the brave new Conservative world created by Steve and company it is better not to let science interfere with your political agenda.

    Comment


      #3
      Like economics getting in the road of your wheat
      board agenda ...you hypocrite.

      Comment


        #4
        Like economics getting in the road of your wheat
        board agenda ...you hypocrite.

        Comment


          #5
          Read between the lines. The nerds are mad cause
          they lost some previous luxuries on the cut backs
          and cant figure out how to get to their Smartcars out
          on their field days,lol.

          Comment


            #6
            try the decaf lw.

            Comment


              #7
              Chucky you need to do a little research
              into the economics of Science and the
              genesis of the global warming fairytale.
              Aside from that peer review only works
              when there are people to oppose the
              thesis.

              Comment


                #8
                They don't even need censorship,most people seem
                so stuck in their believes and opinions,hitting them
                with a 2x4 won't change their minds.

                Comment


                  #9
                  So Larry W are suggesting that it is okay to muzzle scientists when their results don't support the political agenda of the day?

                  The Harper Conservatives have been the most aggressive government in shutting down informed debate that we have seen in a long time.

                  Muzzling scientists is just another step on the road to making sure they dumb down the public discussion.

                  Perhaps you prefer it that way?

                  Perhaps the majority of the party faithful don't believe in science anyway.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I wonder why many of our ag discussions
                    have to be looked at through a
                    politically biased lens instead of a
                    lens that allows one to be objective? I
                    believe that not only are our scientists
                    required to have "minders/babysitters"
                    with them when they want to present
                    their research findings but so do our
                    MPs when they talk to journalists. Is
                    this appropriate? Does it prevent the
                    public from getting all the facts? I am
                    presently in the USA. The use of town
                    hall meetings to allow all sides to be
                    heard is not perfect but is a lot better
                    than what is recently happening in
                    Canada where during election campaigns
                    some of our candidates will/can not
                    attend public meetings to discuss
                    issues.This is censorship at its worst
                    and is very dangerous to democracy.

                    Comment

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