Thank you.
I thank the witness for coming to present to us today.
I have two broad questions. The first question concerns whether or not the B.C. Civil Liberties Association believes there should be more restrictions on free expression with respect to publicly owned airwaves, like radio or television, compared with private media like films or books.
Let me expand on that a bit. We live in a liberal democratic society where we have expansive interpretations of free expression. But there are also limits on that free expression. The Supreme Court has said those limits are based on the harm principle, that is, making sure that the free expression we have doesn't harm others in society. That's an evolution of the restriction on free expression. Previously in questions regarding public decency and public morality, we used the community standards test.
So that's where it stands today. But this applies only to private media. In other words, that's the expansive interpretation of free expression when it comes to privately owned media, privately produced media like books or film.
When it comes to television, though, we're talking about a media that is publicly owned and publicly regulated. In other words, what may be lawful in the private domain when it comes to free expression is not necessarily what we allow on the publicly owned airwaves. For example, we now have the 9 p.m. rule, under which material presented before or after 9 p.m. can vary in its nature.
Does the B.C. Civil Liberties Association agree that it is reasonable to have greater restrictions on publicly owned media, like television and radio, compared with media in the private domain?