Canada’s human-rights commissions assault press freedom anew
This time the commission wants (demands?) every publication in the country, including “media services” websites, be required by law to belong to a national press council that could adjudicate breaches of professional standards and complaints of discrimination.
Chillingly, the council would have the power to order offending media to publish its findings, along with counterarguments from complainants.
And in a bit of verbal legerdemain that would make Big Brother wince, the commission claimed that this would not constitute censorship.