A Poem: ‘Swedish Meatballs’

 

Bovine Respiratory Disease;

the most common illness of beef cattle in the

world.

 

Calves lose appetite;

develop fever;

experience breathing difficulties.

 

In some feedlots,

more than half will die.

 

Luckily, antibiotics help.

A veterinarian can advise on the right

treatment.

 

IKEA says its meatballs are free of

antibiotics.

 

If it means

animals were treated but

no drug residues were left at the time of

slaughter,

how is that different than any other

meat?

 

If it means

animals were never given these

medications,

what did they do

when a cow got

sick?

 

 

By Shai Ben-Shalom

Review: The Day The Music Died

Subsidized media today are so self-pitying it is no surprise they missed the biggest scoop of their lives, the death of subsidized media. Spy the columns and TV punditry and you encounter the same excuses. It was Russian bots or internet poaching of Chevrolet dealer ads or misinformation or Instagram micro-shocks or inflation. It was always someone else’s fault.

Tara Henley, podcaster and former CBC producer, gets the answers. “If media want to restore public trust, we have to examine our own actions,” she writes. “Unpacking our role is essential for making sense of the crisis in media.”

“Most people do not distrust the media for vague, rote reasons but instead for achingly specific ones,” writes Henley. “Indeed, they frequently cite the specific wording in the specific stories that they believe falls short.”

Canadians do not expect infallibility. They expect hard work and honesty. It is not too much to ask. The Trust Spiral notes the descent of media under withering scrutiny blew wide open in the pandemic, an “overheated moment.”

Carefully, methodically, citing sources, Henley builds her case in this forensic autopsy of what killed newsrooms. The result is excellent. She even pinpoints the date.

“During Covid, narrative conformity tended to be more pronounced here,” writes Henley. “As a result, vaccine mandates rolled out without any serious press scrutiny, contributing to one of the biggest media mistakes in Canada in recent years. That debacle involved the 2022 Freedom Convoy.”

Media were already on the federal payroll under a $595 million subsidy scheme. Media treatment of protestors was already prescribed by Justin Trudeau in his 2021 campaign: “These are extremists who don’t believe in science,” he said. “They are often misogynists, also often racists.”

Henley chronicles the result. “There was a feeling among the press corps that the story was uniquely distasteful, and that any alternative conclusions about the truckers were basically boorish,” she writes. “This dynamic was ultimately self-reinforcing. Those outside the media may not comprehend how subtle and insidious such a dynamic can be in enforcing ideological uniformity.”

Proof of this was made plain in a March 9, 2022 Carleton University symposium, “Journalism Under Siege,” where a panel of subsidized reporters recounted their Freedom Convoy experiences. Luckily for historians and the public, it can still be found on YouTube.

Panelist Justin Ling, a Toronto Star freelancer who falsely claimed protestors were armed with shotguns, spoke to the School of Journalism. “Most of what I do is follow misinformation, follow conspiracy theories, follow extremist groups, and all the ones I’ve been looking at, and a few I hadn’t even heard of, were getting together, were all getting on the same page, and were saying, ‘It’s time to go to Ottawa,’” he said.

Ling went on. “These are individuals who for two years now have been hearing propaganda that says masks don’t work, Covid-19 is not as serious as they tell you, the government is using this to restrict our civil liberties and perhaps enact a permanent sort of lockdown, and then later that Covid-19 vaccines are dangerous and ineffective and killing people in scores,” he said. “And they’re getting this information from a totally alternative press. Not just an ‘independent’ press, but a press that exists in a totally alternate reality, one where they get to make up their own facts.”

Problem: The Public Health Agency of Canada itself stated “the effectiveness of the use of non-medical masks has not been well demonstrated.” It assured Canadians that Covid infection rates could be kept to 10 percent, and endorsed a $75 million Vaccine Injury Support Program for Canadians killed and injured by Covid shots. The “civil liberties” question? That was settled in the protestors’ favour by the Federal Court of Appeal last January 16.

The Trust Spiral drives the nail in the coffin. “The chasm between reporters and the people they cover predictably has a negative impact on the quality of coverage, and on public trust,” writes Henley. “But it also has a more subtle and insidious effect: It discourages journalists from challenging those in power. And this, in turn, leads to further failures.”

“A segment of the public now regularly espouses the idea that the Canadian media is a ‘mouthpiece’ for the Prime Minister’s Office, an accusation that Lana Payne, national president for Unifor, Canada’s largest private sector union, has said her members in the media now face,” writes Henley. “It’s a criticism all too familiar to many journalists. ‘The first thing any idiot on Twitter says is, ‘Oh, I guess you’re waiting for your paycheque from the government,’” the Globe & Mail newspaper columnist Andrew Coyne told me. ‘Now obviously, that’s loony and cheap. But it feeds that perception – and to some extent it’s a reality.’”

By Tom Korski

The Trust Spiral: Why The Media Needs Objectivity, by Tara Henley; Polity Press; 128 pages; ISBNM 9781-5095-70935; $17.99

Carney Fund Costs $750M/yr

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s “sovereign wealth fund” will cost taxpayers $750 million a year in debt interest charges, finance department figures show. The estimate yesterday followed criticism the $25 billion Canada Strong Fund was not a savings account: “It’s actually a debt fund.”

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Cannot Confirm Hajdu Story

Labour department managers yesterday could not corroborate Minister Patty Hajdu’s story that a medical emergency justified quashing a legal 2025 strike by Air Canada flight attendants. Hajdu denied making it up though Access To Information records showed Air Canada’s worry was over lost tourism fares, not life-saving organ transplants: “Was it actually true?”

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Charity Feeds 1 In 10 In GTA

The equivalent of a tenth of Greater Toronto Area residents now eat at a food bank, the CEO of the city’s Daily Bread Food Bank yesterday testified at the Commons finance committee. Many recipients work full time, he said: “Staggering.”

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‘Goodness’ No Excuse: Judge

Being a “good person” does not excuse a taxpayer from a justifiable audit, says a Tax Court judge. The remarks came in the latest appeals by participants in what the Canada Revenue called one of the largest tax shelter schemes in the country: “They simply made the same stale arguments.”

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Shoplifting Not Petty Theft

Shoplifting has become a flashpoint for public disorder and organized crime that is costing consumers billions, Conservative MP Chak Au (Richmond Centre-Marpole, B.C.) yesterday told the Commons public safety committee. “Shoplifting has become a national crisis,” he said.

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Senate Concealed Protest Mail

The Senate concealed hundreds of thousands of postcards mailed by Canadians opposed to a cabinet bill, the chair of the budget committee confirmed yesterday. Senator Tony Loffreda (Que.), a Liberal appointee, denied any trickery: “This decision was not made to silence anyone.”

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Gangs Now In Fishery: RCMP

Organized crime is targeting the West Coast fishery, a former RCMP deputy commissioner has told the Senate fisheries committee. Senators were urged to press for mandatory disclosure of companies buying lucrative quotas in the crab fishery: “Organized crime is not a distant or hypothetical concern.”

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Ford Had Hiccups, Too: Feds

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says the Model T Ford was a start-up failure, proving success with cabinet’s electric vehicle policy will take time. A spokesperson later explained Champagne was tired and meant the Tesla Model S, not the bestselling Model T: “It was a misspeak.”

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Bye To Half-Empty Commons

Liberal MP Steven Guilbeault (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, Que.) yesterday bid farewell to a half-empty House of Commons, confirming he will resign this summer. Guilbeault sat quietly as one Conservative MP faulted him for environmental policies that “caused so much hardship for so many families across this country.”

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More ‘Buy Canadian’ Waivers

Federal managers yesterday confirmed Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Buy Canadian policy benefits 100 percent foreign-owned corporations with storefront operations in Canada but couldn’t say if a company hiring temporary foreign workers would qualify. Carney announced the policy last September 5 on a promise to “build Canada strong.”

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Bank Warns On Jobless Youth

A Bank of Canada executive yesterday blamed immigration in part for high youth unemployment rates. Nicolas Vincent, external Deputy Governor, said young jobseekers face difficulties not seen in a generation: “Their contribution to the rise in overall long-term unemployment exceeds what we saw during the recession in the early 1990s.”

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Defends Indigenous Naming

Federal boundary commissioners renamed several ridings with Indigenous references to promote reconciliation, one participant yesterday told the House affairs committee. A cabinet bill currently before the committee would delete Indigenous names given two ridings: “Indigenous place names are already deeply embedded in Canadian political geography even if we do not always stop to notice: Mississauga, Skeena, Nanaimo, Temiscaming.”

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