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Conservatives say they could shrink federal workforce by 17,000 yearly by not replacing leavers

OTTAWA — The Conservative party added more detail Wednesday to its leader's plan to shrink the federal public service, saying the bureaucracy could be cut by 17,000 jobs a year just by not replacing employees who leave their jobs. Read More

Moe, Legault inch closer to Smith on energy exports, pushing back on major Trump retaliation

OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has two increasingly vocal allies among Canadian premiers in her push to ratchet down the response to President Donald Trump's threatened 25 per cent tariff on all Canadian goods. Read More

‘Back-breaking’: Toronto lawyer drawn into service in Israel — harvesting tomatoes

Brad Neufeld, the vice-president of a Toronto-based health-care firm, was in Tel Aviv when the first sirens went off on Oct. 7, 2023. It was early Saturday morning, and Hamas terrorists had hit Israel with everything they had, murdering, raping and kidnapping civilians. Read More

Trumps Threatens Tariffs Feb. 1 on Canada, Mexico and China

Par : Ana Swanson
The president said he will impose tariffs Feb. 1 on products from Canada, Mexico and China, countries that together account for more than a third of U.S. trade.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

It is not clear whether President Trump will follow through on the tariff threats, or to which products they would apply.

Asylum-seeking Jan. 6 convict still detained in Canada while awaiting Donald Trump’s pardon

Par : Kenn Oliver
From inside a Canadian immigration detention facility in British Columbia, Antony Vo, an Indiana man and ardent Donald Trump supporter, was able to watch as the newly inaugurated U.S. president announced and then signed an executive order to pardon over 1,500 Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot convicts. Read More

Trump Is Said to Push for Early Reopening of North American Trade Deal

Par : Ana Swanson
The president wants to begin renegotiating a U.S. trade deal with Canada and Mexico earlier than a scheduled 2026 review, people familiar with his thinking said.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump has also threatened to impose a 25 percent tariff on products from Canada and Mexico, saying those countries are allowing drugs and migrants to flow across American borders.

Trump Says He Plans to Impose 10% Tariffs on Chinese Imports on Feb. 1

The president said the planned duties were a response to China’s failure to curb fentanyl exports.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

President Trump’s pledge to hit China, Canada and Mexico with tariffs is expected to result in retaliatory action against U.S. industries.

Garth Hudson obituary

Innovative organist with the Band, the rock group who changed the way their contemporaries thought about music

His high forehead and long, bushy beard, suggestive of a country preacher or a backwoods boffin, offered an early sign that Garth Hudson, who has died aged 87, was bringing something different to the world of rock music in the 1960s. As the organist with the Hawks, who backed Bob Dylan on a famous series of concerts before turning into the Band, he looked and sounded like a figure from a different age, or perhaps one in whom many ages and cultures were being magically combined.

Music from Big Pink, the Band’s widely influential first album, released in 1968, bore witness to a process to which each of the five musicians – four Canadians and an American – made a distinctive and equal contribution. Levon Helm, the drummer, awakened memories of the old South. Robbie Robertson played guitar with a rare and pointed economy. Rick Danko, the bassist, evoked the intimacy of backporch music-making. Richard Manuel, the pianist, sang with an aching fragility. And Hudson, an enigmatic figure half-hidden behind his organ console, brought the sound of mystery.

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© Photograph: The Canadian Press/Alamy

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© Photograph: The Canadian Press/Alamy

Projets Libres! Saison 3 épisode 9 : Transition.city, simuler et optimiser un réseau transport

Projets Libres! est heureux de vous présenter la plate-forme libre Transition, développée par la chaire mobilité de Polytechnique Montréal.

Nous recevons Yannick Brosseau et Pierre-Léo Bourbonnais, appartenant tous les deux à la chaire, afin d'aborder les sujets suivants :

  • la genèse de Transition
  • son financement
  • l'ouverture des algorithmes et la formation des étudiants sur des outils ouverts
  • les relations avec les sociétés de transports du Québec
  • les données nécessaires, accessibles ou non disponibles pour faire un projet d'optimisation d'un réseau de transport
  • OpenStreetMap au Québec et les actions menées pour améliorer la contribution
  • les enjeux de la construction de réseaux au Canada
  • et bien plus !

Cet épisode est le premier d'une nouvelle série sur Transports + logiciel libre.

Bonne écoute !

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‘I can still hear their words’: the fight to save the Híɫzaqv language

In what is now western Canada, younger generations of the Indigenous Heiltsuk Nation are using social media to revive this ‘deeply relational’ language

Centuries ago, the music of the Híɫzaqv language echoed across a territory of deep fjords, rugged islands, windswept beaches and thick forests.

And then, for more than a century, the lands now in the western reaches of Canada fell quiet.

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© Photograph: Alex Takats

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© Photograph: Alex Takats

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