The Iran War has exposed the anti-imperialism of fools

One doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry at all the dweebs online saying, ‘I ain’t dying for Israel’. From the phrenologist virgins who follow Nick Fuentes to the cockless ‘communists’ of the post-class left, the cry goes out: ‘We won’t fight for that evil state.’ Guys, calm down. No one’s asking 5”4 fascists to fight for anything. Israel isn’t in need of an army of flabby genderfluids who can’t even read a JK Rowling tweet without needing a self-care day. You’re fine. Stand down.

If it hurts China then maybe it’s all good.

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BLACKED OUT: Ottawa censors files on $12.1 million spent searching for alleged Kamloops residential school graves

The federal Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations has redacted nearly all details from internal reports describing how a B.C. First Nation spent millions in taxpayer funding intended to locate alleged graves of children at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School.

Blacklock’s Reporter says documents released under the Access to Information Act show the department labelled the reports “confidential,” concealing details about work undertaken by the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc First Nation after Ottawa provided $12.1 million to support searches tied to claims that 215 children were buried on the site.

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Has Iran executed its ‘impossible to kill’ Quds general for being a spy?

Reports say ‘man with nine lives’ who was always mysteriously absent when Israel carried out assassinations is dead

Speculation has been growing surrounding the fate of IRGC commander Esmail Qaani, with some unconfirmed reports alleging the general was executed by Iran for spying for Israel.

The reports circulating in Arab media that Qaani was arrested and possibly executed on suspicion of espionage have not been confirmed by Tehran.

According to the Emirati outlet The National, the claims remain unverified, but they have spread widely online amid speculation surrounding Qaani’s remarkable ability to survive a string of deadly attacks.

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Why is Canada elbows-up to Trump, but arms-out for Xi and Modi?

There was a disquieting air of jubilation from Prime Minister Mark Carney and his cabinet back in January when the government announced it had secured a new “strategic partnership” with Beijing.

Not that it wasn’t good news that Canada and China had broken their decade-long stalemate, that relief was coming to Canada’s canola farmers, and that plans were set in motion to diversify our energy, agri-food and wood product exports. But the celebratory tone and pageantry that came with the new partnership seemed incongruent with the reality of the situation, which was that renewing ties with China was a necessary evil for Canada.

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The A.I. Disruption We’ve Been Waiting for Has Arrived

On weekday evenings, heading home on the subway from Union Square in New York City, I log into an A.I. tool from my phone and write a prompt. “Look at the data in the files I just uploaded,” I tap. “Load it into a database, then make it searchable with a web interface.” Underground in the subway tunnels my internet connection drops, but when my train emerges onto the Manhattan Bridge, I get a few minutes to see all the work my coding agent has done, and if I type fast enough I can issue another prompt. By the time I get home to Brooklyn, my little project tends to be done: a website, a feature in a music app, a complex search tool or some tiny game.

This is called “vibe coding,” a term coined a year ago by the artificial intelligence expert Andrej Karpathy. To vibe code is to make software with prompts sent to a specialized chatbot — not coding, but telling — and letting the bot work out the bugs. Like many other programmers, I use a product called Claude Code from Anthropic, although Codex from OpenAI does about as well, and Google Gemini is not far behind. Claude Code earned $1 billion for Anthropic in its first six months. It was always a helpful coding assistant, but in November it suddenly got much better, and ever since I’ve been knocking off side projects that had sat in folders for a decade or longer. It’s fun to see old ideas come to life, so I keep a steady flow. Maybe it adds up to a half-hour a day of my time, and an hour of Claude’s.

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A Canadian Lawmaker, and Friend of JD Vance, Channels Charlie Kirk

Jamil Jivani, a Canadian lawmaker who bonded with JD Vance at Yale Law School and delivered a Bible reading at his wedding, arrived at the University of Calgary on a recent winter evening — the latest stop on his tour of Canadian college campuses.

If the tour sounded familiar — Mr. Jivani celebrated masculinity and reached out especially to young men in the age of diversity, equity and inclusion — that’s because it was inspired by the movement started by Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA. A month after Mr. Kirk’s killing in September, Mr. Jivani began his tour to “honor that same commitment to free speech and free debate” represented by the “great Charlie Kirk,” he told Breitbart News, the right-wing site.

With echoes of President Trump’s movement, Mr. Jivani called his own “Restore the North.”

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US Mosques Hold Memorials for Iran’s Supreme Leader

Over the weekend, President Donald Trump announced, “Iran’s formerly supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei is dead.” The Iranian leader was eliminated during a coordinated U.S.–Israeli military operation that targeted senior Iranian officials and military sites across Tehran as part of Trump’s Operation Epic Fury.


Stripped of citizenship followed by deportation.

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Canada has few military tools for Middle East conflict, experts say

OTTAWA—While Prime Minister Mark Carney has said he can’t “categorically” rule out this nation’s military joining the growing conflict in the Middle East, practically speaking Canada’s armed forces don’t have a lot of tools for this particular fight, say experts.

Speaking Thursday in Australia’s capital Canberra, the prime minister said Canada would not be involved in the “offensive actions” the United States and Israel have launched against Iran, but could potentially offer some support to allied countries in the region.

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Rising grocery costs forcing Canadians to cut meals and rely on credit, survey says

More Canadians are relying on credit to put food on the table — and sacrificing nutrition in the process — according to a new survey that shows how the strain of Canada’s affordability crisis is increasingly surfacing in grocery aisles.

A new survey from insolvency and debt relief firm Spergel finds that a majority of the 269 Canadians questioned said they had skipped meals or reduced portion sizes in the past six months due to financial pressure. Fifty three per cent of the respondents, who were between the ages of 30 and 60, reported using credit, buy-now-pay-later services, lines of credit or payday loans to purchase groceries in the last six months.

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Why “Legalize and Tax” Is the Wrong Solution to Our Drug Problem

The economic reasoning is powerful, but it breaks down against reality.

I hate to disagree with my colleague, the great Roland Fryer—and doubly so when it comes to economics. Fryer’s work is consistently both stimulating and insightful, and his contributions to public policy substantially outstrip my own. I nevertheless feel obliged to comment on his recent Wall Street Journal op-ed, in which he uses sound economic reasoning to reach a conclusion I reject: that we should legalize and tax addictive drugs.

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Carney government introduces latest tweak to cheap foreign labour scam

Stupid rhymes with witch

Canada launches new program to grant 33,000 foreign workers permanent residence, immigration minister reveals

… “We have launched it already,” Diab said during an interview with the Star this week, where she also touched on questions about her competence. “I am not in a position to tell you specifically how many so far, but we will in the month of April be able to provide more clarity and more detail on them.”

Government data showed that 2,125,035 temporary residents had their permits expire in 2025 and another 1,938,805 are expected to run out of status in 2026. The questions of where they have gone and will end up have prompted concerns over a potential surge of undocumented population.

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Trump Has Highest Own-Party Approval of Any 21st Century President, CNN Survey Shows

“Republicans love Donald Trump more than any president’s own party supporters loved them at this particular point,” CNN’s Harry Enten reported Thursday, citing results of his network’s latest poll.

No other president of the 21st Century has had this high a percentage of overall approval by supporters of his own party at this point in his presidency, Enten said while explaining why almost all of the primary candidates endorsed by Trump win…

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