Animal rights groups and environmentalists are to blame in part for high rates of anxiety among Canadian farmers, the Commons agriculture committee was told. “These anti-agriculture groups quite frankly are spreading lies,” said a University of Guelph researcher: “Farmers feel scrutinized.”
MPs Pass Tap Water Bill
The Commons has passed a private Liberal bill to compare Canadian drinking water quality to world standards. MPs and environmental groups repeatedly faulted Health Canada for failing to test tap water for dozens of pollutants: “The United States is still more proactive.”
Report Bitcoin By Thirds
Bitcoiners face heavy paperwork under pending federal regulations. Access To Information records indicate distributors will be required to report transactions as small as one-third of a bitcoin: “There’s a balance between innovation and regulation.”
A Poem: “Oy Canada”
We are on a quest
to differentiate ourselves
from the Americans.
Bernier’s right-wing party
will lead the fight against
diversity,
pluralism,
multiculturalism.
The Canadian way.
Doug Ford
pushes Ontario’s sex-ed
an inch closer
to the Bible Belt.
The Canadian way.
And in a bid
to increase uniqueness
(for half-a-billion dollars)
our Chief of the Defence Staff
wants to outfit our troops
with U.S. uniforms.
The Canadian way.
Camouflaged.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Book Review: Days Of Pigs & Leather
Autonomous State features numerous eye-catching accessories and an astonishing fact. The accessories are the tragi-comic failures of Canada’s postwar car industry: the Nova Scotia-made Toyota Corolla, so bad even Atlantic dealers wouldn’t take delivery; or Studebaker, “Canada’s Own Car,” reduced to grinding out cruisers for its hometown Hamilton, Ont. police department before the factory closed in 1966. Or the Windsor-made Chrysler Cordoba, a 4,000-lb gas pig padded with “soft Corinthian leather.”
And the astonishing fact? Under a simple commercial treaty nicknamed the Auto Pact, Canada produced some 60 million vehicles – more cars than we would ever drive.
Morneau Oblivious: Senator
A member of the Senate banking committee yesterday described Finance Minister Bill Morneau as oblivious to key enforcement of anti-crime regulations. Morneau testified he couldn’t recall a staff report that two-thirds of Canadian banks failed to comply with money laundering rules: “I’m just not sure what it is you’re referring to.”
$100K Fine On Privacy Breach
Cabinet on November 1 will introduce regulations that would see companies fined $100,000 for concealing any breach of individuals’ privacy, Industry Minister Navdeep Bains yesterday told reporters. The proposal follows a recommendation of the Commons privacy committee: “That’s a significant fine.”
Dep’t Hid Subsidy Details
The Department of Industry has concealed details of corporate subsidies at companies’ request regardless of whether it was justified, according to the Office of the Information Commissioner. Documents filed with Federal Court faulted the department for automatically rejecting disclosure of public information whenever corporations objected: ‘This is taxpayers’ dollars.’
Would Triple Home Credit
Realtors yesterday petitioned the Commons finance committee to triple a homebuyers’ tax credit. The proposal would cost more than a quarter-billion dollars a year, by Department of Finance estimate: “Provide meaningful help in defraying costs.”
All-Party Copyright Reforms
MPs on the Commons heritage committee yesterday expressed all-party support to tighten Copyright Act exemptions that cost creators. Witnesses complained free copying has driven writers and performers out of business: “We’re not here to fight among ourselves.”
Uncollected Tax Is “Huge”
The Canada Revenue Agency is underestimating the value of unpaid tax by billions, advocates last night told the Senate national finance committee. Tax owed on unreported income by Canadians with offshore accounts is more than triple the $3 billion claimed by auditors, senators were told: “It’s more like $10 billion to $15 billion.”
Bitcoin Regs Soon, Say Feds
Finance Minister Bill Morneau yesterday told the Senate banking committee first-ever federal rules on bitcoin will soon be introduced, but that most regulation of the pseudo-currency will be left to provinces. “The market remains relatively small,” said Morneau.
Judge Says Review Is Political
A professional ethics review of an Ontario judge is unreasonable and unfair, says a lawyer in the case. Justice Patrick Smith in a federal lawsuit accuses the Canadian Judicial Council of targeting him for investigation over Indigenous complaints to the CBC: “I do fault the Council.”
Household Costs vs. Climate
Canadians are divided on cabinet’s climate change program, says in-house research by the Department of Natural Resources. Polling shows as many people worry about energy affordability as reducing greenhouse gas emissions: ‘Which do you think should most guide decisions about Canada’s energy future?’
Figure Sales To The Second
The Bank of Canada in an unusual stopwatch survey calculated to the second how long it takes consumers to pay with cash or cards. Researchers accounted for time spent by check-out clerks in taking phone calls or chatting with co-workers: ‘Waiting time included social interactions, price checking and so on.”



