Monday, April 13, 2026

Canada the Cruel

I had to read this twice to make sure of what I was reading:

A leading MAID advocate argued to parliamentarians last month that Canada must legalize assisted suicide for the mentally ill, lest those same patients commit suicide.

The statement was made at a March 24 parliamentary committee debating the legalization of MAID for Canadians whose “sole underlying medical condition is a mental illness.”

Jocelyn Downie, a leading MAID activist since 2004, warned that if the federal government keeps excluding mentally ill Canadians from accessing assisted suicide, the result will be more mentally ill Canadians dying by suicide.

“What will happen, if there is an extension or an exclusion, is that people will die by suicide,” she said.


Yep.

**

A new poll has revealed a “deep divide” among Canadians’attitudes to Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID).

The online survey, conducted by ResearchCo., found that 41 per cent of Canadians think health-care professionals should be able to decline providing MAID services if they have a moral or faith-based objection.

Forty-two per cent of respondents disagree, while the remaining 17 per cent said they weren’t sure.

That figure is up five points from a similar survey conducted by ResearchCo. in November 2022.

“On a regional basis, opposition to moral or faith-based objections in physician-assisted death cases is highest in Alberta (47 per cent), followed by Atlantic Canada (45 per cent), Quebec (44 per cent), Ontario (41 per cent), British Columbia (also 41 per cent) and Saskatchewan and Manitoba (36 per cent),” ResearchCo. said in a news release.

“Opposition is higher among Canadians aged 55 and over (45 per cent) than among their counterparts aged 35 to 54 (42 per cent) and aged 18 to 34 (39 per cent).”

Several provincial regulatory authorities have issued guidelines requiring medical practitioners who are unwilling or unable to provide MAID to refer patients to other institutions or providers.

In Ontario, for example, physicians and nurse practitioners who object to providing MAID must refer patients “in a timely manner” to another provider.

Gabrielle Peters, a disabled writer and policy analyst, said in an interview with National Post: “The idea of intentionally killing somebody is something that many people object to, and so I think this is a pretty fundamental right that we should be preserving in our society.


Evil loves complicity.




We Don't Have to Trade With China

As much as Carney et al want us to:

The federal government has not raised national security concerns about a Chinese company’s planned acquisition of a Canadian goldminer, clearing the way for the transaction.

Shareholders of Allied Gold Corp. voted in favour of China’s Zijin Gold International Co. Ltd.’s proposed $5.5 billion acquisition of the company last week.

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly reviews all proposed foreign takeovers of Canadian companies in case of national security vulnerabilities. The reviews include assessing how the deals will affect Canada’s defence capabilities, critical supply chains, and the potential for enabling foreign espionage.

(Sidebar: this moron? God ...)

The Canadian government had a 45-day window to raise concerns about the deal, but it did not do so, meaning it was approved by default. The government would still be able to block Zijin’s acquisition of Allied if it fails to pass the ongoing net economic benefit review, which examines the deal’s impact on the Canadian economy, jobs, and supply chains.

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada said in a statement to The Epoch Times that the government is aware of the transaction, but said it can’t comment on specific transactions due to confidentiality provisions in the Investment Canada Act.

Zijin, which has indirect ties to the Chinese regime through its ownership structure, struck a deal in January to acquire Allied for $44 per share in cash—an all-time high for the stock. Allied operates mines in the African countries of Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, and Mali, and produces around 375,000 ounces of gold a year.

Neither of the companies responded to The Epoch Times’ request for comment.

Under former prime minister Justin Trudeau, Ottawa tightened rules on Chinese ownership in the Canadian mining sector, citing national security concerns over China’s growing control of the global critical minerals supply chain. The Canadian government was particularly concerned about Chinese control of lithium, cobalt, and rare earths.

Canada has typically allowed Chinese investment in Canada’s gold sector in recent years, as the metal is not classified as a critical mineral. But in 2020, Ottawa blocked Shandong Gold Mining Co. Ltd.’s attempted acquisition of TMAC Resources Ltd. TMAC’s mine is located near tidewater in the Northwest Passage, which is a strategic shipping route in the Canadian Arctic.

Since Mark Carney became prime minister in early 2025, he has moved to strengthen ties between Ottawa and Beijing in a bit to diversify trade away from the United States. During a visit to China in January, Carney announced he was reducing tariffs on imports of Chinese electric cars, and said Canada was open to more investment from China.


China doesn't want its vassal sate to be in the sphere of American influence.

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In policing — particularly in national security and organized crime — we are trained to recognize a simple truth: the most serious threats rarely arrive with warning. They emerge gradually, through relationships, dependencies, and decisions that appear rational in isolation but carry strategic consequences in aggregate.

What concerns me today is not a single incident or headline. It is a pattern.

Consider the sequence.

In September 2024, Mark Carney assumed a central role shaping Canada’s economic future as Chair of the government’s Task Force on Economic Growth. Weeks later, he met with a senior official from the People’s Bank of China. Shortly thereafter, Brookfield — an entity with which he has longstanding ties — secured a loan of roughly $250 million from the state-owned Bank of China.

There is no allegation of illegality here. But in national security work, legality is not the threshold. Exposure is. Influence is. Perception is. And when public authority and private financial interests intersect — particularly involving foreign state institutions — it raises questions that deserve clear answers.

Now turn to Newfoundland.

The Beaver Brook mine is not just another industrial site. As The Bureau has reported, it is North America’s most significant source of antimony — a mineral essential to ammunition, advanced weapons systems, and modern defense technologies. China owns it. And in 2023, it was shut down.

Since then, Beijing has tightened global supply through export controls, driving prices sharply higher while Western governments scramble to secure independent sources. The United States has responded with billions in strategic investment. Canada has not.

In policing, when a critical asset is controlled by a foreign state actor and rendered inactive in a way that benefits that actor strategically, we do not assume coincidence. We assess leverage.

The same dynamic is emerging in Canada’s Arctic.

Chinese state-linked enterprises hold significant mineral positions in Nunavut. At the same time, Ottawa is accelerating infrastructure projects — roads, ports, and corridors — that will define access to those resources for decades to come. Infrastructure is not neutral. It determines who operates, who profits, and ultimately, who holds influence on the ground.

If Canadian-funded infrastructure enhances the operational reach of foreign state enterprises — particularly those aligned with strategic competitors — we must ask whether we are strengthening sovereignty or quietly diluting it.

Layer onto this the growing body of evidence around foreign influence operations.

A recent international study identified hundreds of organizations in Canada connected to China’s United Front system — an apparatus designed to shape political and social environments abroad. Canada’s own Foreign Interference Commission has heard credible concerns about relationships between political actors and networks aligned with Beijing’s interests.

This is not about ethnicity or diaspora communities. It is about state-directed influence — deliberate, persistent, and strategic.

What is most troubling is not any single element, but the inconsistency across them.

Canada identifies China as a strategic challenge. Yet strategic minerals remain under foreign state control. Public funds support foreign state-linked enterprises. Domestic industries are bypassed in key procurements. National security considerations appear disconnected from economic policy.

In my experience, organized systems — whether criminal or state-based — do not need to overpower institutions. They exploit gaps. Inconsistencies. Misalignments between stated priorities and actual decisions.

Right now, Canada is presenting those gaps.



Your Duplicitous, Tyrannical, Thieving, Inept Government and You

The natural governing party, so they say:

Floor-crosser MP Marilyn Gladu defended her move to the Liberals on Thursday evening, arguing the decision is what’s best for her riding, while also promising to vote with the party on social issues.

“This is actually the best thing for my riding, for the country and for myself,” she told reporters on the sidelines of the Liberal National Convention in Montreal.


Oh, yes - entirely for you, Marilyn.


It's called cheating and it's done by a European failed banker with no native riding and with vested interests in the United States, but none in Canada:




Deputy Defence Minister Christiane Fox in a staff email neither resigned nor apologized after being censured for cronyism. Fox said she breached an Act of Parliament to hire a friend who’d previously worked at a Good Life gym in the name of diversity. The gym employee is Black: “My efforts were focused on advancing diversity and inclusion.”

Something tells me that she would apologise if she knew that she would lose her pension for this kind of sh--.




The sobering but never mentioned fact is that carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are near historic lows, only one-fifth or one-tenth the levels 500 and 600 million years ago, respectively. Preindustrial year levels were 300 ppm; a hundred years ago, they approached the extinction level of 180 ppm. No one knows, and we don’t want to, the exact level at which plants die, animals and fish cannot exist, and human life ends.

Wouldn’t it be ironic if, as it appears, the small impact by humans on CO2 levels (this includes burning fossil fuels, humans breathing, and cows flatulating) may have prevented further fatal decline (this is conjecture). We should celebrate the average annual increase of 2 ppm in the last hundred years to the current level of 430 ppm, avoiding the ultimate damage to the planet. 

The low levels reveal the false narrative of the 1992 Earth Summit zealots’ scaremongering, also revealing the real risk of low levels. The persistent and tiring tactics of Secretary General Guterres warn that humans are “burning up the planet,” which is “on fire.” He knows that in the past temperatures saw tropical verdancy and alligators in the Arctic. How did the planet ever survive?

But this dishonest and highly misleading narrative gained legs; our Prime Minister is one of the leaders of this damaging deception.

All this begs the question of why emission reductions are needed, and further, why Canada needs to be at the forefront? Canada runs at only about 1.5% of total global emissions, hardly relevant to the purported problem. 

There was no mandate asked or given to governments — federal, provincial, or municipal — to make Canada the global leader in emission reductions.

Initiated by the Trudeau federal government in 2015 when it withdrew Northern Gateway after a ten-year regulatory process, the onslaught of the energy sector began. With the guidance of his university buddy Gerald Butts, Energy East, and the Trans Mountain fiasco, capital investment is avoiding our country, with the knowledge that pipelines are only the visible head of the climate crisis dragon.

We are now saddled with one of the world’s “climate crisis” leaders, Mark Carney, who, through much of this period, was a personal advisor to the Liberal Party. BTW, his wife, Diana Fox Carney, works with Gerald Butts at the Eurasia Group, a political risk advisory agency.


Also:


 

The Liberals' greatest gift to the country is brain-drain.

(Sidebar: among other things.)

There is no capital, no innovation, no research, and no willingness to keep and pay the professionals educated here.

Now here we are:

Are you a Canadian considering improving your situation after graduating by moving abroad for better, higher paying opportunities? A guest speaker at the federal Liberal party convention on Friday just suggested that, in order to defeat Canada’s brain-drain problem, our best and brightest either stay put or cough up half a million dollars, what he suggests is the cost of their taxpayer-subsidized education, before they can pursue opportunities outside of Canada.

Ironically, the special guest who made this suggestion during the Building a Stronger, More Competitive Canadian Economy panel which also featured federal ministers Mélanie Joly, Rechie Valdez, and Lena Metlege Diab, is a Canadian who left Canada for better opportunities, now lives in Europe, and paid no such tax himself.

Patrick Pichette was born and educated in Montreal and left Canada for work in the U.S. accepting a role at Microsoft and then senior vice president and CFO of Google in California. He now lives in London, U.K., and is a partner at Inovia Capital. He paid no exit tax when he left Canada.

Yet, Pichette thinks today’s young Canadians should stay put, or cough up $500,000 if they want to leave.

Pointing to himself and then the crowd, Pichette says , “We as Canadians, have subsidized my education to the tune of… half a million,” he told the captive audience, warming up to the idea Ottawa should restrict basic freedoms.

You see, the Americans’ TN visa program for Canadians and Mexicans created under NAFTA is simply too affordable and accessible. Pichette recounted his own experience using the program:

“In Canada, the minute you have your degree, if it’s a professional degree, there’s something in the Canada… it’s called the TN program. So, Microsoft, I finished from University of Waterloo with my computer degree, Microsoft phones me, offers me a job, 300 grand a year, right, all I have to do is show up at the border, apply for a TN visa, right, and I get this three-year, like no questions asked, it costs 30 bucks,” he told the crowd without an ounce of shame.

Pichette laid out the cost of the brain drain of Canada’s talent and gave his recommendation for a cure:

“30,000 TN go to the U.S. every year. You want to save yourself five, ten billion dollars. Shut the TN program. Keep them in Canada, or make them pay their half a million so that if they leave, I’m OK with that,” said the European.

Pichette then suggested that these students, our best and brightest, were a drain on our economy: “You want to go to the U.S.? Give me back my money. Like my dad, my mom — you all work every day to offer them their education. You can’t let five billion or ten billion a year of your hard-earned cash (go) so that Microsoft can get smarter,” he said, seemingly without a lick of self-awareness.

In reality, it is the economy that is a drain on our best and brightest. Seventy percent of our emigrants are highly educated. Emigration hit near-record levels in 2025, up three per cent from the year before, when 120,000, more than half of these emigrants were prime aged workers and highly skilled.

Why do our best and brightest leave? They leave for better paid jobs, more opportunities and lower taxes for themselves and for their companies if they are entrepreneurs. And now, due to inflation and expensive housing, they have even more reason to want to leave.

Yet here’s Pichette, who is now a European, also suggesting to a Canadian audience that we bring in outside to talent to this economy. And attract them with what, exactly? It’s absurd.

This isn’t just a Pichette problem. The Liberals appear to refuse to understand what makes a great economy for workers a businesses to thrive. All they know is that they want to govern as many aspects of it as possible, pick winners, and unload the tax burden of the massive bureaucracy onto Canadians, the smartest of which understand this clearly, and choose to leave.

Threatening young people with a massive exit tax or shutting down mobility pathways won’t fix Canada’s problems. It will only confirm why so many feel they have no choice but to leave.


Would barbed wire be cheaper and easier?

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Speaking of tyranny:

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It’s easy to see why the Carney government wants to overturn the unanimous decision by a three-judge panel of the Federal Court of Appeal condemning the Trudeau government’s use of the Emergencies Act (EA) during the trucker convoy demonstrations in February 2022.

The appeal court’s Jan. 16 ruling – upholding the 2024 judgment of Justice Richard Mosley that the government’s actions were unconstitutional and unlawful– is a devastating indictment of what the Liberal government did, reflecting many of the arguments made by the protesters.

The feds, having lost twice in court on this issue, are now appealing to the Supreme Court of Canada, saying they must have “the tools needed to protect the safety and security of Canadians in the face of threats to public order and national security.”

(In 2023, Justice Paul Rouleau, head of the public inquiry into the government’s use of the EA, concluded it was justified, but added he did so with reluctance, because the factual basis for its use was not “overwhelming,” and, “reasonable and informed people could reach a different conclusion.”)

The Supreme Court has yet to decide whether to hear the government’s appeal.

**

Bottom line, police can now enter your property without a warrant if their purpose is to investigate a crime, even one in which you may be the suspect, as long as they say after the fact that they weren’t entering the property for the purpose of a warrantless search. One can expect at least some police to abuse this power by snooping around private properties in cases where they ought to have a warrant. Perhaps your car happens to be the same make and model as a reported drunk driver, even though you’ve been home all night. They can now bang on your door and start asking you questions, invading your privacy by seeing who you happen to have over that night. Even worse, perhaps you say the wrong thing, and get arrested. You can’t get your privacy back once it’s been breached, and it’s hard to undo the impact of criminal charges even if they’re later dropped. This is why we have warrants in the first place.



No Country For Anyone

Just in time for Yom HaShoah:

Last year saw the highest level of deadly violence against Jews around the world in over three decades, with 20 people killed in antisemitic attacks, according to an annual study released by Tel Aviv University on Monday.

The violence, including a deadly attack at a Hanukkah celebration in Australia, continued a spike that began following the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attack and Israel’s subsequent war in Gaza, the report’s authors said.

“The data raise concern that a high level of antisemitic incidents is becoming a normalized reality,” said Uriya Shavit, the report's chief editor.

Deadly antisemitic attacks were recorded on three continents. Fifteen people were killed at the holiday event at Sydney’s Bondi Beach in December. There were additional deaths in two antisemitic attacks in the U.S. in Washington, D.C., and Colorado; and in Britain, two people were killed at a Manchester synagogue on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar.

Each year, Tel Aviv University’s Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry and the Irwin Cotler Institute for Democracy, Human Rights and Justice releases the report about antisemitism ahead of Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance Day.

The day marks a national memorial for the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust, which begins Monday evening.

The new report also tracked an increase in antisemitic attacks that resulted in physical harm, including beatings and stone throwing.

It found that 2025 was the deadliest year for antisemitic attacks since 1994, when the bombing of a Jewish community center in Argentina killed 85 people and wounded more than 300. An Argentine court has blamed Iran and its Hezbollah proxy for the attack.

According to the report, there was a moderate increase in the overall number of antisemitic incidents last year compared with 2024, but that total represents a huge jump from 2022, before the war in Gaza. The report tracks incidents that range from physical attacks and vandalism to verbal threats and harassment on social media.

“The peak in the number of incidents was recorded in the immediate aftermath of the Oct. 7 attack, after which we began to see a downward trend — but unfortunately, that trend did not continue in 2025,” Shavit said.

In the United Kingdom, there were 3,700 antisemitic incidents in 2025, up from 3,556 in 2024. In Canada, the number of incidents grew from 6,219 in 2024 to 6,800 in 2025, a number more than three times higher than in 2022.

The report found that even after the Gaza ceasefire took effect last October, antisemitic incidents continued to rise from the same period during the previous year. In Australia, there were 588 antisemitic incidents between October and December 2025, up from 492 during the same period in 2024. There were a total of 472 antisemitic incidents across Australia during all of 2022.


**

If you can't deny it, distort it!

Holocaust distortion is on the rise. It does not always appear as outright denial of the murder of six million Jews. Increasingly, it takes subtler forms — reshaping the historical record in ways that erode understanding of what happened and why. Beyond the dangerous manifestations of rewriting the Holocaust itself, there are also increasing efforts to distort its aftermath. The story of the hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees who survived the war only to remain stateless is too often overlooked, minimized, or reframed in ways that obscure their plight. Few examples illustrate this more clearly than the history of the refugee ships that carried Holocaust survivors toward British-mandated Palestine in the years immediately after the Second World War.

(Sidebar: it is fruit of a poisonous tree trying to find its way to acceptability.) 

The Nuremberg trials of 1945–46 exposed the full horror of Nazi crimes against the Jews of Europe. As the world learned the scale of the genocide, one might have expected that the survivors who emerged from the devastation would quickly find refuge.

But that was not the case.

By 1947, at least 200,000 Jews remained homeless and stateless across Europe, many confined to displaced persons camps. They were survivors of ghettos, camps, and hiding. Many had lost entire families. Returning home was often impossible; communities had been destroyed and antisemitism remained widespread. Liberation had come, but security and belonging had not.

For many of these survivors, the possibility of rebuilding their lives in the historic homeland of the Jewish people offered a rare glimmer of hope. Their aim was simple: to live normal lives in peace after the immense tragedy they had endured.

That hope became world famous through the story of the ship Exodus 1947 . On July 11 of that year, more than 4,500 Jewish refugees boarded the overcrowded vessel in Sète, France, hoping to reach Palestine despite British restrictions on Jewish immigration. A week later, British naval vessels rammed and boarded the ship. The passengers were ultimately deported back to Europe and sent to displaced persons camps in Germany — two years after the war’s end.

Exodus was only one of dozens of ships carrying Jewish refugees toward British-mandated Palestine. My parents were on another.

In May 1947, my parents, Berek and Bella, boarded a ship called the Pan York , later renamed Komemiyut, the Hebrew word for sovereignty. They had met in a displaced persons camp in Poland after the war. My mother had survived Auschwitz; both had lost most of their families in the Holocaust. Among the passengers was my sister Sara, then 18 months old.

Like thousands of other survivors, they were trying to rebuild their lives. They sailed from Marseille toward Haifa, determined to escape the uncertainty of Europe.

The British intercepted the ship before it could reach port. The passengers were subsequently sent to internment camps near Famagusta in Cyprus, where thousands of Jewish refugees were detained behind barbed wire. Only in 1948 were many of them, including my parents and my sister, finally allowed to sail to Haifa.

This story matters because it reminds us what happened to Jewish survivors after liberation. The war had ended, but for many Jews the nightmare was not over. They had survived extermination only to face statelessness, confinement, and closed borders. The refugee ships were not symbols of ideology or power. They were vessels of human desperation, carrying people who had nowhere else to go.

Yet public understanding of that history is fading.

Recent Canadian survey data reveal a striking misconception: large numbers of Canadians believe the country was open to Jewish refugees during the Second World War. Nearly half of respondents think Canada welcomed them.

The historical record tells a different story. Canada’s response to Jewish refugees during the Holocaust years was among the most restrictive in the Western world — a policy later summarized by the haunting phrase “None is too many” (the title of the book by Irving Abella and Harold Troper that documented the government restrictions).

(Sidebar: worse than that.) 

It was because so few countries opened their doors that ships like the Exodus and the Pan York existed in the first place.

For my parents and for thousands like them, the journey was never about politics. It was about survival after the destruction of their families and communities. They boarded overcrowded ships because the world had left them with nowhere else to go. To forget that — or to recast their story in ways that blur the reality of their suffering — is to deepen the distortion of Holocaust memory itself.

In a troubling twist of historical revisionism, some now portray those same refugees — people who had just survived ghettos and death camps — as aggressors who settled on someone else’s land. In reality, they were survivors of an unimaginable catastrophe who sought to rebuild their lives and live peacefully alongside others. Yet from the beginning there were too many who refused to accept the possibility of coexistence. Eight decades later, those refugees are sometimes depicted as if the mere act of seeking refuge and rebuilding their lives constituted wrongdoing.

The distortion does not stop there. Today’s antisemites even tell the children and grandchildren of Holocaust survivors to “go back to Poland” — as if Jewish refugees and their descendants remain perpetual outsiders wherever they live, made to feel unwelcome by some in the place they call home.

If we are serious about preserving the memory of the Holocaust, we must also defend the truth about what happened to those who survived it. The refugees of the Exodus, the Pan York, and dozens of other ships were not symbols or abstractions. They were survivors — people who had endured the destruction of their families and communities and who sought, after the darkest chapter in Jewish history, the simple chance to rebuild their lives in peace.


But the West is not serious about remembering the Holocaust or any other genocide.

The Narrative must be maintained.



Wednesday, April 08, 2026

Mid-Week Post

Your post-Easter Sunday chocolate-high ...


The party of corruption:

We now learn that Champagne’s partner, Anne-Marie Gaudet, is vice-president of the environment for Alto, the company behind the Liberals $90billion soon-to-be boondoggle to build a high-speed rail link from Toronto to Quebec City.

This information was disclosed in a letter released by Champagne on Monday. The finance minister said he wrote the letter in September and sent it to Prime Minister Mark Carney. In the letter, Champagne said he was “proactively” applying a conflict-of-interest filter about Alto because of his relationship with Gaudet.

The letter said Champagne was recusing himself from any dealings with Alto.

Two months after apparently writing that letter, Champagne presented a federal budget highlighting “Alto High-Speed Rail: Canada’s first high-speed railway,” which is estimated to cost upwards of $90 billion.

Why is it that five months after that budget, Canadians are only now learning about a rather large potential conflict of interest concerning the minister and Alto?

If the minister thought it right to tell the prime minister, surely he could have figured it out that it was also right to tell Canadians.

But he didn’t figure it out and worse the prime minister hasn’t figured it out either.

On Tuesday, Carney was defending Champagne with the kind of blind arrogance that was also the habitual fallback position of his predecessor.

In a press conference, Carney thought the most important thing to remind Canadians was that ministers have spouses and partners who are allowed their own careers.

But that’s not the point. Of course they are allowed careers and no one is objecting to Gaudet working for Alto.

What’s really important is to have a conflict-of-interest process in place that is transparent and timely. Champagne’s decision to write to his leader was not transparent and considering it has only just been made public, it was certainly not timely.

Carney went on to say that Champagne had followed all the rules.

“There are rules, there are regulations and the minister, the finance minister, has followed those rules and regulations in notification of the ethics commissioner in recusing himself from dealings with respect to Alto,” said Carney.

The letter is not on the website of the ethics commissioner and John Fragos, Champagne’s spokesman, said it was the ethics commissioner’s decision not to post the finance minister’s letter on the website.

On Tuesday, the ethics commissioner confirmed that the office was copied on the September letter but said because of confidentiality rules all the information it was authorized to release was in the public registry.

 But why didn’t Champagne ensure that the letter was posted for all to see? Even better, why didn’t he just announce it for all Canadians to know?

Apparently, Champagne felt it important to let the ethics commissioner know that in 2016 he had received two tickets to the benefit performance of Céline Dion in Quebec. We know because it’s on the commissioner’s website.

But Champagne didn’t think it important to make sure that a possible $90 billion conflict of interest was similarly posted.

Maybe he thought that was not his job. But transparency is part of his job and in that he singularly failed.

It’s not as if Champagne hasn’t been part of a government that has had its share of ethical problems despite entering office with a pledge for openness and transparency.

In case he’s forgotten a few “ethical” highlights would include: giving WE Charity a sole-sourced $912-million contract despite having connections to the Trudeau family; ditching Attorney General Jodie Wilson-Raybould for refusing to cave to the prime minister’s demands; defying the Speaker of the House of Commons by refusing to hand over documents and Justin Trudeau taking a free vacation at the Aga Khan’s home in the Bahamas.

The Ethics Commissioner also found breaches of the rules by former Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc (he handed a lucrative Arctic surf clam licence to a company linked to his wife’s cousin); former International Trade Minister Mary Ng (she helped in awarding two contracts to a company run by a close friend) and former Finance Minister Bill Morneau who was found to have broken ethics laws three times in the WE debacle.

Only a few years ago, a clearly frustrated outgoing Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion told National Post that the Liberals needed to take ethics more seriously. Their constant ethical failings were undermining public trust, he said.

Referring to the Conflict of Interest Code, Dion said, “The act has been there for 17 years for God’s sake, so maybe the time has come to do something different so that we don’t keep repeating the same errors. After 17 years, maybe we should realize that something is not working.”

What’s not working is the Liberals who refuse to display any humility when it comes to how they should act.


All for a railway that won't be built, too.



Paying for professional liars:

Cabinet polled catchphrases and logos in attempting to ease the housing crisis, records show. The Privy Council commissioned federal focus groups on marketing techniques most likely to convince Canadians that cabinet would address shortages: ‘Branding concepts could be used by the federal government.’



The limits to mass unvetted migration are cosmetic.

The Liberals can't afford to have the dwindling old-stock voting alone:

Last month, Bill C-12, the Strengthening Canada’s Immigration System and Borders Act received royal assent. The law gives the Minister of Immigration, Lena Diab, the power to pause applications “in the public interest.” It also retroactively bars persons with expired one-year permits (such as student visas, or temporary work permits) from subsequently filing refugee claims, as they can now do when other avenues to permanent residency are closed. It also eliminates the loophole whereby persons who enter the country illegally and remain undetected for 14 days can also file a refugee claim, under the Canada-U.S. Safe Third Country Agreement.

(Sidebar: this trash.)

These changes would result in the dismissal of 19,000 such refugee applications, according to Diab. That’s a drop in the bucket of the 288,271 pending asylum claims currently clogging the system. Immigration lawyers and refugee advocates are nevertheless crying foul and plan to contest the law in court. ...

How did we get here? For years, the Canadian government opened wide the floodgates on immigration, admitting five million newcomers, including students and temporary workers, between 2022 and 2024, in a country of 40 million people. This created predictable outcomes: colleges relied on foreign students to fund their operations. Hundreds of thousands moved into communities where there wasn’t enough housing, creating shortages and driving up rents. Students and temporary workers flooded the low-skilled job market, such as fast food, delivery and hospitality work. Today we have a youth unemployment rate of 14.1 per cent, more than double the national rate of 6.7 per cent.

 

Also - why stay in a failed country?:

Meanwhile, Jedwab said Canada is experiencing its own “exodus” of both citizens and permanent residents emigrating around the world, not just to the U.S., though it remains the top destination.

Citing Statistics Canada data, he noted roughly 120,000 left Canada in 2025, three per cent more than in 2024 and the fourth straight year the figure has climbed. More than half (53.9 per cent) were prime-aged workers between 25 and 49, “often mid-career professionals in peak-earning years,” many of whom are highly-skilled immigrants like doctors, engineers and scientists who are leaving at twice the rate of their lower-skilled peers.

Seniors (55 and older) account for almost one in seven permanent departures, “with 16,609 leaving in 2025 — an 80.5 per cent increase compared to a decade ago.”

As part of the data study, Jedwab sought to compare the socio-economic profiles of Canadian nationals living in the U.S. and Canadian citizens born in the U.S.

Using Canada’s 2021 national census to understand the latter and the 2021 American Community Survey for insight into the former, Jedwab found that “rather than politics or ideology, economic motivation is the main driver in moves across the border by Americans and Canadians respectively.”

“Even with controls in place, the data point to vast differences in education and income,” he noted.

For instance, U.S. citizens originally from Canada are more likely to earn incomes over CAD$100,000 and those workers aged 25-54 were far more likely to earn over that amount than their American-born population counterparts in Canada. In 2021, almost 36 per cent of the former were earning more than $100,000, more than double the U.S. national average (16.2 per cent).

In terms of education, both cohorts have more university degrees or higher than the overall population, but Americans hailing from Canada are slightly more educated.

The Canadian-born Americans are also more likely to be homeowners.

Jedwab also used the most recent American Community Survey from 2024 to get a better understanding of current Canadian-born Americans, finding that more than one in three are 65 and older (34.4 per cent), they are predominantly Anglophones and, despite almost half being well-educated (48.1 per cent), many of those who arrived between 2019 and 2024 earned less than $80,000 annually (64 per cent).



I'm sure this will invite the usual international indignation:

Many other family members also spoke out in favor of a death penalty for terrorists.

However, once the bill was signed, it was immediately condemned by European governments and a social media campaign based on lies was quickly whipped up, claiming that the bill was racist because it would execute Arab Muslims rather than Jews. All of that is completely false.

The bill only applies to non-citizen terrorists who live under military jurisdiction. It doesn’t apply to Israeli citizens, Jews or Arabs, or whatever their religion may be. The legal basis for this is much the same as the Article III military tribunals that were used in Gitmo after 9/11.

Media and social media accounts chose to completely ignore MK Limor Son Har-Melech, whose bill it was, because her story was too sympathetic, in favor of retweeting a brief clip from a Hamas-linked account, featuring Itamar Ben Gvir, a leader of her party, celebrating the bill.

There was no mention that the bill had come from a survivor of terrorism, that it had been championed by family members of terror victims, or that it was made necessary by disastrous hostage deals like the Shalit deal and the Hamas hostage deal which freed thousands of Islamic terrorists to kill again and which incentivized future attacks and future hostage taking.

The European Union claimed that the bill was “deeply concerning” because “the death penalty is a violation of the right to life”. The terrorists facing the death penalty violated the right to life of others and will do so again if they are set loose. As the EU would indeed like to see happen.


It's not capital punishment.

It's MAID.

I thought that everyone liked MAID.



We don't have to trade with China:



And now for something completely different:

At just 31 syllables in Japanese, the tanka (literally, “short poem”) spread quickly — reshared and rewritten as others swapped out Okamoto’s umbrellas for their own accumulations: “all these open tabs” or “all these clean clothes sitting in the dryer.” 

To date, the tweet has received more than 55,000 likes and helped launch Okamoto’s literary career. She has since published two books — the tanka collection “Water Bus to Asakusa” (2022) and “Rakurai to Shukufuku” (“Lightning and Blessing,” 2025), a blend of poetry and essays — and contributed to anthologies and independent publications. 

More broadly, the tweet sparked renewed interest in tanka itself. 

Written in a 5-7-5-7-7 syllable structure, tanka is one of Japan’s oldest poetic forms, with a history spanning more than 1,300 years. Haiku, a shorter offshoot, developed from renga (linked verse) during the Edo Period (1603-1867). And while haiku has gained global recognition, it is tanka that has recently captured the attention of Japan’s younger generations.

“Haiku is more descriptive of the environment … frogs jumping into ponds and such,” says Damiana De Gennaro, an academic at Stockholm University whose main area of research is tanka communities, referencing a classic haiku by Matsuo Basho (1644-94). “But what tanka does is communication between people.”

Tanka doesn’t require a kigo (seasonal word) like haiku and often has an addressee, like Okamoto asking someone else — perhaps a romantic interest — whether they’re sure they want her. 

The reworking of Okamoto’s poem, the kind of back-and-forth that fuels virality on social media, has precedent in tanka’s past: A practice known as “honkadori” in which poets borrow familiar phrases or structures from earlier works to create new poems. Rather than plagiarism, it is understood as homage. 

That flexibility helps make tanka more accessible. It can be written quickly, in everyday language and with few formal constraints. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, as people spent more time at home and online, many young Japanese gravitated toward what some have jokingly called “granny hobbies” like knitting, gardening and poetry. 

De Gennaro says while tanka communities already existed before 2020, the pandemic increased interest. “Everyone was lonely, isolated and wanted to share something,” she says.