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Disconnected by Design

“Silence is the soil where bad laws grow.”

Photographer: Philipp Katzenberger

Picture this: you’re banned from the internet. Your service provider refuses to reconnect your devices. When you complain, you’re slapped with a $25,000 fine by a government you believed would protect you. Complain again, and it doubles.

Businesses that resist or speak up could face penalties up to $15 million. Their executives could even land in jail. This is the kind of future Canada risks if Bill C-8 becomes law.

The Illusion of Cybersecurity

Bill C-8 carries a harmless name; An Act Respecting Cyber Security, but don’t let that fool you. Behind the title lies a dangerous expansion of government power, one that quietly transforms the internet into a tool of control.

If passed, this bill gives Industry Minister Mélanie Joly sweeping authority to order telecom companies and payment providers to cut off your access to essential services. She could do this without a judge, a warrant, or any public oversight.

The bill has already passed second reading in Parliament. Once committee review ends, a final vote could happen any day.

Spying in Disguise

Bill C-8 authorizes federal agents to collect: your browsing history, location data, financial records, and metadata without a warrant, or your consent. It also forces companies to create “encryption openings,” weakening the same protections that keep your personal data safe from hackers and foreign actors.

Ironically, while the bill increases state surveillance, it does nothing to protect hospitals, schools, or public infrastructure from cyberattacks. Bill C-8 doesn’t secure anything, it controls everything.

The Digital ID Connection

This bill is infrastructure for a national Digital ID system. The government has long been preparing the ground for it but lacked the mechanism to enforce compliance. Bill C-8 provides that tool.

Once it passes, refusing to register, or even hesitating to comply could result in immediate disconnection from digital life; no appeals, no questions asked.

Christine Van Geyn, Litigation Director for the Canadian Constitution Foundation, warned that the government cannot be trusted with such power. “You may think cutting off political dissidents from necessities sounds far-fetched,” she said, “but that’s exactly what happened during the 2022 Freedom Convoy protests in Ottawa.”

Banks froze hundreds of accounts under government orders, without judicial authorization. Protesters lost access to their own money during one of the coldest winters in recent memory.

With Bill C-8, such overreach becomes law.

A Chain Reaction of Control

Bill C-8 forms part of a broader framework that includes:

  • Bill C-9, the Everything is Hateful Bill, redefining speech as “hate” to criminalize dissenting opinions.
  • Bill C-2, the Peeping on Canadians Bill, granting the federal government vast power to collect and centralize private data.

Together, they create a lattice of surveillance and censorship, a system where speech is monitored, movement tracked, and silence enforced.

How Did We Get Here?

The foundation was laid in the Telecommunications Act of 1993. Bill C-8 amends Section 7 to include a new clause:

“(j) to promote the security of the Canadian telecommunications system.”

At first glance, it sounds reasonable, but the follow-up provision, Section 15.1, grants the Governor in Council (the federal Cabinet) the power to prohibit telecom companies from using products, or services provided by “specified persons,” a broad and vague phrase that could apply to anyone, or any entity.

In plain terms, if the government believes a provider, or you, poses a “threat,” it can order disconnection without proof, trial, or transparency.

Why This Matters to You

Freedom isn’t lost in one sweeping motion; it erodes slowly through legislation that sounds sensible. Cybersecurity. Safety. Protection. These are comforting words used to mask control.

Bill C-8 would normalize censorship as security and redefine privacy as privilege. Once digital rights are gone, reclaiming them won’t be easy. You will need permission to access what is already yours.

A Call for Awareness

You don’t need to agree with every protester, or critic to see what’s at stake. This is about power. When the government holds the keys to your digital identity, it holds control over your livelihood, communication, and voice.

That is why Canadians must pay attention, question every clause, and demand transparency before the final vote. Silence is the soil where bad laws grow.

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Written By

In his new role as a reporter and Journalist, Michael can he be described in two words: brilliant, and relentless. Michael Thomas aka Redman was born in Grenada, and at an early age realized his love for music. He began his musical journey as a reggae performer with the street DJs and selectors. After he moved to Toronto in 1989, he started singing with the calypso tents, and in 2008, and 2009 he won the People’s Choice Award and the coveted title of Calypso Monarch. He has taken this same passion, and has begun to focus his attention on doing working within the community.

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