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Inuit man gets reduced sentence for attempted murder due to his Indigenous status and mental illness

A Nunavut judge knocked nearly two years off the sentence for an Inuit man convicted of trying to choke a woman to death because she stood up for his abused sister-in-law, citing his Indigenous status, mental illness and the fact that a shorter sentence would not require him to leave Canada’s northernmost territory to serve the remainder of his time behind bars. Read More
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Adam Pankratz: B.C.’s reconciliation nightmare gets even worse

It has been clear for some months now that David Eby and the B.C. NDP’s approach to Indigenous reconciliation would have ruinous consequences for British Columbia’s economy. Last Friday, the situation got even worse, as a new court ruling poured more cold water on economic activity in the province and opened the door to every B.C. law being subject to interpretation through a United Nations human rights document. The implications for British Columbia could not be much more dire. Read More
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Mickey Amery: How we are protecting free expression for Alberta’s professionals

Albertans and Canadians value their freedoms. They know freedom is the foundation of our democracy and the reason we choose to build our lives here. Freedom of expression, in particular, is fundamentally important. It is the foundation that our democratic discourse is built on. For this freedom to be fully realized, people must be able to speak their mind without fear of losing their licence or their livelihood. Read More
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Colby Cosh: Alberta runs into the separation-referendum barriers that it erected

On Friday, Alberta King’s Bench Justice Colin Feasby issued an irascible ruling on a reference question from the chief electoral officer of the province. Justice Feasby had been asked to decide whether a potential citizen’s initiative launched by an Alberta separatist group was in conformity with the current version of the Citizen Initiative Act (CIA) passed in 2021. Read More
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U.S. ambassador ‘encouraged’ by Carney’s energy pact with Alberta, expects more oil shipments to U.S.

OTTAWA — The U.S. ambassador to Canada says he is "encouraged" by the energy deal Prime Minister Mark Carney struck with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, saying he believes it will lead to more oil and gas production — increasing expectations that more product will flow south of the border. Read More
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B.C. masseur wins funding to appeal sex assault sentence that would have forced his deportation

A former masseur in Victoria who was found guilty of sexually assaulting several women during therapeutic massages has convinced the Court of Appeal for British Columbia to order funding for his “complex” appeal against his conviction and two-year jail sentence, which is long enough to force his deportation to India at the end. Read More
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Chris Selley: The Liberal climate-change grift is finally over

The shockwave of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s decision to get behind a new pipeline connecting Alberta’s oil sands to the sweet, whale-infested West Coast tidewater continues to reverberate among several dozen people in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec City. One of them is now-former heritage minister Steven Guilbeault, who resigned from cabinet over it. He alleged the pipeline would have “major environmental impacts,” that there had been “no consultation” with the First Nations affected, and that Carney’s willingness to exempt Alberta from clean-energy regulations was a “serious mistake.” Read More
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Say hello to pro-pipeline First Nations in B.C.: Full Comment podcast

Listen to the premier of British Columbia, or the CBC, or the Association of First Nations and you’d think that Indigenous groups on the West Coast are determined to stop a new oil pipeline from Alberta. Yet as MP Ellis Ross, former chief councillor of the Haisla Nation near Kitimat, B.C., tells Brian Lilley, a lot of First Nations are open to the opportunity for resource development to help them break their dependency on Ottawa and find prosperity for their people. He also talks about how American anti-oil groups are exploiting First Nations by offering them much-needed funding in exchange for backing their activist campaigns — like the widely quoted “Coastal First Nations” group that doesn’t even represent the area’s First Nations. (Recorded Dec. 5, 2025) Read More
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