↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Jamie Sarkonak: Nanaimo, where complaining about feces-drenched drug zones is all you can do

Nanaimo, B.C.'s downtown drug experiment has failed to stabilize its overdose rate. It has managed, however, to line the city’s oldest streets with feces, garbage, hit-and-runs, doorway fires and damaged property — a situation so bad that city council, just last week, considered fortifying its parking lot with a 1.8-metre fence. Read More
  •  

André Pratte: Dialogue key to decreasing tensions between Alberta and Quebec

Seven years ago, Quebec Premier François Legault made a very unfortunate comment, calling oil from Alberta’s oil sands "dirty energy." “I am not embarrassed to refuse dirty energy while we are offering clean energy at a competitive price,” Legault said, rejecting the idea of a pipeline crossing Quebec’s territory to reach the port of Saint John, New Brunswick. Albertans were incensed, and rightfully so, considering that Quebec receives billions in equalization payments thanks, in part, to Alberta’s prosperity. Consider also that Quebecers consume millions of barrels of gas from the oil sands each year. Read More
  •  

From potatoes to cocoa and coffee, severe weather spikes food prices worldwide, study finds

In 2021, crops withered as Western Canadian farmers faced the worst drought in 19 years. Wheat stocks dropped 38.7 per cent year over year in its wake. By April 2022, food manufacturers were paying more than double what they were in 2020, and that cost had trickled down to consumers. According to Statistics Canada, shoppers spent more on bread (+12.2 per cent), pasta (+19.6 per cent) and cereals (+13.9 per cent) than they had the year prior. Read More
  •  

How Canadian fentanyl smuggling to the U.S. really works and who’s behind it: Full Comment podcast

Between President Donald Trump claiming there’s a flood of fentanyl from Canada to the U.S., and people here insisting there’s almost none, the truth is elusive. A new American report gets to the bottom of what’s really going on, and its author, Jonathan Caulkins, talks to Brian about what he found. Specializing in crime systems, the professor from Carnegie Mellon University's Heinz College breaks down how global supply chains run by criminal organizations moving from Mexico to China to Australia feed Canadian labs with precursor chemicals. And how much of the final made-in-Canada product actually ends up on America’s streets — including, unexpectedly, in Alaska. Read More
  •