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Remembering Claudia: One woman’s life in a 100-year Canadian immigration story

There is no news in this story, no celebrity history. It’s just another obituary of a single individual among the billions who pass through the gates of life on earth and move on to whatever lies beyond. At the same time, however, it’s a story of one woman whose life represents and demonstrates the complex generational transformations that take place in Canada, in this case reaching back almost exactly 100 years. Read More

‘God help us if this all starts happening in January’: A Trump-induced border crisis is coming

Donald Trump pitched a hard curveball into trade relations this week, proposing a 25-per-cent tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico until the flow of illegal drugs and migrants into America is staunched. Coming on the heels of his campaign promise to deport millions of illegal immigrants, border issues will be arguably the most consequential file for his second presidency. Read More

Trudeau calls conversation with Trump ‘excellent’ after meeting in Florida

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau returned home Saturday after his meeting with Donald Trump without assurances the president-elect will back away from threatened tariffs on all products from the major American trading partner. Trump called the talks “productive” but signalled no retreat from a pledge that Canada says unfairly lumps it in with Mexico over the flow of drugs and migrants into the United States. Read More

Chris Selley: Thankfully Australia’s trying a children’s social-media ban… before we do

“Is Ontario’s school cellphone ban actually going well?” a recent Toronto Star headline asked. There are “some reasons to think so,” the author explained, which is of course good news. It’s bananas it wasn't tried before this year. Basically nobody opposes the idea: A poll conducted in May by Toronto Metropolitan University’s The Dais think tank found no more than 13 per cent opposition in any region of the country, just nine per cent in Ontario and six per cent in Quebec. And the arguments against it are preposterous, “what if there’s a school shooting” being the worst of them all. Even in the United States, your child is in far more danger travelling to and from school than at it. Read More

Tackling the vibe-cession, vibe-crisis, vibe-crime-wave: The imagined thoughts of Chrystia Freeland

This week, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Canada is locked in a “vibe-cession.” The country is suffering from any number of materially bad economic indicators, from falling per-capita GDP to rising unemployment, but Freeland offered that this is all a case of bad “vibes”: Canadians feel bad, which is curbing their spending, which is prompting an artificial recession. Read More
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