On the shelves,
enzymes
for lactose intolerance;
maltose
for fructose intolerance;
quinoa
for gluten intolerance.
Merlot
for middle management intolerance.
By Shai Ben-Shalom

On the shelves,
enzymes
for lactose intolerance;
maltose
for fructose intolerance;
quinoa
for gluten intolerance.
Merlot
for middle management intolerance.
By Shai Ben-Shalom

If they were re-inventing Parliament it might not look like the Texas hold ‘em version we have now, a rectangular chamber of adversaries seated face-to-face, seeking advantage and winner-takes-all. This is the product of “critical thinking,” writes Patrick Finn: “A mode of thinking that is governed by a critical approach to all incoming information that has winners and losers.”
“Our system of government is based on a form of critical thinking first established in ancient Greece,” explains Finn, associate professor at the University of Calgary’s School for Creative and Performing Arts. “Does anyone think it is still working? Or are we continually asking ourselves why this system will not allow us to work together more effectively?”
Critical Condition is an engaging book that challenges the very premise of Parliament, the courts, universities, you name it – the school of “us-versus-them thinking,” as Finn puts it. He depicts the practice as pointless, unproductive, suspicious and mean: “No matter how we disguise it, it reeks of violence.”
“I admit to having enjoyed a few victories of this type myself,” Finn writes. “In one of my lowest academic moments, I once made a fellow student weep and run out of the room when I savaged him for ridiculing the work of James Joyce.”
Critical Condition proposes instead “loving thinking,” a keenly practical alternative despite the moniker that comes with a kick-me sign. It is a consultative system that invites creative problem-solving broadly applied to a unique problem. This is precisely how Canada helped win World War Two, and why townspeople sandbag riverbanks in flood season. No name-calling; no point-scoring, no matter who takes the credit.
“If our leaders were educated to believe that solutions were the goal, and not attacks, defences and victories, then they would be predisposed to find ways to act,” Finn writes. “If we trained all students to view critical quagmires as negligence, then our negotiators would no longer begin with lists of non-negotiable items. Creativity makes no room for the non-negotiable. Great ideas require no protection other than the room to breathe and the right to live.”
“Politicians often speak of issues that will kill a campaign as ‘the third rail,’” writes Finn. “They are referencing the power rail of the subway or train that kills on contact. How did we arrive at a place where critical thought has become the third rail of intellectual life? How did it become this strong?”
“If we want to compete, why not get serious about our competition?” writes Finn. “Let us compete against cancer, against pollution, against civil war, against domestic violence, against poverty.”
By Holly Doan
Critical Condition: Replacing Critical Thinking With Creativity, by Patrick Finn; Wilfrid Laurier University Press; 117 pages; ISBN 9781-77112-1576; $14.99

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly’s department yesterday said it needs private consultants’ help in managing “a fundamental rethink” of relations with the United States. The department has more than 6,000 employees and access to fully-staffed Canadian trade offices in 15 American cities: “The Minister and senior Department of Industry officials require current intelligence and support on U.S. political, economic, technology and trade dynamics.”
Liberal MP Chrystia Freeland (University-Rosedale, Ont.) faces questioning on suspicion she misled Parliament over taxpayers’ financing of Chinese shipyard jobs. “You can grill her,” said one Liberal MP.
Cabinet can’t rely on “creative accounting” to meet its NATO spending target of two percent of GDP, Conservative MP James Bezan (Selkirk-Interlake, Man.) yesterday told the Commons defence committee. Bezan questioned cabinet’s inclusion of the Canadian Coast Guard in its calculations when “they can’t even fine anyone for fishing violations.”
A Vancouver climate think tank denies any conflict of interest in advocating freer Canadian market access for low cost Chinese electric cars. A hearing of the Commons trade committee yesterday questioned where the environmental group received its funding: “We have never received any money from China.”
Taxpayers are funding “far left” activists at Canadian universities, one academic has told the Commons science committee. MPs are investigating criteria for research grants worth $4.5 billion annually: “Is it legitimate for a broad spectrum of Canadian taxpayers to fund left and far left advocacy under the guise of research funding?”
The Commons ethics committee last night adopted a Conservative motion targeting blind trusts similar to one used by Prime Minister Mark Carney to conceal vast stock holdings. “This is very timely,” said Conservative MP Michael Barrett (Leeds-Grenville, Ont.), sponsor of the motion.
Federal diversity, equity and inclusion programs have cost more than a billion since 2016, newly-disclosed records show. Grants included Department of Agriculture subsidies for “cultural vegetables” and Veterans Affairs funding for Congolese war veterans: ‘We conducted a search in our grants and contributions management system using the keywords ‘equity,’ ‘diversity’ and ‘inclusion.'”
Foreign Minister Anita Anand will not tell Parliament what groups her department is financing in Gaza. Anand invoked “confidentiality” in refusing a request by one MP to detail who has received taxpayers’ aid under a little-known Canada Fund for Local Initiatives: ‘What are details of each grant?’
Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday said he was “a great tax and budget expert” but would not disclose this year’s deficit. His comments in a Question Period exchange followed notice from the Budget Office that the deficit is “absolutely higher” than cabinet promised.
There will be no recession this year, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said yesterday. Macklem acknowledged the economy shrank in the spring but predicted “slow growth” will offset losses: “It is growth.”
Canadians should brace for billions in new borrowing to be detailed next week in an updated five-year estimate of overspending, Interim Parliamentary Budget Officer Jason Jacques said yesterday. Testifying at the Commons government operations committee, Jacques said there was no question cabinet’s 2025 deficit will be much steeper than indicated: “The government wants to take 10 months before they put up an Excel spreadsheet that indicates what their deficit estimates are for the next five years.”
Criminal investigations are underway into nine separate cases of suspected IT billing fraud at federal departments and agencies, the highest figure disclosed to date. A majority were referred to the RCMP following a separate 2024 police raid at the offices of a lead ArriveCan contractor: “The RCMP will not be providing any further information.”
A cabinet bill that grants postal inspectors new powers to open mail without a warrant is unlawful, Conservative critics said yesterday. “It is an assault on all Canadians,” said MP Roman Baber (York Centre, Ont.).