
After an intense bidding war, The Conservative Woman has acquired the publication rights to the Greta Thunberg Diaries. Ms. Thunberg says the proceeds will go to environmental charities.

After an intense bidding war, The Conservative Woman has acquired the publication rights to the Greta Thunberg Diaries. Ms. Thunberg says the proceeds will go to environmental charities.

Finland remained the happiest country in the world, Zimbabwe was at the bottom of the list, and Canada fell out of the top 10 in the annual World Happiness Index, which is compiled by a panel run by the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network each year. The results are based on 2020 data examining income, freedom, trust in government, life expectancy, social support and generosity.
In a statement, NDP MLA Thomas Dang said that the use of tiki torches in multiple protests held in Alberta recently is an example of blatant racism.
We live in a dire age in which cancel culture rules supreme — even upon the lawns of the Ontario legislature.
Case in point: the glorious statue of Sir John A. Macdonald. This wonderful work of art has been boarded up with plywood, as though the depiction of our country’s first prime minister is tantamount to pornography.

CNN weirdo Brian Stelter announced with Glee Sunday that Dr Anthony Fauci is the subject of a new children’s book titled “Dr. Fauci: How A Boy From Brooklyn Became America’s Doctor,” prompting many to immediately label it a propaganda campaign.
Well, that didn’t take long. The first major bill passed by the new Democratic congressional majority and signed into law by our new president on March 11 had already provoked a constitutional challenge by March 17. The attorney general of Ohio filed suit against the Biden administration last Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, alleging that the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) unconstitutionally and coercively limits the right of states to manage their internal fiscal policies: “This suit challenges an unconstitutional provision in the American Rescue Plan Act — a provision that allows the federal government to commandeer state taxing authority.”
“No. We don’t have freedom of the press for one thing,” Trump told Lisa Boothe on her new podcast when asked if the U.S. is still a free society. “You don’t have freedom of the press. Big Tech has gone wild.”

I’ve never heard of this lady but she asked this intriguing question and Twitter’s almighty algorithm decided it should grace my timeline and so I couldn’t help but read some of the replies.
I’m glad I did because hoo boy.

A senior-level law enforcement source with U.S.Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the Rio Grande Valley revealed the implementation of a plan to release migrant families soon after apprehension. The plan radically changes how illegal migrants have been processed in the past and orders Border Patrol agents to quickly release migrant families without notifying the immigration courts or issuing a Notice to Appear.

Locked Down: Canada’s Failed COVID-19 Response features Dr. Shawn Whatley (Senior Fellow, Macdonald-Laurier Institute), John Carpay (President, Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms), Anthony Furey (Editor and Columnist, Toronto Sun) and Candice Malcolm (Founder, True North.)

A women’s magazine that tends to approach issues from a more conservative, common-sense stance accidentally embraced some liberal thinking this week.

Watch video as columnist Lorrie Goldstein examines the Trudeau government’s plan to increase the carbon tax by 33% on April 1, 2021.

Crime is up dramatically in New York City. The New York Police Department is spread thin because of retirements, leaving the officer’s union to say that the anti-cop sentiment among officials in city hall had left the “NPYD broken, almost beyond repair.”
So naturally, what Mayor Bill de Blasio thinks the NYPD should be doing is knocking on people’s doors if they’re suspected of saying something hateful.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has warned Beijing that the arbitrary detention of two Canadians and the lack of transparency over their trial threatens China’s relations with Western nations. “Their arbitrary detention is completely unacceptable, as is the lack of transparency around these court proceedings,” he said at a daily media briefing on Friday.

Rich appeared on independent journalist and commentator Megyn Kelly’s podcast, “The Megyn Kelly Show,” on Friday. Rich and Kelly shared concern over Biden’s health the same day the 78-year-old president stumbled several times and fell while boarding Air Force One.

According to Blacklock’s Reporter, The Narwhal has received $99,057 through the federal government’s Local Journalism Initiative and a $254,655 grant from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
According to Francis Bradley, president and CEO of the Canadian Electricity Association, Canada’s power systems are better prepared for extreme weather because we’ve learned from major disasters — events like the 1998 ice storm in the East, the 2013 Calgary floods and the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfires.
In this week’s Riskin Report, CTV News Science and Technology Specialist Dan Riskin looks at what’s behind the heavy pollution price of pot, and what could be done to reduce a large chunk of the cannabis industry’s emissions.
A prominent photojournalist rebuked the Biden administration last week for allegedly blocking media from observing operations of immigration officials handling the migrant crisis at the southern United States border.
Miller said, “I can’t go much further than what I was able to just share. I can say it will be big once he starts. There have been a lot of high-powered meetings he has been having at Mar-a-Lago with teams of folks that have been coming in. I got to tell you it’s not just one company that’s approached the president. There have been numerous companies. I think the president knows what direction he wants to head here. This new platform is going to be big, and everyone wants him. He’s going to bring millions and millions, tens of millions of people to this new platform.”
Abbott voiced concerns regarding what can possibly qualify as “unacceptable and inhumane” conditions in two of the three federally run facilities in Texas. The one in Midland has “no proven clean running water at the location” and uses well water which may potentially be contaminated with arsenic, according to Abbott.

Newly released study reveals the CDC initiated new date reporting protocols that dramatically increased reported COVID deaths.

An interim review of why Ottawa’s early pandemic warning system failed to issue a formal alert on COVID-19 has described a lack of detailed knowledge of the system by senior managers.
The audit dated Feb. 26, and released on Saturday, was ordered by federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu after reports the Global Public Health Intelligence Network didn’t operate as intended at the onset of the pandemic.

Sources say the proposed move is an acknowledgment that ‘more needs to be done’ to champion minorities’ rights and follows the explosive claims made by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex of institutional racism.

It is shocking and dangerous that the final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, published in 2015, has been so widely accepted as a full accounting of Native grievances and the basis for policy changes and reparations to accommodate those grievances. Almost the only serious critical analysis that has been given to this massive report is the excellent and very readable book, “From Truth Comes Reconciliation,” which was edited by Rodney Clifton and Mark Dewolf, and published by the Frontier Centre for Public Policy. Every Canadian concerned with Canada’s relationship with its Aboriginal peoples, which forms the basis for the rampant but fraudulent truism that this country is rotten with ”systemic racism,” should read this book. There is general agreement, as there should be, that Aboriginal people have legitimate grievances, that the country’s policy in regard to them has been unsuccessful and that this is a serious policy challenge where we simply have to do better. Justice Murray Sinclair, who chaired the commission, promised to “provide Canadians with a permanent record that weaves all experiences, all perspectives into the fabric of truth.” He and his fellow commissioners, Chief Wilton Littlechild and Marie Wilson, fell grievously short of delivering on that promise.