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Kill the Messengers

Stephen Harper's Assault on Your Right to Know

ebook
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available

Ottawa has become a place where the nation's business is done in secret, and access to information?the lifeblood of democracy in Canada?is under attak.

It's being lost to an army of lobbyists and public-relations flacks who help set the political agenda and decide what you get to know. It's losing its struggle against a prime minister and a government that continue to delegitimize the media's role in the political system. The public's right to know has been undermined by a government that effectively killed Statistics Canada, fired hundreds of scientists and statisticians, gutted Library and Archives Canada and turned freedom of information rules into a joke. Facts, it would seem, are no longer important.

In Kill the Messengers: Stephen Harper's Assault on Your Right to Know, Mark Bourrie exposes how trends have conspired to simultaneously silence the Canadian media and elect an anti-intellectual government determined to conduct business in private. Drawing evidence from multiple cases and examples, Bourrie demonstrates how budget cuts have been used to suppress the collection of facts that embarrass the government's position or undermine its ideologically based decision-making. Perhaps most importantly, Bourrie gives advice on how to take back your right to be informed and to be heard.

Kill the Messengers is not just a collection of evidence bemoaning the current state of the Canadian media, it is a call to arms for informed citizens to become active participants in the democratic process. It is a book all Canadians are entitled to read?and now, they'll get the chance.

This paperback edition of the national bestseller has been updated and features a new chapter on the Canadian Anti-Terrorism Bill.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 2, 2015
      Stephen Harper does not believe in democracy. So argues author Bourrie (Fighting Words: Canada's Best War Reporting) a historian and journalist who pulls no punches in this assault on the seemingly milk-and-water Canadian prime minister. Bourrie opens his book by associating Harper with past anti-democratic stalwarts such as the guillotine-felled King Charles I of England and the Southern Confederacy, which would have perpetuated slavery, had it not lost the American Civil War. Those are not flattering historical bedfellows, but according to Bourrie, these associations fit because Harper considers politics to be "an insider game, one with no place for the public" or anyone who might question his vision of Canada as a resource-exploiting, big-stick-carrying, Arctic-conquering, free-market worshipping super power. In thirteen searing chapters, Bourrie details the Harper government's politics-as-war crusade to "to kill many messengers" by blocking media inquiries, gagging watchdogs (especially climate scientists), shuttering archives and laboratories, and ramping up conservative propaganda â all in the service of relegating politics to well-connected insiders. How readers feel about Bourrie's book will no doubt hinge on their personal politics, but he certainly makes some valid points in this razor-witted, accessible account that should interest anyone who cares about Canada's future.

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  • English

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