And there you have it. The amendment to Bill C-10 that is covered below was lobbied for by the hateful, divisive religious group Canada Family Action Coalition. "The Canada Family Action Coalition is an evangelical group that seeks to have what it calls "Judeo-Christian moral principles" restored in Canada." And the president of the group is, of course, one of those guys who condemns films without watching them. But I believe this allows me to rest my case when it comes to; the Conservatives trying to be more American, the suspicion that religious doctrine may be used to vet art, and that censorship of non-conservative views is the goal...not "public interest"...whatever that is to Harper.
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The Conservatives have, in the style of America, hid an amendment inside the large Bill C-10 that was already passed in the House of Commons. This amendment would give the federal Heritage Department the power to deny funding for films and TV shows it considers offensive even if federal agencies such as Telefilm and the Canadian Television Fund have invested in the production. Representatives from the Heritage and Justice departments would determine which productions are unsuitable and therefore ineligible for tax cuts.
David Cronenberg, the Canadian director behind the critically acclaimed Eastern Promises, said the proposed plan doesn't belong in Canada.
"It sounds like something they do in Beijing," he told CBC News. "You have a panel of people working behind closed doors who are not monitored and they form their own layer of censorship."
Cronenberg says Canadians have a reputation for making edgy dark movies that go places other filmmakers wouldn't venture.
This new panel could quash that kind of creativity, he said.
Stephen Waddell, national executive director of the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists, the actors union, said it seems the government wants to set up a form of "morality police."Every little step this Harper government takes towards emulating their hero, Prez Bush, makes me increasingly nervous because the Liberals can't get their act together to be a credible opposition so this whole damn country might end up as America-lite if we're not careful. The response from the government was this:
"The government is overstepping its bounds and interfering in an arms-length process," Waddell said in a statement released Thursday. "Withholding public funding for film and television productions it deems offensive is a dangerous direction for this government that smacks of censorship."
Waddell said he wonders whether the standards to be applied would be representative of a modern Canadian society or what he calls a "fundamentalist perspective" borrowed from the United States.
Annette Gibbons, associate director general at Heritage Canada, said the changes are only slight alterations to current guidelines.And who said that this government department is at all an authority on these issues? By what measure are they making their decisions? Which religious yardstick can we expect them to apply? How are they even defining the parameters of those categories? How slight can the alterations be if they require an amendment to a Bill and the Income Tax Act?
"It's our responsibility to ensure that public funds are not invested in certain types of material, such as hate propaganda, excessively violent material, or pornography," she said.
Does this inching towards censorship make anyone else nervous? I thought that in Canada we were educated enough to interpret and assign value to what we see and hear without the government deciding in advance for us.