this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2023
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I agree to a large extent! I would add onto that by saying government funding also acts as advertising dollars would, but that because the government has put some value onto transparency and has to be elected, Canadians can have a better chance to identify where the unspoken bias is based on who's got the wallet.
I would also say that because of all their funding and because of their need to establish themselves as a reliable source of news, CBC has to put a ton of effort into reporting on news that many would call 'useful' so that there's more of a benefit of doubt extended to them when they don't report on telecoms.
All that to say "let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater," but the genuinely useful articles and journalistic standards that exist for CBC do also operate in an environment that serves whoever's funding it. They're an excellent starting point for awareness, so I'm happy to see their stuff shared, but I'd never recommend having their word be law on what's "worth" reporting or sometimes even the angle they're taking while they report on it.