To stop Trump, censor those awful people who don’t think like I want them to!

MacDougall: To stop Trump, drain the social media swamp

If nothing concentrates the mind like the prospect of a hanging, what does an endless series of potential hangings do to one’s cranium?

This is the question Canada must contemplate as it braces for more Donald Trump. We may have received a 30-day reprieve on tariffs, but Trump will be back to beggar his neighbour. And every day he is in power, he inspires another generation of “leaders” imbued with the philosophy of “might makes right.”

Do these nutz ever listen to themselves?

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Oh Say Can You See …

He’s ragging us, I think. But VDH said much the same thing about Trump’s Intentions in this interview of 2 weeks ago.

This is the full VDH vid

h/t XC

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Amid a national economic crisis, Justin Trudeau hosts another pointless round table

It was just 9:15 am, and one of the most senior CEOs attending Friday’s Canada-U.S. Economic Summit was already heading for the exit.

You don’t compile this fellow’s successful track record without learning to quickly size-up a situation, and while he missed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s excellent welcoming speech, I assume that he figured there were better ways to add value to our country than contribute to some unstructured round table discussion.

Trudeau loves photo-ops.

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What’s Trump’s Tariff End Game?

President Trump’s threats to put a 25 percent tariff on most Canadian and Mexican imports—now on hold for 30 days, pending negotiations with both countries—have overturned the reigning orthodoxy in trade and diplomacy. Unlike his tariffs on China, the tariffs on Canada in particular lack any direct national security rationale. He may be pursuing them because he thinks Canada’s rules on fentanyl precursors are too loose, because he wants to shock the global trade system, or even because it’s his opening salvo in a bid to induce Ottawa to join the Union. But whatever Trump’s true aims are, one thing is clear: the tariffs would affect the nearly half a trillion dollars of goods and services that Americans import from Canada each year and lower near-term living standards up and down the North American continent.

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Trump promises 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports — including from Canada

U.S. President Donald Trump said he will announce on Monday that the United States will impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports, including from Canada and Mexico, as well as other import duties later in the week.

“Any steel coming into the United States is going to have a 25 per cent tariff,” he told reporters Sunday on Air Force One as he flew from Florida to New Orleans to attend the Super Bowl. When asked about aluminum, he responded, “aluminum, too” will be subject to the trade penalties.

Trump also reaffirmed that he would announce “reciprocal tariffs” —”probably Tuesday or Wednesday” — meaning that the U.S. would impose import duties on products in cases where another country has levied duties on U.S. goods.

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Pierre Poilievre was riding a Trump-like wave. Is it about to drown him?

Susan Delacourt: Donald Trump is no friend to progressives in Canada, to state the obvious. But I’m sure I’m not the only person wondering these days how much of a pal he is to Canadian conservatives, both provincially and federally.

Trump’s 30-day reprieve of tariffs on Canadian imports kind of pulled the rug out from Doug Ford’s whole provincial election pitch to Ontarians, who will now vote on Feb. 27 without any clue on what Trump will do next. Meanwhile, polls are showing that Pierre Poilievre and the federal Conservatives are taking a hit in popularity as Canadians shift their attention to who’s best to deal with the havoc Trump is wreaking. So my question to you, Matt: is it time for Poilievre’s team to get nervous?

People are waking up to the fact the elite and their media have ginned up a TDS patriotism to distract from the LPC-NDP reign of error.

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Cory Morgan: Now Is the Ideal Time for Canada to End Its Costly and Outdated Dairy Supply Management System

Canadians collectively breathed a sigh of relief when President Trump offered a reprieve on the proposed 25 percent tariff on Canadian trade goods. The trade war is not over, however. It has been put on pause for 30 days. As the deadline approaches, or a later one as U.S. officials review existing trade relations, the Trump administration will make new demands, and Canada’s dairy supply management system will be targeted.

Canadian ministers recognize this threat, as International Trade Minister Mary Ng made it clear in a recent interview that there will be no concessions made on supply management.

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LILLEY: Trump gives Japan LNG deal Trudeau denied in 2023

Donald Trump is offering Japan something that Canada, under Justin Trudeau, refused to and we will be poorer because of it.

While meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru on Friday, the U.S. President mentioned several trade initiatives with Japan – but specifically exporting liquified natural gas to Japan.

This is the very deal Japan asked Canada for two years ago, in an attempt to wean their country off of Russian and Middle Eastern products. Trudeau refused their request, but on Friday, Trump boasted of what he says will be a great deal for America.


Trump gets cool stuff, Junior gets us laughed at.

h/t Patti Jo

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$4B Research Grant Agencies Prioritizing ‘Political Activism’ Over Excellence, Says Study on DEI in Canada

A new report looking at the prevalence of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI and EDI) practices in federal research grant-funding agencies says the ideology has “come to dominate” the academia and government.

The report by the Macdonald-Laurier Institute studied how DEI appears in academic and research bodies, including three federal research granting agencies.

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Liberal leadership hopefuls are turning away from some of Justin Trudeau’s policies. Here’s what they say they’ll actually support

OTTAWA—Defence spending is hot. The consumer carbon price is not. And at least two “czars” are on offer to help solve the nation’s problems.

With little over a month left before Liberals choose Canada’s next prime minister, the candidates to replace Justin Trudeau are starting to fill out their policy visions. There is broad agreement on issues like the desire to preserve Trudeau government social programs, including dental care, child care and public coverage of diabetes medication and contraception.

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Jamie Sarkonak: Conservatives must prepare for a public service cull

The Conservatives just got a good piece of advice for dealing with the nearly 370,000-strong federal workforce from the man who once headed the Liberals’ public service: get ready to get firing.

On this topic, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre hasn’t offered much of a plan beyond acknowledging the need for fewer bureaucrats and more efficiency. Last month, his deputy leader, Melissa Lantsman, suggested the tactic of attrition: wait for staff to leave, and don’t replace them. (On this front, the Liberals are one step ahead, having deployed a “natural attrition” plan to save costs in the 2024 budget.)

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SHOCKA! Muslim – Jewish Relations In Canada Considered Bad By Many According To Poll

OTTAWA — As conflicts continue to erupt around the globe, a new survey suggests that Canadians are anxious about relationships between groups here at home — particularly between Muslim and Jewish Canadians.

The survey of 1,578 Canadians, conducted by Leger Marketing for the Association for Canadian Studies between Jan. 17 and 19, 2025, asked respondents for their perceptions of relations between Muslim, Jewish, Indigenous, white and other Canadians.

Across Canada, 43 per cent of respondents said the relationship between Muslim and Jewish Canadians was “bad.”


As expected the Islamist apologists are out in force …

Deborah Lyons, Canada’s special envoy on combating antisemitism, said in a media statement that public perceptions of the relationship between Canadian Muslims and Jews don’t always reflect real life. “In truth, these communities share far more in common than many assume, including resilience and perseverance in combating hate and discrimination,” Lyons said. 

&

“This may indeed be what Canadians think, but it reflects a false and widespread misconception that Israel-Palestine is fundamentally a religious conflict between Jews and Muslims, rather than a political issue about human rights and international law,” Bueckert said.

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Canada vs Elon Musk: Targeting the world’s richest man has its risks and rewards

As Canada and the U.S. careened toward a trade war this past weekend, Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, found himself in the crosshairs.

First, Liberal leadership candidate Chrystia Freeland proposed slapping 100 per cent tariffs on cars made by Tesla Inc., Musk’s electric vehicle company. “We need to be very targeted, very surgical and precise. We need to look through and say who is supporting Trump and … make them pay,” she said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

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Conrad Black: Time to toughen up, Canada

Those of us who confidently stated that in waving about 25 per cent tariffs against Canadian goods, U.S. President Donald Trump was just playing poker and raising the ante, appear to have been vindicated. Those who were preparing for guerrilla war, such as the Toronto Star editorial board and the worrisomely incoherent and oddly malicious Andrew Coyne, have been left to self-sedate in a quiet place and return to normal life when they are ready, without rushing it or being over-ambitious. It was outrageous, as I and others have written, for the U.S. government to treat Mexico and Canada alike. As our capable ambassador to the United Nations, Bob Rae, pointed out on Fox News, when tourism and investment are taken into account, our trade relationship provides huge benefits for both Canada and the United States. And whatever grievances the Americans may think they have over the entry of undesirable people and dangerous drugs into their country across the northern border, we have at least as great a grievance over the flow of illegal firearms and migrants, who have fled across our border in fear of the new president’s threats to deport them. The United States has acknowledged that the flow of fentanyl from Mexico to the U.S. is nearly 500 times greater than the quantity that has come from Canada.

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Booze, language laws and maple syrup? Here’s how interprovincial barriers impact your daily life

There’s been a lot of chatter about interprovincial trade barriers lately — namely, that Canada should remove them, with federal and provincial officials saying that opening up domestic trade could soften the impact of potential U.S. tariffs. But what are these barriers, and how do they impact our daily lives?

Just imagine that Canada’s 13 provinces and territories are each a small country, said Moshe Lander, an economics professor at Concordia University in Montreal.

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