No Media Blacklist: Freeland

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday said Bank of Canada disclosure of a media enemies’ list was an isolated occurrence. Blacklock’s recorded a Bank manager stating authorities would not be “allowing Blacklock’s to be asking questions” while giving preferential treatment to Bloomberg News: “The comment in question was an isolated occurrence.”

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Civil Patrols Enforce Port Ban

It is up to the Coast Guard to enforce a federal ban on Russian vessels in Canadian ports, Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said yesterday. Alghabra said a handful of Russian-owned vessels were already warned to clear out of Canadian waters: “We will not hesitate to enforce any breaches.”

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Gov’t Laments Rail Stoppage

A shutdown at Canadian Pacific Railway is ill-timed, Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan said yesterday. Cabinet would not comment on whether it would invoke back to work legislation to end the dispute between management and the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference: “So you’re not ruling it out?”

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Feds Cool To Decriminalizing

Decriminalizing heroin and other street drugs is no answer to preventing deaths, Addictions Minister Dr. Carolyn Bennett said yesterday. Legalization of marijuana did not stop users from buying on the black market, said Bennett: “Decriminalization still means people go to the street to get their drugs.”

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Convoy Arson Story Is False

An attempted arson linked by media to the Freedom Convoy had nothing to do with the protest, Ottawa detectives said yesterday. Legislators who voted to invoke the Emergencies Act repeatedly pointed to the incident as proof truckers were violent and lawless: “Take a moment to think what that means.”

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Can’t Blacklist Dissent: Judge

A federal judge has cited the Leaders’ Debates Commission for unfairly blacklisting certain media from asking questions at campaign events. Justice Elizabeth Heneghan sharply criticized the Commission for blacklisting Rebel News Network Ltd. at debates last September: “There is room in the nation for the expression of opposing points of view.”

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Remove ‘Squaw’ Writer Prize

The National Newspaper Awards committee has dropped a sportswriters’ prize named for a Globe columnist who ridiculed minority athletes as yelping “squaws” and “coloured gals.” Organizers had pledged to be more sensitive to “equity seeking groups.”

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Ambassador Testifies Tonight

Reid Sirrs, the ambassador who fled Kabul leaving 1,250 Canadians trapped under Taliban rule, tonight speaks publicly for the first time. MPs on the Commons Special Committee on Afghanistan summoned Sirrs for questioning on why he closed Canada’s embassy as thousands pleaded for help: “Any hope for a swift but orderly evacuation went out the window effectively leaving thousands behind.”

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Vax Mandate Under Review

Federal employers are reviewing their vaccination mandates, says Dr. Theresa Tam. The chief public health officer’s remarks follows suspension without pay of more than a thousand workers who declined Covid shots or refused to disclose their medical status under the Privacy Act: “I encourage Canadians to show each other compassion and respect as we make decisions to protect ourselves.”

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Organized Crime At Airports

Customs officers at major airports will be routinely armed under a Department of Transport proposal. Gun-toting smugglers and gangland criminals are now a “presence,” the department said: “There are incidents of organized crime involvement.”

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Oil Spill Plan Was Mediocre

A promised “world class” federal oil tanker safety system lacked clarity and focus, says a Department of Transport report. The $394.8 million program launched nine years ago became mired in paperwork, wrote auditors: “There was a lack of clarity.”

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‘Leader of the Pack’: A Poem

 

The world,

caught off guard

as Russia takes control

of Crimea.

 

All eyes on Ottawa.

 

In a late night meeting,

a stern warning

is handed down

to a sweaty ambassador:

Moscow must immediately restore

Ukraine’s sovereignty,

or the Canada-Russia joint training

of the national curling teams

will be suspended.

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Account Freeze Led To Panic

Panicked credit union depositors withdrew millions after cabinet ordered a freeze on accounts of Freedom Convoy sympathizers, executives yesterday disclosed. “Many Canadians felt surprised the government had that authority,” said Martha Durdin, CEO of the Canadian Credit Union Association: “There was some degree of panic.”

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No Big Convoy Donor Found

No mysterious foreign millionaires bankrolled the Freedom Convoy, crowdfunding executives yesterday told the Commons finance committee. Evidence disproving cabinet claims of six-figure foreign interference came as one Liberal MP theorized Russia may have secretly funded the protest: “The statistics and numbers we are quoting here are the facts.”

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Pensioner Must Repay $115K

Ineligible seniors who falsely claim benefits must pay the money back, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled. The landmark decision came in the case of an American woman ordered to repay more than $115,000 in Old Age Security cheques she pocketed over nearly two decades: “The fact the Minister approved an application does not qualify the person for benefits for all time.”

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