National Post

The National Post (whose anagram, "Anal Spittoon", could not be more apt) is a Canadian daily newspaper. It was founded in 1998 by Conrad Black (Canadian British[note 1] fraudster and answer to Rupert Murdoch) with the intent of countering what he saw as the "over-liberalizing" of editorial policy in Canadian newspapers, being built from the bones of the Financial Post, which Black bought from Sun Media (Canada's answer to News Corp) in 1997.[1] Given this pedigree, the Post's editorial stance tends toward the reactionary end of the conservative spectrum, but due to the sober (if not always neutral) tone of its news reporting, the Toronto Sun and its exclamatory headlines beat it for the title of Canada's answer to the New York Post.

You gotta spin it to win it
Media
Stop the presses!
We want pictures
of Spider-Man!
  • Journalism
  • Newspapers
  • All articles
Extra! Extra!
  • WIGO World
v - t - e

Its owner, Postmedia, also owns most of the provincial newspapers (including both of British Columbia's papers) and maintains an iron grip on their editorial content (hence the reactionary slant). One of the most infamous cases of this was the Edmonton Journal endorsing the widely reviled Progressive Conservative party in the 2015 Alberta Election without its writers knowing.[2]

Notable editorial staff

Barbara Kay

Barbara Kay is defending a CEO caught kicking a puppy. The universe is unfolding as it should.
—Ivor Tossell[3]

Kay is an anti-feminist and MRA[4] cut from the same cloth as Phyllis Schlafly. She has written pieces decrying all the requisite targets: oral contraception,[5] abortion,[6] and women not eschewing education and careers in favor of prolific maternity.[7] Of course, it's not complete without a good shot of denying rape culture.[8] Oh, and the whole "Quebecistan" thing.

She happens to be the mother of the Post's former editorial pages editor and present Quillette grand pooh-bah Jonathan Kay, who really needed to do his job at the Post better.

Terrence Corcoran

So warped out of his mind that we implore you to search him yourself just to get a laugh.

John Ivison

See Corcoran.

Christie Blatchford

See Ivison.

John Robson

A denialist wingnut who used to write for The Rebel, if that tells you anything. [9][10]

"National Post editorial board"

If a commentator is apparently too shy to attach a name to a piece, but not shy enough to have it printed, it will be credited to the "National Post editorial board."

Some notable examples of of this practice include:

  • "Women's Studies is still with us" (January 26, 2010)[11] — Accuses Women's Studies courses of promoting "radical feminism." The aforementioned Barbara Kay came to the defense of herself the mystery author in the wake of negative response to the piece.[12]
  • "Canadians should pay for the Internet they use" (February 2, 2011)[13] — Defense of a now-declawed regulatory decision mandating a usage-based billing model for all Canadian ISPs apparently written by someone with a poor understanding of how internet technology works. The decision sparked widespread protest from Canadians and was roundly opposed by every major political party in the country.[14]

Comments section of NP online

Just in case anyone had any doubt that Canada, like America, has a fringe right, the comments section of the National Post online should clear that up. For many of these posters the Post isn't conservative enough as it is. The top rated comments are usually very nationalistic and are oddly prone to conspiracy theories and logical fallacies such as No True Scotsman:

Getting sick and tired of the media calling these islamic terrorists 'Canadians.' 'Canadian'? Yeah right. No real-Canadian would be participating in such acts of terror.
—On a story about Canadian terrorists[15]
Guess what lefties, the more you make him out to be a regular guy, the more the people will support him. If the cops are investigating him, it's because the unions and communists, that want to run Toronto, have ordered it.
—On Toronto Mayor Rob Ford being investigated in a crack-trafficking ring[16]
gollark: GTech™ recommends against destructive lunar interaction, for your safety.
gollark: That's very boring. The potatOS privacy policy does it better.
gollark: How can this be used for good* and ethical** uses?
gollark: I agree.
gollark: I am always my alts.

See also

  • David Suzuki — Their Great Satan.
  • Wall Street Journal — Both it and the National Post are big on style over substance (Authoritative-looking and readable throughout the non-opinion sections, then the loss of all sanity afterwards.)

Notes

  1. Black was a Canadian-born dual citizen, but renounced his Canadian citizenship to avoid controversy when taking up a British peerage. See "Conrad Black to renounce Canadian citizenship," CBC, May 19, 2001, updated May 19, 2001, retrieved Jan. 4, 2018.

References

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