Well, it appears Pierre Poilievre, that would-be master disinformation-trafficker, has found his true soulmate in another man-child, Elon Musk. They have had a meeting of the minds when it comes to the CBC - dearest Elon has agreed to PP's request that the publicly-funded networked be labelled "government-funded media," a tag that used to apply only to propaganda outlets like RT (Russia Today).
"Government-funded media is defined as outlets where the government provides some or all of the outlet's funding and may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content," according to Twitter.
National Public Radio in the U.S. announced earlier this month that it is leaving the platform after Twitter labelled its account as "state-affiliated media," saying that doing so undermines their credibility by "falsely implying that we are not editorially independent."
U.S. public broadcaster PBS followed suit, also leaving Twitter after it received the "government-funded" stamp.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre recently called on Twitter CEO Elon Musk to add a "government-funded" label to accounts that promote "news-related" content from CBC.
Such a designation will undoubtedly provide sweet succor to the simple amongst PP's clan of followers (but aren't they all a bit simple?) and will undoubtedly raise his 'street cred' with them. And just in case some of them missed the significance of this label, PP tweeted out that the CBC has been "officially exposed" as "Trudeau propaganda, not news."
The CBC was quick to admonish the thinking behind this assault of the media:
The CBC is a Crown corporation, wholly owned by the state but operated at arm's length from government.
In a statement Sunday night, CBC corporate spokesperson Leon Mar emphasized the government does not influence CBC's editorial content.
The CBC is a Crown corporation, wholly owned by the state but operated at arm's length from government.
Such machinations, of course, only help to illustrate PP's discord-sowing ways that make him manifestly unfit to sit in the prime minister's office; they also, however, demonstrate something else a credulous electorate should bear in mind: his hypocrisy:
“Hey mister, who pays your salary?” - BINGO
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It's why I love the conciseness of editorial cartoons, UU.
DeleteAll excellent rhetorical questions, TB, and many thanks for the clip link. I have never seen Canadian Bacon, but it appears to have had a crystal ball able to look 28 years into what is our present.
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if you have not seen Canadian Bacon i recommend you see and enjoy it.
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