
The CBC isn’t covering the news anymore. It’s manufacturing it.
A recent investigation found that CBC producers used false identities and a shell company to set up interviews for a documentary targeting conservatives — specifically designed to challenge Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada’s first Prime Minister. That’s not journalism. That’s using taxpayer dollars to advance a predetermined narrative.
When News Becomes Propaganda
There’s a clear line between reporting the news and shaping it. CBC crossed it.
They didn’t make a documentary. They constructed a scenario under false pretences — misleading identities, a nonexistent company, a predetermined outcome. The goal wasn’t to inform Canadians. It was to discredit conservatives and reshape how we understand our own history.
An Attack on Canadian History
You don’t have to celebrate Macdonald to respect what he built. Without him, there’s no Confederation. No transcontinental railway. No Canada.
When a Crown corporation uses deception to attack that legacy, it’s not asking hard questions. It’s advancing an ideological agenda on your dime.
Why Are We Still Funding This?
This isn’t left versus right. It’s about accountability.
If CBC is willing to misrepresent itself to get the story it wants, serious questions need to be answered. Who approved this? How high did it go? Where exactly are taxpayer dollars being spent, and for what purpose? Canadians deserve to know.
An audit and a full accounting of how CBC operates should be priorities. CBC took public money and used it to promote a predetermined political outcome. That demands explanation. If they can’t be transparent with the people paying their bills, how can they claim to serve the public interest?
Less talk. More accountability.