Survey finds majority of Canadians report burnout and financial stress

A new national survey reveals that more than half of Canadians are experiencing burnout as rising living costs, heavier workloads and unpaid overtime push workers to a breaking point.

The survey, conducted by Harris & Partners, a Licensed Insolvency Trustee firm, gathered responses from 1,731 Canadians and found 58% reported feeling burned out or emotionally drained in the past year.

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Pessimism, anger still dominate Canadian attitudes toward Americans, poll shows

More than 70 per cent of Canadians still pick a negative emotion such as anger to describe their feelings toward Americans, but the intensity of this ire has cooled even as a damaging trade war with the United States continues, a new poll shows.

There’s been a slight uptick in those saying their dominant emotion is instead disinterest or even optimism, the survey indicates.

More than 7 in 10 Canadians polled said pessimism or anger best describe their views toward Americans, an early July poll by Nanos Research for The Globe and Mail found.

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Oh No!

Canadian musician Matthew Good cancels U.S. shows due to Trump administration

Canadian musician Matthew Good says he’s cancelling his U.S. tour dates because of President Donald Trump’s government.

The “Load Me Up” rocker is pointing to Canada’s cancellation of the digital services tax as a main factor in the decision.


I fully expect Trump to cave by supper time.

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Mark Carney needs to explain to Canadians how we’re going to pay for our national defence

It wasn’t so long ago that Canada perennially cashed in on its so-called “peace dividend.” The logic went like this: while our tanks might rust, the salaries of our Armed Forces members stagnate, and our ammunition stockpiles dwindle, the government could reallocate military spending toward areas of more immediate concern — entitlement programs, infrastructure and other “flavours of the day.”

Point to whichever geopolitical disaster from recent history you like, one thing is painfully clear: the dividend has been spent. But the problem isn’t just that our leaders have been slow to acknowledge this new reality — it’s that they’ve been even slower to act on its implications. Because the inverse logic now applies: in a more volatile world, there is a crisis fee to pay. A big one.

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‘He’s Nuts, Your Trump.’ Canada Unites Against America.

So united a member of the RCMP hoped to see Trump assassinated

Even here, among the sparsely populated lakes and thickly forested hills of the Laurentians, it is hard for an American not to feel the anger and incredulity President Trump has stoked with his tariffs, talk of a 51st state and offhand insults.

Much of that may be lost on Americans buffeted by the ceaseless rush of crises and clashes generated by the president’s agenda. But up here, in what used to be the most friendly neighbor a country could possibly ask for, the rage is tangible.

A TDS suffering author from Quebec no less.

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10 ways ex-Olympian Ryan Wedding has evaded arrest for 10 years

Once a Team Canada Olympic snowboarder, Ryan James Wedding has spent more than 10 years on the run from authorities, while allegedly leading a murderous, transnational drug-smuggling empire.

Listed as one of the FBI’s ten most-wanted fugitives since March, the U.S. State Department is offering a $10-million US reward for information leading to his arrest.

So, how has Wedding, 43, evaded capture for so long?

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CHARLEBOIS: Everyone’s suddenly a supply management expert but few understand it

In recent days, nearly everyone has weighed in on supply management – especially after U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated his longstanding opposition to the policy.

In a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney, he threatened to impose new tariffs of up to 35% by Aug. 1, reigniting old debates. In response, the media has scrambled to feature a range of voices, many of whom lack any real understanding of the policy’s complexities. Some of the most misleading statements have come from high-profile commentators and political figures who have never seriously studied the system

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The Beheading of Sir John A. Macdonald

Most Canadians are unaware that the country’s first prime minister, now smeared as “racist,” defended Indigenous rights and advocated for their political enfranchisement.

In 2020, a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada’s founding prime minister, was toppled and decapitated in Montreal. It was the second time the statue had been beheaded; the first had been in 1992; it was periodically vandalized with paint, as well. This time, the city decided not to restore Macdonald’s statue to its pedestal. Montreal isn’t alone—across the country, Sir John A. Macdonald is being purged from public view.

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Canada’s Carney talked tough on Trump – now some say he’s backing down

It’s another curveball in the Canada-US trade war – a new missive by US Donald Trump threatening an unexpected 35% tariff on Canadian goods starting next month.

It came as the two countries engage in intense trade talks meant to produce a new deal in the coming days, and what the latest tariff threat means for these negotiations is unclear.

But Canada’s new prime minister, Mark Carney, is beginning to face questions over whether he is able to stand up to Trump and secure the fair deal for Canada he promised.

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The RCMP’s Stetson is ‘iconic’ Canadiana. It’s also made in America

OTTAWA — Go to any event featuring RCMP in ceremonial dress, and you’re bound to see Mounties wearing the red serge, blue and yellow breeches, a Sam Browne belt, brown Strathcona boots, and a wide-brimmed, beige Stetson.

The hat, nicknamed the “red Stetson,” has appeared as part of the RCMP uniform on stamps, posters, promotional videos and even documentaries. It is a core piece of the Mounties’ iconic image and an internationally recognizable piece of Canadiana.

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Canadians drastically downgrade climate as a priority, poll finds, as economic concerns escalate

OTTAWA — One of the key barriers that seemed to be facing the Carney government’s plans to fast-track big projects designed to boost the Canadian economy — namely, climate concerns — appears now to be not much of an obstacle at all when it comes to public opinion.

A new Leger poll released Friday asked Canadians about what they thought were the biggest challenges facing Canada. Trade and tariff issues and U.S. relations were No. 1, at 20 per cent. But climate change, one of the federal government’s key objections in recent years to building or expanding pipelines, ports and other big projects, was way down the list, a “third tier” issue, said Leger executive vice-president Andrew Enns.

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Quebec’s 25 richest people and the empires behind their billions

To break into Quebec’s wealthiest club, you’ll need more than a billion dollars. That’s the entry price for The Gazette’s inaugural Rich List, which ranks the province’s 25 wealthiest individuals and families.

Together, they hold nearly $87 billion in net worth, from a convenience-store empire and dairy dynasty, to a paper fortune and finance giant. This elite crowd has quietly stacked billions.

Some inherited it. Some built it. A few did both. But they all have one thing in common: they’re the richest people in the province.

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André Pratte: A welfare state that Quebecers can’t afford

School boards, teachers and parents are furious with François Legault’s government for cutting $570 million from the province’s current year education budget.

Services to students, they argue, will inevitably suffer. The cutbacks having been announced without warning, the anger is understandable. However, Quebecers would do well to get used to such financial restrictions: the province’s fiscal situation is dire, and at this stage, there is no other choice but to slow the rise in expenditures, especially for the two largest parts of the budget by far, that is health care (44 per cent) and education (15 per cent).

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Canada’s EV mandate directly benefits Musk. He’ll lose big if it’s dropped.

OTTAWA — Canada’s electric vehicle mandate is under fire from Washington — and if it falls, one of the biggest losers could be Elon Musk.

That’s because the mandate, a climate change policy from the Justin Trudeau era, requires carmakers to hit 20 percent EV sales by 2026, or else buy credits from companies that have exceeded the goal. In Canada, that means they have to buy credits from Tesla, because it only sells EVs.

The Eco-Fanatics must be so torn.

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