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Freedom Convoy protests [Split from All things 2019-nCoV]


Is there one in Ottawa? A Free Speech Zone. A place, in proximity to Parliament Hill, where the discontented can gather and voice their opinions. And where the police, politicians and bureaucrats can keep them under surveillance.....and hear them.
 
A couple of fun paragraphs in a NP article (paywalled if you've exceeded your free limit) today:

"But a senior federal official said, even as it became clear protesters weren’t leaving, the city’s plan didn’t seem to adapt to the worsening circumstances. “They’re just never seemed to be a moment where the city or the police said ‘this is not what we had planned for.’”

Trudeau changed his tone over the following weekend. “Despite their best efforts it is now clear there are serious challenges to law enforcement’s ability to effectively enforce the law,” he said on Monday, in invoking the act."

So: "they didn't try very hard", but "despite their best efforts...", so "EA ON!".
Good catch - sad to see the reporter not knowing which "there" to use, or the editor not catching it.

For anyone exceeding their free limit, article text is attached for purposes of research, private study or education under the Fair Dealing provisions of Canada's Copyright Act.

OP spelling mistake fixed, thanks to Kirhill's better eye than mine
 

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What I am really interested in seeing is the AAR after this is all over.

The first question the AAR should ask:

How did we go from a late January "this is just a fringe movement" and will disappear as quickly as it came to "we need to enact the Emergencies Act".
Strengthen and smarten up our law enforcement intelligence services and police leadership. This was downplayed and minimized right from the start.
The second question the AAR should ask:

What can we do as a Nation to ensure this never happens again?
Extend the EA permanently. Pass Bill C10. More OICs to collect all firearms. Bring back interprovincial travel restrictions.

Or, just govern better.
 
Do you think there will be an honest effort for a transparent AAR? Anyone take a bet that the AAR gets pulled into the EA Inquiry and sealed for ‘National Security’ purposes? Perhaps a redacted version released a few hours before voting day for Election 2024…
Section 39 of the Canada Evidence Act has been invoked for far less than this.
 
Downtown Ottawa is the most heavily video taped spot in Canada right now. I'm sure in the coming days we'll see footage that will explain why the police were butt stroking someone on the ground or see the bicycle thrown at the horse.

That said the Emergency Act might see the police bodycam footage censored due to national security.
No bicycle thrown.
 
Well, this didn't take long.

When I said "extend the EA permanently", above, I was being sarcastic!

And we think nobody watches these forums for ideas....
 
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My belief is that if you want to understand Justin it is important to read this book. This recounts the development of Justin's father, hero and role model.

My sense is that Justin is convinced the world could have been a better place if his father had been alllowed to develop his early theories.
 

Father de Souza, as he often is, is worth quoting in full.


Raymond J. de Souza: CBC bias on full display in coverage of Freedom Convoy, Coastal GasLink protests​

It turned out that opponents of the Coastal GasLink pipeline in northern British Columbia were watching the truckers this week

Author of the article:
Father Raymond J. de Souza
Publishing date:
Feb 19, 2022 • 9 hours ago • 4 minute read • 288 Comments
PHOTO BY ANDRE FORGET/QMI AGENCY

Article content​

I staged a personal boycott of the Beijing Olympics, resolving not to watch any coverage, in solidarity with the Uyghurs interned in prison camps and Catholic leaders imprisoned in Hong Kong. It turned out that was not hard to do, as CBC was the Canadian broadcaster, and almost nobody under 60 ever watches it.

Generally, there is nothing newsworthy about the CBC: how it covers the news is as predictable as its vanishing ratings. Yet a faithful reader sent along a CBC News story, which he thought bears comment. It does.

“Two key organizers of the so-called Freedom Convoy, Tamara Lich and Chris Barber, have been arrested in Ottawa,” reported the CBC on Thursday. “The two have been described as key leaders of the occupation in Ottawa.”

According to the author, the Freedom Convoy is “so-called,” but there is nothing “so-called” about the “occupation.” I don’t demur from calling it an occupation, but the “so-called” business really ought to cut both ways in news reporting.

Why does it matter? Because as the CBC and many other formerly venerable news outlets decried the trucker occupation, they failed to recognize their own role in it. Amongst the multifarious grievances that the truckers brought to Ottawa, they complained that their voices were never heard, their stories never told by the “so-called” mainstream media. They appeared only as objects of disparagement.

A grievance is not justified, much less true, simply for being aired, but over the past three weeks, it was certainly the case that the establishment organs of our national media took a decidedly negative view of the truckers and their supporters. The operating editorial position was to find reasons to discredit them and to highlight discordant notes.

It’s not a novel, nor uniquely Canadian, phenomenon. But the hostility of many in the media is a significant part of what is driving the estrangement that the protesters on the streets of Ottawa feel. When freedom gets modified as “so-called” but occupation does not, there is more than a disagreement at play. Add in other terms presented straight up recently — “sedition,” “treason,” “insurrection” — and you see why so many conclude that the deck is stacked against them.

I wrote earlier in the week that when the Indigenous blockades of February 2020 were rewarded with wholesale concessions by government authorities, many who would come to sympathize with the truckers took note. It turned out that opponents of the Coastal GasLink pipeline in northern British Columbia were also watching the truckers this week.

After three weeks of examining how the media covered people it did not agree with and did not like, someone calculated that it would be a good time to get violent at the pipeline site. Sympathetic to the cause if not the tactics, the CBC and others would see that it did not become too hot of an issue.

In the early hours of Thursday, some 20 assailants wielding axes and metal grinders overturned heavy equipment and destroyed construction trailers. Millions of dollars in destruction was done, and the workers were terrorized, including an attempt to “set a vehicle on fire while workers were inside,” according to the company.

After three weeks of lamentations about blocked roads, blaring air horns and bouncy castles in broad daylight, what would the national broadcaster have to say about broken bulldozers, barricaded workers and barriers set for police, all done under the cover of night? Nothing.

All day Thursday passed without the story making the CBC’s national website. Late Thursday night, a B.C. bureau story went up, but until late Friday morning, the main CBC news site completely ignored the story. When it finally posted a story about the attack, the quotation marks were back: “acts of violence” were said to have taken place.

You might think that given the remoteness of the area, in contrast to the proximity of the trucker convoy to the organic salad bars where CBC producers lobby government ministers for a bigger grant, it was difficult to get the story. Not so, as the National Post had the story within hours.

The CBC’s website even had a story on climate change in Nunavut up and ready to go before the one about the confrontation over the pipeline. Apparently, the news from the north moves faster when it confirms the political positions of the producers.

Blaming the messenger is often a technique of distraction. But the messengers here are a part of the story, and they too must account for their part. It is the responsibility that come with freedom of the press. Or should that be the “so-called” freedom of the press?

 
Watching CBCNNLive earlier today I heard host Heather Hiscox tell her colleague that all the other blockades had to have the Emergencies Act declared to resolve them.

This is either lazy on her part, or deliberately misrepresenting the facts. The Ambassador Bridge blockade was cleared by WPS on Sunday, 13 Feb. The EA was declared the next day on Monday, 14 Feb. so, in her trying to justify the declaration of the EA as needed to also deal with all the other blockades (which was wrong), does Hiscox claim a «petite bêtise» and given a pass, or should we expect that a senior journalist from the Nation’s broadcaster be held to account for inaccurate or misrepresentational reporting?

I bet in no accountability on her part…
 
Perspective is the key word, and that I'd everything. Given the unprecedented nature of this situation, if you think that the cops who Have bodies cameras don't have them on, you are crazy. Remember there will be a parliamentary inquiry after this is over because the EA was invoked, every bit of footage, radio chatted, etc is 110% being logged, and will be archived for later. Both sides can spout as much as they want, but the truth will be found out when the dust settles.
 
I'm also concerned about the amount of issued kit I have seen on the news. Just saw someone wearing an issued gas mask and small pack walk by the camera.
 
I'm also concerned about the amount of issued kit I have seen on the news. Just saw someone wearing an issued gas mask and small pack walk by the camera.
I mentioned this before but I aware of a few CAF members participating in that protest. Not saying it’s them you saw though. Will be interesting to see if any of the 150+ arrested are CAF or not.
 
Perspective is the key word, and that I'd everything. Given the unprecedented nature of this situation, if you think that the cops who Have bodies cameras don't have them on, you are crazy. Remember there will be a parliamentary inquiry after this is over because the EA was invoked, every bit of footage, radio chatted, etc is 110% being logged, and will be archived for later. Both sides can spout as much as they want, but the truth will be found out when the dust settles.
Your naiveté is astounding.
 
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