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These large, luxury Japanese strawberries just launched in Canada

The viral Oishii strawberry is now available in Canada. A package of eight large or 11 medium Koyo Berries retails for $12.99 at all Fortinos locations across the GTA and is for sale at other select Toronto grocers. For point of comparison, that's $10.74 per 100 grams for the Koyo Berry versus $2.06 per 100 grams for greenhouse-grown Ontario strawberries. Read More
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Peter MacKinnon: University censorship is out of control

The Jan. 31 edition of the Economist tells a depressing story of the academy in peril. An instructor of an introductory philosophy course at Texas A&M University — one of America’s largest post-secondaries — faced reassignment unless he excluded Plato from his reading list; another professor at the same school was dismissed for discussing gender fluidity; and 200 courses are under administrative review for prohibited content. At the University of Texas at Austin, 40 per cent of faculty reported being pressured to make changes to their curricula, and the university’s faculty council, elected to advise the administration on academic matters, was dissolved last year. Read More
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Lynne Cohen: IJV co-ordinator’s defence of anti-Zionism proves the gaslighting is real

It was interesting to read Corey Balsam's op-ed complaining that he and NDP leader Avi Lewis are being accused of gaslighting Jews by criticizing Israel and Zionism. The gist of his argument seems to be that neither criticism constitutes antisemitism. In fact, his essay goes a long way to proving the accusation. Read More
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J.D. Tuccille: Olympic Games aren’t worth the cost

The big appeal for me of the Winter Olympics is the biathlon. That combination of cross-country skiing and riflery is a civilian adaptation of Scandinavian military training that needs only the addition of beer to fully evoke my old memories of cold-weather shenanigans in the high country of northern Arizona. But indulging my nostalgia is an expensive endeavour that dwindling ranks of taxpayers around the world are willing to shoulder. While the Olympic Games make for occasionally interesting spectacles, they’re primarily exercises in expensive nationalistic chest-beating that interest fewer potential hosts and spectators than in the past. Read More
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Azim Jiwani: John Rustad, please, for the good of B.C. Conservatives, don’t run

In August 2022, with a lukewarm Guinness in hand, I brokered a quiet deal that would upend provincial politics in British Columbia. In a kitchy Irish pub in downtown Vancouver, I introduced newly independent MLA John Rustad to Conservative Party of B.C. executive director Angelo Isidorou, one of the principal architects behind the party’s rebranding and insurgent revival.  Read More
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