Google Knows Best

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In an op-ed for The New York Times, Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, inserted himself directly into the middle of a heated debate about the line between fighting terrorism’s online reach and internet censorship.

 “It’s our responsibility to demonstrate that stability and free expression go hand in hand,” he writes. “We should build tools to help de-escalate tensions on social media—sort of like spell-checkers, but for hate and harassment.”

The Don Corleone of Climate Change

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If international climate talks really stall, don’t be surprised if there might be an ever-so-slight intervention by Pope Francis.

Cardinal Peter Turkson, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace who helped draft the pope’s June encyclical on global warming, said the pontiff has “deep trust” that negotiators in Paris will get the job done. But just in case they don’t, the pope might possibly send a gentle message, he said.

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Freedom of Speech? Not in Canada.

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A Toronto city councillor called Donald Trump a fascist on Twitter Tuesday and said the Trump International Hotel & Tower in the city’s downtown should change its name.

Ward 22 Coun. Josh Matlow said he was going to write to the owners of the 65-storey luxury hotel and residence asking them to remove the Republic presidential hopeful’s name from the downtown landmark.

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College Students: The New Tyrants

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It is one of William Faulkner’s most quoted lines. “The past is never dead,” he wrote in his novel Requiem for a Nun. “It’s not even past.” In fact, it’s being rewritten all the time for contemporary contexts. But when college students try to erase whole parts of the historical record, as many seem to want to do these days, it’s time to point out the lessons history has to offer about the consequences of such behavior—and how easily zealous righteousness is transformed into tyranny.

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Racial Profiling – The Liberal Way

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The voices of civil libertarians, as well as community and legal activists, were strangely silent last month despite the announcement by Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne that she wants to institutionalize racial profiling by the government itself.

Yes, that’s right. Racial profiling will apparently be a good thing, not a bad thing, when done by the Wynne government.

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