↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Michael Taube: B.C. Conservatives finally oust leader Rustad in public gong show

During the Great Fire of Rome in 64 AD that destroyed three-quarters of the capital city, legend has it that Emperor Nero caused the massive blaze to erupt. Some suspected he had secretly sent out a parade of drunken fools to burn it to the ground in hopes of rebuilding it in his own image. Nero showed a general indifference to what was happening. He played the lyre in his palace, as the story goes, while the flames destroyed Roman art, architecture, and centuries of history. Read More
  •  

Hillel Neuer: UN prostitutes itself to dictators looking to end western sanctions

The United Nations General Assembly has barely paid attention to the war in Sudan — despite 150,000 killed, 15-million displaced and 25-million hungry — yet on Dec. 4, delegates are convening to inaugurate the “International Day against Unilateral Coercive Measures,” which is UN-speak for condemning western sanctions on the world’s worst dictatorships. Read More
  •  

Bryan Brulotte: The war in Ukraine may soon come to an end, but the West will have lost

Canada now stands at a strategic crossroads. The war in Ukraine, once framed as a defining test of Western resolve, is entering what appears to be its final and least favourable phase. Ukraine’s battlefield position has weakened. Territorial losses in the east and south are mounting. American officials now concede privately that Kyiv’s position is unlikely to improve. As Washington signals that a negotiated settlement is necessary, the war’s outcome will be shaped chiefly by the United States and Russia. Canada and Europe will have little influence over the final terms. Read More
  •  

Colby Cosh: Costco’s tariff lawsuit hints that Americans are tiring of Trump protectionism

On Friday, the Costco Wholesale Corp. filed a lawsuit with the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT) seeking an immediate refund of the Trump administration’s unconstitutional tariffs on imports imposed officially in August under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). It’s an interesting political wrinkle in the historic tale of the tariffs. The president’s contrived, random claim of multiple “emergencies” that allow him to rewrite the American tariff schedule according to whim went before the U.S. Supreme Court a month ago. Read More
  •  

Adam Pankratz: UNDRIP is strangling Canada’s economy

If there is one takeaway from the recent memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the federal and Alberta governments on a potential new oil pipeline to the West Coast, it's that Canada needs to abandon the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and return to our own framework for reconciliation: Section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982. Read More
  •