小土豆和川普的关系好像很不好呢

海空绿

初级会员
注册
2016-12-25
消息
888
荣誉分数
261
声望点数
73
从0:49开始。记得把录像的声音关掉:全是噪音。
 
您看谁与特朗普关系好,普京?
 
Uuu.jpg
 
小土豆跟谁关系好了?
治理国家又不是在国际上搞社交
出卖自己国家利益,到处给钱,容易搞好关系,但这是一个国家头该做的吗?
 
最后编辑:
土豆这番话说的没错。
 
能好吗?专门跟Trump对着干,等着trump发推反击吧。。。

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeau-press-freedom-sunday-1.4901226浏览附件797738

Attacks on the media are a threat to democracy, Trudeau says
'The very capacity for a citizen to engage with truth is under attack,' PM tells press freedom event
Janyce McGregor · CBC News · Posted: Nov 11, 2018 2:40 PM ET | Last Updated: 5 hours ago

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a press freedom event in Paris Sunday that one of the bulwarks protecting democratic governments from being undermined is also an institution under stress — a free-thinking, robust media.

"If a democracy is to function you need an educated populace, and you need to have an informed populace, ready to make judicious decisions about who to grant power to and when to take it away," Trudeau said.

"When citizens cannot have rigorous analysis of the exercise of the power that is in their name and they have granted, the rest of the foundation of our democracies start to erode at the same time as cynicism arises."

The press freedom advocacy organization Reporters Without Borders has developed a six-page international declaration on information and democracy to establish basic principles for the "common good of mankind." The organization hosted a small event on the sidelines of the Paris Peace Forum late Sunday afternoon where five presidents and prime ministers, including Trudeau, offered endorsements for this declaration.

The Paris Peace Forum, intended to be an annual gathering of political, business and civil society leaders to explore peaceful solutions to the world's problems, was hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron to coincide with this weekend's events marking the centenary of the armistice agreement that ended the First World War.

When it was his turn to speak, Trudeau acknowledged that throughout history the powerful have tried to silence their critics.

"There have always been tensions between those who would speak truth to power and those who like having their power, thank you very much, and don't necessarily want to see it frittered away," he said.

"But we are now in a phase where that capacity to speak truth to power, the very capacity for a citizen to engage with truth, is under attack. And not just by the powerful, but by those who would see our institutions themselves weakened."

It wasn't clear exactly who Trudeau was referring to with this remark. But in recent elections, efforts to spread misinformation to voters, particularly on social media, have been blamed on Russian President Vladimir Putin's government, which is said to want to destabilize other governments to increase its own influence around the world.

Unexpected encounter with Putin
Immediately before attending this press freedom event, Trudeau was in the audience for the opening of the Paris Peace Forum as Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres spoke. Seated to his right was Russian President Vladimir Putin.

When the pair was spotted chatting together briefly before the event started (for roughly 30 seconds), journalists covering the prime minister's trip asked his office for information on what the pair discussed.


france-trudeau-20181111.jpg

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was seated beside Russian President Vladimir Putin for the opening session at the Paris Peace Forum Sunday. The pair spoke for about 30 seconds before the speeches began. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Relations between Canada and Russia have been tense since before Trudeau became prime minister. Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has been banned from the country.

A spokesperson replied that Trudeau "acknowledged the Russian people's extraordinary sacrifices through the two World Wars," and that "therefore it's important to have Russian representation here to talk about peace."

Freeland spoke about the importance of a free press during an event hosted by CBC's The National last Thursday evening, telling the audience both she and the prime minister had been thinking a lot about the issue lately.

Anxiety, cynicism on the rise
Trudeau, addressing the audience at the press freedom event without a prepared text, also talked about the risk if too many citizens become too cynical about public institutions.

"Attacks on the media are not just about getting your preferred political candidate elected," he said. "They're about increasing the level of cynicism that citizens have toward all authorities, toward all of the institutions that are there to protect us as citizens."

Citizens are feeling "very real anxiety," Trudeau said, because their jobs are transforming as globalization increases competition around the world. When that anxiety is exacerbated, it undermines trust in institutions and increases cynicism.

"One of the bulwarks against that, and one of the institutions that is most under stress right now, is a free-thinking, independent, rigorous, robust, respected media," the prime minister said.


france-wwi-centennial.jpg

Trudeau joined, from left, Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg, Nobel peace prize winner Nadia Murad Basee Taha, Tunisian President Bej Caid Essebsi, 2018 Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, French President Emmanuel Macron, Reporters Without Borders secretary general Christophe Deloire, Senegal President Macky Sall, UNESCO director general Audrey Azoulay, Costa Rican President Carlos Alvarado and Thorbjorn Jagland, secretary general of the Council of Europe, at an event to endorse a declaration on press freedom at the Paris Peace Forum Sunday. (Yoan Yalat/Associated Press)

Trudeau didn't mention Donald Trump by name in his remarks, but the American president's increasing hostility toward the press that covers him is becoming more and more apparent, as he refers to critical reports as "fake news" and insults journalists as they try to do their job covering his administration.

Trump declined to attend the peace forum Sunday afternoon, speaking instead at a commemorative service at an American military cemetery near Paris.

"When people feel their institutions cannot protect them, they look for easy answers," Trudeau said, "in populism, in nationalism, in closing borders, in shutting down trade, in xenophobia."

Trump and Trudeau had a chance to speak Saturday night at a dinner hosted by Macron. A Canadian official speaking on background told reporters they had a "good interaction," although no specific topics were offered.


france-wwi-centennial.jpg

President Donald Trump stands in front of headstones during a commemoration Sunday at the Suresnes American Cemetery near Paris. Trump was attending centennial commemorations in Paris this weekend to mark the Armistice that ended the First World War. (Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press)

Trudeau mentioned the recent killing of Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi and the imprisonment of two Reuters journalists who reported on the killing of the Rohingya minority in Myanmar as examples of troubling cases where Canada feels compelled to speak out.

Myanmar is a member of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), which is holding its annual summit this week in Singapore. Canada is a "dialogue partner" of the ASEAN group, and Trudeau is scheduled to leave for Singapore Monday afternoon.
 
其实川普特别羡慕嫉妒习大,普大,金三
 
当媒体都被收买,根本不能代表民意,甚至真相的时候,媒体都不容许被碰吗?这是何等的特权?
言论自由 vs. 媒体,哪个更重要?

好像没有哪个法律说媒体碰不得吧?记者是神吗?
土豆的那个观点,莫名其妙
 
普京这根老油条!

880x495_cmsv2_3507d3b4-c2fb-5f56-8f3e-56f7a07bfff0-3429708.jpg
 
后退
顶部