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Tasha Kheiriddin: Don’t believe Carney when he says he isn’t planning an election

Prime Minister Mark Carney has had a busy week. A major international speech at Davos that garnered plaudits around the world. An address to the nation designed to rouse Canadian patriotism and rebut U.S. President Donald Trump. An announcement of GST relief to steal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s thunder on affordability, one week before Poilievre faces a leadership review vote. And polls that show Carney’s approval rating soaring, and his party in majority territory.  Read More
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Eva Kuper: Standing proud as a Jew while the world turns hostile once again

Since Oct. 7, 2023, the world has changed for Jews everywhere. The brutality of the attacks in Israel was followed almost immediately by something else — a global wave of antisemitism that spread with alarming speed and intensity. The joyous celebrations of these atrocities the world over and the spiralling rise in hatred against Jews fills me with dread. What shocked me most was not only the hatred itself, but how quickly it surfaced, how openly it was expressed and how little moral resistance there seemed to be. Read More
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J.D. Tuccille: Trump administration turns on gun rights, as Americans turn on ICE

U.S. federal agents have killed another protester in Minneapolis. The lethal shooting of Alex Pretti appears even more egregiously unjustified than the similar killing of Renee Good. The continued siege of the state of Minnesota by the Trump administration is not only repelling Americans who once supported the president’s hard line on immigration, but also costing lives and driving Republicans and Democrats to exchange positions on core issues like the right to keep and bear arms. Read More
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Jack Jedwab: Reducing the Holocaust to yet another story of colonialism distorts history

Today, on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, we honour the victims and survivors of the Holocaust and mark the 1945 liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp. Eight decades later, the challenge of passing on the lessons of the Holocaust is ever more daunting, with the danger being less its outright denial than its distortion or revision — efforts to minimize or reframe the systematic murder of six million Jews. Recent surveys reveal an alarming number of young people in North America believe the Holocaust has been exaggerated, a reflection not so much of disbelief that it happened, but of the subtle erosion of the truth. Read More
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