Ottawa bureaucrats worried about lack of social cohesion

border_humper

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Senior federal officials have been looking quietly for ways to bring together Canadians who don't see eye to eye on the economy, immigration and social issues.

With a general election looming, officials prepared to meet last November to brainstorm solutions to the problem of social fragmentation, according to an internal presentation drafted by the Department of Canadian Heritage.
The presentation called on session participants to come up with ideas to make Canadian society more cohesive by reversing the trend toward polarization, building trust in government agencies and fighting the swelling tide of misinformation and disinformation.

The document offered various questions for discussion, including one asking how session participants could "position our advice on strengthening social cohesion in a way that will resonate for the next government, whatever its complexion."

The Canadian Press used the Access to Information Act to obtain the Nov. 19 Canadian Heritage presentation.

Citing three previous meetings of senior government officials since 2019, the document notes that social cohesion has been a subject of "broad and perennial interest" among federal deputy ministers.

Recent elections in other countries saw issues such as affordability, inflation, housing, immigration, racism, sexism, transphobia, diversity and false information become "divisive wedge issues," the presentation says.
It points to evidence of polarization in Canada associated with the emergence of political "echo chambers" online and in personal relationships, as well as discrimination, political bias and the spread of misinformation.
The presentation also suggests, however, that fragmentation in Canada over the last few years "has been less toxic than what has been experienced in like-minded countries."
Still, the document says officials at the November meeting planned to talk about how to ramp up efforts to "engage and 'bring back' groups veering away from democratic norms."
The presentation says an individual's trust in government strongly correlates with their last interaction with government.
"In the thousands of daily instances when somebody files a tax return, applies for a grant, renews a passport or receives a vaccine, we are creating experiences that influence their social attitudes and institutional trust," it says.
The document calls for simple, effective strategies to connect with Canadians and "streamline access to services."
It says public education is essential to countering misinformation and disinformation and calls for measures to improve critical thinking, media literacy and civic engagement.
The presentation also says there's a need to "pre-bunk" emerging falsehoods before they take hold, and to debunk lies through fact-checking.
Other ideas studied by federal officials include developing a national digital media literacy strategy, removing financial incentives that contribute to the spread of false information and introducing labelling requirements for artificially generated material.
The registered charity MediaSmarts has been pushing for a federal digital media literacy strategy for more than a decade, said Matthew Johnson, the organization's director of education.
"So it was certainly gratifying to see it mentioned in this document," he told The Canadian Press.

A national strategy would open the door to stable funding for civil society organizations like MediaSmarts, which conducts research, creates educational resources and tries to advance digital media literacy, Johnson said.

"We simply don't have the data that we need to be making decisions about digital media literacy policy," he said. "We're one of the only countries that does not have any kind of baseline of how media-literate our citizens are, either young people or adults."

The November presentation also suggests fighting fragmentation by bringing together people from different levels of government and civil society to exchange promising practices and promote a "better understanding of Canada's diverse foundations and social fabric."

But senior federal officials who discussed social divisions at a meeting last September acknowledged that government itself might be part of the problem.

The presentation says the officials recognized "there is a tension in having the public sector intervene when distrust in public institutions is on the rise."

Canadian Heritage did not answer questions submitted about the November meeting or say whether any of the ideas under consideration would be adopted.
They’ll have to involuntarily MAiD me to get me out of this echo chamber.
 
Upvote 32
But senior federal officials who discussed social divisions at a meeting last September acknowledged that government itself might be part of the problem
:pfacepalmclown
 
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Always is.
 
no-shit-sherlock.gif
 
Racism is wrong unless we do it. My body my choice applies to infanticide and suicide but not your choice of prophylactic. Enable drug addiction while ignoring the societal harm the addicts cause.

I am sure they will simply blame conservatives for not compromising and double down on all of it with a side helping of transexuals.
 
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When the trucker protest was going on in Ottawa and not a single politician came out to talk to them. Makes it plenty clear how they perceive Canadians.
 
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@border_humper

He did the same thing with James Topp; arrived with a camera crew after Topp got to Ottawa and went straight to the front of the Column where a reporter would toss planned questions at him. Hardly even acknowledge Topp.

It was pretty cringe especially since Topp had even reached out to all MPs to meet him at a venue to go over his concerns and PP never showed up.
 
Fuck social cohesion and fuck Canada. Why the hell would I want to be a part of this ugly, atomized, cultureless, open air prison / generic economic zone? Leave me the fuck alone!
 
The government can't do three fucking simple things: stop stealing my cash, don't start any damn wars, and just leave me the hell alone. It's nuts they screw this up.
 
It appears you have missed the Canadian, completely non-bias, press release. Allow me to assist in clarifying:

stop stealing
my cash
Its not your cash, it's the governments cash that you stole by working, now give it back. Once you return it, it will go to its rightful owner, a new Canadian or Govt official who didn't acquire it by stealing it while working.
don't start any damn wars
Those aren't wars, they are refugee migratory opportunity zones and you're a bigot of you don't accept them.

just leave me the hell alone

You're the culprit in their land... You need to leave them alone and stop taunting them.


See? SEE?


:pg
 


They’ll have to involuntarily MAiD me to get me out of this echo chamber.
border_humperUnfortunately the damage has already been done and as I predict its going to be an uphill struggle to win over the minds who do not trust the government. This cannot be accomplished via direct control but rather through financial incentives and a desire to actually turn Canada around. If this is done properly and without a globalist iron fist they stand a decent chance of renewing faith.

Trust is earned not given.
 
according to an internal presentation drafted by the Department of Canadian Heritage. The presentation called on session participants to come up with ideas to make Canadian society more cohesive by reversing the trend toward polarization, building trust in government agencies and fighting the swelling tide of misinformation and disinformation.
Government Agencies fighting to control the approved narrative.
It says public education is essential to countering misinformation and disinformation and calls for measures to improve critical thinking, media literacy and civic engagement.
The presentation also says there's a need to "pre-bunk" emerging falsehoods before they take hold, and to debunk lies through fact-checking.
Other ideas studied by federal officials include developing a national digital media literacy strategy, removing financial incentives that contribute to the spread of false information and introducing labelling requirements for artificially generated material.
Pre-Bunk? Misinformation, Disinformation, Media literacy. All code for GOVERNMENT CONTROLLED NARRATIVE.
The registered charity MediaSmarts has been pushing for a federal digital media literacy strategy for more than a decade
This kind of shit is the problem. Piggy's Palace Good Times Society was a charity also.
The Government is not the arbiter of truth. They are purveyors of Disinformation and Malinformation. The fact that they host private meetings to find ways to target the public with more lies is a huge problem. Open transparency is the only way to gain trust in the public.

The army of "fact checkers" deployed during Covid just further proved that Government can't be trusted. Every single narrative they pushed was lies, disinfo and malinfo. Of which they will never be held accountable. The CAF even targeted the public with Afghanistan style war Psyop War tactics(openly admitted).

The trust is beyond broken and can never be repaired.
 
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After the way the government behaved "mask off" during covid, there's no going back. The genie is out of the bottle and I'm tired of trying/pretending. I'm tired of all my tax contributions used to attack my own people with propaganda and fund my replacement with foreigners. Now I have half a mind to just do the bare minimum to get by until this country is ready to change for the better.
 
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