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Paul W. Bennett: The erosion of liberal education is a civic emergency in-the-making

The erosion of liberal education in Canada’s kindergarten to Grade 12 schools is no longer a matter for speculation — it is now undeniable. Thirty years ago, Peter Emberley and Waller Newell’s Bankrupt Education (1994) offered a prophetic warning. They diagnosed a “crisis of public confidence” in our schools, highlighting the rise of a “vague and value-laden” curriculum in which “substance” was giving way to “social experimentation.” Students and teachers, they claimed, were reduced to guinea pigs in a system steadily abandoning knowledge, intellectual rigour, and preparation for higher education. Read More
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Multi-million-dollar Vancouver property owner may have used AI to argue for a lower tax assessment

The owner of a piece of Vancouver real estate that was assessed at over $19 million managed to knock nearly a million dollars off the amount used to calculate property taxes, but the Property Assessment Appeal Board of British Columbia says Fu D. Ren breached its code of conduct and may have used artificial intelligence to make his argument. Read More
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Chris Selley: What Canada can learn from two years of anti-Israel protests

To no one’s surprise, fault lines are already emerging in the Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire. Epochal conflicts don’t often resolve themselves without some violent hiccups. But this remains the latest, greatest hope for peace in the Levant. Anyone who believes Gazans have suffered more than enough, anyone who believes in any kind of two-state solution, should at least be much happier today than they were two weeks ago. Read More
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