The Liberal Party must run a leadership contest free of foreign interference, say MPs. A change in Party voting rules follows evidence a busload of Chinese foreign students helped nominate MP Han Dong (Don Valley North, Ont.) in 2019: “Listen, there’s foreign interference concerns.”
Monthly Archives: January 2025
Feds Freezing Electric Rebates
Electric car dealers say they are stunned by cabinet’s abrupt wind-up of a $5,000 rebate program for new buyers. The Department of Transport announced Friday it will suspend rebates by the end of March or “until program funds are exhausted.”
Québec Defaults Cost $25M
Taxpayers lost millions through defaults on federal loans to Québec businesses, records show. The federal agency that approved the loans, Canada Economic Development for Québec Regions, boasted in a briefing note it was “prepared to support riskier projects.”
Music Biz Collapsing: Report
A federal subsidy program for Canadian musicians went 80 percent over budget due to pandemic lockdowns and collapsing album sales, says a Department of Canadian Heritage report. Musicians have complained they are reduced to collecting pennies in royalties from streaming services: “The current economic context does not allow the majority of artists to make a living.”
Poem: ‘Takes One To Know 1’
Google wants to verify my identity.
It presents weird-looking letters, numbers,
asks me to type them
into a text box.
Somewhere in Iowa, Georgia, or North Carolina,
servers will run algorithms,
analyse my response,
determine if I’m human –
or one of them.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Review: The Days Of Ho Chi Minh
Michael Maclear was the only Western TV correspondent in North Vietnam the day Ho Chi Minh died in 1969. Half a million mourners clad in white queued for hours to see Ho laying in state, his head resting on a soft pillow. It was “a great river of people,” Maclear recalls. The temperature hit 107° and kept climbing: “Every few seconds in the intense heat, even among the ranks of soldiers, someone would faint.”
Reading Guerrilla Nation is like opening a drawer to find a lapsed passport or faded yearbook. In an instant you are in a time and place once very important and now utterly forgotten, “the strangest of journeys in the most divisive of times, when ‘Nam confounded us all,’” writes Maclear.
Travel was expensive. Asia seemed distant. And a CBC-TV foreign correspondent like Maclear was assured fame and a mass audience. One of Maclear’s newsroom colleagues, Knowlton Nash, went into management and self-appointment as network anchor. Another, Roméo LeBlanc, became Governor General. Maclear remained a working reporter, still writing in his 84th year. He died in 2019.
Most indelible are Maclear’s vignettes: the memory of old men wheezing as they freighted 100-kilogram loads on bicycles through the Vietnamese countryside. Or the 12-year old boys press-ganged into a road repair crew. Or a Red propaganda officer who shook his fist at Maclear, “Capitalist swine – you are here to exploit us.”
And, there is controversy. Maclear recounts a dubious scoop, a 1970 incident in which he was invited to take a camera into a North Vietnamese camp and “interview” two imprisoned Americans. Maclear agreed to submit four questions in advance: Name and rank? How often can you write home? Can you describe your daily routine? And, what are your feelings on the war?
“The war is wrong,” one POW remarked as his guards stood nearby. “The answer is that the war must be ended.”
It was a propaganda shoot. The U.S. government called Maclear’s story a “carefully staged production.” U.S. Senator John McCain, himself a victim of torture in Vietnamese custody, later cursed Maclear’s interview subjects as “two camp rats” who collaborated with the enemy.
Maclear could nurse a grudge, too. He remembers an American who called his coverage “pinko crap” and the CBC managers who ultimately suspended him on trumped up complaints over coverage “with my own network echoing, ‘Were you duped?’”
This all happened decades ago, yet Maclear writes: “Time has not erased the memories, nor should it, for the network by its actions not least betrayed the public.” To read Guerrilla Nation is to recall in a flash this angry era, and then marvel at how it is so completely forgotten.
By Holly Doan
Guerrilla Nation: My Wars In and Out of Vietnam, by Michael Maclear; Dundurn; 216 pages; ISBN 9781-45970-9409; $19.99

Paid $369K To Silence Critics
A “fact-checking” program launched in 2019 by then-Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould paid researchers nearly $370,000 to discourage media and the public from questioning authority, Access To Information records show. Researchers stressed the importance of invoking Canadian values to avoid being seen as Liberal partisans: “Dissenting voices, in some cases even just one, can weaken the power of a normative belief.”
Jail Telecom Vandals: Rogers
Parliament should prosecute scrap metal thieves as saboteurs, says Rogers Communications. The telecom firm in a petition to senators complained theft of copper wiring was costing Rogers millions: ‘It is threatening public safety nationwide.’
Tells Press To Honour John A.
Canadians should honour John A. Macdonald as a national hero and be “unapologetic for our history,” Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre yesterday told reporters. Saturday marks the 210th anniversary of Macdonald’s birth: “We need to live out the dream that started with John A. Macdonald. Yes, I said John A. Macdonald.”
Feds Rewrite Charity Tributes
The federal Historic Sites and Monuments Board has cited eight Catholic charities as being complicit in “cultural genocide.” All eight were previously honoured for nationally significant works including aid to the poor: “It did not include a critical consideration of their relationship with Indigenous peoples.”
Parents Wary Of Covid Shots
Many Canadian parents remain wary of Covid and flu shots for children despite ongoing immunization campaigns, says in-house Public Health Agency research. Pandemic mandates did not improve compliance rates, data show: “Have you ever been hesitant to vaccinate your child against Covid?”
Teen TikTok Users Targeted
The federal government paid researchers to develop attention-grabbing TikTok videos for 13-year olds, Access To Information records show. “A machine learning algorithm” targeting teenagers was financed under a program approved by then-Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould: “A machine learning algorithm will be coming out soon.”
Four Eye Run For PM ‘s Post
Four cabinet ministers yesterday said they are eyeing the federal Liberal leadership in the first Party contest of its kind in 12 years. Any ministers who run face a six-figure entry fee and loss of a cabinet bonus with car allowance: “We need to know the rules.”
Act Was Violated Most Times
Violations of the Access To Information Act are so commonplace at the Department of Finance it routinely breaches its obligations more than half the time, says an internal audit. The poor compliance rate followed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s repeated promises of transparency: “Why haven’t you lived up to those promises?”
Press Gov’t To Keep Promise
Cabinet yesterday did not comment on whether it will honour a promise to charities to extend the tax year despite the Prime Minister’s prorogation of Parliament. One lobby group said it was privately assured by the Department of Finance the promise will be kept: “We are working with the department.”



