WAGNER: Pierre Trudeau’s vision is destroying Canada

WAGNER: Pierre Trudeau’s vision is destroying Canada

Currently, there is growing support for independence from Canada in two provinces, Alberta and Quebec. In Alberta, for the first time in history, an independence referendum will be held in October. In Quebec, the Parti Québécois, a sovereigntist party, is leading in the polls.

Two provinces at each end of the country — East and West — have significant numbers of citizens wanting out of Canada. Yet, Alberta and Quebec are very different in almost every way — language, culture, history, and economy.

(Incognito)

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As the U.S. turns on its allies, Canadians look toward joining Europe

As the U.S. turns on its allies, Canadians look toward joining Europe

The idea keeps coming back. A French politician mused about it in Berlin last month. A Finnish leader visiting Ottawa this April didn’t dismiss it out of hand.

Fresh polls show a majority of Canadians would support it.

And in an era when the United States has turned on its closest allies, the question has acquired a new urgency: Could Canada join the European Union?

(more…)

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Polyamory is growing in Canada, but the legal system hasn’t caught up

Polyamory is growing in Canada, but the legal system hasn’t caught up

As non-traditional relationships become more visible across Canada, a growing number of people are entering into polyamorous relationships. The legal system is struggling to keep up.

While polyamory itself is legal, experts say gaps in Canada’s legal framework leave multi-partner families navigating uncertain terrain when it comes to property, parenting and financial protections.

At the centre of the issue is Section 293 of the Criminal Code of Canada, which criminalizes polygamy — but not polyamory.


Muslim polygamy is practiced in Canada without any punishment that I am aware of.

Just what you’d expect of an unassimilable parallel society and a weak host nation.

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Fear of reprisals, isolation, anxiety: Report documents mental health concerns at CSIS

Fear of reprisals, isolation, anxiety: Report documents mental health concerns at CSIS

Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) employees who came forward as part of an external study investigating mental health at the spy agency described a sometimes isolating and bleak environment “laden with stigma.”

One participant told researchers the “service has a fear of mental illness.”

Those comments are included in a first-of-its-kind research project commissioned by CSIS and published earlier this month in the Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology. Researchers spoke to employees who were willing to come forward, with their identities protected, to talk about the unique working environment at the spy agency.

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Sabrina Maddeaux: Fix the brain drain by fixing Canada, not with a $500K exit tax

Sabrina Maddeaux: Fix the brain drain by fixing Canada, not with a $500K exit tax

Too many Canadian retirees spend far too much wealth outside our borders. The richest generation in Canadian history, who also happens to be the most heavily subsidized generation, has long enjoyed the luxury of snowbirding in the U.S. and regular trips abroad. But in an era of unprecedented economic uncertainty and risk, we can’t afford to be sending billions to other countries each year on luxury whims.


I don’t think the rot can be fixed, we live in a state poisoned from the 5th columnists within.

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Toronto police release images of suspect accused of assaulting woman wearing hijab on bus

Toronto police release images of suspect accused of assaulting woman wearing hijab on bus

Toronto police have released images of a suspect who allegedly assaulted a woman wearing a hijab on a Durham Region Transit bus in Scarborough on Monday.

Police are investigating it as a suspected hate-motivated assault. The incident was captured on video and was posted on social media by the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM).

“We are outraged by a recent incident of Islamophobia that occurred on the Durham Transit,” the NCCM said.

(more…)

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How Canada’s economy is choking from federal regulations: 7 graphs

How Canada’s economy is choking from federal regulations: 7 graphs

Regulatory reform is a rare common ground in Canadian politics. The Carney government launched a red tape review last year and reversed several Trudeau-era regulatory policies. Cabinet minister Dominic LeBlanc has publicly criticized how red tape holds back the economy, while Pierre Poilievre has made cutting it a centrepiece of his economic pitch.

recent survey by the Business Council of Canada found that nearly half of CEOs identify the domestic regulatory burden as the single most important factor influencing their investment decisions—higher than CUSMA uncertainty—topping the list in every survey wave since 2023.

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Young woman says Canadian university banned her for listening to a conversation about Iran war

Young woman says Canadian university banned her for listening to a conversation about Iran war

A Canadian woman says she has been banned for life from the University of Guelph in a violation of her Charter rights because she overheard a private conversation that her father had about the Iran war with some Muslims.

Sarah Dotzert, a young conservative activist, posted a YouTube video about her ordeal through her organization, Unify Action. She explains just how far the university went in political correctness by banning both her and her father.

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Avi Lewis Right On One Thing!

Avi Lewis Right On One Thing!

Avi Lewis demands Mark Carney ban stores from using personal info to set prices

OTTAWA—Taking aim at major corporations in his Parliament Hill debut, new NDP Leader Avi Lewis demanded Monday that Prime Minister Mark Carney ban what he called an “unfair” and “downright creepy” practice of “surveillance pricing,” where retailers use data to tailor prices to individual consumers.

With emerging digital tools already under scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators across the U.S., businesses have reportedly been able to hike prices and maximize profits by using artificial intelligence and algorithms to personalize prices based on things like a customer’s search history and demographic information.

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Canada is addressing its shortage of women beaters through immigration

Canada is addressing its shortage of women beaters through immigration

Judge saves Kitchener man who battered ex-gal pal from deportation

The Waterloo Region is breathing a sigh of relief and giving thanks.

Justice Domi­n­ique Kennedy has granted a conditional discharge to a 31-year-old Kitchener man who battered his ex-girlfriend so he wouldn’t be deported to his native India.

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Globe wants masked Death Cultists to teach your children

Globe wants masked Death Cultists to teach your children

The two teachers

Nadia Naqvi, the oldest and fiercest in a family of five children, was born in 1981 in Montreal. Her father, who emigrated from Pakistan in the 1970s, instilled in his children that he was the immigrant in the family.

You are just Canadian, he would tell them, and if anybody asks, you’re Canadian-Pakistani. Always put the Canadian in front, he’d say. But growing up in Montreal’s suburban West Island, Ms. Naqvi never felt fully Canadian. She was bullied more times than she could count, called a “Paki” and “smelly.”

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Doug Ford says Mark Carney’s majority means ‘a stronger hand’ against Trump

Doug Ford says Mark Carney’s majority means ‘a stronger hand’ against Trump

Premier Doug Ford says a majority federal government means Prime Minister Mark Carney “has a stronger hand to deal with President (Donald) Trump and the tariffs that we’re facing.”

Speaking to reporters at Queen’s Park, the Progressive Conservative premier said the three Liberal byelection victories on Monday would help Carney in the upcoming review of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) and in the ongoing trade war with the U.S.

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With a record-low 1.25 children per Canadian woman, stop dismissing falling fertility rates as a choice

With a record-low 1.25 children per Canadian woman, stop dismissing falling fertility rates as a choice

Whenever we speak on our podcast about the falling fertility rate, inevitably we hear from viewers saying that the cause is simple: people are choosing to have fewer kids. They point out that countries all over the world are dealing with this collapse, and there is no solution. It’s a nice, tidy explanation that takes away the need for action. If people are choosing fewer kids, that must be their preference, and we can’t do anything about it.

We don’t think it’s that simple.

As Eric Lombardi recently argued, young Canadians are living through what he called a “milestone recession,” as traditional markers of adulthood, such as stable careers, homeownership, and family formation, are delayed—if ever reached at all.


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