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Michael Bonner: Iran’s regime is a threat to Canada. Many of its officials are already here

2 février 2026 à 12:00
We don’t yet know how the repressive and murderous Islamic Republic of Iran will fall, or when. After the recent uprising and the regime’s bloody response, the most likely outcome may well be some form of military junta arising from the conventional armed forces. A worse outcome would be a coup by the more ideological Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) or Basij voluntary militia. Read More

John Weissenberger: Stephen Harper, the competent manager

2 février 2026 à 12:00
Nostalgia has a political dimension. Conservatives are accused of pining for a lost "golden age," while progressives — who are wed to an inexorable march toward their shining utopia — deny there ever was a better time. As the 2006 election of the Harper government passes one full generation into history, those of us who took part might be permitted some nostalgia. But while patting oneself on the back is tempting, contrasting the Harper years with what came after is more instructive. Read More

Amanda Eskenasi: CBC fed Canadians a biased view of the Israel-Hamas war — and the data proves it

1 février 2026 à 12:00
Public trust in media institutions does not erode all at once. It weakens gradually, through patterns that go unexamined and assumptions that go unchallenged — particularly when a public broadcaster is expected to serve a unifying role in a polarized society, as the CBC is evidently expected to do in Canada. It is in precisely this context that our recent independent study on the CBC's coverage of the Israel-Hamas war was produced. Read More

Raymond J. de Souza: How an Upper Canada Catholic diocese changed an empire

1 février 2026 à 12:00
KEMPTVILLE, ON — On New Year’s Eve, when I wrote about how the Plains of Abraham (1759), the Quebec Act (1774) and George Washington’s military occupation of Montreal (1775) were all pivotal moments in determining that Nouvelle France/British North America would become Canada, and not part of the United States, I had no idea that 18th-century Canadian history would return to the front pages. Fresh from Davos last week, Prime Minister Mark Carney argued at the Citadel in Quebec City that the events of those years charted a distinctive Canadian path, marked by partnership rather than pure conquest. Read More
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