US Consulate update

I’m betting on Elbow People

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Ban London’s Al Quds ‘hate march’ by Iran regime supporters, minister says

A justice minister has put pressure on Shabana Mahmood to ban a march linked to the Iranian regime set to take place on Sunday in London.

Sarah Sackman, the courts minister, said the Al Quds march has “no place in British society and the authorities and the police should take the enforcement action needed against these marches”. She branded the rally, which is held in London each year during Ramadan and named after the Arabic name for Jerusalem, a “hate march”.

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Family of Tumbler Ridge shooting victim suing OpenAI

The family of one of the victims of the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge is suing OpenAI.

The mother of Maya Gebala, a 12-year-old who remains in hospital after the shooting on Feb. 10, alleges the tech company failed to alert authorities to chat prompts from the shooter related to violence.

The claim was filed in B.C. Supreme Court on Monday on behalf of Gebala by her mother, Cia Edmonds.

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The Media Is Taking Iran’s Word on the School Strike

Alleged Tomahawk Missile

President Donald Trump and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth flatly denied that U.S. forces targeted civilians after a missile strike destroyed a girls’ school in Minab, Iran. Trump said the information he reviewed suggested Iran may have caused the explosion itself, while Hegseth repeated that U.S. forces don’t deliberately attack civilians and confirmed the Pentagon is reviewing the incident.

That didn’t stop Western media outlets from rushing to repeat Tehran’s accusations.


Mauser sent this tweet to our attention.

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MCGREGOR: Canada is gambling with its US alliance — it won’t end well

There is a comforting idea making the rounds in Canada: stay neutral, keep everyone calm, and we will be fine. We can distance ourselves from the United States (US) without losing the benefits of the alliance and let markets and multilateral forums do the heavy lifting.

It sounds smart. It is also risky.

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John Ivison: Carney’s credibility faces friendly fire in the war with Iran

It is progress that the Prime Minister’s Office is now letting Canadians know when Mark Carney speaks with President Donald Trump, but it would be much better if the read-out that followed didn’t subtract from the sum of human knowledge.

The PMO said the two leaders held a conversation on Sunday about the economy, developments in the Middle East and trade relations.

What wasn’t clear was who called whom and what, if anything, was achieved.

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Travis Dhanraj’s testimony

Live feed.

It’s running late, was supposed to start at 11 am

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Anti-Muslim hostility’ policies risk splitting society, Labour told

Ministers’ introduction of an official definition of anti-Muslim hostility risks worsening community tensions by allowing Islamists to “undermine our values”, the government’s former anti-extremism tsar has warned.

Lord Walney told The Times he was “deeply concerned” about the definition, unveiled on Monday as part of the government’s social cohesion strategy, which he said could be used by extremists to “deflect scrutiny from their quest to undermine our values and intimidate fellow Muslims”.

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U.S. Consulate in downtown Toronto hit by gunfire

Road closures are in place in Toronto’s downtown core after police say someone discharged a firearm at the U.S. Consulate early Tuesday morning.

Investigators say shots were fired at the building, located near University Avenue and Queen Street West, at around 5:30 a.m.

It’s a fairly formidable building and the area must be covered in cameras.

h/t Patti Jo. This late breaking story is brought to you by the guy who couldn’t sleep last night and finally crashed about 6 am.

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The German Elite’s Anti-Americanism

Much of the sense of European superiority towards America has long rested on an elitist belief that America is dominated by the wrong kind of voters.

Trump has no idea of foreign policy.” “Amateur diplomats.” “Trump privatises foreign policy.” These are the phrases echoing through German newsrooms and opinion columns—often accompanied by imagery that goes considerably further: Der Spiegel’s covers depicting Trump as Hitler or as a dictator are only the most prominent examples. The cumulative effect on public opinion has been measurable. A recent Allensbach survey found that German approval for cooperation with and trust in America had fallen dramatically, from 62% in 2020 to just 34%. A full 64% of respondents agreed that “Donald Trump disregards international rules and long-standing alliances, thereby bringing chaos to the world.”

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Terry Newman: Consultants for human rights museum’s ‘Nakba’ exhibit are hardened anti-Israel activists

It looks like critics who were worried about whether there would be bias in the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) exhibit “Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Past and Present” had cause to be concerned, after all.

When the exhibit, which opens in June, was originally announced last November, I reached out to the museum’s spokesperson, Amanda Gaudes, to inquire about the makeup of the Palestinian Content Advisory Network (PCAN), given that, as per a press release from the Palestinian Canadian Congress, the group played a “central role in making this exhibit possible.” At the time, Gaudes would not reveal who the members were, only that, “It is standard museum protocol to work with advisory networks.”

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Iranians deeply divided over Nepo-Baby Mojtaba Khamenei’s rise to power

Mojtaba Khamenei has been named Iran’s new supreme leader and successor to his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed on the first day of the war with the US and Iran.

Some pro-establishment crowds have taken to the streets to celebrate the appointment of a hardliner close to the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

But other Iranians have told the BBC that they believe it will not bring about change.

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Military police called in to investigate leak of F-35 fighter jet information

Canadian military police are now involved in investigating the leak of a document used to undercut the Liberal government’s consideration of an alternative to the American-made F-35.

The Ottawa Citizen reported Dec. 15, 2025, that the Department of National Defence had launched an initial investigation into the leak of the four-year-old document. At the time the DND refused to say whether police would be involved.

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Alleged Syrian war criminal facing murder charges in UK-first prosecution

An alleged war criminal is facing trial accused of crimes against humanity in the first UK prosecution of its kind.

The 58-year-old man, who now lives in this country, faces three murder charges, three charges of torture and a single charge of conduct ancillary to murder.

It is the first time the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has brought charges of murder as crimes against humanity under the International Criminal Court Act 2001.

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