As Arctic Threats Rise, Canada May Need to Lean on the United States

For the past seven decades, Canada has been the junior partner in a military agreement with the United States to protect the Canadian Arctic.

The Canadian and American flags could be seen billowing at a distance in the all-white Arctic landscape — the Maple Leaf visibly lower than the Stars and Stripes.

The asymmetry had a simple explanation. Flags across Canada, including this one in the hamlet of Cambridge Bay in the Canadian High Arctic, were flying at half-staff to mourn the recent mass killing at a school in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia.

But its symbolism, however unintended, was a reminder of Canada’s increasingly uncomfortable situation in its Arctic region: Unable to defend it by itself, Canada remains dependent on the United States, whose president has repeatedly threatened to annex it, and who has also set his eyes on Canada’s Arctic neighbor, Greenland.

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The Son of Cuba Takes on the Last Communist Neighbor

Confirmed 99-0 and sworn in as the 72nd Secretary of State on January 21, 2025, the first Latino ever to hold the position, Marco Rubio pledged that every State Department decision would be governed by three questions: Does it make us stronger? Safer? More prosperous? That framework marks a return to the peace-through-strength paradigm that has consistently produced results when American leaders have had the conviction to enforce it. In a world still recovering from four years of Biden-Harris weakness and strategic retreat, Rubio’s Cuban-exile roots, legal training, and Senate-honed discipline position him to execute the most consequential foreign policy reset since the Cold War ended.

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Canada’s wait-and-see economy is in a very fragile state

In the past few weeks, news on the Canadian economic front has tilted negative overall.

Statistics Canada came out with a February jobs report that showed employment declined by a net 84,000, which came on top of a loss of 25,000 jobs in January. The cumulative decline makes it the worst start to a year employment-wise since 2009.

GDP figures released late last month showed that Canada’s economy contracted in the final quarter of 2025, capping the weakest year for growth since the pandemic.

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How Well Do Americans Understand the Melting Pot?

Data from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century show why certain immigrant groups assimilated—and offer lessons for today.

When Americans hear the term “melting pot,” they often think of New York City: tenement blocks, Ellis Island, the Lower East Side, a montage of pushcart vendors becoming small business owners. Our national mythology about assimilation is rooted in the urban and Northeastern experience, suggesting that large, multicultural cities best assimilated immigrants.

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Progressive Cranks the fastest growing US export to Canada despite tariff conflict

Progressive cranks in natural habitat

Dual citizens weigh Trump, taxes in decision to renounce U.S. citizenship

Ella Heyder is bracing for a breakup, even though she already moved out decades ago.

She’s contemplating cutting ties altogether with her home country, the United States of America, and President Donald Trump.

“I’m quite disturbed by what’s happening in the U.S. under Trump’s regime. It’s a fascist, imperialist regime,” Heyder said as she and others waved signs outside the American Embassy in Ottawa during what has become a twice-weekly protest against the current U.S. administration.

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Begging Hamas to Disarm – The Misguided Approach of Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’

US President Donald J. Trump’s “Board of Peace” has reportedly presented Hamas with a written proposal on how ​it could lay down its weapons, according to a recent report.

The proposal “was submitted to Hamas during meetings in Cairo over the past week.” The talks were attended by Nikolay Mladenov, the Trump-appointed “Board of Peace” envoy to the Gaza Strip, and Aryeh Lightstone, a US aide to Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff.

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Majority think Doug Ford is failing to protect Ontario, new poll shows

As MPPs return to the legislature after an extended, 14-week winter break, new polling suggests a majority of the population believes the government is failing in its promise to “protect Ontario” across a series of key areas.

A survey conducted by Ipsos exclusively for Global News’ Focus Ontario asked people how well they thought Premier Doug Ford was protecting Ontario on a number of files.

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ICE Agents Are Now Replacing TSA Workers Whom Democrats Defunded. Enjoy the Schadenfreude.

Donald Trump just dipsey-doodled the Democrats.

Only Trump can find leverage in the Democrats’ TSA defunding — turning those broke, unpaid TSA agents and the disastrously long lines at the nation’s airports into a teachable, brilliant, GOTCHA moment to behold. When Democrats figure out what hit them, they’ll be so tattooed with this disaster, even the leftist screechers will lead the effort to restore TSA funding.

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2 men accused of fathering hundreds of kids banned from donating sperm in Quebec

Quebec’s Superior Court has temporarily barred a man and his son from donating sperm after they were accused of fathering hundreds of children.

The injunction against the two men will remain in effect while the wider case against them proceeds on its merits.

They are being sued by a woman who has had three children using the sperm of one man and a fourth child with the genetic material of the man’s son.

It’s like laboratory incest.

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David Spade Blames Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass for Hollywood‘s ‘Terrifying’ Downfall

Former Saturday Night Live star David Spade is blasting California Democrats Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass for the destruction of the film industry in Hollywood.

Spade spoke of his dismay over the fall of Hollywood during a recent episode of his Fly on the Wall podcast, during which he asserted that said “the Hollywood industry is dying” and that he’s “just trying to put the blame somewhere.”

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Dutch doctors euthanized an autistic teen. Why some say that should be a ‘wake-up call’ for Canada

Four-and-a-half years after he was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, a Dutch teen was euthanized at his request.

The boy, aged between 16 and 18, had described his life as “joyless.” He’d struggled with anxiety and mood-related problems, and where he fit in, in the world. Oversensitive to stimuli, “every day was an ordeal he had to get through,” according to the latest annual report from the Netherlands’ regional euthanasia death review committees. “In the final weeks before his death, he lay in bed the whole time.”

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Trump says ‘me and the ayatollah’ could control Strait of Hormuz if Iran deal reached

President Donald Trump said Monday that he and the top leader of Iran could control the Strait of Hormuz if a deal to end the war is reached.

Trump told CNN reporter Kaitlan Collins that the strait could be “jointly controlled” by the United States and Iran. “Maybe me? Maybe me. Me and the ayatollah, whoever the ayatollah is,” he said when asked who specifically would be in control of the body of water in this case.

Hmmm

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Liberals Abuse Military Again

Liberals Abuse Military Again

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They were injured in military service. Canada promised better rehab. Here’s why these veterans are still in pain

Though his tours in Afghanistan and Ukraine left their mark on his body and brain, Tristan Barkwell hoped to live a normal life beyond the base.

After his medical release last year, the 37-year-old sergeant enrolled in the military’s rehabilitation program with the goal of becoming a radiology technician.

“I was very motivated to heal,” he told the Star from his home in Edmonton.

But the publicly-funded program that was supposed to help demoralized him.

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