Fewer Prisoners Than Britain

Canada has one of the lowest incarceration rates in the English-speaking world, new data show. Figures from the Department of Public Safety also indicate 40 percent of adults appearing in criminal court are not convicted: ‘The purpose is to assist the public in understanding statistical information on corrections.’

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Gov’t Must ‘Educate’ Drivers

Canadians need “increased education” if cabinet is to meet its electric car mandate, says in-house research by the Department of Natural Resources. Federal pollsters found stiff resistance to electrics as costly and impractical: “Fewer than one in five, 17 percent, feel there is an affordable zero emission vehicle that meets their lifestyle needs.”

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Blame It On Feds, Not Russia

Consumers increasingly blame inflation on federal deficit spending, not the war in Ukraine, says Bank of Canada research. Canadians surveyed by the Bank said they expected overspending to raise prices overall for years to come: “Most consumers think the Bank’s ability to get inflation back to target is hampered by high government spending.”

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Tax Break Cut Worth $286M

Repeal of tax breaks for real estate investment trusts would save the federal treasury a quarter billion over five years, the Budget Office said yesterday. Figures were requested by Green MP Mike Morrice (Kitchener Centre, Ont.), who blamed trusts for running up housing costs: “It adds up.”

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McKinsey Ethics No Problem

McKinsey & Company was never considered for federal blacklisting as an unethical supplier even after facing legal troubles abroad, records show. The Department of Public Works said court settlements and corruption charges “had no impact” on its work with the company: “I wake up every day knowing it’s an ethical company.”

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‘Vast’ Lottery Heist Disclosed

Court of King’s Bench in Manitoba has documented the “vast” theft of lottery tickets by a clerk at a village gas station, one of the biggest hauls of its kind. The Court imposed what it called an economic “life sentence,” full repayment of nearly a half million worth of stolen tickets: ‘The numbers were not adding up.’

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I’ll Name Names, Says Ex-Spy

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service has 30 years’ worth of records on federal ridings that are “hunting grounds” for Chinese Communist agents, says a former chief analyst. The retired spy told the Commons ethics committee he was prepared to name names: “We have evidence, names, circumstances when all this happened.”

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‘Committed’ To Web Censors

Cabinet in a letter to MPs said it is “committed” to appointing an internet censor board called a Digital Safety Commission to police legal content, but set no deadline for legislation. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau earlier described uncensored speech as “destabilizing.”

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Minister’s Claim Is Ridiculed

Cabinet will legislate lower internet fees if telecom companies don’t cut prices, says Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne. MPs ridiculed the claim after Champagne approved a $26 billion takeover of Shaw Communications of Calgary by its larger Toronto rival Rogers: “If we don’t see a drop in prices – ”

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Only Immigrants Trust Them

Recent immigrants are more likely to trust media than people who were born here or spent any time in Canada, says new federal data. Even among immigrants, confidence in media generally declined the longer they lived here: “Trust in Canada’s media has never been lower.”

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Legion Files Trademark Suit

The Royal Canadian Legion Dominion Command has filed a $50,000 trademark lawsuit against a Québec theatre company over commercial use of copycat Remembrance Day poppies. It disrespects war dead, lawyers wrote Federal Court: ‘The Legion reminds Canadians of the debt owed to those men and women who died.’

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A Poem: “First Past The Post”

 

The votes are in

for a class trip.

 

Toronto gets 40%,

Montreal 35%,

Kingston 25%.

 

“Destination Toronto!” declares the teacher.

 

But some claim it’s a false majority.

The class shouldn’t be traveling to a city

that 60% voted against.

 

 

By Shai Ben-Shalom