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by corresation 4877 days ago
Spying on and harassing activists has, for a long time, been a big part of what CSIS does.

Give me a break.

Canada has a very open door immigration policy. Unfortunately that open door draws in people who actually don't like what Canada is about (which makes it weird that they would come here) and who conspire against, effectively, Canadian society. I welcome that law enforcement cares about this and does normal investigations.

Further from a corporate perspective it is well known that China, in particular, is going absolutely rampant with corporate espionage in the West. This is a major concern.

Or just call it some sort of "anti-activism" creed.

3 comments

>Unfortunately that open door draws in people who actually don't like what Canada is about ... Or just call it some sort of "anti-activism" creed.

Sounds like what you're saying is that because CSIS does some legitimate things it means they don't also do less legitimate things, like harass/spy on activists.

Perhaps the confusion is because CSIS spying on people is a legit thing.
Writing cryptography tools, and activism in general, aren't illegal and people who don't break laws should not be spied on or harassed.
If they knew who the lawbreakers were, they wouldn't need to spy on anyone.
Good logic to justify blanket domestic surveillance.
I personally know and have seen the logs from an activist who has CSIS host-names show up in his blog for the past few years. This came after the G8 fiasco in Toronto, where they pulled him in for questioning.
I personally know and have seen the logs from an activist who has CSIS host-names show up in his blog for the past few years.

So? I have the CIA appear in my blog logs and have for years. People work there, and some of them like blogs. Is that, apparently, "harassment"?

They do spy on and harass First Nations activists, notoriously.