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John Weissenberger: Canada used to be able to build pipelines — quickly and cost effectively

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 continue our series that celebrates Canadian greatness, in whatever form we find it. Read More
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Adam Zivo: The plan for the day after Iran’s Islamic Regime falls

Iran’s exiled crown prince, Reza Pahlavi, wants to lead a transitional government should the Islamic regime in Tehran eventually collapse. His vision for the country — articulated in a detailed proposal published last year — has earned the confidence of many once-skeptical Iranians, particularly within the diaspora, and should assuage those who worry that foreign military intervention could produce a failed state.  Read More
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How an exodus at a declining D.C. think tank intersected with a Carney cabinet retreat

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Andrew Hale, an economist and trade expert based in Washington, D.C., is a citizen of both the United Kingdom and the United States, and a former resident of Canada, where he attended the former Grenville Christian College boarding school as a teen, and later CEGEP and Western University. Hale led a campaign to expose abuses against pupils at Grenville, having experienced them firsthand under the tenure of the headmaster, Rev. Charles R. Farnsworth.  Read More
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Matthew Taub: How anti-Israel lawfare led to a comedian being held at Toronto airport for six hours

Canada once prided itself on something increasingly rare: a legal culture anchored in restraint. We believed accusations required evidence. That guilt was individual, not collective. That law was not a weapon wielded by whoever shouted loudest, but a shield applied evenly, regardless of politics or identity. That tradition is now under threat. Read More
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Opinion: Rebuilding the military isn’t making headlines, but it’s happening

Many Canadians will recall the prime minister’s announcement last June that Canada would reach defence investment equal to two per cent of GDP in the current fiscal year, and the subsequent commitment to meet NATO’s even more ambitious five per cent target by 2035. Even at the time, these seemed like ambitious goals. As we approach the final quarter of the year, the specifics of how the spending is happening has slipped from the headlines, but the increasing chaos around the world confirms its importance. Read More
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Barbara Kay: New novel questions Canada’s no-kill wolf policy for national parks

In April, 1996, newly-graduated biologist Patricia Wyman was mauled to death at her “dream job,” tending captive wolves at the Haliburton Forest Wolf Centre Sanctuary. Commenting on the fact that she had entered the wolf enclosure alone, a wolf biologist rather delicately commented, “Her love of wolves perhaps made her a little more bold than she should have been.” Read More
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Adam Zivo: Carney put Liberals first, even though Trump tariff threat was predictable

U.S. President Donald Trump's threat to impose crippling tariffs should Ottawa and Beijing sign a trade deal is unacceptably coercive and mimics China's behaviour. Yet, at the same time, Prime Minister Mark Carney could be navigating this situation better, and seems to be prioritizing political theatre over Canada's interests.   Read More
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