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Mohamed Fahmy: Iranian sleeper cells are activating, and Canada is a target

12 mars 2026 à 11:00
At least five U.S. diplomatic missions have recently been targeted in Iranian retaliatory strikes across the Middle East. With no definitive time frame on the end of the war, embassies are now being targeted beyond the region as well. The latest apparent incident occurred in Toronto, where unknown assailants fired shots at the U.S. consulate early Tuesday — an act the prime minister has condemned as intimidation. Read More

Joe Adam George: Canada can no longer ignore Iran’s dangerous shadow network 

12 mars 2026 à 11:00
In his book "From Auschwitz to Tehran," Eran Hermoni recounts a meeting in October 2000 between Spanish prime minister José María Aznar and Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. As Khamenei prepared tea, Aznar asked him a direct question: “When you wake up in the morning, what is the first thing you think about?” Read More

Majority of Canadians agree with Smith that provinces should have greater control over immigration: poll

12 mars 2026 à 11:00
A majority of Canadians say they are in favour of granting provinces more control over immigration as a means to curb the inflow of newcomers, with a majority also in favour of the Alberta government’s suggestion of restricting publicly funded social services for temporary residents, according to a new Postmedia-Leger poll. Read More

Adam Pankratz: It’s not too late for Canada to become an energy superpower

12 mars 2026 à 11:00
As the war in Iran intensifies, reports are that Canada is looking at ways to boost our oil supply to the world. Indeed even Energy Minister Tim Hodgson got in on the act saying Wednesday Canada would “do its part” to help the International Energy Agency in its release of 400 million barrels of oil from strategic stockpiles around the world and calm oil prices. Though, in typical fashion, Hodgson did not say what our “part” would be. Read More

J.D. Tuccille: The global threat to free speech has a British accent

12 mars 2026 à 11:00
British media recently reported that the country’s internet regulator, Ofcom, imposed millions of pounds worth of fines for forbidden content, but collected only a pittance from scofflaw firms. Unmentioned was that some of the targeted companies are based in the United States, where they're protected by the First Amendment, and have no presence in the United Kingdom beyond their websites’ accessibility. In an age in which bureaucrats worldwide are seeking power beyond national borders, U.K. censors are distinguishing themselves for their ambitions — and the humiliation they’ve so far suffered. Read More
Reçu — 7 mars 2026 National Post

Cannabis ban dropped ‘to test’ Ontario man with paranoid schizophrenia who killed his mother

7 mars 2026 à 13:30
An Ontario man with a history of drug abuse who was found not criminally responsible for murdering his mother by striking her "numerous times on the head, back, neck, and arms with several weapons, including a large bladed knife, a smaller paring knife, a claw hammer and a large pry bar," has seen his cannabis prohibition removed as a test to see how he handles it. Read More

Mia Hughes: B.C. Human Rights Tribunal ignores science to silence debate on gender ideology

7 mars 2026 à 12:00
Last month, the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal handed down an extraordinary decision, ordering former Chilliwack school board trustee Barry Neufeld to pay $750,000 for publicly criticizing gender-identity ideology and its inclusion in schools. The ruling highlights the conflict between the demands of modern trans activism and the fundamental rights enshrined in Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This must serve as a wake-up call for all Canadians. Read More

Conrad Black: Canada must unleash the Ring of Fire

7 mars 2026 à 12:00
The Prospector’s and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC), the world’s premier gathering of the global mining industry, just concluded its annual convention in Toronto, drawing nearly 30,000 participants from more than 125 countries. As always, the event served as a barometer of the global mining sector. This year, critical minerals, dominated nearly every discussion, and all eyes inevitably turned to Canada. Few countries possess the combination of political stability, geological potential, proximity to the world's greatest market, and technical expertise that Canada brings to the global mining industry. Despite the voracious global appetite for mineral exploration and development, Ontario premier Doug Ford has been criticized by some for his extensive publicization and promotion of the Ring of Fire mining region in northern Ontario in the low-land approaches to James Bay. Many were burned in the initial enthusiasm about this area approximately 25 years ago and have less than happy memories of unfulfilled promise. Read More

Colby Cosh: Did the Globe and Mail just advocate for Alberta separatism?

7 mars 2026 à 12:00
Ladies and gentlemen, I’m not sure you noticed, but there was Norwailing in the Globe and Mail this week. In the year 2026! It’s making a comeback! Norwailing is my term for columns and editorials that castigate the province of Alberta for spending government revenues from oil and gas on current programs instead of socking the money away and living on taxes in the meantime. This is a greedy and short-sighted policy, unlike the one pursued by the exemplary and beautiful state of Norway, which … well, we might as well quote the Globe’s unsigned Tuesday leader: Read More
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