AAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! 😆@fancypants_s https://t.co/Uce4VGnG0c
— Auntie Polly (@auntie_polly) March 13, 2026
h/t Auntie Polly
AAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! 😆@fancypants_s https://t.co/Uce4VGnG0c
— Auntie Polly (@auntie_polly) March 13, 2026
h/t Auntie Polly

OTTAWA — Canada lost 84,000 jobs last month as unemployment inches higher, the latest jobs report from the government says.
And the number of full-time workers experiencing chronic, long-term unemployment is now higher than during the pandemic.
Taking jobs away from urban youth isn’t enough. They need to get the rurals, too. https://t.co/Zcm4sdwY4H
— Jamie Sarkonak (@sarkonakj) March 13, 2026
#EXCLUSIVE: Dashcam Footage Of Vehicle Running Red-Light, Crashing Into School Bus On📍Airport/North Park In Brampton. pic.twitter.com/dsOOQeNGpY
— 401_da_sarpanch (@401_da_sarpanch) March 14, 2026

It’s been nearly two weeks since the Trump administration launched a war against Iran, and President Trump is beginning to signal that he wants to wind it down. On Monday, he said “we’re way ahead of schedule,” and that the war would be over “very soon.” On Wednesday during a speech in Kentucky, Trump off-handedly declared “we’ve won,” and said it was all over “in the first hour.”
It’s understandable that Trump would be eyeing a quick end to the war, given spiking oil prices, growing public opposition to the war, and criticism from his MAGA base. But at this point it’s looking less and less like the president will simply be able to declare victory and walk away, however politically desirable that might be.

I am writing as a concerned citizen to express my profound concern over the federal government’s March 9, 2026, move to close debate on Bill C-9, Ottawa’s anti-hate bill.
As recently reported by the National Post, Khaled Al-Qazzaz, executive director of the Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council, said he and other Muslim groups representing hundreds of Muslim organizations opposed the bill and felt “ambushed” by the government’s decision to limit further debate.
Ten questions help us discern whether the present war on Iran will be an iteration of previous Middle East conflicts or the start of something much worse
Four years ago, when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, I recall being asked if it was the beginning of the World War III. Today, two weeks into the latest war on Iran, the same question comes up. It is not foolish to ask.
Unlike World War I, which began in 1914 when all the European empires more or less simultaneously activated their war plans, World War II was in truth a series of regional conflicts that did not converge into a unitary global conflict until the end of 1941. We have seen war break out in eastern Europe in 2022 and then in the Middle East in 2023.
The most recent US-Israeli onslaught on Iran may look to future historians like a staging post to a global conflagration. I stress “may”. Because they may also write about Gulf War III. The better ones may see that this can be understood only in the context of Cold War II. But World War III?
Mojtaba Khamenei was reportedly wounded twice in two separate attacks
France 24 reported that Iran’s new Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, was first wounded during the February 28 attack that killed his father, Ali Khamenei, and then wounded again when the hospital… pic.twitter.com/NW9Imm9BAc
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) March 13, 2026
BREAKING: The Revolutionary Guards headquarters in the Rabat Karim area, near Tehran was destroyed by US-Israeli strikes. pic.twitter.com/eT7tRQOZrQ
— World Source News (@Worldsource24) March 13, 2026

Rushed, incomplete assessments, families kept in the dark, loved ones driven to choose MAID because of unbearable suffering.
A new study adds to growing evidence that Canadian families’ experiences with doctor-assisted death are deeply mixed, with some describing the experience as raw, traumatic and surreal — including sometimes oddly “cheerful” providers — and others describing caring and compassionate deaths for loved ones who’d “had enough.”

Societal transformation without representation.
“Islam is largely alien to American history—it certainly didn’t come into the United States on the Mayflower,” freshman Rep. Brandon Gill (R-Tex.) observed last month. Gill continued: “It’s something that we deliberately imported as a matter of immigration policy into our country.”
Quite right. But who, exactly, is the “we” who implemented such a reckless—indeed, suicidal—act of mass cultural importation? It’s a frustratingly difficult question—and one we ought to be asking, especially in light of recent events.
Racism is built into Canada’s system says law professor Bruce Pardy.
Universities, tribunals, even governments favour some races over others. This isn’t opinion. It’s policy. And most Canadians have no idea.
Watch Bruce Pardy expose it NOW on YouTube.https://t.co/cQPXJ1VYxq… pic.twitter.com/d3wQyQv1uC
— David Leis🇨🇦Leaders on the Frontier, TV, Podcast (@LeadersFrontier) March 13, 2026
Full vid

Floor-crossing has always been a feature of Canadian politics dating back to the first Parliament — and seeing four opposition MPs jump ship to join the government in a matter of months is rare but not unprecedented.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has only been in office for a year and is ranking near the top in terms of prime ministers who have had opposition MPs join his caucus during a parliamentary session.
John A. Macdonald, Robert Borden and Jean Chrétien attracted a swath of MPs to their respective governments — though all in vastly different circumstances.

… As of 8 p.m., Stephen Ellis, the legal counsel for the rally organizers, said he has not received a notice yet.
He told CTV News Toronto that the province won’t succeed in getting an injunction and is confident that the event will proceed.
“Mr. Ford is pandering to the most backward political elements in our society. What he’s looking to do is to pander to that section of people who are uncritically supporting Israel, no matter what it does. So, his tweet is a disgrace. I’m not surprised,” Ellis said.

Two men are now facing time behind bars after a ‘turf war’ between rival barber shops sparked a mass brawl in a market town.
Omed Pirot, 31, and Shahab Husseini, 25, were found guilty of affray after becoming embroiled in a fight in front of terrified bystanders, including children.
Meanwhile, Sardam Ebrahimi, 27, was found not guilty of affray by the jury and was cleared of the charges.

A new survey from Nanos Research for CTV News found 43 per cent of Canadians are less likely to travel to the United States in 2026, compared to the previous year.
Thirty-eight per cent said they don’t vacation in the United States in general, while just four per cent said they are likely to spend more leisure time south of the border.
For many Canadians, “the U.S. is not on the radar in terms of a travel destination,” said Nik Nanos.

Funding from a group founded by George Soros has supported the slavery reparations campaign against Britain, The Telegraph can reveal.
The Open Society Foundations (OSF), established by Hungarian investor Mr Soros and now led by his son, Alex Soros, has donated vast sums from its $23bn (£17.2bn) endowment to progressive causes.
The foundation has provided hundreds of thousands of dollars to groups seeking to claim reparations from Britain for slavery and colonialism.
Ottawa is rewarding a filmmaker who proudly blends pornography, political provocation, and public funding. Canadians should ask why their money and one of the country’s top cultural honours are being used to elevate explicit ideological smut.
(Incognito)