Drug overdose deaths in British Columbia are running at their highest rate ever recorded, the B.C. Coroners Service said yesterday. New figures on fatalities follow cabinet polling on Canadians’ support for decriminalizing narcotics: “Stakeholders are saying criminalizing personal drug possession is hurting not helping.”
Monthly Archives: November 2021
Party Is Silent On Censorship
Cabinet yesterday in a 2021 Priorities Survey of Liberal Party members dropped all mention of internet regulation. Party members were asked to choose from dozens of issues “as we kick off this new mandate,” but omitted any reference to Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez’s web controls: “This is an important moment.”
CBC Sorry For Bad Reporting
The CBC yesterday apologized after bungling a hasty Québec City election call that sent the wrong candidate rushing to the podium to mistakenly deliver a TV victory speech. The Crown broadcaster earlier praised itself as a “beacon for truth” with high newsroom standards: “We need the public to feel safe, that we are a beacon for that truth.”
Be A Good Sport, Says China
China’s foreign ministry yesterday said it will not tolerate the “politicization of sports” at the Beijing Winter Games. The Commons last February 22 by a 266-0 vote censured China for crimes against humanity and agreed to petition the International Olympic Committee to relocate the 2022 Games: “We’re pragmatic.”
Vax Is Voluntary For Convicts
Visitors to federal prisons will require proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test though the rule doesn’t apply to inmates. The Correctional Service said it preferred education to coercion in dealing with prisoners themselves: “Inmates are not required to get the Covid-19 vaccine and must consent to being vaccinated.”
Rules Parliament Is The Law
Public comment by Attorney General David Lametti on the constitutionality of a particular law is insufficient for sentencing, an Alberta court has ruled. Parliament makes laws not Lametti, wrote an Edmonton judge: “His opinion does not reflect the will of Parliament.”
Still Count WWI Pension Roll
Department of Veterans Affairs pension rolls still include widows and orphans of First World War veterans 103 years after the Armistice. Their dwindling number is down to 31: “The average yearly payment is $10,757 or about $896 per month.”
Vow Aid For Climate Jobless
A long-promised federal law for Canadians who lose work due to climate change regulations will be introduced in Parliament shortly, says Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson. The Just Transition Act was promised in 2019: “What do you mean by just transition?”
Counted 5,000,000 Unvaxed
There is no reason to believe everyone who declines a Covid shot will contract the coronavirus, says Canada’s deputy chief public health officer. Dr. Howard Njoo earlier told reporters he considered vaccination a “personal choice” though he himself is fully immunized: “Is it safe to say if you’re an adult in this country and you haven’t been vaccinated you’re going to get Covid?”
Fed Monitor Shames Premiers
A federally-funded media monitor accuses two former premiers of “pushing conspiracy theories and disinformation.” The Canadian Anti-Hate Network, an agency subsidized by the Department of Canadian Heritage, did not respond to questions: “We have always stated at the Canadian Anti-Hate Network that leaders have to lead.”
161 Days Days At Half Mast
The national flag last evening was raised on Parliament Hill for the first time in more than five months only to be lowered again this morning for Indigenous Veterans Day. New rules of flag protocol saw the Assembly of First Nations recommend its own banner fly over all federal buildings: “It is an irrefutable part of our present.”
Sunday Poem: “The Survey”
This questionnaire is
anonymous.
Data collected
will be used exclusively for
statistical purposes.
We aim to improve
workplace experience and
employee satisfaction.
Your participation is valuable.
Please indicate your
gender,
age group,
ethnicity,
mother tongue,
salary range,
how many years in our organization,
is your cubicle south-facing or north-facing,
and whether John was your co-worker until very
recently.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Covid Violence A Myth: Data
Rates of police-reported family violence actually fell under Covid lockdowns, Statistics Canada data showed yesterday. Figures indicated the vast majority of families happily spent more time together despite official claims that “people are not necessarily safe in their homes.”
Most Were Already Vaxxed
The Treasury Board yesterday claimed credit for a 98 percent vaccination rate in the federal public service after threatening reprisals against unimmunized staff. However data confirm the vast majority of employees already had their Covid shots before cabinet issued an October 6 ultimatum: “It’s working.”
No Comment On Rate Hikes
The Department of Environment yesterday said coal-fired electricity generation must end but did not explain how to replace thermal plants in Atlantic Canada or the Prairies, or the impact on utility costs. A 2018 federal report warned of 12 percent rate increases if coal plants were to be abolished: “It may seem impossible.”



