The
Slow and Painful Death of Freedom in Canada
Adam
Kingsmith
29
April, 2013
Less
than a generation ago, Canada was a world leader when it came to the
fundamental democratic freedoms of assembly, speech and information.
In
1982, Canada adopted the Access to Information Act -- making it one
of the first countries to pass legislation recognizing
the right of citizens to access information held by government,
and as recently as 2002, Canada ranked among the top
5 most open and transparent countries
when it came to respect for freedom of the press.
Fast-forward
a decade, and we've become a true north suppressed and disparate --
where unregistered civic demonstrations are inhibited and repressed,
rebellious Internet activities are scrutinised and supervised,
government scientists are hushed and muzzled, and public information
is stalled and mired by bureaucratic firewalls.
In
the 2013
World Press Freedom Index
-- an evaluation done by Reporters Without Borders on the autonomy of
a country's media environment, Canada came in at a paltry 20th,
putting us behind liberal-democratic powerhouses such as Namibia,
Costa Rica, and the Western Hemisphere's new champion of free media –
Jamaica
So
what the devil is going on?
According
to page
8 of the report,
this uneasy drop "was due to obstruction of journalists during
the so-called 'Maple Spring' student movement and to continuing
threats to the confidentiality of journalists' sources and Internet
users' personal data, in particular, from the C-30 bill on
cyber-crime."
Yet
perhaps more distressing than the consistent during Quebec's Maple
Spring has been the abrupt confiscation of the right of citizens in
the province to spontaneously demonstrate and protest in public
spaces -- seen recently at the totalitarian
debacle known as the Anti-Police Brutality Protest,
where over
250 people were arrested for failing to register
with authorities before assembling.
Passed
last May by the National Assembly of Quebec in the midst of the
student upheaval, Bill
78
requires organisers of assemblies involving 50 or more people to
register
the details of any demonstration with the police
at least eight hours before it begins. Anyone who does not comply
with the law faces a fine from $1000 up to $125,000 depending on his
or her involvement and leadership in the protest.
Not
to be outdone by Quebec's anti-demonstration legislation however, the
federal government decided to continue the trend with Bill
C-309
-- criminalising
the act of covering one's face
during any sort of display of civil disobedience. And as opposed to
the customary fine, the bill carries with it a penalty of up to five
years in prison.
But
don't worry -- it's for our protection.
Speaking
of our "protection," Bill
C-30,
or the Lawful Access Act -- proposed by the Harper government in
February of last year, attempted to grant authorities the power to
monitor and track the digital activities of all Canadians in
real-time.
This
internationally-condemned Orwellian "cyber-crime legislation"
planned to force service providers to log and surrender browsing
information about their customers upon government request as well as
permit the remote access to any personal computer in the country --
all
without the need of any sort of warrant.
And
while Bill C-30 has been tabled for the time being, Bill
C-12
-- which similarly authorises
the warrantless acquisition of customer information
from ISPs, email hosts, and social media sites on a voluntary basis,
looks
poised to creep in and achieve many of Bill C-30's initial objectives
by reducing the need for warrants, and gradually circumnavigating
safeguards that protect our personal information online.
Of
course we've all had the rhetoric jammed down our throats -- these
adjustments to a citizen's right to public assembly, defiant
anonymity, and digital privacy are the necessary sacrifices we must
be willing to make in order to shelter ourselves from half-heartedly
articulated illusory threats such as "terrorism" or
"extremism".
But
the undemocratic stifling doesn't stop here either. Even our
taxpayer-funded government scientists -- the last line of defense
against ignorance and uncritical thinking, are
increasingly coerced into suppressing unwelcome findings.
According
to a report by researchers at the University of Victoria titled
Muzzling
Civil Servants: A Threat to Democracy,
"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."
When
Canadian scientists are permitted by their handlers to speak to
journalists or international colleagues, they are forced to
regurgitate pre-approved party findings that rest neatly within the
confines of official government policies -- regardless
of what the yields of their research and expert opinions may actually
be telling them.
What's
even more concerning is that in a recent
study
by the Center for Law and Democracy -- which classifies the strength
and effectiveness of access to information laws in 93 countries,
Canada
ranked an utterly humiliating 55th,
thanks in large part to the bureaucratic
red tape that smothers requests for access to public records.
So
perhaps it is time for us Canadians to wake up and smell the
suppression -- no longer are censorships solely the purview of
tin-pot dictators in far away regimes.
These
seemingly gradual erosions to the freedoms of assembly, expression
and information in Canada are all very real -- just last week,
Parliament actually struck down a bill claiming that "public
science, basic research and the free and open exchange of scientific
information are essential to evidence-based policy-making."
And
I have the sinking suspicion that whichever party is in power, these
rights will continue to decompose unless the citizenry is willing to
vocalise this as a major election issue. After all, even in democracy
new governments seldom willingly return rights and freedoms back to
the people once in office -- power can be just too enticing.
One
day it's the right to spontaneously demonstrate, next it's the right
to wear a mask well doing so, then Internet privacy, scientific
inquiry, public records, and so on as the vice compressing freedom
and civil disobedience slowly tightens on us all.
But
then again, this is Canada. That sort of thing could never happen
here, right?
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