The threshold for what qualifies for one to be cancelled has been lowered drastically – anyone can get cancelled nowadays.
“The Mandalorian” Star Gina Carano was cancelled because she may have been a Trump supporter, Mumford & Sons’ Winston Marshall was cancelled because he read a book by Andy Ngo and it looks like even the beloved Dolly Parton isn’t safe from the woke mob.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took a jab at Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre during question period on Wednesday for losing his finance critic post last month.
During an exchange between the two, Trudeau implied that he sympathized with Poilievre for being among the many Canadians who lost their jobs during the pandemic.
"I can understand the frustration of the member opposite, being amongst the many Canadians who lost their jobs during this pandemic," said Trudeau. pic.twitter.com/7W1uSxZMQv
“This prime minister has cost the most to achieve the worst results and what he expects us now to do is to just continue down this failed path. If the prime minister wants the confidence of Canadians will he tell them: what will he change to reverse the failures that he has delivered thus far?” asked Poilievre.
“I can understand the frustration of the member opposite, being amongst the many Canadians who’ve lost their jobs during this pandemic. The fact is that we have been there to support Canadians every step of the way, by investing in families, by investing in workers, by knowing that the best way through this pandemic is to be there to support them and that is exactly what we have done and what we will continue to do,” said Trudeau.
Poilievre was moved out of his finance critic role in early February following a shuffling of the Conservative shadow cabinet.
MP Ed Fast took over Poilievre’s former post, while Poilievre was moved to the party’s jobs and industry critic position. The move was the first party shuffle since Erin O’Toole took over as leader of the party in 2020.
Earlier this week, the MacDonald-Laurier Institute (MLI) released its COVID Misery Index which ranks the relative despair caused during the pandemic. In Its report, MLI ranked Canada as the fifth most-miserable country out of the fifteen countries studied.
According to Statistics Canada data, Canada’s jobless rate went up to 9.4% in January as the economy shed 213,000 jobs partly due to nation-wide restrictive lockdowns.
A December 2020 poll by Ipsos also revealed that around 9% of Canadians, or 3 million people reported losing their jobs in 2020.
Halifax Regional Police are asking the public to stay alert after a repeat sex offender was released into the community.
In a statement, police warned that Gerald Edmund Pike, 53, has completed his sentence and will be subject to a long-term supervision order. Pike is considered a high-risk sex offender.
“Pike has a criminal convictions history for violent offences dating back to 1999 that includes convictions for sexual assault, assault, assault causing bodily harm, criminal harassment and uttering threats,” Halifax Regional Police said.
“Pike has been assessed as being at a high-risk to re-offend.”
Pike has been charged for attacks on various women over the years and was added to the national sex offender registry following a 2011 assault conviction.
Most recently, Pike was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2014 after he sexually assaulted a teenage girl in St. John’s.
Release conditions dictate that Pike must have no contact with children under the age of 18 and must abstain from alcohol or drugs.
In a recent review, the Parole Board of Canada noted that Pike had long crime-free periods before eventually re-offending.
“The latest Psychological Risk Assessment from December 2019 indicates that your risk for sexual recidivism is in the ‘Well Above Average’ range,” the Parole Board found.
Pike is also required by his release conditions to take his medications. In a previous supervised outing, Pike assaulted an officer while off his prescription.
Police are asking the public to call 902-490-5020 if they believe Pike is violating his release conditions.
Justin Trudeau’s government is accepting a Senate amendment to its bill expanding access to assisted suicide which will make it so people suffering only from mental illnesses can access state-facilitated deaths. Conservative MP Garnett Genuis joins True North’s Andrew Lawton, a suicide survivor himself, to explain why this bill is so dangerous.
The Canadian Constitution Foundation (CCF) is launching a legal challenge to the Trudeau government’s mandatory quarantine hotels.
In a statement on Monday, the CCF said it will argue that forcing people to stay in quarantine hotels and pay out of pocket violates the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The CCF is joining five individuals who were forced to stay in quarantine hotels after travelling abroad for compassionate reasons, such as attending a funeral or attending to a spouse who received surgery abroad.
“The quarantine hotel policy is an unjustified limit on the rights of Canadians’ Charter protected right to enter Canada. The $2,000 cost per traveler is exploitive and punitive, and some of the hotels have been operating with inhumane conditions,” said CCF Litigation Director Christine Van Geyn.
Earlier this year, the Trudeau government began requiring that everyone who enters Canada from abroad must stay in government-approved hotels for up to three days and pay up to $2,000 out of pocket.
The policy has faced increased scrutiny as many travellers have complained about the poor conditions of the hotels. An instance of sexual assault has also been been reported.
As of Monday, the government was attempting to enlist more hotels to become quarantine sites.
“The individual applicants in this challenge must leave Canada for incredibly compassionate and sympathetic reasons. Their need to travel is unimpeachable,” Van Geyn said.
“It is frankly bizarre and cruel that the federal government provides specific exemptions for compassionate travel into Canada, but not for the reverse situation of individuals travelling out of Canada for compassionate reasons. That’s why we are bringing this constitutional challenge.”
The CCF claims that the quarantine hotel policy violates multiple sections of the Charter, including those preserving the right to enter Canada, freedom from arbitrary detention and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment.
Canada is doing worse than most Western countries when it comes to its handling of the pandemic, according to research from the MacDonald-Laurier Institute (MLI).
In their new COVID Misery Index, ranking the relative despair caused during the pandemic, MLI ranked Canada as the fifth most-miserable country out of the fifteen countries studied.
“While Canada was spared the worst ravages of the disease, our response to it has brought significant misery, largely attributable to quite strong restrictions in behaviour and a lagging vaccination program,” MLI said.
“The economic misery has been severe, and the projections are that Canadian taxpayers will be paying this bill for some time to come.”
The Misery Index measures the relative misery caused by COVID-19, the government response to the pandemic and the economic fallout, giving each a score of 0 to 100.
Canada scored 178.02 on the Misery Index. By comparison, the least miserable country, Norway, received a score of 71.6. The most miserable country was Spain, scoring 220.58.
While Canada scored better than most on misery caused by the virus, Canada had the second-worse score when it came to government-induced misery. Canada ranked third most miserable when it came to economic impacts of the pandemic.
During the pandemic, Canada faced unprecedented unemployment and immense damage to small businesses. Government-enforced lockdowns also lead to increased rates of loneliness, mental illness and drug abuse.
Liberal Minister of Canadian Heritage Steven Guilbeault is being accused of hypocrisy after being exposed for sharing news content on social media platforms without properly citing their sources or compensating news organizations.
Guilbeault has stated in the past that the practice by social media websites like Facebook of linking to Canadian news content without compensating creators was “immoral and unacceptable.”
“That’s immoral to me and it’s unacceptable,” Guilbeault said about the practice on Global News’ The West Block in September 2020.
Currently, Guilbeault is in charge of developing new legislation which would force social media giants to pay for Canadian news content and be forced to remove offensive and illegal content from their platforms.
Despite Guilbeault’s prior moral indignation, research by University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist shows that the minister has engaged in the very same practice he condemned at least a dozen times.
Heritage Minister @s_guilbeault has called linking to news on social media sites without a licence “immoral”. But my review shows he does it all the time, including uploading a full 14 minute broadcaster video without even including a link. https://t.co/06bDBO2WQQpic.twitter.com/2PVUvmDfrR
According to Geist, the minister’s Facebook page contains numerous news articles and videos that used third party content for which the creators were never compensated for. Research also shows that Guilbeault had spent at least $10,000 on at least 54 advertisements on Facebook during the 2020 election.
“The shared articles come from a wide range of news sources including the Journal de Montreal, La Presse, Global News and the Toronto Star. Given that there was no payment for these links, one wonders if Guilbeault thinks these are also immoral,” writes Geist.
“Rather than post links, Guilbeault has at times made a copy of the video and posted it directly to Facebook. For example, this post features his full appearance on Tout le Monde en Parle. The segment is available online and could be linked, but Guilbeault instead made a copy of the 14 minute appearance and uploaded it himself, thereby denying the referral to the original broadcaster.”
Conservative Party MP and heritage committee member Alain Rayes took to social media on Tuesday to condemn the minister for the alleged double-standard.
“How can Canadian Heritage Minister @s_guilbeault post news on his social media and then refer to such practice as immoral. I am very curious to see how he will manage to come up with a fair proposal for Canadian media after that,” tweeted Rayes.
In response to Rayes’ tweet, Guilbeault claimed that he had invested $24,237 in local publications and only $76 on Facebook ads. “Did your research inform you that I invested $24,237 in advertising in local publications, equity-seeking media groups and community organizations in my riding, compared to only $76 for Facebook? Facts first, this information is public,” tweeted Guilbeault.
Canada stands to benefit from a revitalized space industry, parliamentarians were told at an industry committee meeting on Tuesday.
Several experts in Canada’s aerospace industry testified before the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology to discuss the space sector’s future. Among those testifying was CEO of the pioneering Canadian space company MDA, Mike Greenley.
“Countries around the world are moving swiftly and decisively to participate in the new space economy. Because while space might not be the final frontier, it is the next one. The global space market is worth over $420 billion today and is projected to surpass $1 trillion in the next decade,” said Greenley.
Greenley said in spite of the pandemic, the sector saw record investment in 2020, noting that Canada is “well-positioned” to become a leader in it.
“Canada and the entire space community are planning to be a part of this economy in a big way,” he said.
MDA was founded in 1969 as a public company but was privatized in 2020. On Dec. 9, 2020 the company was awarded a contract by the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) to help develop the Canadarm 3, the third generation of the robotic arm used on various space shuttles.
According to Greenley, the space sector has a role to play in revitalizing Canada’s post-coronavirus economy and the Canadian government can take three key steps to ensure the industry’s long-term success.
Among those steps is positioning the Canadian government as an anchor customer for Canadian space companies, further investments and a long-term space plan.
The Canadian government allocated $325 million to the Canadian Space Agency in the 2020-2021 budget.
This year has already seen several major international efforts aimed at space travel and exploration.
In February, NASA’s latest Mars rover, Perseverance, successfully landed on the red planet for a mission to identify signs of life.
A number of Canadians, including CSA senior mission scientist Tim Haltigin, were involved in the project and the rover’s SuperCam optic cables were developed by the Kitchener-based company, FiberTech Optica.
Meanwhile, the Chinese government has also stepped up its efforts to develop its own space industry, announcing that its Tianwen-1 spacecraft had touched down on the moon.
Unlike the Cold War era, where the major driving forces behind the industry were nations like the US and the USSR, today private companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX are leading the way.
Last week, SpaceX successfully re-landed its prototype Starship rocket after takeoff at its south Texas launch site.
Justin Trudeau once called the idea of a vaccine passport “divisive” but now the federal government says it’s a “live” issue between Canada and its G-7 allies. True North’s Andrew Lawton talks about this and how opposing lockdown has been characterized as a fringe position.
Also, Conservative MP Garnett Genuis joins the show to explain how the Liberal government is prioritizing suicide promotion over suicide prevention.
Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre tweeted on Monday that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was delaying the budget for political reasons ahead of reports of a rumoured 2021 election.
Let’s face it: Trudeau is delaying the budget, because he wants the election over before people learn how desperately broke he’s made us.
The Liberal government stated that it would not be releasing a budget in March, claiming that they need more time to assess the impact of the pandemic.
Trudeau’s latest delay marks a period of two years since the ruling Liberals have last presented a full budget to the House of Commons.
“Let’s face it: Trudeau is delaying the budget, because he wants the election over before people learn how desperately broke he’s made us,” tweeted Poilievre.
According to the Globe and Mail, an official within the Trudeau government familiar with the matter stated that no date has yet to be set for a full pandemic budget. However, the source also ruled out early April as a possible budget day.
“It is completely irresponsible for Justin Trudeau to keep Canadians in the dark about his plans for reopening our economy,” Conservative finance critic Ed Fast told the Globe and Mail.
“For almost two years, this Liberal government has failed to table a budget, which would allow Canadians to assess whether the Prime Minister has a plan to properly manage our economy as we emerge from the COVID pandemic.”
True North reached out to Finance Canada but did not hear back in time for publication of this story.
Under Trudeau’s leadership, the federal government has accrued over $1 trillion in federal debt and is currently expected to post a $385-billion deficit in 2021.
In February, the Conference Board of Canada warned that the potential consequences of such a poor fiscal situation could be “inescapable.”