Former employees say the nature magazine became a paid mouthpiece for oil companies and others.
Christie Blatchford is certainly entitled to her own opinion. But in the case of Steph Guthrie’s trial, she frequently presents her opinions as objective realities, and couches them in rhetoric that any reasonable person would understand could incite a violent reaction. Her most recent column reflects both of these tropes and is both inaccurate and dangerous.
Bill C51 is barely a month old and is already facing its first Charter challenge.
The Canadian Civil Liberties Association and the organization Canadian Journalists for Free Expression filed an application in Ontario’s Superior Court today, July 21, to challenge the constitutionality of the legislation, officially called the Antiterrorism Act of 2015.
Thomas Mulcair shocked politicos recently by sharpening the NDP’s stance on a tender political issue, telling a Quebec-based news magazine in clear, unambiguous terms that he opposes the Energy East pipeline.
Except he didn’t.
“There is much to do,” says EIC Walmsley
Here’s a list of women who’ve chosen to leave editorial positions at the Globe and Mail in the last three years.
CANADALAND has obtained from Paul Watson the full audio of the meeting with Editor in Chief Michael Cook and Executive Editor Paul Woods which prompted his resignation, with permission to post an excerpt. It pertains directly to The Star’s official comments on the story.
Here’s a list of men who’ve chosen to leave editorial positions at the Globe and Mail in the last three years.
Veteran photojournalist and reporter Paul Watson has resigned from the Toronto Star.
The Globe and Mail has a problem with women. The problem is, women keep quitting.