Commentary Canada’s Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez has now twice confirmed that fears regarding the looming regulation of online speech in Canada were and continue to be legitimate. The first was when, in early February, he introduced Bill C-11—the Trudeau government’s second attempt, to put it simply, to define the global internet as mere broadcasting and put the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) in charge of it all, lock stock and barrel. This replaced last year’s first effort, Bill C-10, which stumbled through the House of Commons before dying in the Senate when the election was called. In the course of its journey, then-heritage minister Steven Guilbeault dismissed concerns from many civil rights, legal, and other experts and insisted his legislation posed no threat to freedom of expression. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau referred to opponents of the legislation as tinfoil hatters. So when the Liberals stepped up to the plate …