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Colby Cosh: The brewing Canada-U.S. fight over a disputed puffin island

The last piece of land officially contested between the United States and Canada, a rocky outcropping in the Bay of Fundy called Machias Seal Island, has popped up in the news this week, delighting us lovers of bizarre legal abstractions. New Brunswick Senator Jim Quinn, a retired Coast Guard sailor and a former boss of the port of Saint John, is raging and ranting over federal government inaction in the face of a grievous American offence against Canadian sovereignty. Read More
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Raymond J. de Souza: Returned kayak a symbol of Vatican-Indigenous relations

An Inuvialuit sealskin kayak was transferred to the Canadian Museum of History (CMH) this week after a century in the collections of the Vatican Museums. Fulfilling the decision of the late Pope Francis, Pope Leo XIV gave the kayak and some 60 other Indigenous artifacts as a gift to the Catholic bishops of Canada, which in turn presented them in a spirit of reconciliation to Canada’s Indigenous leaders. It was a gracious and touching moment at the CMH as Inuit men from the North laid eyes on the kayak for the first time. Read More
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Adam Sandler finally feeling the love from critics

If you’re a media critic, it’s easy to dismiss an actor who likes to talk in a man-baby voice. Who likes a good groin injury joke, who delivers news commentary as an opera aria. But if you’re an Adam Sandler fan, that kind of stuff can make him a hero for an entire generation. Read More
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Michael Higgins: How Heather Reisman’s love for books built an empire

Somewhere across this great land, someone or something great is just getting started. This country is built on game-changing people, ideas and initiatives: Wayne Gretzky redefined a game; oil sands innovations helped us prosper; Frederick Banting transformed millions of lives; Loblaws changed how we live. Today, we continue a new National Post series that celebrates Canadian greatness, in whatever form we find it. Read More
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David Oliver: Trump admits that the U.S. is not invincible

United States National Security Strategy (NSS) statements tend to be provided by a presidential administration a year or so into its new term. Written by committee and required by law, they often resemble a Christmas tree of policy baubles and ornamental statements of how America is going to make the world a better place. Read More
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