Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Mid-Week Post

Ugandan martyrs, pray for us.

 

You b@$#@rd:

Prime Minister Mark Carney has responded to the news that the Canadian economy entered a technical recession by saying lower population growth and reduced government spending have contributed to “weakness” in the economy.

Statistics Canada reported on May 29 that Canada’s economy showed no growth in the first quarter of 2026 after negative growth in the last quarter of 2025. The country’s GDP declined for two consecutive quarters on an annualized basis, meeting the common definition of a technical recession.

Asked by reporters in Parliament on June 2 whether Canada was in a recession, Carney responded by saying his government had “been in the process of laying the foundations for a stronger, more resilient, more independent” Canadian economy. He said this involved the “difficult” work of making major investments, changing the way government operates, and securing trade agreements with other countries.

“As we do all that, the data is going to be uneven, and we will see some weakness,” Carney said.


Remember – he was a banker.

Or something.


 

Answering questions is for little people:

Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday skipped Commons questions over the recession to take a 15-minute tour of a construction site in his Nepean, Ont. riding. The Prime Minister would only let media “take a picture of him wearing a hard hat and carrying a hammer around pretending he’s a carpenter” but would not discuss his management of the economy, said Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre.

**

As MPs gathered in the House of Commons at 2 p.m. Monday for daily question period, Prime Minister Mark Carney was 20 minutes away, posing for a photo op in front of a housing development in his riding.

The Leader of the Official Opposition, Pierre Poilievre, had hoped the prime minister would be present in the House of Commons to answer questions about the economy, given that, on Friday, Statistics Canada noted that gross domestic product output shrank during the quarter ending March 31, the second consecutive quarter in which the economy contracted.

One definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative growth. But with the second quarter shrinking by just 0.1 per cent, BMO Economics senior economist Robert Kavcic argued against applying that label.

“There is much more to a recession than two quarters of negative GDP growth,” Kavcic wrote. “Things aren’t great, but Canada isn’t there yet.”

Still, whether the country is in a recession is a debatable point, and that’s precisely what Poilievre wanted to do: challenge the prime minister for leading the country into what Conservatives argue is a “full-blown” recession.

But in skipping question period for a photo op — where he took no questions — Carney continued a pattern now clearly established during his time as prime minister of avoiding accountability to members of Parliament.

“Question period, where normally prime ministers go to answer, especially in a moment of crisis when the economy has fallen into the only recession in the G7, you’d expect him to be there to be accountable, to show his incredible economic brilliance, but he’s not showing up for question period,” Poilievre told reporters Monday morning in the House of Commons foyer.

Monday’s question period was the 123rd such session in the current Parliament and Carney has been present for just 33 of those sessions, or 26.8 per cent.

 

 

Also:

The Senate concealed hundreds of thousands of postcards mailed by Canadians opposed to a cabinet bill, the chair of the budget committee confirmed yesterday. Senator Tony Loffreda (Que.), a Liberal appointee, denied any trickery: “This decision was not made to silence anyone.”

 

 

All Hitler had to do was wait a few years:

An OPSEU employee who came under scrutiny for social media posts praising Adolf Hitler will keep her job.

In a statement issued Friday by Canada’s largest public sector union, recently-hired campaign officer Rawan Qaddoura will not be fired over the historic posts on Twitter — now called X — that praised the Third Reich leader and repeated racist tropes that the world is controlled by Jews.

“The staff member has taken full and public responsibility for this conduct,” read the statement from the Ontario Public Service Employees Union.

In a statement issued alongside, Qaddoura called the posts “completely inexcusable” and she understands the harm they caused.

“These posts do not reflect my beliefs today, nor did they meaningfully reflect any beliefs that I sincerely held at the time,” the statement read.

Qaddoura claims she didn’t have the “same level of judgement political understanding, and emotional maturity” at the time the posts were made in 2012 and 2013.

“I regret the harm and distress this has created for staff, members, and the broader labour movement,” she said.

The posts were made when Qaddoura was allegedly 14 years old.

“I honestly wish I was born at the time of the second world war just to see the genius, Hitler, at work,” Qaddoura wrote in a January 2012 post on X, formerly Twitter.

In a second post six months later, Qaddoura wrote, “Everytime I read about Hitler, I fall in love all over again.”

That was followed by a third post from August 2013, where she quoted a now-deleted X account saying, “The whole world is controlled by Zionist Jews and until you understand that, life will never make sense.”

All three tweets were cataloged and archived by online antisemitism watchdog Canary Mission, which has documented Qaddoura’s history of anti-Israel activism.

Qaddoura will remain an OPSEU employee

In their statement, the union said they conducted a throughout review of the matter, including her job performance and Qaddoura’s mea culpa.

“Having concluded that process — and recognizing both the authentic accountability she has demonstrated for comments made as a child and her exemplary record of respectful conduct in the workplace — OPSEU/SEFPO has determined that the staff member will remain on staff,” the statement read.

“We will not be commenting publicly any further on internal staffing matters or next steps.”

The statement also acknowledged concerns raised by Jewish OPSEU members.

“We have heard your concerns and understand this situation does not exist in isolation, and we are committed to doing more — not just responding to incidents as they arise, but building a union where every member, including Jewish members, feels genuinely respected and included,” the statement read.


 

A system too big to fail:

Except “chair medicine” and “waiting room care” have become routine and common, default responses to Canada’s severely gridlocked emergency rooms, Mackay and other emergency physicians are reporting.

“ER chair medicine in Ontario (the awful cousin of hallway medicine) is unacceptable. Full stop,” Toronto emergency physician Dr. Raghu Venugopal posted on X.

“We need to get rid of it. We must fund hospitals and fix the problem of critically ill patients put in a chair. There is zero exaggeration here. I am sounding the alarm. Hear it.”

Venugopal posted that he witnessed people in “extremis from pain” being “put and kept in a chair.”

Extremis can mean uncontrolled, doubled-over-in-agony pain. “Generally speaking, those patients shouldn’t be in a chair,” Mackay said.

But as backed-up emergency departments desperately try to manage more demand than they have the capacity to meet, more people are being assessed in “unconventional spaces,” the official euphemism for spaces never designed, or equipped, to provide emergency care: No access to oxygen or suction, no nurse call bell, no easy access to a washroom or sink, no shred of privacy.

“Unconventional spaces” can include any carved-out space. Hospitals are converting ambulance bays into patient wards. “No heating, no plumbing, but, ‘Hey, it’s great — we’re taking care of our patients by sticking them in a cold garage,'” said Mackay, chair of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physician’s rural, remote and small urban section.

Patients have been examined in closets and washrooms. Doctors are wading into waiting rooms and pulling sick patients into corners and cubby holes. Blankets are being hung off IV poles to create makeshift curtains for people stranded in chaotic hallways. While it may give the illusion of an acceptable version of medicine, care is “guaranteed being comprised by the concept, ‘We can just see a patient in a chair,'” Mackay said.

**

In Canada, if your doctor refers you to a specialist, you’ll likely have to wait 15 weeks to get an appointment. Then another 13 weeks to get treated. Just getting an MRI will take 4 1/2 months, on average. But if you want to kill yourself? You can get a same-day appointment.

Welcome to the healthcare system that Bernie Sanders and his socialist pals want to import into the U.S.

A decade ago, Canada legalized “Medical Assistance in Dying,” or MAID. At first it was limited to those whose deaths were “reasonably foreseeable,” such as end-stage terminal cancer patients. Five years later, it was expanded to those whose “death is not reasonably foreseeable.” People with a disability or non-terminal illnesses could get a doctor to snuff them out. Lawmakers expanded it again to include those suffering solely from a mental illness, which the government expects to implement next year.

MAID is already big business in Canada. Nearly 100,000 Canadians have availed themselves of this form of “healthcare,” and it now accounts for more than 5% of all deaths in the country.

And the government seems to be doing everything it can to make it a runaway hit. Lawmakers waived the 10-day waiting period for those whose deaths “are reasonably foreseeable,” and the rest have to wait only 90 days.

The result is that same-day or next-day killings are common, which one member of the MAID Death Review Committee said “reveals remarkable fast‐tracking of euthanasia.”

“One elderly woman declined MAID and preferred palliative care,” he wrote. “When a hospice placement request was rejected, her husband, who had been assessed as struggling with ‘caregiver burnout’ asked for an urgent MAID assessment. She was euthanized that day.”

Nor does the state appear to care much about enforcing its own rules.

 The Toronto Globe and Mail this week reported on a case involving a 45-year-old who suffered from Crohn’s disease, whose doctor approved him for death at a meeting in a coffee shop, and then followed up with dozens of text messages encouraging him to go through with the euthanasia, including one bashing family members who opposed him committing suicide. The doctor even drove him to the facility to administer the fatal drug cocktail.

The same doctor had also declared a patient dead only to have her start breathing again, requiring him to return to finish the job.

 

 

Why keep tabs on thing like that?:

Labour inspectors must ensure no illegal immigrants are working on federal public works, says Conservative MP Kyle Seeback (Dufferin-Caledon, Ont.). Cabinet has admitted it does not know how many, if any, of an estimated 500,000 illegal immigrants in Canada are drawing wages in subsidized construction: “Can the Minister cite one investigation?”

**

The Department of Immigration says there is “high interest” in foreigners applying to become Canadians under 2025 changes to the Citizenship Act. Conservative MP Brad Redekopp (Saskatoon West) in Commons debate on budget Main Estimates pressed for a number: “Does the Minister stand by her estimate?”

 

 

The Grift in process:

The Senate human rights committee last night voted 7 to 1 to criminalize Indian Residential School “denialism.” Public statements intended to promote hatred by downplaying the impacts of Residential Schools would be outlawed under threat of two years in jail: “It can involve denying, minimizing or justifying the documented abuses, deaths, forced assimilation and intergenerational harms.”

**

A hoax costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars and appears to incite arson attacks against dozens of churches.

 No, this isn't the latest headline out of Minnesota — look a little further north.

In 2021, at a time when media throughout the Western world were still in a state of agitation after the killing of George Floyd, Canadian outlets picked up a story too sensational not to be true:

Hundreds of indigenous First Nations children had been buried in unmarked graves at residential schools run by the Catholic Church in British Columbia.

The Kamloops Indian Band sent around a press release that "confirmed" it.

The statement claimed the remains of 215 children had been found with the help of an expert using ground-penetrating radar.

"We had a knowing in our community that we were able to verify," said the band's chief, Rosanne Casimir.

"Some were as young as three years old," she continued, asserting "the final resting place of these children" was in the Kamloops Indian Residential School.

Only it wasn't. No human remains have been found at Kamloops, as media that fanned the flames of the story now admit.

Even now, Canada's biggest daily paper, The Globe and Mail, phrases its retraction in cagey terms.

"There has been no public confirmation of the discovery of any human remains," the paper conceded on May 30.

That funny phrasing leaves one wondering, is there private confirmation of human remains — another "knowing," perhaps?

The Globe and Mail editorial, titled "There is no reconciliation without truth," is a masterpiece of embarrassed equivocation, lamenting conditions for First Nations children at Canada's residential schools and even insisting the absence of bodies "does not mean children did not die there" before finally, eight paragraphs into the story, taking a smidgen of responsibility:

"The media, including The Globe and Mail, did not initially scrutinize, much less challenge" the story, the editorial board concedes.

"The initial headlines and stories in the media simply stated as fact that the remains of 215 children had been found. Many of those early stories, including in this newspaper, made references to 'mass graves'," a phrase that went beyond even Chief Casimir's claims.

Yet right after admitting its failures, the paper speculates, "Perhaps it will be proven, some day, that there are hundreds of unmarked graves at Kamloops" — as if the error here was being a little too hasty to declare what will sooner or later turn out to be true.

After all, that would be the "truth" that fits the narrative The Globe and Mail lays out in the first seven paragraphs of its story, a tale of wicked residential schools and countless First Nations children doomed to a miserable death.

 The narrative comes first — the facts must follow.

This time they didn't, but next time?

The narrative isn't going away just because its showcase story has been debunked.

The consequences of the media hype aren't going away, either:

Canadian taxpayers footed the bill to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars — real money in U.S. dollars, too — for First Nations groups to investigate "soil anomalies."

The government simply doesn't know where the money went.

As enormous as the fraud here appears to be, worse is the destruction unleashed by arsonists and vandals against Catholic Churches in the story's wake.

Canada's state broadcaster, the CBC, cataloged 33 churches "burned to the ground" between 2021 and 2024, with 24 of those incidents "confirmed arsons."

"A researcher and some community leaders suggest Canada's colonial history and recent discoveries of potential burial sites at former residential schools may have lit the fuse" for these incendiary attacks, the CBC reported.

Yet the media lit the fuse — not only by hyping an outrageous story that was never backed up by evidence but also by laying down a grand narrative that stoked anger at churches.

(And, in typical fashion, although the residential schools were Catholic-run, other churches also suffered from indiscriminate attacks apparently inspired by the story.)

**

Sarah Beaulieu, the ground-penetrating radar technician whose report had yielded the initial 215 figure, said she had since received information that her survey had accidentally counted a series of prior archaeological digs.

Between 1991 and 2004, land surrounding the former Kamloops Indian Residential School had been excavated by a Simon Fraser University team. The work involved digging “shovel test pits” and then screening the soil for bone tools, fire pits and other evidence of pre-contact Indigenous use.

And apparently, some of those test pits had been incorrectly pinged as suspected graves.

“I had to rule out where those excavations had taken place in the late 90s, early 2000s,” said Beaulieu. “After this review it was determined that there remain 200 targets of interest.”

Unmentioned at the two-hour press conference was the arguably far more relevant information that the area of the Kamloops Indian Residential School grounds they had surveyed also lay atop a historic septic system.

In fact, the survey site may have been overtop the system’s “disposal beds,” a structure consisting of a latticework of clay pipes, installed in 1926 and laid out in an east-west orientation. The details of the system were easy to find. The plans, purchase order and correspondence related to the septic field are all held in the archives of the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.

**

Federal managers yesterday testified they never authorized a $10 million charge by Indigenous Languages Commissioner Ronald Ignace to host a four-day conference in Ottawa. An internal audit is underway: “How many Indigenous people could have learned their language with $10 million?”

**

The duty to consult indigenous people isn’t within the Canadian Constitution. Section 35 is a short and straightforward segment of the document. It states:

35 (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.

(2) In this Act, “aboriginal peoples of Canada” includes the Indian, Inuit, and Métis peoples of Canada.

(3) For greater certainty, in subsection (1), “treaty rights” includes rights that now exist by way of land claims agreements or may be so acquired.

(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the aboriginal and treaty rights referred to in subsection (1) are guaranteed equally to male and female persons.

Note, it does not say consult anywhere within that text. It certainly doesn’t say consent.

The duty to consult we keep hearing of is a judge-made constitutional obligation developed by the Supreme Court of Canada. In a ruling regarding the Haida band in 2004, the Supreme Court stated, “When the Crown (federal or provincial government) contemplates conduct that might adversely affect established or potential Aboriginal or treaty rights, it has a duty to consult the affected Indigenous group(s).”

The nature of Canada’s system follows the living tree doctrine. It’s a principle of constitutional interpretation that views Canada’s Constitution as a dynamic, evolving document rather than one frozen in time. It’s a nice ideal, but it has empowered activist judges to veritably rewrite the document and not in a good way.

**

DRIPA, which was passed by the government of former B.C. premier John Horgan in 2019, cannot provide a viable framework for reconciliation in British Columbia, because the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) is not a viable framework for reconciliation in an advanced western democracy such as Canada, which already recognizes and affirms Aboriginal and treaty rights in its Constitution.

The suggestion that UNDRIP ought to be Canada’s reconciliation framework came from the Truth and

Sec. 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, states, “The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.” The Supreme Court has interpreted this as the proper vehicle for reconciliation in Canada. While Sec. 35 has been criticized, it at least provides a balanced approach to reconciling the pre-existence of Indigenous societies with the imposition of sovereignty by the Crown.

UNDRIP is inconsistent with Sec. 35 and is contrary to what the Supreme Court has determined to be the constitutional obligations of governments and the rights they are supposed to protect. Governments simply cannot accept UNDRIP as an alternative pathway to reconciliation in the Canadian context.

Apparently the B.C. government’s view was that it never intended DRIPA to be legally enforceable by the courts, or to cause UNDRIP itself to be the law of the land. Yet in December 2025, the B.C. Court of Appeal disagreed with that interpretation of both DRIPA and Sec. 8.1 of the Interpretation Act, which states that, “Every Act and regulation must be construed as being consistent with the Declaration.”

The court determined that, “Properly interpreted, the Declaration Act incorporates UNDRIP into the positive law of British Columbia with immediate legal effect.” This has created enormous levels of legal uncertainty in the province and opened the door for First Nations to litigate, and potentially upend, any provincial laws if they so choose.

Even American First Nations have cited DRIPA and UNDRIP in legal challenges to provincial government decisions, including the government’s approval of the Eskey Creek mine in northern B.C.

Recently, the Business Council of British Columbia surveyed its members and found that 98 per cent of them are “very concerned” about DRIPA “applying to all laws in the province. The same share of respondents also said that they do not believe DRIPA is living up to its original promise of creating greater investment certainty in B.C.”

**

On the sunny afternoon of October 16, 1966, just a few weeks into the school year, 12-year-old Charlie (aka “Chanie”) Wenjack was enjoying himself on the swings in the playground at the back of Cecilia Jeffrey (CJ) Indian Residential School in northwestern Ontario. Seven days later, his lifeless body was found lying beside the railway tracks about 70 kilometres east of the Ontario–Manitoba border.

Today, Charlie Wenjack is the most famous Residential school student in Canadian history—a symbol of the suffering endured by Indigenous children who were forced to attend white-run boarding schools away from their families.

Books have been written about Charlie. Buildings have been named in his memory. He is featured in more than 50 “Legacy Spaces” across Canada sponsored by banks, major retailers, universities, performing-arts centres, and governments. Thousands of Canadians from coast to coast “Walk for Wenjack” every October. Children in more than 65,000 classrooms across Canada and in the United States are being taught about his altogether too-short life and tragic death through a book called Secret Path.

Unfortunately, much of what has been written and said about Charlie Wenjack—including some contents of Secret Path—has no basis in fact.

While it is absolutely true that he longed to be back with his family, and that he died of exposure while trying to make the ill-advised trek back home, lurid depictions of Charlie being preyed upon by priests and nuns within a schoolhouse full of gothic horrors are completely ahistorical. (Indeed, there were no priests or nuns working at CJ at the time Charlie attended.) …

According to a Daily Miner and News report on the inquest into Charlie’s death, it was a restless Ralph McDonald who took the initiative to leave that Sunday afternoon “because he wanted to visit his uncle, whom he liked.” The newspaper quoted Ralph saying he much preferred trapping animals with his uncle to being in school.

The newspaper also reported that Charlie’s best friend, 10-year-old Eddie Cameron, testified that Charlie was lonely and, when the McDonald brothers headed for their uncle’s cabin, he decided to tag along with them.

According to a February 1967 article by Ian Adams, published in Maclean’s, the decision to run away had been made on the spur of the moment. “Right there on the playground, the three boys decided to run away… It was a sunny afternoon, and they were wearing only light clothing. If they had planned it a little better, they could have taken along their parkas and overshoes. That might have saved Charlie’s life.”

Three of Charlie’s sisters, who were also at Cecilia Jeffrey, might well have been on the playground that Sunday afternoon. Wherever they were, he didn’t say goodbye to them, which suggests that he intended to return after the visit to the uncle’s cabin.

During one of the many interviews I conducted in Kenora for my newly published book, Lonely Death of an Ojibway Boy, a former senior staffer at CJ, Abe Loewen, told me the doors were never locked. There was no gate at the open-pillared road entrance, and no fence on the opposite side of the property. Nothing would have prevented Charlie or any other child from leaving the school whenever they felt like it. …

In the official form that he prepared in support of an inquest into Charlie’s death, Coroner Dr R. Glenn Davidson wrote, “they [the boys] stayed at the Kellys for a few days, and then Wenjack was told to leave. Wenjack was given some matches in a glass container and a map by Kelly’s wife. It is believed he left about 3:00 pm October 19 [Wednesday] to head east.”

One reason why Dr. Davidson had the wrong date—in fact, Mr. Kelly didn’t show Charlie the way to the nearby railway tracks until Friday, October 21—was that the magazine article describing Charlie’s trip to the trap line wasn’t published until more than three months after his death. That important information wasn’t available to Dr Davidson at the time he issued the warrant for the inquest.

Dr Davidson wrote in his report that one of the reasons he’d decided to hold the inquest was “to ascertain if [Charles] Kelly turned the boy loose with no food to travel over 300 miles east, on the [railway] track.”

That hike (which would take even a well-provisioned adult two weeks to complete) would have taken Charlie to the town of Nakina in north central Ontario, from where he’d have to take a plane to get to Ogoki Post. He had no food, water, or money. And it isn’t clear how he would have convinced anyone to fly him back to his reserve, even if he’d managed to complete the hike.

Charles Kelly testified at the inquest that Charlie had left without his knowledge, contradicting his statement to Adams that he’d showed Charlie how to get down to the railway tracks on Friday morning. In the end, the inquest jury issued a handwritten report that concluded that both “Mr Benson” (at whose cabin the boys stayed Sunday night) and Kelly “should have notified the authorities of the [boys’] presence.”

We can only speculate about what serious consequences there would have been for Charles Kelly if the coroner and the jury had known that Charlie had been at his trapline cabin on Thursday night and that he’d turned him loose Friday morning with neither food nor water, nor much idea of where he was going.

**

In a column published in newspapers across Canada, WE Charity co-founders Craig and Marc Kielburger said Chanie Wenjack  “died fleeing his residential school” and encouraged Canadians to donate money in support of “Legacy Rooms” in restaurants, schools, libraries and corporate boardrooms.

“For a $5,000 donation,” they wrote, “the Downie-Wenjack Fund will provide an official plaque and signage explaining Chanie’s story to set the tone for the Legacy Room. The money raised supports initiatives to teach about residential schools in Canadian classrooms.”

Gord Downie gets top billing on the $5,000 plaques in Legacy Rooms that are now sprouting up across Canada. His trademark hat sits atop the words “The Gord Downie” in boldface. The line below in smaller, lighter, type says: “& CHANIE WENJACK FUND.”  There’s a photo of Gord Downie performing at one of his concerts on the left side of the plaque and one of a shy, smiling little Chanie on the right.

One might well ask whose “legacy” is being commemorated.  Chanie Wenjack’s name is completely overshadowed.

The plaque looks like part of a donor-supported promotion for the late Gord Downie’s solo albums.

On October 28, 2017, the Globe and Mail published an article about a Canada 150 reconciliation journey through the Northwest Passage on the Polar Prince.

At one point, Aluki Kotierk, president of Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. broke down in tears during a group discussion on reconciliation in the ship’s Legacy Room.

“I just don’t know why in this Legacy Room there is no box of Kleenex,” she said prompting laughter from her colleagues. “Or why Gord Downie’s name is bigger than Chanie Wenjack’s” on the plaque on the wall.

Good question.

 

 

We don’t have to trade with China:

Putin walked away [from his meeting with Xi] with more than 40 agreements, but he did not leave with the prize he has long sought.

"When you look at all the 'agreements,' they are only memoranda of understanding. In other words, they are merely invitations to talk more." — Dmitri Alperovitch, chairman of Silverado Policy Accelerator and co-author of World on the Brink: How America Can Beat China in the Race for the Twenty-First Century, to Gatestone Institute, May 22, 2026.

The pipeline is especially important to Russia because it will replace sales to Europe, lost because of its 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

"Russia is running out of capital. Putin does not have the cash to build Power of Siberia 2, and he has not been able to convince the Chinese to pay for it." — Dmitri Alperovitch, to Gatestone Institute, May 22, 2026.

Let them argue forever if they want. While they do, America continues to have a chokehold over China's imported energy supply.

**

Federal figures confirm cabinet granted Beijing the equivalent of half the battery electric car market in Canada through 2031. The Minister of Industry had downplayed the China concession as “a small quota.”

**

On May 6, Guangming Daily — not just an official Chinese Communist Party newspaper, but allegedly the favored mouthpiece of the world’s largest intelligence agency — published an admiring essay under a headline that reads “From dependence to autonomy: how the Carney government is reimagining Canada–U.S. relations.” The piece, which approvingly amplified Carney’s odd choice to flourish a figurine of the British general Isaac Brock, famed for repelling an American invasion in 1812, does not report on Prime Minister Mark Carney’s rupture with Washington so much as celebrate it.

 It casts his turn away from the United States not as a crisis to be managed but as an awakening to be admired, a passage from servitude to sovereignty.

The striking part is that the essay’s central idea — dependence giving way to autonomy — was, almost to the word, the case Carney himself made to a room of American financiers three weeks later.

At the Economic Club of New York on May 28, the prime minister described Canada’s drive to become “more autonomous” as a “core” objective of his government, then sanded the edge off with a line built for the room: “Let’s be absolutely clear. Canada Strong will help make America great again.”

Strip away the flattery — a borrowing of Donald Trump’s own core slogan — as Guangming Daily does, and the same program remains beneath it: a deliberate loosening of the ties that bind Canada to the United States, even as Carney trumpets forging deeper strategic ties with Beijing in trade, law enforcement, media and culture.

According to the Australian analyst Alex Joske, the China-influence expert who wrote the definitive study of Beijing’s feared Ministry of State Security, Guangming Daily is, in his words, “still the MSS newspaper of choice today.” In Spies and Lies, his account of the ministry’s influence operations, Joske documents its long use of publishing houses, think tanks and newspapers as fronts to shape Western opinion and to reach its agents; among them is the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, an organization the ministry knows internally as its Eleventh Bureau. This is the apparatus that has now chosen to lavish praise on a sitting prime minister of a Five Eyes democracy.

The essay’s other enthusiasms are specific.

It praises Carney for resisting what it calls American expansion, and casts Canada, under his hand, as a representative of a world standing against “America first” and economic coercion. It applauds the defense decoupling now underway in Ottawa — the pledge to route the bulk of federal defense contracts to domestic firms, the march toward five percent of output on the military by 2035, the billions promised for the Arctic — and reads each as a healthy loosening of the American grip. And it closes by noting that Canada supplies roughly sixty percent of American crude imports and is Washington’s most reliable source of nickel, while a tariff-burdened Trump administration heads into a midterm election under strain. The subtext is not subtle.

Canada has leverage, Donald Trump is vulnerable, Ottawa can afford to stall.

The Bureau makes no claim that Carney sought, welcomed, or coordinated with this Ministry of State Security endorsement. What the record shows is explicit: the propaganda arm of a hostile intelligence service has decided to celebrate, in flattering and well-informed detail, the foreign policy of an allied head of government.

That trope — Carney as the bulwark against a tariff-obsessed Donald Trump — is not new from Beijing.

It is almost exactly the message a Chinese Communist Party information operation pushed during the 2025 federal election, when Canada’s election-threat monitor, the Security and Intelligence Threats to Elections Task Force, disclosed a covert campaign run through Youli-Youmian, WeChat’s most popular news account, casting Carney as the tough Canadian leader best suited to stand up to Washington — one post titled, in translation, “The United States is Facing a Tough Prime Minister from Canada.” Intelligence tied that account to the Communist Party’s Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission. A year later, the Ministry of State Security’s newspaper of choice tells the same story.

There is a logic to that enthusiasm, and it is known in Ottawa.

Among the durable aims of Chinese statecraft is to divide the Five Eyes — to pry the United States apart from the allies with whom it shares its deepest secrets. A 2018 report published by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service through its academic outreach program mapped the method with unsettling foresight. Trading partners, it warned, “have quickly found that China uses its commercial status and influence networks to advance regime goals.” And it issued a caution that reads today like a note left for the present government: “Unless trade agreements are carefully vetted for national security implications, Beijing will use its commercial position to gain access to businesses, technologies and infrastructure that can be exploited for intelligence objectives, or to potentially compromise a partner’s security.”




Tuesday, June 02, 2026

It's Just Money

It's not like anyone should be held to account for its mishandling or going missing or anything.


It's not like CUSMA matters or anything:

Canada has told its counterparts in the North American free trade agreement that it hopes to see the pact renewed ahead of the review set to begin in July.

Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc has sent a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and Mexico’s Economy Secretary Marcelo Ebrard formally notifying them of Ottawa’s intention, as required under the terms of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA).

“Canada looks forward to continued engagement with both the United States and Mexico on opportunities to expand our trading partnership and is willing to consider any proposal that can be beneficial to all three nations’ long-term prosperity,” LeBlanc says in the letter.

“In parallel, discussion with the United States on addressing sectoral tariffs will be essential.”

Activity around the CUSMA review beginning July 1 is ramping up, with LeBlanc holding consultations with stakeholders in Canada in recent days.

LeBlanc attended the cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill on the morning of June 2 and is then expected to travel to Washington, D.C., to meet with Greer. It will be the first face-to-face meeting between the two since early March, although they have remained in contact remotely via other means.

Trade talks between Canada and the United States have progressed slowly compared to U.S.-Mexico negotiations. A first round of formal talks around the CUSMA review between the United States and Mexico was concluded last week and two more rounds in June and July have already been scheduled.

After July 1, CUSMA members will have to decide whether to renew the agreement for a certain number of years, with or without modifications, or continue annual reviews if no consensus can be reached. A partner could also decide to pull out of the agreement.

U.S. President Donald Trump and his officials have criticized the agreement and cast doubts about its usefulness, but the North American economies have become highly integrated under CUSMA and its predecessor NAFTA. U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra said this week he’s optimistic a deal can be reached.

Prime Minister Mark Carney addressed the status of trade talks when speaking with reporters ahead of the cabinet meeting. He said there’s a “bifurcated discussion” between the CUSMA partners because the United States has different technical issues with Canada and Mexico.

Carney said there’s about 30 trade issues between Canada and the United States, whereas there’s around 60 between the United States and Mexico.

“We’re working through a series of those issues, they’re of varying technicality, if I can put them, and some of them are provincial,” Carney said.

He added that for Canada, the more “fundamental structural issues” relate to U.S. tariffs on sectors deemed strategic. Those include the universal duties on autos, steel, aluminum, and lumber, which have been imposed on national security grounds using Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962.

“We’re looking to determine whether there’s a possibility of a new partnership,” Carney added.

 

Also:

The Commons yesterday by a 193 to 134 vote rejected an Opposition motion to freeze mandatory fees charged video streaming services. Companies like Netflix and Disney Plus face a tripling of rates, from 5 to 15 percent of their yearly Canadian revenues, under a May 21 CRTC order: “Who will pay for this?”


And:

Two U.S. lawmakers are set to introduce a bill aimed at preventing “Chinese-connected vehicles” from entering the United States via Canada and Mexico, amid growing concerns over Chinese-made electric vehicles entering the Canadian market.

U.S. Representative Haley Stevens and Senator Elissa Slotkin, both Democrats, announced the Protecting America from Chinese Cars Act last week at a conference in Michigan.

“Vehicles today can collect and transmit massive amounts of data – geolocation of drivers, mapping of critical infrastructure, full-motion video, and more,” the document says. “These ‘connected vehicles’ are roving data collectors – sweeping up information that would threaten our national security if it were to fall into the hands of our adversaries.”

The bill would prohibit connected vehicles from China and other “adversarial nations” from entering the United States, including vehicles made or designed in China, as well as vehicles made by a Chinese company or an entity more than 15 percent owned by Chinese companies, according to a May 28 press release from Stevens’s office.

It would also establish a process for vehicle manufacturers to apply for specific authorization to allow otherwise prohibited vehicles to enter the United States. Authorization would only be granted under “strict conditions, with both transparency and congressional oversight.”

Federal authorities in Canada have also raised concerns that connected vehicles could pose security and privacy risks if the data they collect falls into the wrong hands.

In a memo, Public Safety Canada said Canada must expand its economy in response to a changing geopolitical environment, but warned that opening its markets to “new players” could also “amplify the presence of high-risk vendors.”

The department said unauthorized access to data and connected vehicle systems “could be used to establish patterns of life or conduct surveillance on sensitive sites.” It also said national security laws in countries such as China can compel manufacturers and suppliers to share data with their home governments or police, increasing the risk that Canadian data could be exploited.

A one-page readout on the U.S. bill says connected vehicles could be “remotely accessed and tampered with,” presenting a “tremendous” risk to U.S. safety and security, noting the Chinese auto industry is heavily subsidized, allowing Beijing to “undercut competitors and quickly flood new markets.”

“The Chinese Communist Party should never have access to sensitive information about American drivers, roads, or critical infrastructure,” Stevens said in a statement, adding that the bill would “close dangerous loopholes” that currently allow Chinese connected vehicles to enter the United States through Canada and Mexico.

Recent data from Global Affairs Canada indicates 2,910 Chinese EVs were allowed into Canada for the first time in May, after Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed in January to allow up to 49,000 Chinese EVs into Canada at a reduced tariff rate of 6.1 percent, from the previous 100 percent rate.

Ottawa has said 49,000 EVs represent less than 3 percent of Canada’s auto market, but the quota represents nearly half of Canada’s battery electric sales in 2025.

According to data tabled in the House of Commons on May 29 by International Trade Minister Maninder Sidhu in response to a question by Conservative MP Rhonda Kirkland, the initial 49,000-unit quota will grow 6.5 percent, exceeding 63,000 units by February 2031.


Considering these, does anyone think that Carney wants to renew CUSMA?



Monday, June 01, 2026

The Decline

It all started in 2015 and snowballed ever since:  **

As prices for just about everything skyrocket and an untold number of Canadians are going deeper into debt trying to keep up, the Fraser Institute’s latest study is a reminder that Canada and the provinces have been hurdling their own roads of indebtedness since the 2008 recession.

In its latest research bulletin on the growing debt burden for Canadians, the public policy organization found that the combined federal and provincial net debt, adjusted for inflation, has nearly doubled from $1.24 trillion in 2007-08 to a projected $2.44 trillion this fiscal year, a growth of 97.7 per cent.

In 2024, the Fraser Institute forecast it to reach $2.2 trillion and last year it was $2.3 trillion.

Most of the $1.2 trillion over the 18-year study period was accrued by Ottawa, projected to have increased $712.7 billion (93.7 per cent) over that time, particularly during its response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In fact, Jake Fuss, the author and the institute’s director of fiscal studies, found that from 2019-20 until this fiscal year, both levels of government are projected to have collectively accumulated $603.7 billion in net debt, an increase of 32.8 per cent.

With the pandemic well in the rearview, Fuss said now is the time for a plan to address government debt.

“A long-term plan to return to balanced budgets is necessary if Canadian governments are going to begin the difficult task of stemming debt accumulation and eventually reducing the debt burden,” he wrote.

The bulletin notes that Ottawa and the provinces “have decisively broken from the era of fiscal prudence” exhibited from the mid-1990s to the late aughts and returned to an era similar to the 1970s to the 1990s, when accumulating debt and increasing deficits “became the norm.”

In comparison, in the 12 years before the study period, federal net debt was reduced by $364.5 billion.

Canada's combined federal-provincial debt costs are almost three times what the federal government currently spends on national defence.

Servicing Canada's ballooning debt now costs $2,000 per citizen, per year.

“Put differently, in the past 18 years, the federal government has accumulated nearly double the amount of debt that it repaid in the mid-1990s to late-2000s,” Fuss explained.

**

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s “sovereign wealth fund” will cost taxpayers $750 million a year in debt interest charges, finance department figures show. The estimate yesterday followed criticism the $25 billion Canada Strong Fund was not a savings account: “It’s actually a debt fund.”

**

Similar patterns appear among new graduates. Statistics Canada’s analysis of STEM retention shows that graduates in mathematics, computer science, and engineering are less likely to remain in Canada than non STEM graduates, even among Canadian citizens (Retention of STEM Graduates in Canada, 2025). Doctoral graduates and graduates from highly ranked universities have the lowest retention rates, particularly in the first five years after graduation. Mobility rises with skill portability.

International students exhibit slightly improved retention, but the gains are fragile. Students from top institutions and advanced programs still leave at disproportionately higher rates. Canada is educating globally competitive STEM talent in fields where U.S. entry barriers are relatively low—through TN visas and employer sponsorship.

Immigration does not offset these losses. Rather, it intensifies them. The Institute for Canadian Citizenship’s Leaky Bucket 2025 report2 shows that onward migration is highest among immigrants with doctoral degrees, strong earnings potential, and experience in management, ICT, engineering, and science based occupations. Within five years of entering Canada, highly educated immigrants are more than twice as likely to leave as lower skilled immigrants.

**

So there was a business case for natural gas exports to Germany after all

Of course, we never thought otherwise. But back in August 2022, with Europe freezing and scrambling after Russia invaded Ukraine, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz came to Canada hat in hand looking for reliable LNG supplies. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looked him in the eye and delivered his classic line, that there was “never a strong business case” for Canadian LNG exports to Europe. Too expensive, too far, Europe was going green anyway, etc. 

Germany shrugged, turned around, and signed a fat long-term deal with Qatar instead.

Fast forward through years of European energy pain, higher emissions from dirtier suppliers, and endless Canadian hand-wringing about projects on the “wrong coast.” Fast forward also past multiple stalled proposals, regulatory delays, and virtue signalling: nothing says moral leadership like lecturing your allies on climate purity while they scramble for alternatives to keep the lights on.

Yesterday, however, Energy Minister Tim Hodgson stood up in Vancouver and proudly announced Canada’s first major long-term LNG deal with Germany: up to 1 million tonnes per year from the indigenous-owned Ksi Lisims project on BC’s northwest coast, with deliveries starting in the early 2030s for up to 20 years. 

The buyer? Securing Energy for Europe, which is to be served by a floating LNG facility on Nisga’a lands, powered by hydroelectricity from BC Hydro.

**

Oh, dear:

In March, the Carney government announced a relaxation of rules for the Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) program in rural Canada. At the request of any premier, the allowable share of low-wage TFWs in rural workforces can be increased from 10% to 15%. So far, Manitoba, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia have opted in.

It is notable that most provinces have not chosen to avail themselves of the federal government’s offer to boost TFW numbers. The Canadian public’s support for immigration restriction shows few signs of cooling, and provincial governments are to some extent behaving accordingly.

The business lobby has emerged as the only voice in support of the Carney government’s loosening of foreign labour rules. Restaurants Canada – the national foodservice lobby – is sounding the alarm bells over “labour shortages” in the restaurant sector, and is “calling on all provincial governments to sign on to the temporary cap increase for temporary foreign workers in rural regions”. Restaurants Canada is often blunt in its immigration advocacy, in one case circulating a document titled “Foreign Labour Is Essential To Canada’s Foodservice Industry”.

The idea that Canada is experiencing such a dire shortage of workers that we need to import people to cook and bus tables in restaurants flies in the face of all available evidence. In April, youth unemployment in particular rose to 14.3%. A recent study by the Fraser Institute found that last year 437,000 people in Canada aged 15-24 looked for a job but could not find one. This figure is up 57% since 2022.

The study explains that “the rate at which youth unemployment climbed after 2022 has no historical precedent when Canada’s economy is growing: for teenagers, the increase in unemployment exceeded that during recessions starting in 1981, 1990, and 2008”. Further, “the surge of youth unemployment is specific to Canada: while unemployment for Canada’s youths was at a level associated with recession, the US rate remained close to historic lows”.

The statistical evidence backs up the anecdotal evidence. Increasingly, Canadian youth are reporting that finding a simple summer job is next to impossible. In one recent case, 5,000 young Canadians lined up at a Calgary job fair, with one young man saying he has sent 100 applications and not heard back.

**

Your grocery list this week probably didn’t include “luxury Normandy butter cups” or beef tenderloin, and you probably opted for the $25 bottle of red wine instead the one more than twice the price, but the Canadian Taxpayers Federation wants you to know that “Prime Minister Mark Carney and his entourage” are enjoying such luxuries when they fly internationally.

The advocacy group dug into House of Commons order paper questions and learned that just shy of $200,000 was spent feeding Carney and government officials who accompanied him on just three out-of-country flights in 2025.

Franco Terrazzano, the CTF’s federal director, contended that’s more than an average Canadian family will spend to feed themselves for a decade.

“When the government is paying more than a billion dollars a week to cover interest charges on the debt, it’s time to stop irresponsible overspending on luxuries like gourmet in-flight dining,” he said in a press release.

According to the latest Canada Food Price Report, the average family of four is expected to spend $17,571.79 on food this year, which, over ten years, is roughly $180,000.

**

According to a Food Banks Canada report, food banks across the country recorded nearly 2.2 million visits in March of last year.

“That’s double the monthly usage recorded just six years ago,” the report said. “It took decades to reach one million visits in a month, and it has now taken half a decade to double that.”

**

Canadians are paying record prices for chicken while importing massive quantities of foreign poultry, mostly from the United States. If that sounds contradictory, it’s because it is.

According to the latest Canadian Association of Regulated Importers (CARI) figures released May 23, Canada has already imported more than 52.2 million kilograms of chicken so far this year under WTO, CUSMA, and CPTPP commitments combined. Nearly 23.8 million kilograms came directly from the United States under CUSMA alone.

And yet, wholesale chicken prices in Canada continue to surge.

Over the past year, Canada imported roughly 200 to 215 million kilograms of chicken overall, enough for approximately 1.3 to 1.4 billion meals. About 60% came from the United States. Most Canadians likely have no idea how often they may already be consuming imported chicken in nuggets, deli meats, frozen meals, restaurant sandwiches, soups, and prepared foods.

Under supply management, Canadians were promised something very different: Stable supply, mostly domestic production, and predictable prices.

Instead, Canada now faces one of the tightest chicken markets in decades.




Oh, It's Only a "Technical" Recession

So it's nothing to worry about, right?:

On Friday morning, Statistics Canada made it official, the Canadian economy is in a recession.

This isn’t a “technical” recession as some media and politicians are trying to spin it. We’ve had two quarters in a row of the Canadian economy shrinking and in the last year, we’ve seen the economy shrink in three of the four quarters.

Our unemployment rate has gone up over the last year and now sits at 6.9% with about 13,000 more Canadians registered as unemployed compared to last year. Youth unemployment in the country sits at a staggering 14.3% up from 14.1% last year.

Bankruptcies are up 10.1% compared to a year earlier.

Food inflation remains persistently high and last month came in at 3.8%. The $100 worth of groceries that you bought five years ago now costs almost $130.

The rise in price for so many items is shocking.

Tomatoes up 20.9% compared to a year earlier while coffee is up 15.5%, beef is up 12.5%, carrots are up 10.5%, and pork is up 9.4%.

Higher prices, higher unemployment, increased bankruptcies and now Canada is in a recession.

“Mark Carney is now the only leader in the G7 to have plunged his economy into recession,” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Friday on Parliament Hill.

“He’s been prime minister for four quarters now. The economy has shrunk in three of those quarters. He’s the only G7 leader who can say that. The economy is smaller today than when Mark Carney became prime minister a year ago. He’s the only G7 leader who can say that.”

Poilievre said that Carney can’t blame tariffs and trade uncertainty with the Americans because every other country is also dealing with those factors, but we’re the only G7 economy entering a recession. The truth is that Canada’s economy has been weak for some time, a point Carney himself made last year while seeking the Liberal leadership.

“Our economy over the last five years, has been driven by the big increase in the labour force, which was largely because of the surge in immigration and by government spending that grew over nine percent year-after-year after year, twice the rate of growth of our economy,” Carney said.

“So, our economy was weak before we got to the point of these threats from President Trump.”

After a year in office, things under Carney have not improved; they’ve gotten worse.

We hired a PM who was a former banker and business executive right out of central casting. He looked the part, he sounded the part, he convinced an awful lot of Canadians that he knew what to do to turn Canada’s economy around and that he could deal with Trump.

Instead, the economy is weakening and there is no sign of a deal with Trump.

Carney has been able to survive, thrive even, based off of feelings. His poll numbers are high, an 11-point lead in the latest poll by Leger for Postmedia.

That same poll found 59% of Canadian voters approved of Carney’s performance in running the government. That’s the feeling, that’s the vibe, and it’s mainly based off of Carney’s stance towards Donald Trump.

(Sidebar: this is why Canadians deserve to be poor. If spite is the only reason why they elected a failed banker, then what other way can they be convinced?)

The hard numbers tell a different story, that with Mark Carney at the top, Canada’s economy is faltering.



Happy Pride In the Sacred Heart of Jesus Month!

Hooray!



After that I saw this divine Heart as on a throne of flames, more brilliant than the sun and transparent as crystal. It had its adorable wound and was encircled with a crown of thorns, which signified the pricks our sins caused Him.

It was surmounted by a cross which signified that, from the first moment of His Incarnation, that is, from the time this Sacred Heart was formed, the cross was planted in It; that It was filled, from the very first moment, with all the bitterness, humiliations, poverty, sorrow, and contempt His sacred humanity would have to suffer during the whole course of His life and during His holy Passion.

He made me understand that the ardent desire He had of being loved by men and of drawing them from the path of perdition into which Satan was hurrying them in great numbers, had caused Him to fix upon this plan of manifesting His Heart to men, together with all Its treasures of love, mercy, grace, sanctification and salvation ... .

This devotion was a last resort of His love .… [He] wished to favour men in these last centuries with his loving redemption, in order to withdraw them from the empire of Satan, which He intended to destroy, and in order to put us under the sweet liberty of the empire of His love.







Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Mid-Week Post

 

Your middle-of-the-week agent provocateuse …

 


What does he care? He has his pension:

Former environment minister Steven Guilbeault will resign as a Liberal MP. He will make the announcement to his colleagues Wednesday morning in caucus and will give a speech at the House of Commons later in the afternoon to explain his reasons.

A source close to Guilbeault confirmed the information to the National Post after news of his impending resignation was reported by different media outlets.

The source confirmed Guilbeault is leaving politics because of the recent deal Prime Minister Mark Carney struck with Alberta to advance a new oil pipeline to the West Coast, but also because of the government’s environmental policy setbacks in general.

 

 

We could be sweeping up right now:

It’s now officially been a year that the Carney government has been musing about maybe, possibly building an oil export pipeline from Alberta to the B.C. coast. 

“Will I support building a pipeline? Yes,” was what Prime Minister Mark Carney told CTV on May 13, 2025. He also said that he’d expressed such thoughts “repeatedly.”

Although Carney retains extraordinary powers to greenlight such a project at any time, this month he announced only that he intends to approve construction by September 2027. According to a subsequent report by CIBC World Markets, the “best case scenario” is that the project might be moving oil by 2034.

And a West Coast pipeline has already been on the drawing board for more than 20 years. As early as 2006, Enbridge first started inking contracts for the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline, only for the project to be cancelled by then prime minister Justin Trudeau in 2016.

So, if everything goes to plan, the current state of affairs is that Canada might be able to begin operations on a West Coast oil export pipeline more than 28 years after such a thing was first proposed.

This is a glacial pace unknown to any other major oil producer. While Canada doesn’t have a monopoly on cancelled oil infrastructure or red tape, its inability to move its own oil across internal borders is unlike few other jurisdictions on earth. 

The Strait of Hormuz bypass pipeline

If the United Arab Emirates’ official timelines are to be believed, they’ve recently delivered a masterclass on how to fast-track an oil export pipeline.

In March, the UAE first saw its oil exports thrown into disarray by intermittent Iranian blockades of the Strait of Hormuz, the sole waterway connecting UAE oil ports to the Indian Ocean.

Just this month, Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. announced that it was already half-done on a new pipeline that would bypass the blockaded strait, with oil set to start flowing in 2027.

The UAE is able to fast-track this pipeline largely because it’s following an existing right-of-way. The project merely expands the existing Habshan-Fujairah pipeline, which first opened in 2012.

However, that situation also neatly describes the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, which remains Canada’s only non-U.S. export pipeline built in the last 50 years. That project, completed in 2024, followed the route of the 1950s-era Trans Mountain Pipeline.

Even then, it took 11 years for TMX to go from application to completion. And it wouldn’t have been completed at all if the federal government hadn’t bought out the project in 2018.

Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline

Canada’s chief vulnerability in getting pipelines approved is jurisdictional conflict. Any attempt to construct a pipeline across provincial borders will often spur litigation and obstruction from neighbouring provinces, not to mention an avalanche of litigation from any one of dozens of First Nations along the pipeline route.

So it’s perhaps notable that in the early 2000s, a major pipeline was laid across three sovereign countries without nearly as much handwringing and red tape.

That would be an 1,800-kilometre pipeline running through Georgia, Turkey and Azerbaijan, all to connect the Baku oil fields to the Mediterranean Sea. The intergovernmental agreement authorizing its construction was inked in 1999, and it was pumping oil by 2005.

Sino-Myanmar Crude Oil Pipeline

The political case for a Canadian oil export pipeline to the Pacific is that it’s effectively the fastest way for Canada to diversify trade away from the United States. If Northern Gateway had been completed in the 2010s as intended, it would currently be exporting 190,000 barrels of oil per day. Right now, that would be at least $20 million in oil exports per day, much of it going to non-U.S. customers.

A similar kind of sovereign pressure underlay the development of the Sino-Myanmar pipeline project, which saw twin natural gas and oil pipelines driven from Western China to ports in Myanmar.

Although it’s an import pipeline, the whole idea was to reduce sovereign vulnerability to outside pressures. Specifically, the pipeline is intended to bypass the Malacca Strait, a choke point between Indonesia and Malaysia through which most of China’s imported oil is shipped.

Both Beijing and Myanmar are authoritarian countries, which generally expedites infrastructure approvals. Nevertheless, the pipeline was being driven through a region with active armed conflict. And rebel militias in the area have indeed targeted pipeline infrastructure on occasion.

Nevertheless, the oil pipeline portion of the project was officially inaugurated by 2015, less than six years after it was first announced in 2009.

Dakota Access Pipeline

The Dakota Access Pipeline — much like any number of Canadian oil and gas pipelines — was the target of a well-funded, all-out activist attempt to shut it down. The most memorable component of which was a months-long anti-pipeline encampment established on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota.

And yet, those protests ultimately proved to be a mild speed bump towards the project’s ultimate completion.

The Dakota Access Pipeline is several hundred kilometres longer than any proposed pipeline from Alberta to the B.C. coast. And it took just three years to go from its initial regulatory application in 2014 to its completion in 2017.

 

 

Has no one asked why a government wants to spy on its own citizens:

The federal government never consulted widely on one of the most contentious parts of its lawful access reform to how police and intelligence services can obtain or intercept private data.

That’s according to Murray Rankin, the former NDP politician and intelligence watchdog head who was tasked by the Liberal government to consult and make recommendations to the government leading up to Bill C-22.

In an interview, Rankin said Canada desperately needs lawful access reform to avoid becoming an “oasis” for criminals because law enforcement doesn’t have the tools to protect Canadians like our European or Five Eyes alliance allies.

But he also noted that he was never asked to make recommendations about a clause in the bill that would force yet undefined “core providers” of electronic services to retain certain categories of metadata — including transmission and location data — for up to one year so that police and Canadian spies can obtain them via warrant if a judge allows it.

Bill C-22, which is currently at committee, is the Mark Carney Liberals’ second attempt at lawful access reform and comes after the government returned to the drawing board and tasked Rankin last summer to quietly consult on the bill and issue recommendations to the government.

Lawful access, or the ability to obtain Canadians’ private information and intercept communications, is one of the most intrusive powers afforded to police and intelligence agencies. Creating such a regime for the digital age in Canada has been the subject of fierce debate for decades.

But some of the most fierce criticism has targeted the bill’s one-year metadata retention clause, which privacy and security specialists argue is far too long and a violation of Canadians’ right to privacy.

“Imposing a blanket obligation on a whole class of service providers to preserve everyone’s metadata for law enforcement purposes would amount to a significant interference with the privacy interests of millions of Canadians,” wrote Thompson River University law professor Robert Diab.

On the other hand, some police services have told MPs they’d prefer the retention period extended to two or even three years.

In an interview, Rankin told National Post that the government never brought up the one-year retention period of metadata during his roundtables, suggesting he was surprised to see the clause appear in the bill.

“You know this business about the metadata, it never came up in our conversations,” Rankin said. “In my work, it never came up.”

**

Google and Apple, whose software runs in nearly every phone and tablet in Canada, warned that the Liberals’ lawful access bill poses a “threat” to encryption and their users’ data and could facilitate crimes such as foreign interference.

Speaking to the House public safety committee Tuesday, representatives from both tech giants said they respect the government’s desire to adopt lawful access reform. They argued that their goal is to balance users’ privacy with the need for law enforcement to have the tools they need.

But they warned that the Liberals’ controversial Bill C-22 goes too far and needs to be reworked significantly, lest it force them to create a “backdoor” into their encrypted services to users.

Google and Apple’s software powers over 99 per cent of all cellphones and tablets sold in Canada, as well as a significant portion of portable computers. They also operate a significant portion of the cloud storage business.

“Our users trust Apple with their most sensitive information. They expect and deserve the strongest protections, that’s why we’re so concerned about the threat to encryption posed by C-22,” said Apple senior director Erik Neuenchwander.

Google’s Jeanette Patell went a step further, telling MPs that the bill as it stands could force the company to undo many of its security features and open the door to criminals.

“Without stronger definitions, the law could be used to force the dismantling of critical privacy and architecture, such as breaking encryption, overriding users’ data deletion controls, or building remote access capability, all of which could facilitate foreign interference and weaken global user privacy,” Patell argued.

The federal Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne also told the committee the Liberals’ lawful access bill is overly broad and should be narrowed to protect Canadians’ rights.

The government has repeatedly sworn that the new obligations to telecommunications and electronic services providers would not compel them to decrypt encrypted information. They argue the bill would allow them to ask companies to decrypt information if that is already possible, but would not force them to develop ways to unlock encrypted information.

But, many of the bills’ clauses “don’t compromise encryption directly but try to get at it indirectly by circumventing it or bypassing it. It still have the same impact in terms of the vulnerabilities that they ultimately create,” the Canadian Civil Liberties Association’s Tamir Israel to MPs Tuesday.

Lawful access, or the ability to obtain Canadians’ private information and intercept communications, is one of the most intrusive powers afforded to police and intelligence agencies. Creating such a regime for the digital age in Canada has been the subject of fierce debate for decades.

 

Also – what about anti-Catholic groups?:

Attorney General Sean Fraser yesterday said he feared some future justice minister will use federal hate crimes legislation to settle scores with environmental groups or political opponents. Fraser did not identify any person by name: “Those are dangerous conversations.”

 

 

Never forget who and what they are:

A majority of the House of Commons voted against a non-binding motion on Monday that called on the federal government to protect private property from First Nations land claims — a political issue the Crown-Indigenous Relations minister has said is rife with partisan rhetoric.

B.C. and the Cowichan Tribes have both said they do not want to invalidate any privately held fee simple titles on the lands covered by the court decision.

The federal and provincial governments opposed the Cowichan Tribes' claim. There are now appeals on both sides of the issue — including an appeal by the federal government.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and his party have seized upon the uncertainty created by the decision and have for weeks been calling on the federal government to take action. Poilievre held a press conference and town hall events in B.C. about the issue last week.

On Friday, the First Nations Summit released a statement accusing the Conservatives of fearmongering and claiming Poilievre is desperately trying to stay relevant.

"The Cowichan decision is not and never was about taking away people's homes or private fee-simple property. The court simply reaffirmed principles that have existed in Canadian law for decades — namely that First Nations title was never automatically extinguished by the Crown," said Laxele'wuts'aat, Chief Shana Thomas of the First Nations Summit political executive.

Last month, Poilievre appointed B.C. MP Tako van Popta to lead a Conservative task force on property rights. He was tasked with, among other things, convening a parliamentary committee to study the issue.

"The ruling has shaken the foundations of British Columbia's economy and sparked fear among landowners provincewide," Poilievre said in a statement on April 23.

The Conservative motion called for a number of actions, including the creation of a special committee to study the legal, constitutional and political steps that could be taken to protect private property rights.

It also called for the government to put private property first and argue that it has priority over all other forms of title, and to ensure it does not make future agreements with First Nations that do not include explicit protection of fee simple property rights.

The Conservatives voted in favour of the motion, while the Liberals, NDP and Bloc Québécois all voted against it.

 

There is no right to property in the Charter.

 

 

None could be happier than Carney:

Canadians are resigned to failure in eliminating U.S. tariffs, says in-house Privy Council research. Federal focus groups were unable to reach any consensus on whether Prime Minister Mark Carney was “on the right track” after promising to negotiate a win for Canada: “Few thought that it was likely that an agreement could be achieved where all tariffs would be removed.”

 

 

The proles have no right to ask questions:

The Department of Employment says its Canada Summer Jobs program does help student hiring through 50 percent wage subsidies but cannot say how many jobs it creates. A first-ever analysis called it “a good policy tool” at more than a quarter billion a year: “How do you know if the program is achieving its objectives without measuring exactly that?”

**

An unidentified automaker is drafting a secret plan to export Canadian-made passenger cars to Asia and the Middle East, Industry Minister Mélanie Joly said yesterday. MPs on the Commons industry committee expressed skepticism: “No company has come to any committee on Parliament Hill or gone to the media to suggest that this is a viable business plan.”

 

 

What was once cruelty has descended into farce:

A London, Ont., doctor who assessed a patient with inflammatory bowel disease and a history of mental health issues for MAID outside a Tim Hortons location and later personally drove the man to the place his life was ended has agreed to a minimum six months’ supervision.

In another case, Dr. James MacLean failed to administer one of three drugs used in assisted deaths — one that paralyzes the body’s muscles, including the muscles involved in breathing. The patient resumed spontaneously breathing again after initially being pronounced dead, and after MacLean had already left the home.

As first reported Monday by the The Globe and Mail, the doctor’s case is raising new concerns about MAID’s oversight and accountability.

“What is striking is not only the seriousness of the concerns identified in these cases, but the limited regulatory response,” said Dr. Ramona Coelho, a family physician and former member of the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario’s MAID death review committee.

As part of an investigation by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) into two public complaints made against MacLean, an independent assessor appointed to review a number of MacLean’s charts concluded that he “did not meet the standard of practice of the profession, displayed a lack of judgment and that his conduct exposes or is likely to expose patients to harm or injury in five out of twenty charts reviewed,” according to a summary decision of the college’s inquiries, complaints and reports committee.

MacLean was called before the committee to be verbally “cautioned” with respect to the MAID complaints.

In addition to agreeing to mandatory clinical supervision for at least six months as part of an “undertaking” with the college, MacLean will undergo ongoing review of his MAID patient charts and mandatory professional education related to MAID, consent, documentation, professional boundaries and professional behaviour.

After six months, he’ll undergo an assessment of his practice, the results of which “may form the basis of further action by the College,” Laura Zilke, a CPSO spokesperson said in an email to National Post.

“The undertaking imposes extensive oversight and monitoring requirements on Dr. MacLean’s practice,” Zilke said.

“The college takes any complaints brought to our attention extremely seriously as part of our mandate to serve the public interest and ensure safe, ethical and competent medical care for all Ontarians.”

MacLean declined comment when contacted by National Post.

“Due to the rules regarding privacy and my professional responsibilities to the CPSO regarding confidentiality of complaint investigations, I am unable to respond to your questions,” he said in an email.

According to The Globe and Mail, one of the complaints concerns Thomas Dillon who suffered from Crohn’s disease and died, age 45, in January 2024.

The anonymized death of the St. Thomas man was also flagged by the Ontario coroner’s MAID death review committee.

In a report involving 2024 MAID deaths, the coroner’s panel highlighted the case of “Mr. A,” a male in his 40s with inflammatory bowel disease who, because of his illness, didn’t have an active social network, had difficulty maintaining a job, found personal relationships difficult and was dependent on family for housing and financial support.

He had a history of mental illness, previous bouts of suicidal thinking and on-going alcohol and opioid misuse that cost him his driver’s licence.

During a psychiatric assessment, Dillon was asked if he was aware of MAID and given information on the option.

There was no documented input from the family who were known to have had concerns about the MAID request.

MacLean and another assessor found Dillon eligible for MAID under Track 2, designed for people whose death is not reasonably foreseeable but who suffer intolerably from a grievous and irremediable medical condition.

MacLean conducted his assessment outside the coffee shop. The CPSO panel found it concerning that MacLean discussed “sensitive MAID-related matters in an informal public setting,” according to the summary of the inquiries and complaints committee’s decision.

“In the Committee’s view, this reflected a lack of the level of formality and care expected when assessing requests for MAID.”

The panel was also troubled by the “quantity and nature” of MacLean’s text exchanges with Dillon, which included comments about the family’s views.

MacLean’s decision to drive Dillon to the MAID provision location — which the Globe identified as an industrial-like facility where bodies are prepared for funerals — “raised concerns about professional boundaries.”

“Taken together, these actions created a risk that (MacLean’s) involvement could be perceived as influencing the patient,” the committee’s summary reads, especially given the patient-doctor power imbalance and Dillon’s history of mental health and substance use issues.

According to a more detailed decision from the inquiries and complaints committee provided to the family and obtained by The Globe and Mail, Dillon refused to ride to the MAID procedure site with his sister when she arrived at the Tim Hortons, where he and MacLean had again arranged to meet. MacLean ultimately drove Dillon himself “to ensure that patient’s final moments were dignified.” Dillon didn’t want to die at home, where he lived with his mother, because he knew his family didn’t approve and he agreed to the chosen site after other options were considered, the decision said.

“In this case, the assessment occurred during a single encounter at a Tim Hortons coffee shop,” Coelho said in an email.

“The family was not engaged in the assessment process, despite being the patient’s primary support and despite the MAID provider being aware they were trying to raise concerns,” she said.

“Collateral information from those closest to the patient is essential to understanding the factors contributing to the desire to die.”

 

The world sees Canada as willing to embrace cruelty.

Now it’s making this cruelty into a joke.

 

Also – look – actual human concern yields positive results:

For years, Akiko Hashiguchi was told she was failing as a mother.

Teachers criticized her parenting. Other parents distanced themselves. Relatives and strangers alike blamed her for her son’s behavior, which was only later understood to be linked to ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder).

She found herself constantly apologizing.

By her account, the criticism did not create a single rupture but steadily accumulated as small judgments that, over time, fostered a sense of total isolation in a society where asking for help is often difficult. By 2001, the pressure had become unbearable.

Hashiguchi, then 29, drove into the mountains of Shizuoka Prefecture with her 6-year-old son, intending to end both of their lives. In Japanese reporting, such incidents are often described as muri shinjū, a term used for situations involving people in close relationships in which one person kills another before taking their own lives.

“I placed my hands around my son’s neck,” Hashiguchi said, having resolved to kill him and then drive the car off a cliff. “But when he said, ‘I’m sorry for making you suffer, Mom,’ I suddenly came to my senses and let go.”

Hashiguchi and her son in 1995. She felt small judgments about her parenting from teachers, other parents and relatives steadily accumulated and fostered a sense of total isolation over time.

Domestic murder-suicides are a recurring headline in Japan.

Muri shinjū is not a legal term, but a journalistic shorthand used in early reporting when circumstances are still unclear. It has become embedded in crime coverage, often involving families, couples and caregiver-dependent relationships.

The phrase combines shinjū (心中), originally used for love suicides (when partners choose to die by suicide together), and muri (無理), meaning forced — referring to deaths within intimate relationships in which the intent is not shared.

Japan’s Children and Families Agency classifies parent-child muri shinjū — including cases in which the parent survives — as deaths linked to child abuse, framing them as an extreme form of maltreatment.

Beyond official classification, they are often discussed in terms of how family distress is handled within the home in Japan. Financial hardship, caregiving exhaustion and mental health problems are frequently dealt with privately, with limited outside intervention until situations become severe.

In parent-child incidents, social expectations around resiliency, responsibility and self-restraint can intensify feelings of shame among those already under strain, particularly for mothers, with signs of withdrawal or exhaustion often only recognized in hindsight.

Keiko Ishii, a professor of cultural psychology at the University of Tokyo who studies help-seeking behavior, said studies suggest people in Japan may be more likely to worry about disrupting relationships, being criticized by others, or making situations worse by speaking openly about personal or family problems.

She added that social ties are shaped by expectations of reciprocity and harmony, along with anxiety about being excluded or damaging existing relationships.

These concerns can make it harder for people to seek comfort or advice when they are struggling,” she said.

Ishii said her research suggests that people in Japan tend to interpret hardship as a deviation from social expectations or responsibilities — a view that can deepen shame, reduce empathy, and make both seeking and offering help less likely. …

In response, new support efforts are beginning to emerge in Japan. One Tokyo-based program, “Ikuji 119,” offers 24-hour assistance for parents in distress, dispatching trained childcare professionals to their homes within an hour of a phone call for a fee. ….

One of the few people in Japan to publicly share her personal experience with muri shinjū under her own name, Hashiguchi has since been involved in parents’ support work and advocacy around developmental disorders.

She says her planned murder-suicide was an impulsive act that was shaped by social isolation and a lack of support outside her family, as well as a culture quick to judge mothers while reducing deeply personal struggles to textbook solutions.

There was no village to raise a child in,” she said. “I just needed one person outside my family who would be there for me. If I had that, things might have been different. I think we can all be that for someone else.”

Akiko Hashiguchi and her son in September 2001 taken a month after his ADHD diagnosis. Her son now supports her decision to share her story, hoping it may help prevent another tragedy.

Akiko Hashiguchi and her son in September 2001 taken a month after his ADHD diagnosis. Her son now supports her decision to share her story, hoping it may help prevent another tragedy. 

Ishii said that preventing people from reaching a breaking point begins with addressing severe isolation. In Japan, she said, social ties have traditionally carried strong expectations of mutual obligation, sometimes enabling quiet, informal support such as checking in or simply being present. But she noted that rapid social change has made that kind of support harder, while formal systems do not always reach those most in need.

Preventing severe isolation requires creating spaces where people can seek help without feeling they are imposing on others,” the professor said, adding that this can include environments where people from different backgrounds can mix and share everyday experiences.

Nearly a decade after the incident, Hashiguchi recalls breaking down as she spoke to her son about what happened — trying to leave him in the mountains, him chasing after the car and her attempt to strangle him — before she begged for forgiveness. He now supports her decision to share her story, hoping it may help prevent another tragedy.

I know I will carry the guilt with me for the rest of my life,” Hashiguchi said. “But if my experience can stop even one parent from feeling completely alone, then I believe it has meaning.”

 

 

I was assured that these diverse doctors and engineers were far more tolerant than native-born Canadians:

A recent survey has revealed that fewer Canadians support people being able to express their gender however they choose compared to eight years ago.

The findings, published in Statistics Canada’s Juristat, were based on self-reported data from the 2018 and 2025 Survey of Safety in Public and Private Spaces (SSPPS). The survey examined how attitudes toward gender-related issues have changed over time.

When it came to gender expression, women were more likely than men to agree with statements supporting people’s rights to gender expression.

In 2025, 77 per cent of women and 70 per cent of men agreed that people should be able to express their gender however they choose. Women were also more likely to say they would support a family member if they came out as transgender (77 per cent compared to 65 per cent).

However, support for people’s right to express their gender however they choose has declined among both women and men since 2018.

The percentage of women who agreed that people should have this right decreased from 85 per cent to 77 per cent, while support among men dropped from 78 per cent to 70 per cent.

The StatCan survey doesn’t examine the potential causes behind the decline, but notes that the changes in attitude coincide with “a period of animated public discourse” surrounding the rights of transgender and non-binary people. …

The survey found that 80 per cent of women and 71 per cent of men born in Canada agreed that individuals should be able to express their gender however they choose, compared to 70 per cent of women and 67 per cent of men born elsewhere.

 

Imagine entire voters blocks that don’t care about liberal feelings.

 

Also – a known liar will not allow people to correctly conclude that a troubled sociopath plugged with artificial hormones and given access to rifles is not the usual tact of “misinformation” but actual truth:

Days after a shooter opened fire on a school in rural British Columbia, a memo addressed to Prime Minister Mark Carney warned that “false claims” and “misinformation” was circulating online regarding violence and those who identify as transgender.

Officials also flagged that the incident risked giving rise to criticisms around firearm regulations.

The document, released partially redacted to National Post under federal access-to-information legislation, was dated three days after the shooting of nine mostly school-aged children that injured dozens more at a secondary school in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., located in the province’s interior.

Prepared for the prime minister by the Privy Council Office, the document includes an appendix of analysis of the “sentiment” that was being expressed by the public and online in the immediate aftermath, which noted the spread of “grief, shock, and national mourning” as well as calls to support victims.

“Early signs of polarization are emerging,” the note read, “particularly on social media, where identity-related narratives, policy debates, and misinformation are beginning to fragment public discourse.”

It specified that polarization was being observed on social media when it came to the shooter’s identity, from “identity-based political commentary” and “disputes over police handling of gender identity” as well as “hostile exchanges between ideological groups.”

“False claims and misinformation involving transgender violence have circulated online,” it added. “Media reporting confirms social media narratives fuelling anti-trans rhetoric.”

The shooter, identified by police as 18-year-old Jesse Van Rootselaar whom officers said was found dead from a self-inflicted wound, was born a biological male and later transitioned to female.

The memo prepared for Carney pinpoints that among federal departments that stood available to offer supports was Women and Gender Equality Canada, which funds LGBTQ organizations, noting “the tragedy’s impact on the “broader trans” and LGBTQ community.

It also pointed to an anti-stigma campaign which the department had launched, meant to address the discrimination faced by those who identify as gender diverse. “This may be useful for community leaders, educators and parents to discuss these issues with children and others impacted by the tragedy,” the memo says.

When it comes to firearms, the memo to Carney outlines how the sentiment on social media was shifting from grief to more accountability driven questions, such as mental health interventions “firearms access, and whether warning signs were missed.”

 

Why, that sounds like a cover-up for an agenda-driven and unaccountable plutocracy to me.

 

And:

Canada spent more than $722 million providing extensive health care to tens of thousands of asylum seekers in the last fiscal year, including a considerable portion on “failed refugee claimants” who are either languishing in the system or avoiding removal orders, according to a new report from the Parliamentary Budget Office.

The review of the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP) also found that its costs continue to climb because of “backlogs” in Canada’s asylum system that keep claimants waiting, in some cases for up to three years.

The IFHP was created to provide limited and temporary health-care coverage to foreign nationals deemed vulnerable and disadvantaged.

 

 

Some people are special:

Parliament should criminalize Indian Residential School denialism just as it outlawed wilful downplaying of the Holocaust, First Nations leaders yesterday told the Senate human rights committee. Indigenous witnesses condemned skeptics who state “no children actually died or are buried at these sites.”

 

Not even close.

Outlawing thought and inquiry, especially into a largely exploded and fabricated moral outrage, is not the same as Holocaust denial.

Comparing an actual genocide to claims based on shaky statements (and lucrative agendas) is a base and transparent attempt at legitimacy for these beliefs and deflection from genuine inquiry.

 

 

We don’t have to trade with China:

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board holds shares in a Chinese social media company used by Communist Party agents to intimidate Conservatives in the last election, records show. The Board had no comment on millions invested in operators of WeChat, a platform used to distribute wanted posters of one candidate who was forced to suspend his campaign: ‘The RCMP intercepted a credible threat to harm me during the election.’