Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Legalised Vendettas

 Change my mind:

A ruling by the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal which imposed a penalty of $750,000 on a trans heretic is as chilling in its implication as it is draconian in its punishment.

The extraordinary judgement creates a hierarchy of beliefs in that if a person says they are transgender then everyone is obliged to believe them, regardless of any skepticism. To do otherwise is to deny their existence, says the tribunal.

The ruling has all the hallmarks of the Spanish Inquisition: a government-sanctioned body seeking to compel people to conform to a certain orthodoxy on pain of punishment. The tribunal isn’t yet using the Iron Maiden but by imposing such a large cash award the financial pain is considerable and punitive.

The man at the centre of the case, Barry Neufeld, was ordered to pay compensation of $750,000 to be distributed among the LGBTQ members of the Chilliwack Teachers’ Association, the group that complained about him.

The tribunal claims that it is balancing the rights of free expression against the evils of hate and discrimination. The judgement, however, is heavily weighted in finding Neufeld guilty, but when it comes to freedom of speech the “fix” is in early.

The ruling says that merely denying the existence of trans people is not, on its own, hate speech. But it says, “speech which denies the authentic existence of trans and gender diverse people bears a hallmark of hate against them.”

In essence, if a Canadian now questions whether someone is transgender, then the ground has already been prepared for them to be accused of hateful and/or discriminatory conduct.

By creating a hierarchy of beliefs, the tribunal is setting a dangerous and chilling precedent.

 

By creating a tribunal, you are setting a dangerous and chilling precedent, one where some unaccountable and unelected chair-moistener can cater to the whims of an emotionally stunted grifter who relies on such tribunals to not only pacify their tantrums but line their pockets, as well.



Who Would Support This?

There are people who have no regular physician and they pay into the system.


A Conservative motion to restrict health-care benefits to failed asylum claimants was tabled in Parliament on Tuesday, with the projected cost of a federal health program for refugees expected to increase to $1.5 billion by 2030.

“Under the Liberals, the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP), the program that provides benefits to asylum claimants, has morphed well beyond its initial intent of providing care to a small number of legitimate refugees who are fleeing to Canada from war zones into a massive boondoggle that provides care to bogus asylum claimants,” said Conservative Immigration Critic Michelle Rempel Garner, who tabled the motion.

The Parliamentary Budget Officer published a report earlier this month that broke down the rising costs of the IFHP, which has ballooned from $226 million in 2019 to $1 billion in 2025. The total projected cost is expected to climb to over $1.5 billion in 2030.

The PBO also projects that the number of beneficiaries will continue to grow and will reach over 680,000 eligible beneficiaries in 2029-30.

The program has basic and supplemental health care coverage. The basic coverage includes hospital services, services from medical doctors, registered nurses and other licensed health care professionals, ambulance services and lab and diagnostic services (such as blood tests and ultrasounds).

The supplemental coverage includes psychologists, occupational therapists, physiotherapists and speech language therapists, assistive devices like prosthetics, mobility aids and hearing aids, home care and long-term care, urgent dental care and limited vision care, medical supplies and equipment. The program also provides prescription drug coverage.

Rempel Garner’s motion calls on the federal government to review the program to find savings for taxpayers, restrict federal benefits received by rejected asylum claimants to emergency life-saving health care only, provide an annual report to Parliament of the IFHP program and pass policies to immediately expel foreign nationals convicted of serious crimes in Canada.

Immigration Minister Lena Diab told reporters that her government introduced a co-pay model in the federal budget, specifically for supplementary coverage. She also said her government will continue to uphold the constitutional, humanitarian and international obligations that Canada has as a signatory to the United Nations convention on refugees.

“We want to still protect those refugees and those people that are claiming the help and need from Canada that legitimately deserves to be protected, including the children,” she said. “We will continue to do that.”

 

Would these be the children you plan on euthanising?

Is MAID offered to our newcomer friends?


Cut the b@$#@rds off.

This practice of covering the bills for these people is a sign of pure contempt the Liberals have for the electorate.

And the electorate lets it happen.


Canada to Record 100,000th MAID Death By Summer

Imagine a mass casualty event wiping out a mid-sized town in this country.


Just as Canada approaches the 10th anniversary of legal assisted suicide, the country is on course to soon record 100,000 total deaths from Medical Assistance in Dying.

This means that in addition to now charting MAID as one of its leading causes of death, Canada will also become the first country of the modern era to measure its total euthanasia deaths in the six figures.

The 100,000 figure has recently been popularized by Canadian anti-MAID activist Kelsi Sheren. She stated in a recent op-ed that her country is “about to kill its 100,000th citizen through Medical Assistance in Dying.”

The number was picked up by various anti-euthanasia organizations, and was repeated by Sheren in a podcast appearance on the show Real Talk With Zuby.

“This spring, we’re about to hit our 100,000th individual,” she told host Nzube Udezue, a British rapper who goes by the stage name of Zuby.

And the estimate is indeed in line with the official trajectory of Canadian MAID deaths.

In Health Canada’s most recent update on MAID deaths, the agency stated that 76,475 Canadians had died via assisted suicide as of Dec. 31, 2024.

At the time of the report, new MAID deaths were coming in at a rate of 45 per day; the annual number of deaths charted in 2024 came to 16,499. Thus, even if MAID approvals have plateaued in the interim months, Canada would be on track to pass its 100,000th MAID death by the first week of June.

This would be only a couple weeks shy of June 17, when Canada will mark the 10th anniversary of the passage of Bill C-14, the Act of Parliament which first legalized doctor-assisted suicide.


The government's greatest trick is fooling a gullible public that is it directing its own demise.


Scraping the Bottom of the Barrel

Trust these guys:

Left-wing activists are planning to stage a protest at the Buchenwald concentration camp on the anniversary of its liberation—accusing the memorial’s managers of not being “anti-Israel” enough.

The demonstration, organised under the banner “Keffiyehs in Buchenwald,” is set to take place on April 11th, the date the camp was freed from Nazi control in 1945.

The group is demanding the right to wear the keffiyeh—widely associated with the Palestinian cause and, in some contexts, pro-Hamas activism—at the site. Their campaign follows a ruling last year in which a German court said the memorial has the right to refuse entry to those wearing the scarf. Memorial director Jens-Christian Wagner has stressed that the keffiyeh was not automatically banned, but that “when it is used together with other symbols … to relativise Nazi crimes, then we would ask people to remove those symbols.”

A woman who claims to have been barred from the memorial last April asked ahead of the planned protest: “How can it be that the genocide against the Palestinians is now being denied in this very place?”

 

Because there is no genocide of the Palestinians and this pantomime certainly has no place at a former death camp, you b!#ch.



It's Just Money

Not Carney's, of course:

Canadians will be expected to make sacrifices to build up national defence, Prime Minister Mark Carney said yesterday. Carney reiterated a pledge he reneged on last year to spend 2 percent of GDP on military preparedness: “Can you outline what sacrifices?”

**

Pay and benefits averaged more than $143,000 per federal employee last year, the Budget Office said yesterday. It was “historically high,” wrote analysts: “An employee can have seven levels of management above them.”

**

Cabinet spent more than $18 million refitting an Italian office to showcase “Canada’s efforts to combat climate change,” Access To Information records show. The spending on a consulate in Milan was approved at the same time cabinet claimed to cut unnecessary spending: “How do you convince Canadians that you are serious about this?”

**

Conservative amendments to provide more guardrails to a provision in the federal budget that would allow cabinet ministers to exempt entities from federal laws was passed by the finance committee on Monday, with support from the Liberal government.

Buried in the federal government’s 600-page Bill C-15 is a provision that gives cabinet ministers discretionary power to exempt a company or individual from any act of Parliament for a three-year period, except for the Criminal Code, for the purposes of what’s called a “regulatory sandbox.”

The provision is proposed under amendments to the Red Tape Reduction Act, legislation that was first passed under the Stephen Harper government in 2015.

Regulatory sandboxes are a tool used by federal regulators that allow industry to demonstrate the real-life impacts of a new product or service in the marketplace under a temporary set of rules and controlled by regulatory supervision.

The exemptions in question could be given by a minister if they are within the public interest, the benefits outweigh the risks and “would enable the testing of, among other things, a product, service, process, procedure or regulatory measure with the aim of facilitating the design, modification or administration of a regulatory regime to encourage innovation, competitiveness or economic growth.”

The exemptions have been the subject of criticism from opposition parties and Canadian civil, legal, and environmental groups, who call the provision the “King Henry the VIII” clause, “draconian” and “offensive” to democratic institutions.

Earlier this month, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne defended the measures, which he said were a key ask by innovators, particularly in the tech sector.

But the Canadian Civil Liberties Association said the original language in the bill suggests the powers would go beyond just regulatory sandboxes.

“It does not streamline regulation,” said Anaïs Bussières McNicoll, director of the fundamental freedoms program at CCLA. “It applies to almost every piece of federal legislation and regulation, and it truly dynamites the rule of law itself by creating a two-tier legislative system whereby laws debated and enacted by Parliament can be suspended for political convenience with little to no accountability or transparency.”


That's the plan.


Why Does This Sound Familiar?

This:

The CBC prompted protests from Seoul by repeatedly identifying South Korean athletes as Chinese at the Winter Olympics. It was the biggest gaffe of its kind since the Government of Canada put up German flags to welcome a delegation from Belgium: “We want people of all backgrounds, identities and abilities to feel valued, seen and heard by CBC.”


I thought multiculturalism was supposed to make people more savvy.


Now I remember where I've heard this before:



From the Most "Transparent" Government In the Country's History

Shutting people up one bill, one obfuscation, one act at a time:

The Liberals proposed to add “clarifying language” to their contentious bill targeting hate and terror symbols Monday that they say will protect religious speech from being deemed promotion of hate.

But Conservatives say the proposed change is meaningless as Bill C-9 remains stuck in committee study while parties argue over a controversial deal between the Liberals and Bloc Québécois to remove the religious exemption from hate-speech laws.

Bill C-9, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government’s first major justice bill, proposes to create a new offence for intimidating someone to the point of blocking their access to a place of worship or another centre used by an identifiable group. It would also criminalize the act of promoting hate by displaying a hate or terror symbol, such as one tied to a listed terrorist organization or a swastika.

(Sidebar: which is a symbol of the sun in Buddhism, by the way.) 

But the legislation has been stuck in the Commons justice committee since November as Liberals, Conservatives and the Bloc argue over the effects of a major amendment passed by the government and the Bloc.

The Liberals agreed to a Bloc proposal to amend C-9 to remove what is commonly referred to as the “religious exemption” to some hate speech laws.

Currently, section 319 of the Criminal Code exempts individuals from being convicted of promoting hateful or antisemitic speech if they expressed “in good faith” an opinion “based on a belief in a religious text.”

While the amendment was meant to secure Bloc support for the bill, it led to an uproar from Conservatives, civil rights and many faith groups, further stalling the legislation.

Since then, committee meetings on C-9 have been cancelled at the last minute or have been set aside to study another bill as parties negotiate a way forward behind the scenes.

Conservative MP Andrew Scheer speaks to the media at a foyer of House of Commons in West Block of Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026.

On Monday, the Liberals presented a new olive branch to Conservatives by proposing to add “clarifying language” to the bill that aims to address the concerns raised “sincerely” by faith groups, legal experts and civil society, Liberal MP Patricia Lattanzio told committee.


Scrap the whole damn thing.

It's a censorship bill and wedge for more censorship.

They all damn well know it.


Oh, it gets better:

A federal hate crimes bill would outlaw “obstruction” of Indigenous sacred sites including purported unmarked graveyards, says a Department of Justice memo. Attorney General Sean Fraser made no mention of it when he introduced Bill C-9 An Act To Amend The Criminal Code last September 19: “Why isn’t Indian Residential School denialism proposed in this bill?”


Is that so?:

The Tk’emlups te Secwepemc First Nation of Kamloops, B.C. yesterday confirmed it has not attempted to exhume the purported graves of 215 children at the site of an Indian Residential School despite receiving $12.1 million in federal funding for field work. The admission comes ahead of the scheduled release of Access To Information documents regarding the First Nation’s requests for funding for “exhumation of remains.”

**

Millions in federal funding intended to recover the remains of children at a former Indian Residential School in Kamloops,vwere instead allocated for consultants, publicists, and other administrative costs, according to newly revealed documents.

Blacklock's Reporter says the Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations attempted to withhold these financial records under the Access to Information Act.

The Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation received $12.1 million after announcing in 2021 that 215 unmarked graves had been discovered at the Kamloops Residential School.

That number was later revised to 200 “potential burials.” However, no human remains have been recovered to date, despite internal memos noting “requests from families to return bodies.”

Originally granted nearly $8 million for fieldwork, record searches, and site security, funding increased by more than $4 million, described as “robust and comprehensive” in council meeting minutes.

Expenses included $405,000 for administrative costs, $37,500 for marketing, and $100,000 to hire two trauma counselors for six months.

Another $532,000 was spent on security, while funds were also allocated to publicists, architects, and engineers for projects such as a Healing Centre, a museum, and a culturally supportive nursing home for indigenous elders.

The Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations pressed the First Nation for details on archaeological and forensic progress but noted the complexity of such work.

“We are not seeking to intervene in this matter but are trying to understand the approach,” wrote acting director Mandy McCarthy, who inquired about exhumation and DNA testing protocols.

Despite these questions, details about the spending remain censored, and records reveal little evidence of direct fieldwork to locate graves.


No wonder they want to shut people up.



Robed friends in high places:

The CBC is entitled to conceal internal details of corporate spending under the Access To Information Act, says a federal judge. The ruling came on a legal challenge by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation to find how much the CBC spent on advertising while executives pled financial hardship: ‘Disclosure could result in political interference and pressure to modify its spending.’



"My end draws nigh; 't is time that I were gone ..."

And answer made King Arthur, breathing hard:

 "My end draws nigh; 't is time that I were gone.

Make broad thy shoulders to receive my weight,

And bear me to the margin; yet I fear

My wound hath taken cold, and I shall die."

 

         So saying, from the pavement he half rose,

Slowly, with pain, reclining on his arm,

And looking wistfully with wide blue eyes

As in a picture. Him Sir Bedivere

Remorsefully regarded thro' his tears,

And would have spoken, but he found not words,

Then took with care, and kneeling on one knee,

O'er both his shoulders drew the languid hands,

And rising bore him thro' the place of tombs.

 

("Morte D'Arthur", Alfred, Lord Tennyson)

 


Tennyson's Arthur knew the time of Camelot was over.

He did not retreat into hesitance or illusion as Sir Bedivere did, but embraced resignation.

After ten years of a collapsed economy and experiencing a moral descent from which no civilisation ever returned, all the things that have happened to Canada are signs of decrepitude, of a failing nation that rested on past laurels, that destroyed itself but its pride will not let it accept the obvious:

Remember, not all Canadians suffer TDS. Sane Canadians realize it’s just a game they usually win. The last time the USA men’s team won was The Miracle on Ice. In all, Canadian men have 9 men’s team gold medals. The USA has 3.

What really shocked Canadians is the realization that 49 of the 50 states are better off than Canada financially. They accept that America in whole has a better economy. What galls them is that those southern states are better off. The TDS crowd believes slavery is still alive in the SEC states. ...

So why are Canadians allowing all those people in who are a drag on society? Poverty is a choice. Sudden success takes time, energy and commitment. Alabama is an overnight success 80 years in the making.

Unable to deliver on the economy, Ontario Premier Doug Ford allowed bars to open at 6 AM on Sunday for the big game. He said, “Let’s all come together, support local businesses and cheer on Team Canada!”

His bread and circuses through beer and a hockey game failed to deliver the thrill of victory. Meanwhile sweet home Alabama, where the skies are so blue, got sweeter.


Bread and circuses, indeed.

Let these serve as distractions from the larger issues, some being that arrogance and sloth are making people unwilling to accept new realities instead of strive for a better future.

After ten years, there can be no future.






South of the Border, Part Deux

I'm sure a quiet cottage in Texas is looking rather attractive right about now:

Canadians in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, are being ordered to shelter in place as violence escalates in the region.

Mexican government officials are warning residents that Jalisco State, including popular tourist destination Puerto Vallarta, is not safe for travel at the moment.

Global Affairs Canada issued a warning to people in the area that criminal groups have set up roadblocks with burning vehicles throughout the state. The agency says there are just under 19,000 Canadians in Mexico at the moment, including nearly 5,000 in Jalisco State. However, they note those numbers are estimates, as they come from a voluntary registry of Canadians abroad.

 **





Monday, February 23, 2026

Know Who Owns You

None of you are free.

But don't take my word for it:

George Orwell’s dystopian vision of the future, 1984, was supposed to be a warning about the dangers of dictatorship and the loss of objective truth, not a guidebook on how to achieve it.

That said, in Canadian politics these days, one of the primary tools used by Orwell’s all-powerful government of Oceania known simply as “The Party”  “doublethink” or the ability to hold two contradictory views at the same time  is on full display.

How else to explain the Canadian public’s acquiescence to Prime Minister Mark Carney calling China our greatest security threat in April 2025 and a strategic partner in January 2026?

To hold these two contradictory views simultaneously requires not only doublethink but the practical application of Orwell’s “memory hole” in 1984, the mechanism by which the Party systematically destroyed the historical evidence of its previous positions when they contradicted its new ones.

In this case, the historical evidence  barely a year old  is that of Canada’s foreign interference inquiry, which reported in January 2025 that China “is the most active perpetrator of foreign interference targeting Canada’s democratic institutions” and sees Canada as “a high-priority target.”

To believe that threat has abated, one has to believe that the admission of 49,000 Chinese-made EV vehicles into Canada annually will cause China to rethink, in the words of the foreign interference inquiry, targeting “members of Chinese Canadian diaspora communities for the purposes of repression, influence and forced return of … individuals to the People’s Republic of China.”

That it will no longer deploy “a wide range of tradecraft to carry out its activities, one of which is to use a person’s family and friends living in the PRC as leverage against them.”

And that China will cease using “its diplomatic missions, PRC international students, community organizations and private individuals, among others, to carry out its transnational repression activities” in addition to its standard operating procedures of industrial espionage and intellectual property theft.

In his now famous Davos speech, Carney justified such doublethink by proclaiming that Canada will, going forward, “actively take on the world as it is, not wait around for a world we wish to be.”

In reality, when it comes to China, Canada’s position is to actively ignore China as it is, in favour of a China we wish it to be.

As John Robson described it in an excellent National Post column last week titled, “In Mark Carney’s Canada, nothing matters”:

“Given firm evidence that Chinese Communists are subverting our elections, penetrating our institutions and intimidating our citizens, we do nothing whatsoever. The police don’t swoop. The promised foreign agent registry never materializes. Politicians don’t stop flying to Beijing. Exactly as if being conquered doesn’t matter.”

**


(Sidebar: see here.)


What difference does it make if we are invaded from our southern neighbours?

Do we expect things to be worse?

What could happen?

Our elections run unimpeded and without the hint of interference?

We stop killing our sick, elderly and veterans?

We're already chattel.




Canada the Cruel

Canada is now known as the country that kills for fun:

**


Also:

**



 

But Canada Was Never Founded On [Redacted] Values

Guess which ones:

That's a special kind of pandering.


When Arrogance Meets Reality

But ... surely Canada is better than the American South!

Right?


For eons, Canadians have viewed Alabama as a small state that, save for a few pockets, is dirt poor. All anybody seems to know about Alabama is that Montgomery and Birmingham were the centre of the civil rights movement. In 1963, when Martin Luther King Jr. wrote his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” he called Birmingham “probably the most thoroughly segregated city in the United States.”

So, it was a shock when Canadian economist Trevor Tombe and the International Monetary Fund ran the numbers in 2023 and 2024 and concluded that Canada had, in fact, become poorer than Alabama.

To measure this, they calculated gross domestic product (GDP) per capita. In simple terms, it’s the size of the Canadian economy in a given year divided by the population. The same was done for Alabama. After adjusting for foreign exchange and some cost differences in both countries, the average for Canada’s 10 provinces was estimated at at US$55,000 in 2022, the same as Alabama. Shortly after, the IMF found Canada had actually fallen behind the southern state. (Canada has since edged ever-so-slightly higher than Alabama; the numbers are volatile from year to year.)

The timing was terrible for the Canadian psyche. Home prices were on an astronomical trajectory, inflation made everyday items such as groceries far more expensive and there was deep resentment toward Ottawa. Canadians could probably stomach having their living standards slip relative to the broader U.S., the epicentre of the world’s tech revolution. But Alabama?

For an ego check, The Globe and Mail travelled to the Deep South to understand how this happened. Immediately, it was obvious Alabama is misunderstood. In Huntsville, there are as many Subaru Outbacks as there are pickup trucks, and the geography in Alabama’s two largest metropolitan areas – Birmingham and Huntsville – looks nothing like the historical imagery. …

Alabama is also home to five million people – the same population as Alberta – and its economy is booming. The state’s unemployment rate is now just 2.7 per cent, versus 6.5 per cent in Canada, and its major employers include Airbus SE and giant defence contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. The state has also morphed into an auto manufacturing powerhouse with plants from Mercedes-Benz AG, Toyota Motor Corp., Hyundai Motor Co. and more. In 2024, Alabama made nearly as many vehicles as Ontario. …

But being on the ground in Alabama, it was obvious that Canadians need a wake-up call. They tend to view the economy through a historical lens – this is a G7 country that has long punched above its weight. Yet capital is global now and competition for it is fierce. If Canada isn’t careful, places such as the Deep South will continue to steal jobs. The Eli Lilly plant awarded in December could have just as easily gone to Montreal, a pharmaceutical hub.

In other words, it might be time to eat some humble pie. “People have a lot to learn from Alabama,” Mr. Hughes says.

**

 



This is the result of ten years of economic, industrial, political and social stagnation.

Not even one's snobbery can counter that.






South of the Border

I'll bet they wished they were in Florida right about now:


Mexican government officials are warning residents that Jalisco State, including popular tourist destination Puerto Vallarta, is not safe for travel at the moment. ...

The federal government says there have also been shootouts and explosions, though it’s not yet clear if there are any injuries. Global Affairs Canada is advising Canadians in the area to keep a low profile and shelter in place, and monitor local and international media to stay informed.

In a post on social media, Pablo Lemus Navarro, the governor of Jalisco, said that federal forces conducted a raid in Tapalpa, a town about 400 kilometres inland of Puerto Vallarta, Sunday morning.

That raid, Navarro wrote, led to “confrontations” across the state.

The Associated Press is reporting that the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Nemesio Ruben Oseguera Cervantes, was killed in that raid.

The U.S. State Department had offered a reward of up to $15 million for information leading to the arrest of El Mencho. The Jalisco New Generation Cartel is one of the most powerful and fastest-growing criminal organizations in Mexico.




Not Our Game

And it hasn't been since the Russians realised that they could play and get paid for it:
**



What has been lost, aside from professionalism, is the kind of composure needed to stomach a loss and revel in a victory.

If anything, this game - indeed, the winter Olympics - have shown Canada as it has become: no longer a fledgling nation that put its entire weight into any effort and either succeeding or failing with grace, but now a group of self-important, self-entitled blowhards who labour under the delusion that the world thinks it's so pretty and special because it's not the US, but is now met with the reality that the world is finding its tantrums and ego tiresome.

It's hard to walk back from that.



Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Mid-Week Post



Your Lenten post ...


The more recent bribe is getting fast-tracked:

A one-time top-up payment will be coming to Canadians who receive the GST credit.

The “Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit,” which was first announced late last month as part of a number of the government’s affordability measures, passed the final vote in the Senate on Thursday. ...

The finance department says the benefit will provide a one-time top-up payment “as early as possible this spring” worth 50% of the credit.

The regular value of the benefit, which is paid to lower-income Canadians, will also see an increase by 25% starting in July and continuing for five years.

The top-up is expected to help more than 12 million Canadians so when combined, the measures mean a family of four will receive up to $1,890 this year — compared to the annual $1,100 current credit — and about $1,400 annually for the next four years.

Meanwhile, a single person eligible for the new benefit would receive $950 this year compared to $540.

The Conservatives have called the top-up a “Band-Aid solution,” but nevertheless, helped speed the bill through the House last week.


(Sidebar: then you're not really helping, are you?)


Fool me once, shame on me.

Fool me more times than have been counted ...


Somewhat related:  

In November 2025, Canada’s supply management system deliberately destroyed millions of litres of perfectly good milk in Ontario, even as grocery prices remained high and food banks reported record demand.
That destruction was not an accident or a processing failure. It was the predictable outcome of policy.




We don't have to trade with China:

While Russia remains a military threat in the Arctic, Canada’s security officials told a House of Commons committee this week that they remain primarily focused on China’s threats to economic security in the North.

“Russia has a tremendous interest and focus in the Arctic,” Paul Lynd, assistant director at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), told the foreign affairs committee on Thursday. “However, they are of less concern than, say, the activities of China and other hostile state actors at this time.”

**




Canada the cruel:

Feminist and development groups are urging Canada not to turn its back on funding reproductive health and gender initiatives, as Canada focuses its foreign aid cuts on global health programming.

"A bold diplomatic voice is really crucial," Oxfam Canada executive director Lauren Ravon told a panel she hosted on Parliament Hill earlier this month.


No, you're just killing black people off.

Racist.

**

Canadian doctors are considering euthanizing newborns under certain circumstances as a form of “healthcare.” When Dr. Louis Roy advocated for this in 2022, it sparked widespread outrage and the proposal appeared to be dead. It wasn’t. When the Daily Mail pressed the CMQ last year, it confirmed it still endorses the recommendation. It recently stated that euthanasia for babies with “severe deformations” or “extreme pain” may be medically justified. Public outrage, as usual, has faded in the shadow of Canada’s euthanasia bureaucracy.
Infant euthanasia isn’t yet law, but given the expansion of Canada’s euthanasia laws, it soon could be. In 2016, Canada legalized “Medical Assistance in Dying,” or MAiD, for terminally ill adults. Five years later, its Parliament lifted the requirement that a patient’s death be “reasonably foreseeable.” By 2022, lawmakers were discussing euthanasia for minors and in psychiatric cases, and next year MAiD for mental illness will become legal.
When a government grants permission to end a life, where does it stop? “Once you start legalizing, there is a risk that a significant number of physicians normalize this practice. It’s like putting fuel on the fire,” says Trudo Lemmens, a law professor at the University of Toronto, who now regrets supporting Canada’s original MAiD laws. Wesley J. Smith of the Discovery Institute think tank asks the question: “If killing is an acceptable answer to suffering, why limit the killing to adults?”



The new under-dogs:

It’s been a long journey, but for the first time in history Israel has sent a bobsled team to the Winter Olympics — the 2026 Games in Milan-Cortina, Italy.

The team is led by American-Israeli AJ Edelman, who has poured in years of sweat and sacrifice to make this possible, even fundraising on his own to secure the resources necessary to compete.

Edelman was also the first Orthodox Jew to compete in the Winter Olympics, representing Israel in the one-person skeleton sled at the 2018 Winter Games in PyeongChang, South Korea.

Affectionately named Shul Runnings after the 1993 comedy film about the Jamaican bobsled team, Cool Runnings, the nickname plays on the Yiddish word shul, meaning synagogue.


Also - not a good look:



And now for something completely different: