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Saturday, June 28, 2025

Indigo refuses to put best-selling Freedom Convoy book on its shelves

Canadian bookstore giant Indigo is refusing to sell The Freedom Convoy: The Inside Story of Three Weeks that Shook the World in its stores – despite the book being a best-seller.

Written by True North senior journalist Andrew Lawton, the book combines Lawton’s reporting and exclusive interviews with organizers and strives to tell the whole story of what happened in Ottawa during the convoy. 

In a statement to the National Post, Indigo said it is not selling the book in its stores because they have limited shelf space for books.

“We believe that access to books fuels discussion and can bring about change. We are committed to representing the diversity of Canada in the books and products we sell, feature, and promote,” Indigo said in a statement.

Since publication, the book has topped a number of bestseller lists, including on Amazon Charts, in the Toronto Star, and in the Globe and Mail

Indigo says Lawton’s book can still be purchased from its website.

The publisher of the book, Sutherland House, told the National Post that they were shocked by Indigo’s decision to not sell the book in its stores.

“We have a good relationship with Indigo,” Sutherland House founder Kenneth Whyte said to the National Post. “So, this was surprising.”

“Maybe they don’t think the people who would be interested in this book would shop at Indigo.”

Whyte indicated that he reached out to Indigo to reconsider their decision since the book continues to top bestseller lists across Canada. However, Indigo was still not interested. Whyte fears Indigo has “a problem with the subject matter or the perceived politics in the book.”

Purchase your copy of The Freedom Convoy: The Inside Story of Three Weeks that Shook the World by Andrew Lawton at Amazon or Sutherland House

Danielle Smith says there is a constitutional crisis — and Ottawa started it

Danielle Smith says the United Conservative Party (UCP) leadership race is shaping up to be a threefold question on who’s the best person to stand up to Ottawa, to beat NDP leader Rachel Notley in the next election and to restore freedom. 

“I think that person is me,” she told around 260 supporters in Stony Plain on Tuesday night. 

Smith said she’s demonstrated she has a “backbone” of steel as evidenced by her willingness to leave the mainstream media and to take a stand for Albertans’ freedoms. 

The former Opposition Wildrose Party leader has been pullings crowds in the hundreds at all her campaign events. She was approved as the party’s second official candidate on Monday night, after handing in 4,500 signatures — more than four times the party’s requirement. 

She’s had success in appealing to voters who feel abandoned by the UCP with promises to fix Alberta Health Services, to never lockdown the province again and an insistence to allow for vaccine choice. 

Her staunch support of the Alberta Sovereignty Act, legislation which would bar federal bills deemed harmful to the province, has also resonated with voters. The proposal is the product of the Free Alberta Strategy Group, of which co-founder Rob Anderson recently took a leave to serve as Smith’s campaign chair. 

Critics of the proposal, including many in the legacy media, have accused Smith of flirting with a constitutional crisis. 

But Ottawa already created a constitutional crisis when it blocked Alberta’s constitutionally-protected right to develop its own resources, she said. 

“We have a constitutional reckoning coming,” Smith said. 

The leadership candidate also said she can address a lack of unity in the UCP because she understands why it exists. 

Those reasons include Premier Jason Kenney’s government reversing its positions on a provincial vaccine mandate. The Kenney government has also failed to address equalization payments, which Albertans have said they want to be amended. 

Smith alleges the exact moment Albertans lost confidence in equalization was when Ottawa handed Quebec an additional $1 billion through the equalization fund after Quebec Premier Francois Legault said his province doesn’t want to export “Alberta’s dirty energy” in 2019. 

“So they didn’t want our dirty oil but you bet they still want us to keep the pipeline of money flowing to the east,” the former Wildrose Party leader said. “We’re not going to put up with that anymore.” 

Recently, federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has released a new plan to reduce oil and gas emissions by 40% of 2019 levels by 2030. 

“That is a death sentence on our energy industry,” she said. “That’s what happens when you play nice.” 

Rival candidate Raj Sherman briefly shared the stage with Smith on Tuesday night. Both agree “the last thing we need is a socialist government with $100 oil,” he said.

Sherman said he doesn’t consider Smith to be competition, saying, “we’re all teammates.” 

The former Alberta Liberal Party leader was already disqualified by the party’s Leadership Election Committee, but chose to run anyway. He appealed to supporters to sign his nomination form on Tuesday night, saying he still requires 300 signatures ahead of Wednesday’s application deadline. 

All candidates hoping to be approved by the party must submit 1,000 signatures from the province’s five regions and the first $75,000 of the $175,000 contest fee.

UCP members will elect a new leader and Premier on October 6.

Poll finds 57% of vaccinated Canadians won’t take booster shot

Most vaccinated Canadians will not take a booster shot, a new poll finds.

An Angus Reid Institute survey on vaccination conducted between July 13 and 15, 2022 found that there’s hesitancy towards booster shots and their effectiveness among some Canadians, including those who have been vaccinated with one or two doses. 

The news comes amid legacy media reports of a seventh wave of Covid fuelled by the BA.5 Omicron subvariant and some provinces including Ontario and Alberta opening up fourth vaccine doses to the general population.

Fifty-seven percent of Canadians surveyed by Angus Reid who received either one or two doses of a Covid vaccine said they won’t take a booster, while 93% of quadruple vaccinated Canadians said they will get a fifth dose of the vaccine as soon as they are eligible.

The poll also asked people if they would take a Covid booster every year if public health officials recommend it.

64% of those who have received one or two shots said they are not willing to get a booster every year, while only 24% said they would opt for an annual Covid shot. 

Meanwhile, 95% of those with four vaccine doses indicated they are willing to get an annual booster for as long as it is recommended by public health agencies.

As for vaccine effectiveness, only 26% of vaccinated Canadians believe being up-to-date with Covid-19 vaccines is effective at preventing transmission, while 45% believe it is not at all effective.

It should be noted that an Abacus Data poll had previously found that vaccinated Canadians were more worried about Covid than those who had opted not to take the vaccine. 

Booster uptake in parts of the country has been low, with federal government data from June 19, 2022 showing that less than half of the people in Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Nunavut, the Northwest Territories, and Yukon have received a third vaccine shot.

Age-wise, Angus Reid said that only one third of Canadians aged 18-29 had received the booster. Government data also shows a greater uptake in females compared to males for most age groups.

The Trudeau government recently announced it would be transitioning to a new definition of “fully vaccinated”, that is based on an “up to date” vaccine regimen. It also suggested that Canadians will need to get a Covid shot every nine months.

“The virus evolves and Omicron made us aware we will never be fully vaccinated against COVID-19″ said federal health minister Jean Yves Duclos, adding that “we have to maintain our vaccinations up to date.”

The feds have also said that future vaccine mandates would rely on an updated definition of “fully vaccinated.”

ArriveCan glitches wrongfully ordering some Canadians into quarantine

The federal ArriveCan app is erroneously ordering Canadians who are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 into mandatory quarantines, even though fully vaccinated travellers are supposed to be exempt from quarantine.

Quadruple vaccinated traveller David Crouch said that despite not testing positive for Covid-19 and having no symptoms, the application demanded he quarantined upon arrival to Canada. 

“I checked my email and there’s an email from ArriveCan, saying you are quarantined. This is your second day of quarantine,” said Crouch. 

“It seems to be all one way. They can tell you things, they can send you things, but God forbid you ever tried to get hold of anybody.”

Current federal mandates only require unvaccinated travellers entering Canada to quarantine for fourteen days.

Despite calls by the Conservatives to scrap the ArriveCan program altogether, the Liberal government has indicated that it is committed to making the app a permanent feature of Canadian travel. 

“Use of ArriveCan is extremely high — according to our most recent statistics, it was successfully used by 99.52 per cent of those travelling by air and 89.20 per cent of those travelling by land,” said Public Safety Canada press secretary Audrey Champoux. 

“While we are aware some travellers may have experienced some glitches, in cases where people have issues using the app, the CBSA’s top priority is always to help and educate, not be punitive.”

According to Crouch, the government sent him instructions asking for his quarantine information, which he has yet to fill out.

“ArriveCan has been a disaster for our community in terms of its impact on our tourism community,” said Conservative MP Tony Baldinelli, who represents the border community of Niagara Falls, Ont.

“Our two communities are highly integrated. So we’ve got a lot of people who, for example, will live here and work in the United States or live in the United States and work in Canada,” said Baldinelli.

Majority of Canadians think Trudeau is unequipped to deal with inflation

A majority of Canadians aren’t confident in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s ability to deal with inflation. 

According to a Maru Public Opinion poll commissioned by Yahoo News, 55% of Canadians said they don’t believe Trudeau has a “solid plan” to weather the country through economic troubles. 

Only 20% of those polled said that Trudeau has a “good plan” while 25% believed the prime minister was following a bad plan.

Views didn’t vary much when Canadians were asked the same questions about Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland. 

55% of Canadians also believed that Freeland had no plan to bring ballooning prices down while only 21% believed she had a good plan. The remaining 24% believed Freeland had a specifically bad plan.

The poll surveyed a random selection of 1,515 Canadians over the age of 18. Results were weighted by education, age, gender and region. The poll has a margin of error of +/- 2.5%, 19 times out of 20. 

When it came to the primary culprit 23% of respondents blamed “profit taking by companies and speculators” for current economic troubles. 

Meanwhile 17% believed supply chain problems caused by the pandemic are behind inflationary woes. Another 16% said that the war in Ukraine was the most significant factor while 14% blamed price hikes following lockdowns. 

“Compared to where Canadians were ten days ago when the same measure was applied, the impact of inflation on their ability to buy necessities for themselves and/or their family nowadays has increased the group who are “worried —inflation is causing some serious money issues” (59%, up to three points from 56% from ten days ago),” wrote pollsters. 

“This compares with fewer Canadians who are “comfortable—inflation is not really having an impact” (28%, down three points from 31% from ten days ago).”

During the first signs of inflationary troubles, Trudeau told reporters last year that he didn’t worry about “monetary policy.” 

“When I think about the biggest, most important economic policy this government, if re-elected, would move forward, you’ll forgive me if I don’t think about monetary policy,” said Trudeau in 2021.

‘Tamara Lich is an enemy of the state’ (feat. Ari Goldkind)

Freedom Convoy organizer Tamara Lich is currently sitting in jail awaiting trial on her bail breach charge – an unprecedented situation in Canadian legal history. Other organizers and people involved in the Freedom Convoy are either out on bail or not facing charges at all, so why is Tamara Lich the one who seems to be facing the harshest punishment and why is the state throwing the proverbial kitchen sink at this case?

Criminal defence attorney Ari Goldkind joins Rupa on the podcast to discuss why he believes that the handling of Tamara Lich’s case is an affront to Canada’s justice system and a danger to Canada’s democracy. Goldkind believes that Lich is an ‘enemy of the state’ and that she is being punished because of her politics.

Goldkind is no supporter of the convoy. In fact he was at the time and still is adamantly against the actions of the protesters in Ottawa and at the numerous blockades across the country, however as he explains to Rupa on the show, he is extremely concerned about the handling of Tamara Lich’s criminal case.

Ari and Rupa do a deep dive into the legal process unfolding in the Lich case and have a long and engaging discussion about Canada’s political and legal system in the wake of the Freedom Convoy protests that continue to have ripple effects in Canada and around the world.

Tune in to the Rupa Subramanya Show now!

SUBSCRIBE TO THE RUPA SUBRAMANYA SHOW

Canadian Scouts stranded in Switzerland after ArriveCan glitch

Source: Wikimedia

A group of Canadian Scouts aged between 12 to 14 were stranded in Zurich, Switzerland due to troubles with the government’s ArriveCan app. 

According to CTV News, six of the group including four youth were unable to board a scheduled flight back to Canada after an application glitch failed to register the passengers.

Before the problem could be fixed, the group’s flight had already left. 

“It was a great experience until it was time to come home,” said Karina Vega, mother of a stranded 14-year-old Scout. 

“By the time they got everything sorted out, the check-in desk closed. They literally saw their flight leave.”

According to Vega, Air Canada is refusing to honour its travel insurance policy which the Scouts paid for. 

“Air Canada won’t respect their travel insurance policy, which they purchased at an extra cost and includes missing flights,” said Vega.

“All of our kids are Canadian citizens. They’re scared, tired and very stressed. We just got a call saying the embassy is involved.” 

According to Air Canada, its aware of the issue but was unable to comment on whether travel insurance would cover this situation. 

“Since they booked via a travel agency, someone has already reached out to their travel agent to assist,” said a spokesperson. 

Conservative transport critic MP Melissa Lantsman has blasted the Liberals over ArriveCan calling on the federal government to immediately scrap the requirement for travel. 

“People do not want to come, and the regulations are certainly redundant,” said Lantsman. 

“There’s a whole lot of things that we expect from our American friends that they are not willing to do. That’s hurting us.”

With the help of the Canadian Embassy, the remaining scouts were able to find a return trip to Canada.

Covid Lockdowns responsible for sharp drop in church attendance

Statistics Canada has reported a sharp decline in attendance for churches and other religious services since the outbreak of the pandemic when the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) recommended canceling masses and prayer meetings.

“Among the population as a whole the proportion of people who participated in group religious activity at least once a month decreased from 23 to 19 percent, ” said StatsCan report The Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic on the Religiosity of Canadians.

11 percent of Canadians 15 and older said they prayed weekly at home or participated in another personal religious practice. Some people reported that because of the pandemic they prayed more or their faith grew stronger, researchers wrote.

On March 30 2020, the Conference of Catholic Bishops joined Protestant, Jewish and Muslim leaders in issuing a Message to Canadians that urged people torightly heed the precautions of physical distancing.” Doctors and nurses “provide us with a powerful witness of care, expertise and service in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic,” said the message.

Members of the Christian, Muslim, Jewish, and Buddhist faiths said their personal attendance at religious gatherings declined in the first year of the pandemic. Among those who reported having fair or poor general health, the proportion who participated in a religious activity at least once in the previous year fell from 43% in 2019 to 34% in 2020.

Provincial bans on gatherings affecting masses prompted numerous unsuccessful legal challenges by Christian advocacy groups. The Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench upheld lockdown orders that limited attendance at funerals and baptisms to a maximum of five people.

“The pandemic’s presence in Manitoba demanded decisive action in order to reduce the spread of the virus and in order to flatten the curve,” wrote Chief Justice Glenn Joyal. “Manitoba is not exaggerating when they state lives were at stake.”

On March 16 2020 the Ontario government ordered the closing of churches and other faith based organizations. While federal guidelines for essential workers directed that those deemed to be providing essential services to Canadians, including bankers, realtors, grocery store employees, and take-out restaurant workers, would continue in those roles largely without restriction, priests, ministers, rabbis and imams were not listed as essential.

Can you reject a mandatory Covid test at the airport?

Some Canadians on social media have been suggesting that travellers can reject a Covid test when returning to Canada from an international trip, claiming the test would be a violation of Section 14 of the federal Quarantine Act. 

The Trudeau government resumed its controversial mandatory random Covid-19 testing program for fully vaccinated air travellers Tuesday, despite Canadian airports being plagued with major delays. The testing will now be done offsite.

Section 14 of the Act refers to screening technology and states that “any qualified person authorized by the Minister may, to determine whether a traveller has a communicable disease or symptoms of one, use any screening technology authorized by the Minister that does not involve the entry into the traveller’s body of any instrument or other foreign body.”

Many Covid-19 tests do penetrate the body, including common PCR tests that are performed with a nasal swab.

With that said, does the Quarantine Act prohibit the government from mandating on arrival Covid tests for travellers? True North reached out to the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF) to find out.

“It appears that…  (s. 14 of the Quarantine Act) refers to normal screening when people entering Canada go through customs. It basically authorizes customs officers to use non-invasive techniques to screen for illnesses,” said JCCF barrister and solicitor Hatim Kheir.

“The mandatory Covid testing, on the other hand, is authorized by an Order-in-Council under s. 58 of the Quarantine Act,” he added.

Orders-in-Council are a type of legislation drafted by cabinet and issued by the Governor General of Canada. They are adopted without debates or votes in parliament.

Kheir told True North that “section 58 allows the government to make emergency orders ‘subjecting to any condition the entry into Canada of any class of persons who have been in a foreign country’”.

He added that the wording of section 58 gives the government broad powers which are likely not limited by section 14 of the Act. 

However, Kheir says that the matter is “not particularly clear” and hence it could be reasonably argued in court.  

It should be noted that the courts previously ruled in favour of the federal government’s strict Covid travel restrictions.

The Federal Court of Canada found in 2021 that the Trudeau government’s mandatory hotel quarantine program for those returning from abroad was constitutional.

“The finding that detention of thousands of law-abiding Canadians in federally mandated facilities does not violate their Charter rights is a blow to our democracy and our Charter,” JCCF lawyer Sayeh Hassan told the Law Times following the court’s decision.

However, the JCCF says the lawsuit resulted in the feds changing their hotel quarantine policy to state that Canadians being detained the right to legal counsel without delay.

The Trudeau government’s current border restrictions, including vaccine mandates and testing requirements, are set to remain in place until at least September 30.

True North also reached out to the Government of Canada for comment but they did not respond in time for publication.

Danielle Smith approved as UCP’s second official leadership candidate

Danielle Smith is the United Conservative Party’s (UCP) second official candidate in the race to become party leader and the Premier of Alberta.

She was approved by the party Monday night. Former Finance minister Travis Toews was the first candidate, approved nearly two weeks ago.

Smith handed in her leadership application with 4,500 signatures — more than four times what the party required. She also presented the entire $175,000 contest fee.

All candidates have until Wednesday to submit the signatures plus the first $75,000 of the fee. Candidates undergo an interview before being approved. 

“I want people to know I can raise money. I want people to know I have support,” Smith said last week on Real Talk With Ryan Jesperson.

Her efforts prove her ability to bring the party together which is what the race is about, Smith continued. 

“We have seen…I think despair among the conservative movement looking for another option. And I want people to see that I’m able to bring people back into this movement so that we can defeat Rachel Notley in the next election.”

Smith took a six-year hiatus from politics after crossing the floor in 2014 as leader of the Opposition Wildrose Party to join Jim Prentice’s Progressive Conservatives.

Since returning, she’s promised to never lockdown the province again and to resist pressure from Ottawa to introduce any such measures. 

As Premier, Smith’s first bill would be the Alberta Sovereignty Act, legislation authorizing the Alberta government to refuse to enforce any federal law or policy that attacks Alberta’s interests or provincial rights.

Party executives told True North last week that Brian Jean would be interviewed following Smith.

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