WTF?
wtf
Supreme Court says asylum seekers entitled to subsidized Quebec daycare

The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that Quebec discriminated against female refugee claimants by introducing regulations that denied them access to subsidized daycare spaces.
This marks the third ruling against the Quebec government on the matter.
WTF?
Geezuz. 🦨🌬️@fancypants_s https://t.co/BPAm0eDCiT
— Auntie Polly (@auntie_polly) March 6, 2026
H/T Auntie Polly
WTF?
Bloody hell, that must have been quite a Facebook post pic.twitter.com/r6O24Qidde
— Peter Hague (@peterrhague) March 6, 2026
WTF?
Daniel Lurie, the Democrat Mayor of San Francisco, is under fire after a video shows him casually ABANDONING his security guard, who gets slammed onto the pavement during a fight and begins bleeding. pic.twitter.com/n6jZR7GR3o
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) March 6, 2026
Why “Legalize and Tax” Is the Wrong Solution to Our Drug Problem

The economic reasoning is powerful, but it breaks down against reality.
I hate to disagree with my colleague, the great Roland Fryer—and doubly so when it comes to economics. Fryer’s work is consistently both stimulating and insightful, and his contributions to public policy substantially outstrip my own. I nevertheless feel obliged to comment on his recent Wall Street Journal op-ed, in which he uses sound economic reasoning to reach a conclusion I reject: that we should legalize and tax addictive drugs.
Alcohol sales in Canada just saw ‘largest’ annual drop since tracking began

Sales of alcohol declined for the fourth straight year in 2024-25, according to a Statistics Canada report released Wednesday.
From April 1, 2024 to March 31, 2025, sales dropped by three per cent to 2,898 million litres on a volume basis, marking the fourth consecutive year volume sales have declined.
CHARLEBOIS: Poutine, protectionism and cheese curds

Quebec is moving ahead with plans to recognize fromage en grains du Québec — cheese curds — as a controlled designation.
If adopted, the rules would be simple: The milk would need to come from Quebec, the curds would need to be produced there, and producers would have to follow a prescribed production protocol. Cheese curds made outside the province simply could not be marketed under the name fromage en grains du Québec.
Canada’s top crying general weighing military options to support Gulf states in Iran conflict – DEI expected to play key role

OTTAWA — Canada’s Chief of the Defence Staff General Jennie Carignan said she will be meeting with her European counterparts on Friday morning to discuss military options to support Gulf states. But Carignan ruled out any Canadian military involvement in Operation Epic Fury, the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran.
“We are not talking about participating to Epic Fury, per se, this is not the mission that we are considering,” she told reporters on the sidelines of the the Ottawa Conference on Security and Defence on Thursday.
🚨MAJOR BREAKING
Canada's top solider says Canada might enter the middle east fray
to defend gulf allies!!
Buckle the f'k up Canada!! pic.twitter.com/uekZS04yJI
— Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸 (@Tablesalt13) March 6, 2026
Gen. Jennie Carignan says the Canadian Armed Forces is undergoing "major transformation" and will look "very different in 10 years."
Meanwhile, an internal DND presentation says only 58% of CAF personnel could mobilize if NATO declared war, amid recruiting challenges. pic.twitter.com/Eh7SLEt1bu
— Juno News (@junonewscom) March 5, 2026
What military options? It’s doubtful the CAF could put down a sewing circle at this point.
h/t patthedog via Pacific Pundit
WTF?
I don’t think dogs are half as dramatic cats cos wtf😭😭😭🤣🤣🤣 pic.twitter.com/zVQXMLxjBo
— Dr. God Abeg ooo (@josh_uglyasf) March 4, 2026
WTF?
Holy shit, my sides hurt🤣🤣🤣
This is the best thing I’ve seen all year. I can’t breathe 💀🤣💀🤣 pic.twitter.com/4VjUNqe6Wa
— Chaya’s Clan (@ChayasClan) March 5, 2026
‘Buy Canadian’ policy likely to cost taxpayers $12 billion yearly: study

A study released by the Montreal Economic Institute estimates the federal government’s “Buy Canadian” policy could increase the cost of large infrastructure projects by more than $12 billion per year.
The study states that, among Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, total expenditures on public procurement accounted for 12.9 per cent of gross domestic product in 2021.
WTF?
I want to give you a little glimpse inside my TikTok algorithm. And this is the rather tame stuff. pic.twitter.com/fRNJKryQAb
— Dr. Jebra Faushay (@JebraFaushay) March 4, 2026
