Cabinet expects the post office and its largest union to come to terms “as soon as possible,” says Labour Minister Patty Hajdu. One business group proposed Parliament impose back-to-work legislation on the Canadian Union of Postal Workers for the third time in 14 years: “The government is monitoring this situation closely.”
For A Safe & Happy Holiday
Blacklock’s pauses for the August bank holiday with warmest regards to subscribers. We wish you a safe, happy holiday. We’re back tomorrow — The Editor.
Sunday Poem: ‘The Follower’
“I believe in equality for everyone,
except reporters and photographers.”
Gandhi’s words.
Little did he know,
an American President
would share this same animosity
towards journalists,
while ignoring other such teachings as
forgiveness,
compassion,
and the difference
between the power of love
and the love of power.
By Shai Ben-Shalom

Review: A Whirligig
The National Gallery of Canada’s director of publishing and new media was on the line. Blacklock’s asks: What is your acquisition policy on folk art please? Pause. “Well, we don’t have a collection of folk art.” Pause. “What you consider folk art and what I consider folk art is probably not the same thing.”
The Gallery’s Acquisitions Policy running to 16 pages decrees the national collection must reflect aesthetic qualities “of the highest possible nature.” No whirligigs. No macramé. Folk art gets no respect.
It is the squeezebox accordion of the Canadian art world, so ill-defined it’s confused with Christmas crafts or macaroni glued to a tin. “The term is unclear,” note authors John Fleming and Michael Rowan, and is hobbled by raw assumptions that folk art “is aesthetically unsatisfying,” “empty of any serious purpose or moral end,” “unimportant and even trivial” and “requires no formal training.”
Translation: Folk art is the expression of ordinary people with simple tools documenting familiar things, unashamedly and without being self-conscious. It is “the aesthetic of the everyday,” as Fleming and Rowan put it, which “asks nothing of us in return.” Canadians acknowledge the art form as worthy in others – the wood carvers of Bali, cave painters of New Mexico or matryoshka doll makers of Russia – but rarely in ourselves.
Canadian Folk Art To 1950 attempts to balance the scale. It is a celebration. It spies the land on a simple mission: “To draw from the objects of everyday life their grandeur, mystery and magic, to represent the fantastic and hallucinatory related to the operations of the subconscious.”
If the results are crude, they’re joyful. Here is a hooked rug with the image of a fat man, 1916. There are boxes and dressers, paper cuttings and cow portraits, stoneware jugs and model ships, a cigar store Indian and barber pole. Canadian Folk Art To 1950 devotes an entire chapter to 19th century trade signs like the shoemaker’s wooden boot that “punctuate urban spaces.”
And yes, there is even a whirligig, from New Hamburg, Ontario circa 1880. It depicts a militiaman in a snappy peaked cap. It would be magical in a stiff breeze.
By Holly Doan
Canadian Folk Art to 1950 by John Fleming & Michael Rowan, photographs by James Chambers; University of Alberta Press; 600 pages; ISBN 978-0-88864-556-2; $45

Auditors Were Wrong: Judge
A Tax Court judge has faulted the Canada Revenue Agency for misunderstanding its own regulations in penalizing a couple over an RRSP withdrawal. Parliament to date has rejected Opposition calls for an enforceable “duty of care” owed taxpayers when the Revenue Agency is wrong: “There really isn’t any legal recourse.”
Petition To Criminalize Lying
A Liberal-sponsored petition is asking the Commons to criminalize political lies. MP Karim Bardeesy (Taiaiako’n-Parkdale, Ont.), parliamentary secretary for industry, sponsored the petition: “MPs have been accused of making important public statements that are false and without evidence.”
32% More Water Advisories
The number of long-term boiled water advisories on First Nations is up 32 percent from last year, says Indigenous Services Minister Mandy Gull-Masty’s department. Dozens of First Nations still have tap water unfit to drink more than four years after cabinet promised to eliminate all water advisories at a $3.6 billion cost: “Advisories remain in effect.”
MP Will Stay In Gov’t Caucus
The president of the Canada-Israel Interparliamentary Group yesterday said he will “continue to work with like-minded colleagues” in the Liberal caucus despite the Prime Minister’s unilateral recognition of Palestine as a country. MP Anthony Housefather (Mount Royal, Que.) in the past called legitimization of Palestine “a really bad precedent.”
Find Banks Ignore Customers
Canadian banks typically disregard federal guidelines requiring that they answer all customer complaints, says a Financial Consumer Agency of Canada report. Access To Information records show the Agency itself disregarded tens of thousands of consumer complaints: “Banks failed.”
House Opposed PM Decision
Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday made diplomatic history with Parliament in summer recess by announcing recognition of Palestine as a country. MPs including members of the Liberal caucus voted down an identical proposal in 2024: “I am speaking for Canada now.”
Staff Warned On Twitter Talk
Federal employees who post partisan, self-serving or vulgar comments on social media even by anonymous personal accounts should expect scrutiny and criticism, says a new Treasury Board directive. The policy, the strongest yet, warned provocative posts on Twitter, Instagram and other social media undermined public trust in the Government of Canada: “Ask yourself how this post could be perceived by a reasonable person.”
No Recession Here: Macklem
Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem yesterday repeated assurances there will be no recession this year though the economy shrank in June. Macklem acknowledged an “unusual degree of uncertainty” in months ahead.
Consultants Part Of The Team
The Canada Revenue Agency is so reliant on consultants an internal audit warns that managers developed “an employer-employee relationship” with contractors. The Revenue Agency spent millions on private advisors last year though it has more than 55,000 employees: “The relationship between the employer and the consultant could result in legal, financial or tax liabilities for the Revenue Agency.”
AI Forecasts The Future: Feds
Federal meteorologists propose to improve weather forecasting using artificial intelligence, says a Department of Environment briefing note. It follows a 2020 audit that found Environment Canada was still relying on radar stations so obsolete they couldn’t find parts for repairs: ‘AI could provide earlier warnings of weather and environmental events.’
Feds Seal Bridge Files To 2026
The Department of Transport has sealed all records regarding Confederation Bridge tolls until November 2026. Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday had no comment on costs of ongoing subsidies to the Bridge operator whose investors included then-Transport Minister Anita Anand’s husband: “It is the taxpayer who is getting dinged on that.”



