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Say hello to pro-pipeline First Nations in B.C.: Full Comment podcast

Listen to the premier of British Columbia, or the CBC, or the Association of First Nations and you’d think that Indigenous groups on the West Coast are determined to stop a new oil pipeline from Alberta. Yet as MP Ellis Ross, former chief councillor of the Haisla Nation near Kitimat, B.C., tells Brian Lilley, a lot of First Nations are open to the opportunity for resource development to help them break their dependency on Ottawa and find prosperity for their people. He also talks about how American anti-oil groups are exploiting First Nations by offering them much-needed funding in exchange for backing their activist campaigns — like the widely quoted “Coastal First Nations” group that doesn’t even represent the area’s First Nations. (Recorded Dec. 5, 2025) Read More
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Colby Cosh: Coming soon to the news — betting on real life

Possible historic landmark whizzing past your window dep’t: early Wednesday morning, CNN announced that it is entering into a branding partnership with Kalshi Inc., one of the two leading companies in the emerging business space of “prediction markets.” Kalshi is an exchange, more or less exactly like a stock exchange or a betting market: it’s a place where you can bet on quantifiable outcomes of a very general variety of future events. It has become a market leader, and apparently worthy of the attention of CNN, by pursuing a strategy of legality and regulatory housebrokenness. It’s chartered in the U.S. and is subject to the American legal rules of commodity exchanges (after suing, with tentative success, to be recognized as such). Read More
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Raymond J. de Souza: Quebec’s war on Islam an attack on the religious liberty of all

The Liberal government’s plan, at the behest of the Bloc Québécois, to remove the religious faith exemption from the Criminal Code prohibition on hate speech ran into unexpected and formidable opposition this week. A House committee meeting was abruptly cancelled on Thursday, leaving the future of the amendment, and the Liberals' hate speech bill itself, in question. Read More
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John Weissenberger: How Canadian ingenuity turned Alberta’s tar pits into a cash cow

Somewhere across this great land, someone or something great is just getting started. This country is built on game-changing people, ideas and initiatives: Wayne Gretzky redefined a game; oilsands innovations helped us prosper; Frederick Banting transformed millions of lives; Loblaws changed how we live. Today, we launch a new National Post series that celebrates Canadian greatness, in whatever form we find it. Read More
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Trump forced Canada to scrap its digital services tax — but did he save Carney from bad policy?

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Prime Minister Mark Carney rescinded Canada’s digital services tax (DST), a three per cent levy on digital services revenue from large domestic and foreign businesses, in June after President Donald Trump threatened to halt trade talks if the tax took effect. The repeal was a strategic move to restart stalled negotiations with the United States, which soon resumed after Carney’s announcement but were again disrupted later ... by a Ronald Reagan ad. Despite removing the DST to ease tensions, Carney has little to show for it. Read More
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What is the religious belief defence? What to know about proposed change to Canada’s hate crime law

Federal politics has been abuzz since the National Post’s scoop that the governing Liberals have struck a deal with the Bloc Québécois to pass their hate crime reform bill by eliminating the special defence of religious belief to the criminal charge of wilful promotion of hate. Civil society and religious groups have expressed concern that the move puts the faithful at legal risk and could chill religious discourse with the threat of prosecution. The National Post explains the religious defence, where it came from, how it has been used, and how it guides controversial prosecutorial decisions about criminal hate speech. Read More
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