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Saturday, August 9, 2025

CAMPUS WATCH: Concordia scholars plan to counter colonialism in physics

Scholars at Montreal’s Concordia University are planning to trace and counter what they say is colonialism in physics, which they describe as a “social field” rather than one of “pure knowledge.”

The project’s website says the initiative “explores ways and approaches to decolonize science, such as revitalizing and restoring Indigenous knowledge, and capacity building.” It also aims to develop “a culture of critical reflection and investigation of the relation of science and colonialism.”

As reported by The College Fix, “Decolonizing Light” is led by Concordia associate professor Tanja Tajmel, who also serves as a special advisor to the dean for equity, diversity and inclusion. Tajmel’s bio on Concordia’s website notes that “her main interest lies in investigating the politics of STEM education and how STEM education and STEM discourses impact social (in)equity.”

Fifteen other people are working on the project, including Concordia associate professors Louellyn White and Ingo Salzmann, who are co-investigators.

The “Decolonizing Light” initiative, which was established in 2021, receives funding from the federal government’s New Frontiers in Research Fund, which was created to support “interdisciplinary, high-risk/high-reward, transformative research led by Canadian researchers working with Canadian and international partners.”

Tajmel, White, and Salzmann co-authored a paper with Donna Kahérakwas Goodleaf, who serves as Concordia’s director of decolonizing curriculum and pedagogy, in which they explained that they are exploring decolonization in physics because the discipline “plays a special role in the field of science due to its unique scientific authority.”

“Physics is commonly regarded as the ‘most objective’ and the ‘hardest’ science,” the scholars wrote, “it fundamentally defines scientific key concepts such as energy, matter, force, light, space and time, for all the other sciences.” 

The scholars say “it is important to understand physics as a social field rather than as ‘pure knowledge’ independent from social values and decisions.” They chose to focus on light due to its ubiquity across societies, languages and cultures. 

As part of their project, they said they intend to create “courses together with Indigenous scholars and Knowledge Keepers in which students approach questions from different or culturally diverse perspectives, as well as de-centering Eurocentric Western science.” They will also aim to “critically investigate if and how physics itself has contributed and still contributes to colonialism.” 

The scholars say the purpose “is not to find new or better explanations of light; we are not seeking to improve scientific ‘truth’. Rather, our project initiatives are motivated by the marginalization of women, Black people, and Indigenous peoples, particularly in physics.”

“We regard marginalization as a key problem for social equity as well as for scientific quality. Furthermore, we regard scientific knowledge that reproduces bias and colonial power relations as non-acceptable.”

The Concordia scholars’ “Decolonizing Light” project received criticism from other scholars, including McGill University chemistry professor Patanjali Kambhampati. 

Kambhampati told The College Fix that “Decolonizing STEM is absurd and offensive to many people of all walks of life, including me as a scientist born in the third world.”

“There are no other or alternative ways of knowing. There is only science.”

Kambhampati also slammed the feds for funding the project, saying neither “the Canadian government nor should the US government fund these quackery pursuits.”

True North reached out to the “Decolonizing Light” project and Tajmel for comment, but did not hear back in time for publication. 

Alberta Social Services Minister says feds must consult with province before investing

Alberta Seniors, Community and Social Services Minister Jeremy Nixon says the federal government’s efforts to invest in supports for vulnerable communities fall short when Ottawa doesn’t consult with the province first. 

In a year-end interview with True North, Nixon said the Trudeau Liberals have “bypassed” consultation with the provincial government. 

“(They) tried to directly apply these things in ways that don’t always make sense with what the government is trying to do, or in ways that doesn’t align with the needs that are in our community,” he told True North. 

“To address issues and supports for vulnerable Canadians they need to work with the provincial governments and allow us to do what we do best.”

For example, Ottawa recently announced rent subsidies for those who make less than $20,000 a year — a commitment which excludes those with a disability by just $200. Albertans on Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped (AISH) receive $20,220 annually from the province. 

“They either knew what they were doing or they’re willfully incompetent,” Nixon said. 

Still, the minister is positive about the direction new Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is taking. He said she spent about 45 minutes chatting with each MLA after she won the United Conservative Party (UCP) leadership race, discussing the challenges of the disability sector, people on fixed incomes and affordability challenges.

 “She was certainly moved to action,” he said. “I just really appreciate her response.”

In the last month, Smith has announced public safety and community response task forces for both Edmonton and Calgary to respond to issues of addiction, homelessness and public safety. 

In an announcement on Dec. 13, Edmonton Police Services chief of police Dale McFee said provincial services requested the integrated approach.

“It is essential leadership if we are going to unpack the multi-layered issues impacting those dealing with addiction, mental health and homelessness, and I am pleased to see the province move forward with this urgent work,” he said. 

Nixon, who sits on both task forces, said it’s the first time since the UCP has been in government that the four ministries are working together in a formal way to tackle issues plaguing Alberta’s two major cities. He said the task force is working towards completing what’s been learned from previous reports over the last three years and creating cohesion across government. 

“Sitting at the same table with municipal leaders, indigenous leaders, police and (emergency medical services), as well as nonprofit leaders is very significant,” he said. “Too often governments cannot operate in silos and so having all of us together, hopefully that makes a difference in executing judgment.”

FUREY: The “War on Christmas” convo didn’t happen this year — did one side prevail?

What happened to the “War on Christmas?” We didn’t hear much about Christmas being cancelled this year – did the woke mob finally win and Christmas was officially cancelled? Or has everyone agreed to celebrate Christmas this year?

As Anthony Furey explains in his latest video, neither side has won. Instead, institutions like the government and school boards have decided to take a politically correct approach, whereas Canadians from all walks of life are happy to celebrate Christmas.

From all of us here at True North, Merry Christmas to you and your loved ones!

OP-ED: Why two ridesharing court cases matter to all Canadians

Source: Pixaby

Rita Smith is the publisher of Road Warrior News/Taxi News.

Are governments in Canada subject to the laws they write? If so, what are the consequences (if any) when the very bodies that write the statutes willfully ignore them? 

Two court cases are proceeding right now. Both are against municipal governments who wrote and ignored laws so cavalierly that they put consumers at risk, and cost thousands of small business people virtually everything they owned. 

Although they may seem small and industry-specific, these cases should matter to every Canadian whose work, business and life can be decimated by government on an ephemeral whim. Or those whose safety could be endangered in a regulated business simply allowed to ignore regulation. Or those who expect the services required by Disabilities Acts to be available. 

In Toronto, Beck Taxi has launched a civil suit against the City for its taxicab driver training policy, which refuses to recognize the City’s own three-week training course while accepting an internet program a few hours long.

In Ottawa, a class-action lawsuit alleges that City negligently enforced its former taxi by-law and unlawfully amended its by-law to permit rideshares like Uber to operate. 

Further, this suit claims that in failing to enforce its by-law and in changing the by-law, the City discriminated on the basis of race, colour, ethnic origin, or language, contrary to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Human Rights Code

Ottawa’s actions also fly directly in the face of its own “Equity and Inclusion Lens Handbook,” which directs staff “to be consistent and coherent in our efforts to move equity and inclusion forward in our services.” 

If equity and inclusion doesn’t matter in a case where 90% of industry members are immigrants, does it matter anywhere at all?

The Ottawa taxi court case was certified in January 2018, five long years ago. Both Ottawa and Toronto re-wrote their by-laws in 2016 to legalize ridesharing, which until that point had been operating illegally but were never prosecuted for doing so. 

A lot has changed in five years, including the election of a new mayor in Ottawa and new councillors in both cities. An even bigger change has been the attitude toward Uber with the release of the Uber Files in July 2022 by the International Consortium of Independent Journalists. 

As revealed in the Uber Files, politicians around the globe were targeted by Uber lobbyists “spending gobs of cash on a global influence machine deployed to win favors from politicians, regulators and other leaders.”

Let’s be honest: municipal officials were duped. Just as there are no free lunches, there are no free rides. Costs including vehicle purchase and maintenance, fuel, insurance, and a driver’s living wage did not drop to half when rideshare entered the transportation market, loaded with venture funding strategically spent to subsidize rides and eliminate competition. 

Now, markets muse that Lyft may go bankrupt, Uber has never turned a profit, and rising interest rates are encouraging the venture capitalists that subsidized rideshare to look for better investments. 

Taxi operators who diligently obeyed every law governments decreed did not deserve to see their hard work and lifetime investments made worthless by schemes based on fantasy and spin. 

This is not just an issue for the Taxi industry: Canadians need to know if governments are compelled to abide by their own laws. If they are, what happened when rideshare arrived was wrong and needs correction.

If not, let’s admit it and stop misleading law-abiding business owners and investors before they sink any more resources into a capricious Canadian system. 

Canadians also want to know if diversity, inclusion and equity guidelines actually mean anything.

If they do, Ottawa is clearly in violation of its own guidelines and needs to correct the situation. If they do not matter, let’s just admit it and stop misleading immigrants we invite here to build the very nation that will wipe out all their work on a whim. 

Let’s be honest.  

Three quarters of Canadian believe worst of Covid-19 is over, poll shows

Canadians are optimistic concerning Covid-19, believing that the worst of the pandemic is behind us, according to a year-end survey. 

The poll, conducted by Research Co., asked Canadians whether or not they believed the worst of the pandemic was “behind us,” finding that 75% of Canadians agree with this sentiment. This represents a seven percent increase since Research Co. conducted a similar poll in August

Less than one in five Canadians said that they thought the worst of the pandemic was still ahead, while under 10% responded that they were unsure – a three percent decrease to both figures since August. 

The poll also found that Canadians are generally satisfied with the way municipal, provincial, and federal governments have responded to the pandemic, though there remains significant dissatisfaction.

Both provincial and municipal governments poll at a 58% rate of satisfaction, with the federal government polling just one point ahead. British Columbians are most satisfied with their government’s pandemic response, with approval reaching 68%, while the Alberta government’s approval lags behind other provinces at 46%.

Approval of various public health officers has been on the decline since Research Co. last polled Canadians on this issue. The federal chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam’s approval dropped from 66% to 60%, Ontario medical officer Dr. Kieran Moore’s approval dropped by 8 points to 59%, and Quebec’s Dr. Luc Boileau’s dropped from 66% to 60%.

Alberta’s new public health officer Mike Joffe is polling lower than former public health officer Deena Hinshaw, despite Premier Danielle Smith firing Hinshaw for poor performance. 

The poll also found that a majority of Canadians still view the Covid-19 pandemic as a “real threat”, with up to 78% of Canadians aged 55 and older agreeing with the sentiment.

Despite Canadians estimating the worst of the pandemic to be over, government public health officials still recommend precautions and occasionally hint at a return to mandates.

In October, Dr. Moore made a strong recommendation that Ontarians mask up in indoor settings and threatened the re-introduction of a provincial mask mandate if voluntary mask use wasn’t at a satisfactory level. 

On December 5, the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board voted 10-3 to reintroduce a “temporary universal masking requirement” despite facing significant backlash from parents and students alike. 

Research Co. conducted their online survey of 1,000 Canadian adults from December 10-12.

LEVY: Toronto is falling apart – and politicians are letting it happen

Three years ago, I wrote about Seattle featured in the horrifying documentary Seattle is Dying, suggesting this is where Toronto was headed.

I was hoping our politicians would stand up and take notice considering the many similarities between the two cities. 

But they didn’t. Now my beloved adopted city has become worse than Seattle.

We have a mayor and council who act as if they keep ignoring the reality of the crime on our streets and in our TTC subway system, it will go away.

Over the past few years, they haven’t even given the rightfully vocal residents most impacted by the mess the courtesy of a response.

They are so disconnected from reality, it borders on obscene.

Non-stop shootings and assaults of innocent victims in our subway stations and on our buses have been occurring so rapidly in the past few months, we don’t know what to think.

But last Sunday’s killing of a 59-year-old homeless man near the city’s Strathcona homeless shelter by a gang of eight underage females – three as young as 13 roaming the downtown streets at 12:30 a.m. – has truly left Torontonians shocked and horrified. The story even made BBC news along with several U.S. news outlets.

Maybe Mayor John Tory and his posse of weak-willed politicians on council just don’t care.

It certainly seems that way.

While on Monday, Tory tweeted about the tragic Vaughan shooting, we saw not a word about this senseless crime. Over the past three days, the mayor has weighed in about climate change, trans rights and much about an impending snowstorm but not about this tragedy.

It’s as if this black mark on Toronto doesn’t exist.

This outrageous uptick in violence didn’t happen overnight.

As an observer of city politics for 20 years, I can trace how Toronto evolved from a far safer city when Tory came to power in 2014 to one in which residents are fearful to walk previously quiet and crime-free streets at night.

It started in 2015 when both carding (street checks) and the Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention strategy (TAVIS) were discontinued at the behest of race-based activists. The latter program was introduced in 2006 to deal with a spike in gun violence in the city and had worked well.

Tory sat on the police services board when activist Desmond Cole came to pressure them into cancelling the very successful cops in schools program. 

If these series of actions didn’t kneecap the Toronto police, along came the Gay Pride parade and the Black Lives Matter activists, who disrupted the parade in 2016 amid demands to ban the police from marching.

Since then the police have not been permitted to march. Our mayor has done nothing to fight for them. He could have refused to award Pride officials their grant until police were let back in but yet again he kowtowed to the activists.

It sent a clear message to the activists that they take priority over our police.

Tory didn’t stop there.

When an unruly passenger was threatening female passengers on the King streetcar in February of 2020 and transit safety officers intervened, Tory sided with the leftist activists – even though the unruly passenger was charged with two counts of assaulting peace officers.

The safety officers, who were simply doing their jobs, were thrown under the bus.

At the same time Tory and his sycophants successfully neutered the police and transit security, they increased the number of safe injection sites around the city and opened low-barrier homeless shelters (full of troubled, addicted street people) in tourist areas and other quiet neighbourhoods.

When vandalism, sexual assaults, break-and-enters, attacks on innocent victims, carjackings, illegal weapons possession came to light in and around these shelters, Tory and his equally cowardly councillors ignored the outcry. 

When the homeless started camping out on the TTC nothing was done. And no wonder, when the hands of transit security officers were tied.

When illegal drug dealing became an everyday occurrence outside of safe injection sites and homeless shelters, police were helpless to intervene because they were considered “no go” zones.

Let’s not fool ourselves. Many of the shootings are by rival gang members or other drug dealers fighting over their piece of turf.

Most recently when a spate of shootings and other violence occurred in or around Toronto District School Board schools, Tory held a meeting with education director Colleen Russell-Rawlins to discuss a SafeTO plan that will continue the same multi-million-dollar hug-a-thug programs that haven’t worked.

They have, however, enriched the bank accounts of race grifters, many of whom have sprung up from nowhere.

The bottom line is that our spineless politicians have created this mess by neutering the police, ignoring security risks on the TTC and by enabling drug addicts and drug dealers to continue to cause harm to themselves and others.

I would say they don’t seem to have a clue how to make things right.

But I’m betting that they don’t have the guts to concede their series of decisions that have brought us to this place were a mistake.

Freeland, Macklem make taxpayer group’s Christmas naughty list

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) ranked Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland and Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem on their 2022 Christmas naughty list for wasteful spending. 

According to the CTF, the top culprit is a federal worker who billed taxpayers $6,000 per night for a single hotel room during Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral. 

“Taxpayers were visited by the Ghost of Christmas Waste this year,” said CTF federal director Franco Terrazzano. 

“Someone spent $6,000 per night on a hotel room but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau won’t say who it was so this mysterious waste continues to haunt taxpayers.”

Freeland was also cited for announcing $452 billion in new spending during April’s budget and for being on track to spend $20 billion over budget. 

As for Macklem, he made the list for dishing out $45 million in bonuses and raises at the Bank of Canada while inflation was taking off. 

“Governor General Mary Simon landed in Santa’s bad books for getting an early start on the festivities and billing taxpayers for her fancy airplane feasts in March,” said Alberta CTF director Kris Sims. 

In March, Simon’;s trip to the Middle East cost taxpayers nearly six-figures on airplane food and beverages. 

Premiers Smith, Tim Houston, Blaine Higgs and Doug Ford made the “taxpayer nice list” alongside Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux. 

“Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is keeping more money in families’ pockets this year, and so are the premiers in New Brunswick and Ontario. That fills taxpayers with joy,” said Sims.

Meanwhile, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault also made the naughty list for misleading Canadians about carbon tax rebates. A recent report by the Parliamentary Budget oFfice found that Canadians on average pay between $299 and $671 on carbon taxes even after rebates are figured in. 

Saskatchewan finance minister Donna Harpauer also received a spot on the naughty list for spending $8,000 on a private flight instead of driving. 

Persecution of Christians on the rise around the world: report

As Canadians gather for the Christmas season and those of the Christian faith celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, Christians abroad remain the most persecuted religious group in the world and the situation is growing grimmer.

According to the Catholic organization Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), human rights violations against Christians in at least 18 countries have become worse since 2017. 

The report, titled Persecuted and Forgotten? A Report on Christians oppressed for their Faith 2020-22, outlined how conditions have worsened for Christians in countries such as Nigeria, Afghanistan, North Korea and China. 

In Africa, a sharp rise in jihadism has led to terrorist attacks targeting Christians and has seen the situation for Christians worsening in all countries reviewed in the ACN report. 

More than 7,600 Nigerian Christians have been reportedly murdered between January 2021 and June 2022. 

“Jihadism is one reason why Nigeria teeters on the brink of becoming a failed state, with kidnappings, priests killed and deadly attacks on churches becoming increasingly regular,” the ACN states.

The survival of some of the oldest Christian communities in the Middle East is at risk as Islamist terrorist groups continuously target believers. In Syria, the Christian population declined from 10% to less than 2%, falling from 1.5 million just before the Syrian War began in 2011 to around 300,000 today.

“More than five years on from the military defeat of Daesh (ISIS), the threat of a full-scale resurgence has by no means disappeared. A revival of jihadism has the potential to deliver a knock-out blow for Christianity in its ancient heartland,” the ACN report reads.

In Asia, particularly in North Korea, state authoritarianism is behind the oppression of Christians. ACN states that religious beliefs and practices are routinely and systematically repressed in the socialist state. 

Religious nationalism has also caused the increased persecution of Christians in Afghanistan, India, Pakistan and other parts of Asia. 

According to Open Doors USA’s World Watch List, more than 360 million Christians live in countries where they experience high levels of persecution – one in seven believers worldwide. 

Open Doors USA found that between Oct. 1, 2020, to Sept. 30, 2021, at least 5,898 Christians were killed, 5,110 churches were attacked or closed, 6,175 Christians were arrested without trial and 3,829 Christians were kidnapped. 

Montreal firefighters deliver food baskets, gifts to 800 families

(CNW Group/Association des pompiers de Montréal)

Firefighters in Montreal are holding a Christmas basket campaign to help nearly 800 local families this holiday season. 

According to a Montreal Firefighters Association (MFA) press release, the program is needed now more than ever due to inflation and the rising cost of living. 

An MFA press release cited “a spirit of great sharing” as their reason to support people during “these times of inflationary spirals”.

This is the first time that the association was able to resume their charity work after a two-year pause during the pandemic. 

“If you only knew how gratifying it is for us to see that our community action brings happiness and comfort to these too many families in need,” said MFA president Chris Ross. 

The campaign began on Dec. 17 with the delivery of smaller baskets to nearly 250 families. Five hundred other families with two or more children received larger baskets worth $340 on Tuesday. Additionally every child over 13-year-old will receive a gift while 14 and 15 year olds will get a $25 gift card. 

On top of the deliveries of foodstuff and presents, firefighters held a crowdfunding campaign with the help of five organizations. This is the 35th year the association has held the charity drive. 

A recent survey by BMO found that a vast majority of Canadians were struggling with buying gifts this year due to inflation. 

A third of people – 37% – also reported resorting to less expensive gifts, while 33% are cutting back on gift-buying altogether. 

“Given the highest inflation in four decades and the fastest interest rate increases in three decades, it’s not surprising that Canadian families, especially younger ones, are feeling substantial strain on their finances and well-being,” said BMO senior economist Sal Guatieri.

Alberta charter school founder says teachers are ‘too busy’ with curriculum to implant biases

Following accusations that a Calgary school teacher was pushing an anti-conservative agenda to students, the founder of a new Alberta charter school says she’s not concerned her educators will start implanting their biases onto students because they’re “too busy” teaching students a fundamentally different curriculum. 

Caylan Ford said the Calgary Classical Academy rejects the view that education should be seen as a means of vehicle for social transformation, a philosophy progressive education reformers began to embrace in the 20th century. 

“That’s part of why you end up with a lot of this kind of thing in schools — a lot of focus on contemporary social issues on turning students into agents of change,” she said. 

Ford said teachers at the Calgary Classical Academy are busy teaching students subjects like Latin, music and world history. 

“We expose kids to texts in works of art and literature, and stories that have stood the test of time and are in some cases centuries or millennia old,” she said.

“Frankly, we don’t have time for much else beyond that.” 

Ford’s Calgary Classical Academy opened in August 2022. After families in Edmonton began contacting her “desperate” for their kids to access a classical education, she decided to expand with an Edmonton location, set to open the 2023-24 academic year.

True North reported last week that a concerned parent posted screenshots online of what appears to be a PowerPoint slide from a Calgary teacher showing examples of “appropriate” and “inappropriate” opinions. One example of an appropriate phrase was “Black Lives Matter,” while the phrase “All Lives Matter” was characterized as inappropriate.

Another slideshow was titled “great speakers” and included photos of child climate activist Greta Thunberg, Michelle Obama and Alberta’s former chief public health officer Dr. Deena Hinshaw. 

The parent further told True North that the teacher described examples of “bad speakers” as prominent conservatives like Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, former President Donald Trump, and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. 

The Calgary Board of Education won’t comment on the issue, saying it’s an “individual personnel matter.”

Ford says she often hears from parents concerned that their local public schools may not be teaching in a way that accords with the family’s values.

“That doesn’t necessarily mean that there are circumstances like the one that’s alleged here, but there’s a general sense among a lot of parents that they can’t trust their schools,” she said.

“We just espouse a different anthropology and a different understanding of the purpose of education, about the individual dignity and equipping them with the tools of moral intellectual discernment that can apply in various circumstances.”

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