National Post

Climate: The Movie - Timely as Carbon Tax and Net Zero Rebellion Escalates says Friends of Science Society

Retrieved on: 
Friday, March 22, 2024

CALGARY, AB, March 21, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Martin Durkin's "Climate: The Movie – The Cold Truth" features interviews with leading scientists like Steve Koonin, William Happer, Richard Lindzen, John Clauser, and Nir Shaviv who explain that fears of a climate emergency are unwarranted, and that carbon dioxide is not the main driver of climate change (thus carbon taxes are a useless policy). Far from facing a global warming problem, the documentary shows we are in a cold period of time.

Key Points: 
  • "Climate: The Movie" is timely, as seven premiers and seventy percent of Canadians call for a pause in the upcoming carbon tax hike to $80/t, due April 1st, says Friends of Science Society.
  • Far from facing a global warming problem, the documentary shows we are in a cold period of time.
  • The claim is that you get more "climate money" in return for a rising carbon tax, a notion disputed by Friends of Science Society in their 2019 video " The Roots of Global Warming ."
  • For people seeking more scientific information, Friends of Science Society has a number of full-length science presentations by many of the presenters featured in "Climate: The Movie" listed on their website under "Library" >" Past Events ."

Taboola Announces New, Exclusive Deal with Postmedia to Increase User Engagement and Monetization Opportunities Across 15 Canadian Digital Properties Including National Post and Financial Post

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 16, 2024

This announcement comes after recent news that Taboola now powers native recommendations for Yahoo’s premier digital properties in Canada.

Key Points: 
  • This announcement comes after recent news that Taboola now powers native recommendations for Yahoo’s premier digital properties in Canada.
  • Under the agreement, Postmedia will utilize Taboola’s suite of products to grow its audience, optimize user engagement, and drive revenue.
  • Taboola will be implemented into various Postmedia sites including National Post, Financial Post, Vancouver Sun, and Toronto Sun, among others.
  • “We’re proud to welcome Postmedia as a partner and we’re looking forward to seeing how our offerings can provide value to their readers.”

Campus tensions and the Mideast crisis: Will Ontario and Alberta's ‘Chicago Principles’ on university free expression stand?

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, November 8, 2023

Nonetheless, if there’s a place in society where the high ground on free expression should be consistently held, surely it’s on university campuses.

Key Points: 
  • Nonetheless, if there’s a place in society where the high ground on free expression should be consistently held, surely it’s on university campuses.
  • Read more:
    Defending space for free discussion, empathy and tolerance on campus is a challenge during Israel-Hamas war

Conservative campaign promises

  • When majority Conservative governments came to power in Ontario in 2018 and Alberta in 2019, they quickly implemented campaign promises to compel post-secondary institutions to create or update their free expression policies.
  • These policy shifts arose in response to the perception of a “crisis” of free expression at universities that has gained momentum over the past decade.

‘Chicago Principles’ and free expression


Alberta instructed post-secondary institutions to endorse “the Chicago Principles,” a policy template with origins at the University of Chicago, and Ontario told post-secondary institutions to consult the Chicago Principles in creating or updating now-required policies. Key pillars of the Chicago Principles are:
It’s up to the university community — not the administration — to make judgments about the merits of campus expression.
The proper response to problematic expression is argument rather than censorship. In the words of the report that spawned these principles: “The university’s fundamental commitment is to the principle that debate or deliberation may not be suppressed because the ideas put forth are thought by some or even by most members of the university community to be offensive, unwise, immoral or wrong-headed.”
Universities ought not “shield individuals from ideas and opinions they find unwelcome, disagreeable or even deeply offensive.”

Widest possible latitude for expression

  • Yes, but you should still call them out

    The principles envision the widest latitude possible for campus expression, subject only to narrow time, place and manner restrictions (to ensure the proper functioning of the university) and any applicable legal prohibitions (that is, criminal hate speech and anti-discrimination legislation).

  • The Chicago Principles are relatively uncontroversial for an academic environment, even if they reflect American laws that are much more tolerant of harmful expression.
  • Furthermore, most expression that sparks campus controversy exists in a grey area between the controversial and the potentially discriminatory.

Challenges responding at universities

  • Following Hamas’s attack on Israeli civilians and Israel’s siege of Gaza, university administrations have issued statements condemning discriminatory forms of expression and intimidation.
  • In response, some faculty and students have questioned administrations and are accusing them of bias and silencing dissent.

Disagreement on expressive harms

  • Within academic communities, there is intense disagreement about which forms of expressive harms ought to result in expressive restrictions.
  • To complicate matters further, universities have significant discretion in their decision-making in the context of expressive restrictions.

Legal remedies, questions of university mission

  • Universities can exercise their additional discretion and restrict expression if they believe it compromises their mission (facilitating an inhospitable environment) or rely solely upon the reasonable limits established by Canadian jurisprudence.
  • Given redoubled efforts to protect expression in Ontario and Alberta, universities arguably bear the burden of showing that any expression they restrict at least appears to cross a legal threshold.

Conservatives embracing restrictions?

  • However, the dilemma for some conservative politicians, parties and pundits who have insisted before now that free expression is imperilled on campus is more daunting.
  • Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s government recently took the extraordinary step of barring Sarah Jama, an NDP member of the Ontario legislature, from speaking in the legislature in response to her criticisms of Israel.

Will calls for censorship grow?


With no sign of campus unrest relenting, calls for censorship may grow. In theory, compelling universities to conform to the Chicago Principles means they bear a greater obligation to protect expression that is within the bounds of law. But given the backlash and legitimate concern about discrimination and hate, how universities will navigate this fraught time is far from certain.
Dax D'Orazio receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. He is affiliated with the Centre for Constitutional Studies and Centre for Free Expression.

We fact-checked residential school denialists and debunked their 'mass grave hoax' theory

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Recently a politician from a village in Prince Edward Island displayed an offensive sign on his property in which he proclaimed there is a “mass grave hoax” regarding the former Indian Residential Schools in Canada.

Key Points: 
  • Recently a politician from a village in Prince Edward Island displayed an offensive sign on his property in which he proclaimed there is a “mass grave hoax” regarding the former Indian Residential Schools in Canada.
  • Although many have called for him to resign, he is just one of many people who subscribe to this false theory.
  • A hoax is an act intended to trick people into believing something that isn’t true.

There is no media conspiracy

    • As two settler academic researchers, we decided to investigate the claims of a media conspiracy and fact-check them against evidence.
    • To find out, we analyzed 386 news articles across five Canadian media outlets (CBC, National Post, the Globe and Mail, Toronto Star and The Canadian Press) released between May 27 and Oct. 15, 2021.

‘Preliminary findings’ of ‘unmarked burials’

    • A National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation Memorial Register has to date confirmed the deaths of more than 4,000 Indigenous children associated with residential schools.
    • But the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) noted its register of missing children was incomplete, partly due to a large volume of yet-to-be-examined and destroyed records.

Countering harmful misinformation

    • In the two years since, a number of commentators, priests and politicians, including the P.E.I councillor with his sign, have downplayed the harms of residential schooling — or questioned the validity, gravity and significance of the the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation’s announcement.
    • We hope that our research can contribute to this work and that our report helps to debunk the “mass grave hoax” narrative specifically.

Cherry-picked ‘evidence’

    • Myths, however, are not pure fiction; they often contain a kernel of truth that is exaggerated or misrepresented.
    • This selective representation of evidence is commonly referred to as cherry-picking, and it’s easy to see how those spreading the “mass grave hoax” narrative rely on cherry-picked evidence.
    • By September, denialists were misrepresenting the extent of media errors to push the conspiratorial “mass grave hoax” narrative online.
    • And we hope our report sparks a national conversation about how important language is when covering this issue.

Challenging Residential School denialism

    • According to Daniel Heath Justice and Sean Carleton (one of the authors of this story), residential school denialism is not the denial of the residential school system’s existence.
    • Read more:
      Truth before reconciliation: 8 ways to identify and confront Residential School denialism

      Residential school denialism, like climate change denialism or science denialism, cherry-picks evidence to fit a conspiratorial counter-narrative.

Truth before reconciliation

    • This is the strategy of disempowering and discrediting residential school denialism advocated by former TRC Chair Murray Sinclair.
    • We hope others will join us in this type of research to help Canadians learn how to identify and confront residential school denialism and support meaningful reconciliation.
    • As the Truth and Reconciliation Commission said in its final report, without truth there can be no genuine reconciliation.

Amnesty International Canada announces 2022/2023 Media Awards winners

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, September 28, 2023

Short-Form Video: “You can say ‘Hockey is for everyone.’ Or you can join the fight to ensure that’s true,” Donnovan Bennett, with cinematography by David Zelikovitz, Sportsnet

Key Points: 
  • Short-Form Video: “You can say ‘Hockey is for everyone.’ Or you can join the fight to ensure that’s true,” Donnovan Bennett, with cinematography by David Zelikovitz, Sportsnet
    “On behalf of Amnesty International Canada, congratulations to the winners on your impressive achievements.
  • Thank you for your commitment to telling honest, eye-opening, nuanced stories about people defending human rights,” said Ketty Nivyabandi, Secretary General of Amnesty International Canada’s English-speaking section.
  • We desperately need more of it today to make informed and principled decisions about our future.”
    The 2022/2023 Amnesty International Canada Media Awards will be handed out at a private, in-person ceremony on October 19.
  • Emceeing the event will be trailblazing journalist, educator, and media personality Ginella Massa .

Why a Toronto high school principal's death is wrongly linked to anti-racist training

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, August 3, 2023

Although the reasons for suicide are complex, his family and lawyer released a statement linking his death to an anti-racism workshop he had attended.

Key Points: 
  • Although the reasons for suicide are complex, his family and lawyer released a statement linking his death to an anti-racism workshop he had attended.
  • Those ardently opposed to “woke politics” are now using Bilkszto’s tragic death to decry anti-racism and equity work.
  • The minister’s response as well as those by right-wing news media have helped to fuel a narrative that anti-racism and equity work is to blame.

Anti-racism training denigrated by news media

    • The Daily Mail described the investigation into Bilkszto’s death as one that will look into “whether the obsession with woke policies may have contributed” to his death.
    • The National Post wrote: “It’s no coincidence that Bilkszto came out humiliated” since “the DEI industry is designed to sell guilt and shame and perpetuate a culture of victimhood.” The Toronto Sun has suggested there is need to look at “the general issue of diversity, equity and inclusion training” concluding “reform may be sorely needed.”

Equity work disrupts ‘safe spaces’

    • It begins with the acknowledgement of both historical and contemporary inequities and the premise that such work is needed to bring about equity.
    • Even at its mildest, equity work involves taking some people outside of their comfort zone.
    • But equity work at its most meaningful involves getting people to recognize that their comfort zone has depended on other people’s silence and marginalization.
    • Yet equity work is often conducted within the context of a market-based relationship, where client priorities dictate the boundaries of change and disruptiveness.

The unspeakability of racism

    • Many developed Equity, Diversity & Inclusion (EDI) policies, and several demonstrated a willingness to have difficult conversations on racism.
    • Since then, the perceived urgency of this equity work has been steadily waning, yet the resistance to this work has remained forceful.
    • Equity studies scholar Sheila Dawn Gill offered the term “unspeakability of racism” to describe the barriers to naming racism within Canadian spaces.

New West Public Affairs launches dedicated communications unit

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, July 5, 2023

CALGARY, Alberta, July 05, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --  New West Public Affairs today announced it is launching a dedicated communications offering designed to help clients across the country tell their stories to audiences that reach beyond the halls of government.

Key Points: 
  • CALGARY, Alberta, July 05, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --  New West Public Affairs today announced it is launching a dedicated communications offering designed to help clients across the country tell their stories to audiences that reach beyond the halls of government.
  • From message development and strategic communications planning to media relations and digital communications, New West is now poised to offer clients a full suite of communications services that will raise profiles, capture imaginations and influence decisionmakers.
  • “We are thrilled to launch this new service offering and provide even more value for New West clients,” said Monte Solberg, CEO of New West Public Affairs.
  • Rounding out the powerhouse communications team is Alysha Mohamed, Communications Consultant for New West.

Consumer Banks Unable to Slow Technology Talent Drain Despite Substantial Efforts in Recruitment, Reveals Josh Bersin Company Research

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, June 15, 2023

Of the 7,300 tech roles that consumer banks attracted from tech companies, a staggering 7,100 technologists migrated to the technology industry.

Key Points: 
  • Of the 7,300 tech roles that consumer banks attracted from tech companies, a staggering 7,100 technologists migrated to the technology industry.
  • Stella Ioannidou, The Josh Bersin Company Research Director, said:
    "Technology professionals are now as important to banks as finance experts.
  • Janet Mertens, The Josh Bersin Company Senior Vice President of Research, said:
    "The data clearly shows that recruitment alone will not solve this problem.
  • Josh Bersin, global HR research analyst and CEO of The Josh Bersin Company, said:
    "Technology workers are very savvy about 'salary-boosting jobs' that let them work on advanced technology.

CJF Black Journalism Fellows Announced

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, May 2, 2023

TORONTO, May 2, 2023 /CNW/ - The Canadian Journalism Foundation (CJF) is proud to announce Leïla Ahouman, Serena Lopez, Mzwandile Poncana, Rahma Shafi and Daniel Reale-Chin as recipients of the Black Journalism Fellowship Program , in partnership with CBC/Radio-Canada, CTV News, The Globe and Mail and the Investigative Journalism Bureau (IJB).

Key Points: 
  • TORONTO, May 2, 2023 /CNW/ - The Canadian Journalism Foundation (CJF) is proud to announce Leïla Ahouman, Serena Lopez, Mzwandile Poncana, Rahma Shafi and Daniel Reale-Chin as recipients of the Black Journalism Fellowship Program , in partnership with CBC/Radio-Canada, CTV News, The Globe and Mail and the Investigative Journalism Bureau (IJB).
  • The fellowship program aims to amplify Black voices, improve coverage of Black issues in the news and cultivate future Black media leaders.
  • Serena Lopez, CJF-CTV News Black Journalism Fellowship;
    Rahma Shafi, CJF-CBC/Radio-Canada Black Women's Journalism Fellowship; and
    Daniel Reale-Chin, inaugural CJF-Globe and Mail Black Journalism Fellowship.
  • Thanks to the generous support of our sponsors:
    lululemon for the CJF-CBC/Radio-Canada Black Journalism Fellowship;
    Aritzia for the CJF-CBC/Radio-Canada Black Women's Journalism Fellowship;
    BMO Financial Group for the CJF-CTV News Black Journalism Fellowship; and
    Unifor and Gerry Gotfrit for the CJF-IJB Black Investigative Journalism Fellowship.

The David Foster Foundation launches 'Week of Giving' with star-studded support to raise awareness of the need for registered organ donors

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Until December 18, a special video announcement will be posted daily on the David Foster Foundation Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts by special celebrities and guests that are long-time supporters of the David Foster Foundation.

Key Points: 
  • Until December 18, a special video announcement will be posted daily on the David Foster Foundation Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts by special celebrities and guests that are long-time supporters of the David Foster Foundation.
  • "I am always happy to help the David Foster Foundation with this important cause," added Melissa Peterman, ambassador andlong-timesupporter of The David Foster Foundation.
  • The David Foster Foundation provides financial assistance to families of children for all non-medical expenses while their child is going through the major organ transplant process.
  • Cision is the exclusive newswire distributor of The David Foster Foundation.