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Friday, October 10, 2025

OP-ED: Why India could become the next global superpower

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It is painful and even frightening to watch America’s decline, to see its power and prestige wither away and the world become a more dangerous place. With Canada’s military disintegrating and our current government neglecting national defence, it’s logical to wonder and worry about which country might step up to become the next global superpower.

Those on the left may see America’s decline as its rightful comeuppance – the price it is finally paying for its imperialism, greed, and economic and military bullying. But those who understand the good it has done realize the world needs a dominant though essentially benign superpower — a “hegemon” in political science parlance — to protect the global commons at sea and in the air, to prevent regional conflicts from spiralling, to help foster democracy and to enable global prosperity. The era of American hegemony brought us NATO, remember, which delivered peace in Europe for the next 75 years, as well as the only significant period of safety in all seven oceans the world has ever known.

Who then might replace America as the world’s force for good? Under whose protection could weaker nations flourish? What nation will be the example to others, that beacon of light on the hill? China or Russia obviously cannot be trusted. Groups of co-operating countries like the United Nations or the European Union can’t do the job — their innate tendency toward internal division disqualifies them. Is there another candidate?

Before answering the question, one first must ask what characteristics distinguish a moral superpower — one not obsessed with conquest and exploitation but that advances its interests peacefully and, thereby, safeguards everyone’s freedom. During my university studies long ago, one of my professors put forth eight traits for us to consider that then applied to the U.S. I’ve added two more. Considering all those criteria today, one nation stands out: India. The world’s most populous country could become the world’s next moral superpower.

Taking the 10 characteristics one-by-one, here’s how India stacks up:

One: A Large, Patriotic Population. India is home to 1.4 billion people and its population is still growing. More impressively, 62 per cent of Indians consider themselves patriotic, while another 29 say they’re somewhat patriotic. While the U.S. was once intensely patriotic, today a near-record low of 39 per cent say they are patriotic.

Two: High Levels of Education. Education gives teeth to patriotism. It’s necessary for advanced war-fighting capability but also so that soldiers know what they are fighting for and why. It’s crucial to building a powerful economy and it sharpens talent for trade and foreign affairs. India’s education system needs improvement, particularly in serving poor and rural populations and eliminating gender disparity. But the country’s literacy rate is a respectable 74 per cent (in the U.S. it’s 79 per cent). India has more than 700 universities and 37,000 colleges, and 26 per cent of adults aged 18-23 are enrolled in higher education.

Three: A Robust, Market-Based Economy. India’s economy is the fifth-biggest in the world and the fastest-growing among major countries. India has transformed itself from a largely agricultural society, one crippled by socialist policies in the decades after independence, to a market-based modern economy with strength in manufacturing and services. India remains a poor country, ranking a woeful 160th in the world in GDP per capita, but that measure too has seen healthy improvement; a 2022 report from Morgan Stanley gushed about India’s Impending Economic Boom.

Four: Abundant Natural Resources on a Large Land Mass. India is the world’s seventh-largest country by area, and a remarkable 60 per cent of its land can be cultivated. And while the country is poor in crude oil, it is blessed with a number of important natural resources, including coal, diamonds, natural gas, manganese, lithium and iron ore.

Five: English as a Main Language. English is the global working language of science, business, diplomacy, the internet and many specialized areas like aviation. As this article rather disapprovingly notes, about 30 per cent of Indians currently speak English which, alongside Hindi, is one of the country’s two official languages. Frequently used in government functions — including the Indian parliament — English is taught in schools and provides a distinct economic advantage. Almost 89 per cent of Indians with a bachelor’s degree speak English, and men who speak it fluently earn up to 34 per cent more than those who don’t.

Six: A Large, Technologically-Advanced Military. With more than 2.2 million troops, including nearly 1 million reserves, India has the world’s second-largest military, after China, the third-largest defence budget, and — according to recent Global Firepower rankings — the fourth-most-powerful military overall. It’s one of nine countries with nuclear weapons, a deterrent to hostile, nuclear-equipped neighbours China and Pakistan. India has two aircraft carriers — the same number as China — and is building a third. It’s also developing a fifth-generation stealth fighter jet. Last summer, it sent much of its navy on a “mega exercise” in the Arabian Sea to prove, as one commander put it, that India “is capable and ready to support our ‘collective’ security needs in the region.”

Seven: Elections and Freedom, Guaranteed in a Constitution. For everyone’s sake, the next global hegemon must not be an oppressive dictatorship. It must be a democracy. India is the world’s biggest democracy and it holds impressively smooth elections. Over 900 million people were eligible to vote in 2019, and turnout was over 67 per cent. India also has the world’s longest written constitution, whose preamble secures liberal democratic rights of freedom and equality.

Eight: Widespread Religion. Religion is an important component of a moral superpower because it brings moral standards to bear on a nation’s behaviour. Although India is a nominally secular country, the population remains widely religious. More than 70 per cent of Indians are Hindu and recent surveys found that 60 per cent of Indians pray daily and that 84 per cent say religion is important.

Nine: Protective Seas, Strong Borders. Protective seas form the most powerful natural defence against the threat of external violence or invasion, giving a prospective superpower a safe base from which to develop and operate. Great Britain and the United States were almost perfectly endowed in that regard. India, not quite so much. Though bracketed by the Arabian Sea on the west and the Bay of Bengal on the east, and with no enemies to the south, its northern approaches are a major vulnerability. To secure the north, India has the world’s largest Border Security Force, with a strength of 270,000 personnel.

Ten: Effective Diplomacy. The precarious geopolitics of our world today demand not just powerful but moral international diplomacy. When it comes to soft or cultural diplomacy, India succeeds in many ways, from Bollywood, to yoga, to exporting its unique food and fashion, to showcasing its mid-20th-century history of nonviolence to gain independence. While India remains officially non-aligned with any of the world’s three main powers, it has shown a distinct swing away from socialist dictatorships and towards the West. And India supports Israel, with prime minister Narendra Modi being one of the first global leaders to condemn the horrific October 7 attacks by Hamas. That India can favour Israel – the lone democracy in a hostile neighbourhood – when most other countries and the United Nations condemn it says a lot.

The Bottom Line: India today is, to be sure, in a weaker overall position than the U.S. was throughout the 20th century. It is bordered by enemies in a way the U.S. is not, and those threats have erupted at times into regional wars. It is still a comparatively poor nation that suffers from political nepotism and the lasting influence of its caste system. Possibly the biggest caveat to its becoming the next moral superpower is the lasting stain of sectarian violence in the Punjab, where terrorism in the fight for a separate Sikh homeland was met with reprisals and oppression. Brutal violence left thousands dead, though certainly not just Sikhs.

But obstacles can be overcome and the bigger picture for India is of an emerging superpower taking its place on the right side of history — that is, as a free-market-based democracy that stands to become a force for a safer, more peaceful and more prosperous world. For Canada’s entire existence, we’ve depended on the good graces of benign superpowers — first Great Britain, then the United States. As America declines, a rising, democratic India will be a very good friend to have.

The full-length, twopart version of this article recently appeared in C2C Journal.

Lynne Cohen is a journalist and non-practising lawyer from Ottawa. She has four books published, including the biography Let Right Be Done: The Life and Times of Bill Simpson.

Trudeau’s housing promise would require more than one home built per minute

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Canada must build 1.096 houses every minute for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to fulfil his housing goals.

Trudeau posted to X on Thursday that his Liberal government would build almost four million new homes by 2031.

“We’re going to change the way homes are built in Canada. And we’re going to create a new generation of homeowners,” said Trudeau.

The prime minister’s newest promise echoes Trudeau’s promises in September 2015, when his Liberal party promised affordable housing for Canadians. 

At the time of his initial promise, the average house in Canada cost $448,000. In February 2024, the average cost of a house was $719,000, an increase of over 60%.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre responded after Freeland delivered the budget in the House of Commons, critiquing Trudeau’s ninth consecutive budget with a deficit after the prime minister said that the budget would balance itself.

“Everything he’s spending on has gotten worse. He promised that the deficits would make housing affordable, but it ended up doubling the cost of rent and mortgage payments and down payments to buy a house.”

While the actual number promised in the federal budget is below four million, at 3.87 million new homes, many people in Trudeau’s replies helped him with the math.

Independent MP Kevin Vuong replied to Trudeau on X, saying he knew math wasn’t the prime minister’s strength, so he’d help him with the calculations.

“With your track record, you expect us to believe you’re building a house a minute?” asked Vuong, after showing the calculations that 1.13 homes per minute would need to be built to reach Trudeau’s goal of 4 million new homes.

To build 3.87 million homes by 2031, Trudeau would have 2,449 days since the day of his post to accomplish his goal. He would have to build 576,786 houses per year.

The ambitious plan laid out in the budget said that the goal of 3.87 million new homes would include 2 million net new homes on top of the 1.87 million homes expected to be built by 2031.

Between 2015 and 2023, Canadian housing starts were anywhere from 195,535 to 271,198 per year, averaging 225,104 houses built per year, according to Statistics Canada.

Between 2022 and 2023, housing starts fell by over 21,000 units.

Based on the current average, the Liberals won’t even accomplish their goal of the 1.87 million homes expected to be built by 2031, let alone the 2 million new homes.

To accomplish his goal, Trudeau would have to find a way to build over 65.84 houses per hour and 1.096 houses per minute.

In the Liberals’ new housing plan, published on Apr. 11, the party said that their plan commits to making housing affordable.

“No hard-working Canadian should have to spend more than 30% of their income on shelter costs,” said the plan.

True North previously reported that housing affordability in Canada recently reached an all-time low.

The median household in Canada has to spend an unprecedented 63.5% of its income to afford the mortgage. In Vancouver, an average household has to spend 106.3% of its income to cover homeownership costs.

The United States’ population is over 8.5x larger than Canada’s. Despite this, the United States only builds 1.521 million homes annually. Trudeau’s current goal would require Canada’s housing construction per capita to be almost three times higher than the United States.

Part of Trudeau’s 2019 campaign promises was a commitment to planting 2 billion trees. The $3.2 billion program launched in 2021. The Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development audited the program.

The audit found that in 2021, 1.5% of the 10-year goal of 2 billion trees was met. In 2022, 2.3% of the goal was met. 

“It is unlikely that the program will meet its objectives unless significant changes are made,” concluded the audit.

The record for Canada’s housing starts was 273,203 in 1976. Canada would have to more than double that for the next seven straight years to reach its goal. 

1.096 houses per minute. No weekends off. No days off. No minutes.

Vandals smash windows of Toronto synagogue

Source: X

Toronto Police Services responded to a break-and-enter call from Kehillat Sharei Torah synagogue in Toronto, Ont. at 3:52 a.m. on Friday.

When officers arrived at the synagogue on Bayview Avenue and Fifeshire Road, they discovered five windows were damaged.

According to the police, there was no graffiti found and nothing was stolen from the location.

The representative said the police are still canvasing security footage to get the suspect’s description.

Individuals and organizations who are concerned with the rise of antisemitism took to X to weigh in on what they believe is another example of hate in the community.

Dr. David Jacobs in a post said “In happier times, they post funny messages on the sign out front. Today the sign reads, “Bring all of the hostages home.” For that, they got a rock through their window.

The Jewish rights group B’nai Brith Canada spoke out as well.

The group called the act of vandalism “callous hate” and said it was the result of the “emboldening silence on the part of our authorities.”

According to the TPS’ annual hate crimes report for 2022, antisemitism was one of the most reported hate crimes in the city, the Jewish community along with the Black community were the most frequently victimized groups for hate-motivated mischief to property.

Early this week accusations of antisemitism were levied after MPP Robin Martin’s office was vandalized by anti-Israel protesters, and B’nai Brith raised awareness of a surge in what they said was antisemitism following Iran’s retaliatory strike on Israel.

A representative for the TPS told True North the motive for the incident is yet to be determined and the investigation is ongoing.

Grain farmers reduced emission intensity by 50% over 20 years

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Even before the Liberal government introduced its fertilizer emission reduction target, Canadian grain farmers were leading the way in reducing agricultural emissions. 

According to the Grain Growers of Canada, between 1997 and 2017, grain farmers surpassed the entire economy in reducing emission intensity. Emission intensity measures a farmer’s emission output relative to the production of a single bushel. 

Over that period, grain farmers reduced their emission intensity by 50%, while the entire Canadian economy saw a 36% reduction. 

“For decades, grain farmers have been at the forefront of sustainability, making Canada a global leader in producing grain with the lowest emissions possible,” said the advocacy group’s vice-chair, William van Tassel. 

“Yet, boosting our competitiveness and commitment to emission reductions demands a significant increase in research and development investments. These investments are essential for overcoming current obstacles and leveraging future opportunities.”

Although the Liberal government has called grain growers the world’s worst emission offenders, more research is coming out that disproves that claim. 

According to the University of Saskatchewan’s Global Institute for Food Security, Canadian farmers outpace the rest of the world when it comes to low-emission agricultural practices. 

For example, Canadian canola farmers had a carbon footprint that was 60% lower than the global average, while Saskatchewan farmers overall saw a staggering 67% reduction in emissions.

“These impressive results are driven by the widespread adoption in Saskatchewan of agricultural innovations and sustainable farming practices that have significantly reduced the amount of inputs and emissions needed to farm each acre of land,” said researcher Prof.Steve Webb.

Despite farmers making headway in emission reductions, the Liberal government has asked farmers to voluntarily reduce fertilizer emissions by 30% by 2030. 

Some agricultural groups warn that this reduction is impossible without threatening global food security

LAWTON: Former finance minister slams Liberals’ fiscal record

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The Liberals have faced mounting criticisms for their fiscal and economic policies since being elected, with public dissatisfaction currently at an all-time high. Former finance minister Joe Oliver joined True North’s Andrew Lawton at the Canada Strong and Free Networking Conference in Ottawa to discuss the state of Canada’s economy under Liberal governance.

No evidence extreme weather events are on the rise despite activist claims: study 

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A Fraser Institute study found that although global temperatures have increased “moderately” since 1950, there is no evidence to suggest that extreme weather events are on the rise despite the assertions of climate activists and Canada’s government.

The study analyzed data found in the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC) and found that in many cases the frequency and severity of extreme weather events decreased or stayed the same rather than escalating.

The author of the study, Kenneth Green, a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute spoke to True North about his findings.

Green has a doctoral degree in Environmental Science and Engineering from UCLA, and has been studying environmental policy since before receiving his doctorate in 1984.

“When you dig into the actual underlying data on what’s happening, rather than the claims of politicians, you find that extreme weather events are pretty uncertain as to whether we’re seeing extreme weather changing or will see extreme weather changing,” said Green.

He said the assessments from the UN IPCC authors are subjective and contradict the data found in their own study.

The IPCC claims with “medium confidence” that the frequency of droughts has increased around the world. Though Green found the data they cite from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Standardized Precipitation Index, which covers world data from 1901-2017, “indicates no significant trend in drought has occurred.”

A study Green cited from the Royal Society found the drought data, that the IPCC used, showed “a dominance of non-significant trends between 1900 and 2020.”

The IPCC also claimed it is likely floods have increased globally since 1950, yet they also say the data lacks “overall statistical significance of a decrease or an increase over the globe as a whole.”

“Of more than 3,500 streamflow stations in the USA, central and northern Europe, Africa, Brazil, and Australia, 7.1% stations showed a significant increase, and 11.9% stations showed a significant decrease in annual maximum peak flow during 1961–2005,” Green stated in the report.

He said the same is true for hurricanes and cyclones, that the frequency of these events has decreased overtime.

The study found no long term trends in hurricanes and cyclones since 1980, according to data from the WMO.

Along with flooding, hurricanes and cyclones, the study found the rate and intensity of wildfires was declining globally as well.

According to a study by the Royal Society using data from up to 2017 and 2018, “when considering the total area burned at the global level, we are still not seeing an overall increase, but rather a decline over the last decades.”

Green said it’s very important that government policies are rooted in the actual data.

“There’s a lot at stake with regard to climate change policies, they need to be grounded in reality rather than in, speculative scenarios and speculation that is false and possibly exaggerated by climate activists and by governments,” he said. “(The policies are) being based on these exaggerated claims of extreme weather and extreme risk, that are not backed up by the underlying literature and empirical data.”

He said Canadians should not have to make major changes in the way they live based on the subjective opinions of a few.

“The government is taking actions based on speculation and their actions will lead to Canadians having their quality of life impacted as fossil fuel use is suppressed,” Green said.

Green said the policies which are justified by the speculative opinions of studies such as this are destructive.

“The net zero 2050 greenhouse gas emission agenda is going to be quite damaging to Canada’s economy and to people’s incomes.”

Conservatives say Trudeau to blame for rising crime  

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As Canadian crime stats “skyrocket” year-over-year, the Liberal government’s approach to crime has “demonstrably failed” and is making Canadians less safe.

That’s what Rob Moore, the Conservative shadow minister, told True North in an interview Wednesday. Canadians feel less safe than they did before Justin Trudeau, Moore said.

“When people are feeling less safe, it’s because Canadians are less safe under this government,” he said.

“These (stats) are the result of deliberate actions taken by the government in legislation that have created a catch and release (system), which means that in spite of the best work of police to capture someone, our justice system is releasing those individuals back onto the street to re-offend.”

Since Justin Trudeau took office in 2015, violent crime has increased across Canada by almost 40%, homicides are up by 43% and gang-related murders are up by 108%, according to Stats Canada data from 2022.

Despite Trudeau’s gun bans, violent gun crime is up by 101% since he took office. There has been a year-over-year increase in crime for the last four years.

According to a Leger poll in Apr. 2023, 32% of Canadians said crime and violence had gotten much worse since before the pandemic, while another 32% said it had gotten “a little worse.”

Almost two-thirds of those polled reported they feel much less safe than they did before 2020.

Under the previous Conservative government, which was voted out in 2015, crime was on the decline.

Moore said Bill C-75, which became law in 2019, and Bill C-5, which was passed in 2022, contributed to “skyrocketing” crime rates, along with an “unwillingness to listen to police and victims” are largely to blame for the “skyrocketing” crime rates.

The two bills have been criticized by the Conservatives as being “soft on crime” for repealing mandatory minimum sentences and making bail easier for offenders to get.

“So we’re seeing individuals who should not be on the street out on bail. And the Toronto police have identified over the last several years individuals who were on bail for a firearms crime, being arrested and charged again for another firearms crime and getting bail again,” Moore said. “It’s simply a revolving door of catch and release and it’s putting Canadians at risk.”

Moore criticized a case from earlier this week in which a repeat offender out on bail stabbed a Toronto police officer.

Moore’s problem with Bill C-5 is that it allows house arrest for crimes such as sexual assault, kidnapping, human trafficking and auto theft.

“It allows individuals who commit those serious crimes to serve their sentence from the comfort of their home in their communities, which is leading to those individuals committing crimes while on house arrest,” Moore said.

He said people on house arrest have rules they are supposed to be following, but police do not have the resources to monitor everyone.

“If we want someone to be out of the community and keep the community safe from crime, there’s a reason we have jails,” he said. “It’s for those individuals, those repeat offenders who have proven that they are going to re-victimize Canadians when they’re back on the street.”

Bill C-5 also eliminated mandatory jail time for firearms offences such as robbery with a firearm, extortion with a firearm, and using a gun in the commission of an offence.

Moore took aim at what he characterized as the Liberals’ position of “allowing people to get bail that wouldn’t have otherwise got bail, that somehow that would create a safer country.”

“In fact, the evidence is in now. We have empirical evidence after eight years of Liberal government, just the opposite is true,” Moore said.

LAWTON: What Freeland’s budget means for Canadians

Source: Facebook

Earlier this week, Chrystia Freeland unveiled her fourth federal budget, laying out billions in spending to address various issues including housing supply, grocery prices, and online hate. Coalition of Concerned Manufacturers and Businesses of Canada president Catherine Swift joined True North’s Andrew Lawton to discuss the budget and how it will impact Canadians.

The Alberta Roundup | Smith responds to guilty verdict for Coutts 3

Source: True North

Today on the Alberta Roundup with Rachel Emmanuel, Rachel interviews Alberta Premier Danielle Smith on when the provincial fuel tax will be lowered and whether the province is recommending Covid-19 vaccines for babies beginning at six months.

Rachel also asks the Premier about protecting women in jails and shelters after Smith said at the CSFN conference last week that biological men will still be allowed in these spaces.

Finally, Rachel asks the Premier for her response to the guilty verdicts for the Coutts three and for an update on a promise to ban electronic tabulators in the province.

Tune into the Alberta Roundup now!

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Khalistani protesters burn flag in front of Indian consulate 300 days after killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar

Source: Media Bezirgan

Khalistani secessionists burned and slashed Indian flags at a protest at India’s Vancouver consulate marking 300 days since the killing of Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

Nijjar was killed last year outside of a Sikh temple in Surrey, B.C. in what Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada believes was potentially an assassination carried out by “agents of the Indian government.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has denied this as “absurd.”

“Such unsubstantiated allegations seek to shift the focus from Khalistani terrorists and extremists, who have been provided shelter in Canada and continue to threaten India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” India’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

At the Thursday demonstration, protesters burned and slashed Indian flags with kirpans, the sacred daggers of the Sikh faith, outside of the Indian consulate in Vancouver, urging for a referendum to form an independent Sikh state called Khalistan in India’s Punjab region.

In a video posted by independent journalist Mocha Bezirgan, protesters can be heard chanting.
“What do you want? Khalistan!” as they desecrate the Indian flag.

In a video posted by self described Sikh activist and journalist, Jagjeet Singh, protesters are heard chanting “Who killed Hardeep? (the) Indian government! Who killed Nijjar? (the) Indian government!”


The protest was organized by Sikhs for Justice, a Washington-based Khalistani separatist group designated as an “unlawful association” in India. India has classified the organization’s founder, Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, as a terrorist.

In an interview with True North, Pannun accused the Indian government of having spies operating out of the consulate.

“We call the Indian consulate these terror houses from where Indian agencies, like RAW (India’s foreign intelligence service) and Indian spies are working, and that’s where they are challenging the sovereignty of Canada,” he said. “We all know from Prime Minister Trudeau…that Canada has been investigating the role of Indian agents in the killing of Nijjar.”

Pannun accused a man who came out of the consulate building during the protest of being an Indian spy.

True North called the Indian consulate but the answering machine said it was closed for a holy day.

Nijjar, who lived in British Columbia, was viewed as a terrorist by the Indian government, who regarded him as the “mastermind” of the Khalistan Tiger Force, an illegal militant group.

Pannun accused the Indian state of threatening and suppressing free speech of Khalistani activists.

He said there hasn’t been a single act of violence since the beginning of the Khalistan referendum movement he started in 2020.

Another group connected to the Khalistan independence movement was involved in a terrorist attack on Air India Flight 182 in 1985, however.

Pannun’s group has been attempting to hold independence referendum in Canada and the United States, although they are non-binding and have no official status. The next one is scheduled for July 28, 2024 in Calgary.
If the referendums succeed, Pannun said the ones running the campaign to “liberate” Punjab would hire and collaborate with international law experts to draft up a constitution for the new nation which he says would resemble the American, and Canadian constitutions.

“We have proved it with our action that we are seeking a peaceful and democratic resolution to the ongoing conflict, whether Sikh’s have a right to self determination in Indian apartheid Punjab,” Pannun said.

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