Foreign aid groups urge Canada to maintain funding for abortion, LGBTQ+ advocacy

OTTAWA — Feminist and development groups are urging Canada not to turn its back on funding reproductive health and gender initiatives, as Canada focuses its foreign aid cuts on global health programming.

“A bold diplomatic voice is really crucial,” Oxfam Canada executive director Lauren Ravon told a panel she hosted on Parliament Hill earlier this month.

“It’s easy to get into a scarcity mindset. We think ‘Well, we can’t afford it, so let’s cut out the work on LGBTQ+ rights, let’s cut off the work on abortion and just stick to the life-saving pieces.’”

Foreign aid is racist I declare.

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Canadian Intelligence in ‘Lockstep’ With US Counterparts Despite Trade Tensions: CSIS Official

Canada is still working closely with the United States when it comes to intelligence, despite its tense trade relationship with its southern neighbour, according to a senior official with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS).

CSIS Assistant Director Paul Lynd told MPs during his testimony before the House of Commons foreign affairs committee that Canada and the United States have been partners “for decades” and that the two countries’ intelligence departments are still working in unison.

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‘Defeat the American Aggressor’: New Las Vegas Biolab Arrest Warrant Cites Fentanyl Test Kits and the Ideology Behind a Transnational Chinese Operation

LAS VEGAS/VANCOUVER — The Chinese transnational criminal at the center of what began as a counter-terrorism raid on a Las Vegas residential garage told a co-conspirator that his fraudulent theft of U.S. scientific property would help “defeat the American aggressor and wild ambitious wolf.”

In another exchange — part of a sprawling CAD $330 million American IP theft ring run from Vancouver — Jiabei “Jesse” Zhu offered a darker philosophy: “The law is strong, but the outlaws are ten times stronger.”

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Will Canada soon be euthanizing babies?

Donald Trump may or may not bomb Iran in the next few days. His cheerleaders will cite the Tehran regime’s brutal executions of Iranian protesters as justification. But if the President is in the mood for humanitarian interventions and stopping barbarism, he might also want to make good on his pledge to annex Canada.

Once praised as a paragon of decency and civility, Canada is now turning into a dystopian society in which so-called “healthcare” professionals wield increasingly terrifying power of life and death.

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WATER WARS: Global experts sound the alarm for Canada

CALGARY — A new Global Foresight survey from the Atlantic Council suggests that while climate change is slipping as the world’s top perceived threat, tensions over water sources are intensifying.

For the first time in the past three years, a smaller number of the roughly 450 geopolitical experts polled ranked climate change as the single biggest threat to global prosperity, with just 17% saying it tops the list, with fewer than one in five now believing climate change will drive international cooperation in the coming decade — a sharp drop from two years ago.

(Incognito)

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Stop Pretending the Tumbler Ridge Killer Was Female

The sight of Canadian police and journalists extending fraudulent courtesies to a trans-identified mass-murderer may prove to be a clarifying moment.

On 10 February, Jesse Van Rootselaar (also known as Jesse Strang) killed eight people in the remote British Columbia mining town of Tumbler Ridge. The first two victims were the killer’s mother and half-brother, whom Van Rootselaar shot at home. Van Rootselaar then went to a local secondary school and murdered six more people—five of whom were twelve- or thirteen-year-old students—before committing suicide. Twenty-seven others were injured. It was the deadliest Canadian school shooting in almost four decades, and the highest-casualty mass-shooting event in the nation’s history.

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The ‘cheating’ scandals, F-bombs and secret filming claims that rocked curling

Curling is often called chess or bowls on ice; a genteel, slow-paced and respectable sport of strategy and precision that stands in sharp contrast to the more extreme edges of the Winter Olympics.

Until Friday that is, when the sport was rocked not just with a cheating scandal, but a stream of F-bombs, accusations of secret filming, claim and counterclaim as well as a whole heap of bad feeling.

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Conrad Black: In search of a distinct Canadian identity

Canadians, and especially all English-speaking Canadians, have lived all their lives intermittently explaining to themselves why Canada should be an independent country and not part of the United States. Apart from the many abrasions of his public personality, the greatest grievance in Canada against U.S. President Donald Trump is that he explicitly stated the same question. Like most Americans, Trump thinks all foreigners wish to be American, and like most foreigners familiar with Canada, he fails to find any significant difference between English-speaking Canadians and Americans from northern states of the U.S. This question arose when former prime minister Justin Trudeau told him that Canada’s economy would “collapse” if subjected to sizable American tariff increases. To Trump, it was perfectly logical, and more a flattering than an insulting question, given that Canada had not paid its way in national self-defence for decades, to ask why it did not take the logical step to eliminate any question of tariffs or any worry about national defence and simply join the United States.

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Behind Canada’s Sealed COVID-19 Reports

Pandemic governance and the cost to Canadian freedom.

On Feb. 2, 2026, Blacklock’s Reporter confirmed that Canada’s Liberal government has now “sealed internal reports on vaccine and drug injuries for 15 years” and revealed that the hastily buried documents shockingly “run to several million pages.”

Unfortunately, the Liberal government’s recent effort to further conceal the unspeakable damage wrought by the COVID vaccines in Canada is merely the latest sordid example of the fascist left-wing politics and open human rights violations that have plagued Canadian society since the onset of the COVID pandemic.

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Data suggests most Canadians believe U.S. would support Alberta separation

As discussion around Alberta separation continues, a new survey suggests many Canadians believe the United States would back the province if it chose to leave Confederation.

A Nanos Research survey commissioned by CTV News found four in five Canadians believe the U.S. would support Alberta separating from Canada. Respondents in the Prairie provinces reported the highest levels of that belief at 58.2 per cent, whereas less than 30 per cent of Quebec residents believe that it is likely that the U.S. would support Alberta separating.

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Head of military’s space division warns Russia is considering putting nuclear weapons in orbit

We have a Space Division?

The head of Canada’s military space division says the country “should absolutely be” concerned about Russia’s potential capabilities amid global fears the Kremlin is considering putting nuclear weapons in place to target satellites.

“That would be cataclysmic,” said Brig.-Gen. Christopher Horner, Commander of 3 Canadian Space Division during an interview with CBC’s The House.

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Amid ‘Buy Canadian’ fervour, Canada’s top pension funds still heavily invested in U.S.

For all the fear over the U.S. trade war and President Donald Trump’s threats to Canadian sovereignty, this country’s biggest pension funds remain heavily invested in the U.S.

The Canada Pension Plan (CPP), the largest pension fund in the country, announced this week that it has grown to a record $780.7 billion in assets, with 47 per cent invested in the U.S., compared to only 13 per cent in Canada.

That level of U.S. ownership hasn’t budged in the year since Trump retook office, according to third-quarter results released on Friday.


But it gets better … kidding

h/t handy n handsome

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Canada has officially joined the EU’s loans-for-weapons program

Defence Minister David McGuinty says Canada has now officially joined the European Union’s Security Action for Europe (SAFE) program, which offers loans to member states to invest in defence capabilities.

“The agreement strengthens our collective security, supports the development of key defence capabilities, and gives Canadian industry access to European defence markets while contributing to European and Ukrainian security,” McGuinty said in a statement sent to CBC News.


Canada joined in late 2025 with an upfront participation contribution of about €7.5 million (in 2026) plus an administrative fee of €2.5 million, totaling around €10 million for preferential access.

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