Terry Newman: Pro-terror event held at government-funded community centre in Montreal

Terry Newman: Pro-terror event held at government-funded community centre in Montreal

On Sunday, a community centre in Montreal hosted a Palestinian prisoners speaking event that celebrated convicted terrorists involved in stabbings, murders and a failed suicide bombing. The event was organized by the Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM), a group with documented ties to terrorist entities.

Three days prior, two government departments and the centre’s administration were contacted by a lawyer warning them that the event posed a serious risk of promoting hatred and glorifying terrorism, to which none of the parties responded.

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The Equality Act institutionalised racism – against whites

The Equality Act institutionalised racism – against whites

THERE is a term for what is happening in Britain today but the establishment is terrified to say it. That term is institutional racism. For years we were told that the goal of the Equality Act was to protect discriminated against minorities. Now the mask has slipped. Racism and prejudice have not disappeared; they have simply been reworked and aimed at a new target: the British white majority.

The most damning recent evidence of this systemic rot is the ongoing scandal within the Royal Air Force. Recent disclosures have moved this from a policy failure to a full-blown crisis of integrity. Official documents and parliamentary testimony show that senior leadership allegedly lied to the Defence Secretary to hide the scale of their illegal recruitment practices.

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Made In Xinjiang: How Forced Labour Will Dictate Ottawa & Beijing’s Relationship

Made In Xinjiang: How Forced Labour Will Dictate Ottawa & Beijing’s Relationship

The vocabulary of diplomacy has always struggled to keep pace with the realities of power. Today, as technoauthoritarianism reshapes global influence, Canada faces a stark test: whether its economic and diplomatic engagement with Beijing can be reconciled with mounting evidence of systemic human rights abuses, most notably the ongoing genocide against the Uyghur people. Recent public statements and testimonies have only sharpened that dilemma, exposing not just policy tensions, but a deeper moral fault line.

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Trump has had it with NATO

Trump has had it with NATO

A month ago, it was obvious that our frenemies in NATO was trying to play President Trump for a fool by blocking USA bases in their countries from carrying out Operation Epic Fury, which would keep the Islamic regime in Iran from building nuclear weaponry.

I wrote about this in March, calling that newsletter The Little Orange Rooster.

Unlike the characters in The Little Red Hen, these animals were not simply lazy—they were saboteurs supporting a regime that killed 40,000 protesters in two nights. Do not for a moment believe Starmer, Macron, Merz and the rest of the cowards would not open fire on their own people, too.

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Why Canada’s military is nowhere near meeting its decade-old female recruitment target – they don’t like the “Fighty” part

Why Canada’s military is nowhere near meeting its decade-old female recruitment target – they don’t like the “Fighty” part

The military commander overseeing recruitment said the Canadian Armed Forces is nowhere near meeting a target set a decade ago for women to make up 25 per cent of the Forces by 2026 — and at the current rate, reaching that goal is impossible.

Lt.-Gen. Erick Simoneau, chief of military personnel, said Canada’s military is still struggling to attract and keep enough women in uniform.

“We’re having great difficulties because the bulk of our occupations and positions that we have to offer to the Canadian population is in the combat arms in the army,” said Simoneau. “So until we can convince women to join the army and then the combat arms, I’m very pessimistic about meeting the 25 per cent target.”


Besides the men are hoarding all the tampons.

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The ‘anti-extremism’ movement has always been a con

The ‘anti-extremism’ movement has always been a con

Every now and then, there’s a news event that feels simultaneously insane and entirely logical. The stink swirling around the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) is just such an event.

At first blush, the suggestion that the centre has been ‘fund[ing] the extremism that it claimed to be fighting’ seems wild. But then it hits you – such duplicitous antics, if true, would be wholly in keeping with an activist class that continually inflates the far-right threat in order to make itself feel purposeful and virtuous.

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Michael Murphy: The farcical attempt to ‘decolonize’ Shakespeare

Michael Murphy: The farcical attempt to ‘decolonize’ Shakespeare

The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, custodian of buildings and archival materials linked to the playwright, has decided that Shakespeare was too white for their liking. So white, in fact, that the Trust commissioned an investigation into how the playwright’s work advanced “white supremacy.”

Shakespeare’s plays stand accused of being a pillar of “British cultural superiority” and “Anglo-cultural supremacy,” compliments with which I shan’t quibble. The Trust was magnanimous enough, no doubt to the delight of continental esthetes who would like to claim him, to also implicate the Bard in “white European supremacy.” One wonders if the English can, in turn, be awarded some kudos for Dante — but I digress.

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Former Toronto police homicide boss details antisemitism, racism on the force in new memoir

Former Toronto police homicide boss details antisemitism, racism on the force in new memoir

Longtime homicide investigator and former unit commander Hank Idsinga says internal antisemitism, racism and a lack of leadership led to his decision to leave Toronto police after a storied career.

He’s no whistleblower, Idsinga insists, as he sits across from a reporter in a west-end restaurant to discuss his upcoming memoir, “The High Road: Confessions of a Homicide Cop.” This was all part of his story.

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Demographic Decline and Europe’s Political Deadlock

Demographic Decline and Europe’s Political Deadlock

It is well known that socialism is an ideology that ignores the individual and focuses all its attention on the collective. Marx, the preeminent socialist economic theoretician, divided individuals into classes based on the function they have in producing economic value; Lenin, Mao, and others have iterated their own versions of Marxist class theory.

Wherever socialists have carried their ideology to its completion, the result has been the same in terms of the people: in Mao’s China and Stalin’s Soviet, tens of millions of people were starved to death or otherwise killed by the regime; in Pol Pot’s Cambodia, one-quarter of the country’s 8 million people were annihilated in the name of the state’s ideology.

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RCMP calls China police a ‘partner’ as lawmakers question secrecy of cooperation deal

RCMP calls China police a ‘partner’ as lawmakers question secrecy of cooperation deal

The RCMP is describing Chinese law enforcement as a policing “partner” on par with agencies like the FBI, while refusing to disclose details of a cooperation agreement with Beijing, saying the terms cannot be shared without Chinese permission.

Blacklock’s Reporter says Senior Deputy Commissioner Bryan Larkin made the comments during testimony before the Senate national finance committee, where he defended the arrangement as a standard tool for international policing collaboration despite growing political scrutiny.

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Iran State Media and Officials Are Reportedly Ready for the War to Resume

Iran State Media and Officials Are Reportedly Ready for the War to Resume

Iranian state media has reportedly signaled readiness for a potential resumption of war with the United States, amid uncertainty over whether Iran will be able to agree on a unified proposal. This comes even after being granted an additional three to five days under the ceasefire, as hardline Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) members clash with Iranian government officials over whether to concede to American demands or go down fighting.

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Canada’s brain drain is only half the story

Canada’s brain drain is only half the story

Canada has long consoled itself with a particular self-image, that, whatever its economic shortcomings, it remains a magnet for the world’s talent. People want to come here. The numbers back that up. But a harder question is beginning to surface in the data, not how many people arrive, but how many stay—and whether the ones who leave are the ones Canada can afford to lose.

I recently documented Canada’s net emigration and the disproportionate loss of high-earning, highly educated Canadians, particularly to the United States—the entrepreneurs, scientists, engineers, and financiers whose economic contributions far exceed their numbers.

That finding tells only half the story. The other half is what is happening on the immigration intake side of Canada’s human capital equation, and it points in the same troubling direction.

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