The CBC has been disabling comments on their website for years for any articles relating to Indigenous issues because their identity politics and slanted reporting gets called out constantly. But they do it under the guise of "racism".
Probably the most famous example was the murder trial of Gerald Stanley in 2018, a white Saskatchewan farmer who shot a Native man, Colton Bushie, who was day drunk and trespassing on Stanley's rural property with two of his other friends, crashed his car, tried to steal Stanley's ATV and brought a non-functioning rifle in the front seat of his car. All while having got shitfaced day drunk that morning and trying to rob another nearby farm before entering Stanley's property.
The CBC tried to frame the narrative as "white farmer shoots young Native man whose car broke down and came to ask for help" long after the facts came out and Boushie's own drunk partners in crime admitted to their actions and intentions.
The CBC has been disabling comments on their website for years for any articles relating to Indigenous issues because their identity politics and slanted reporting gets called out constantly. But they do it under the guise of "racism".
Probably the most famous example was the murder trial of Gerald Stanley in 2018, a white Saskatchewan farmer who shot a Native man, Colton Bushie, who was day drunk and trespassing on Stanley's rural property with two of his other friends, crashed his car, tried to steal Stanley's ATV and brought a non-functioning rifle in the front seat of his car. All while having got shitfaced day drunk that morning and trying to rob another nearby farm before entering Stanley's property.
The CBC tried to frame the narrative as "white farmer shoots young Native man whose car broke down and came to ask for help" long after the facts came out and Boushie's own drunk partners in crime admitted to their actions and intentions.
Where's that meme of throwing shit over a wall?
https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/000/960/143/d7a.jpg
They just said it's because "especially women" are "fragile and in need of attention".
The CBC once asked the audience for feedback on a story and then banned users who provided negative feedback.
"Freedom of speech isn't freedom from responses" or something idk I'm not an authoritarian.
Extremely applicable meme from months ago:
https://i.pinimg.com/564x/a3/0d/d2/a30dd2b9b2a69052c45584b0ac56dffc.jpg