“Hate” is in the eye of the beholder. Survey participants were given no guidance on what “hate” means, and sociologist David Haskell says young people are increasingly taught to perceive hate in comments previously considered offensive, but not truly harmful or “hateful.”
“There is lots of evidence coming from current psychological research showing that educational environments are ’training' students to experience a phenomenon that does not exist in objective reality,” Mr. Haskell, an associate professor in the faculty of Liberal Arts at Wilfrid Laurier University, told The Epoch Times via email.
“Those who take part in classes or workshops related to ‘anti-racism’ education or diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) are significantly more likely to claim they can see ‘evidence’ of hate in what others see as innocuous words or deeds,” Mr. Haskell said.
Perception of Harm
The bill would allow people to bring complaints of online “hate speech” to the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. While not every complaint to the tribunal will necessarily result in a fine—up to $50,000—the process of being brought before a tribunal can in itself be onerous.People may also report others to the courts on the basis of a “fear” they may commit hate crimes, including an online “hate propaganda” offence. If the judge finds the fear reasonable, the defendant must adhere to restrictions (such as a curfew and wearing an electronic bracelet) for a year on pain of imprisonment.
Social media companies will also be required to gauge what is “hateful.” They must flag content they believe “foments hatred” and deal with content they have “reasonable grounds to believe posed a risk of significant psychological or physical harm,” according to the bill.
The Online Harms Act would have broad impacts on how hate speech is defined and policed, though its scope goes beyond that. It also targets child exploitation, intimate pictures shared without consent, content related to terrorism, and more.
The StatCan Report
Statistics Canada peppers some definitions of hateful online content throughout the report. It says disinformation, malinformation, and misinformation can all “contain elements or undertones of aggression and can promote or propagate hate.” It says “misinformation,” however, is not intentionally harmful.In 2022, 84 percent of Canadians aged 15 to 24 saw information online that they suspected to be false, the report says.
Seventy-one percent of this age group reported also seeing content that could “incite hate or violence,” compared to the national average of 49 percent. “This type of content can consist of, but is not limited to, terrorist content or violence toward ethnic groups,” the report says.
The survey question used to garner this data does not define or give examples of hate or violence or the type of content in question. It is thus up to the respondent to decide based on perception.
A Statistics Canada spokesperson told The Epoch Times via email that the question posed in the CIUS 2022 included “e.g., terrorist content, violence toward ethnic groups.” But the spokesperson did not reply as of publication to a follow-up question as to why that does not appear in the CIUS 2022 published on the Statistics Canada website.
Statistics Canada did note briefly in the report “the same content can have a different impact on different viewers.”
It said the majority of cyber-related hate crimes reported to police are allegedly committed by youth. Boys aged 12 to 17 were charged or accused in 30 percent of the crimes from 2018 to 2022. In an additional quarter of the crimes, the accused was aged 18 to 34.
So it seems a substantial number of people behind the kind of online content targeted by the Online Harms legislation are themselves children, or young adults.
The last line of the Statistics Canada report says polarization in society is causing online hate to spread.
“The rapid and constant sharing of misinformation and violent and hateful media can polarize individuals and communities and foster a space for hate to spread both online and offline.”
Mr. Trudeau said “social media drivers” and the alternative news sources increasingly available online “prevent people from actually agreeing on a common set of facts.” It undermines legacy media, which “used to project across the country at least a common understanding of things.”
He said that “serious acts should be criminalized, investigated by police, tried in court and punished with jail, not pushed off to new bureaucracy.”