Gov’t Censorship Bill Lapses

A bill to censor legal internet content yesterday lapsed with prorogation of Parliament. It marked the second time in four years that cabinet tried and failed to regulate blogs, Facebook posts and other social media deemed hurtful: "The government is close to the end of its mandate and does not have a lot of public support."

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Convoy Cop Wins In Court

An Alberta policeman disciplined for speaking at a Freedom Convoy rally has had his suspension without pay overturned. The punishment was “not justifiable,” ruled an Edmonton judge: "We are left in my view with factual distinctions."

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Abandoned $84M In Security

The Department of Foreign Affairs spent a record $84 million on special security at the Canadian Embassy in Kabul prior to abandoning it to the Taliban, documents show. Then-Ambassador Reid Sirrs, who had boasted of security preparedness in Kabul, fled the city the same day it fell to terrorists in 2021: "We failed. Look at us now."

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Feds Fund Pro-Lib Research

Cabinet used a costly "Digital Citizen Initiative" to fund partisan research at taxpayers’ expense, Access To Information records show. The Initiative launched by then-Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould polled Black people on whether they voted Liberal and hired Liberal publicists to monitor "anti-Liberal" media: "We decided to focus."

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Bills $36,847 For Paris Hotels

Governor General Mary Simon and entourage billed nearly $37,000 in hotel charges to visit the Paris Paralympics last August, records show. The junket followed demands from MPs for greater scrutiny of Simon’s expenses that included silk jackets, limousine rides and gourmet meals: "The Governor General has shown a lack of respect for taxpayers."

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Suspicious Spike In Refugees

Canada saw a rush of foreign students claiming to be refugees after cabinet announced cuts to study permits, new figures show. A total 11,630 foreign students applied to remain in Canada as refugees from last January to August, the equivalent of more than 340 a week: "That isn’t the sign of a healthy system."

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Gov’t Finds Taxpayers Angry

Taxpayers in Canada Revenue Agency focus groups complained they were “gouged” and “overtaxed” by greedy auditors, says a pollsters’ report. The research followed cabinet’s threat to enact a $17.4 billion increase in capital gains taxes: "Impressions of Canada’s tax system focused on its complexity, lack of fairness and rates of taxation which were characterized as high."

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Ridicule Was Hurtful: C.R.A.

The Canada Revenue Agency was stung by public ridicule after attempting humour in a Twitter post, Access To Information records show. Management used a cartoon character to encourage taxpayers to file a yearly return on a promise of federal benefits: 'It was met with bewilderment.'

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“Knowledge-Based Policy”

Poet Shai-Ben Shalom writes: “The Liberals didn’t know the deficit would be three times their estimate. Nor did they know international agreements would be in their way of legalizing pot…”

Review: “C-anada I-s O-rganizing!”

In Canadian remembrance of the Second World War one fact rarely rates a footnote: Victory was union-made. Wartime membership in trade unions more than doubled.

The U.S.-based Congress of Industrial Organizations first organized a Windsor, Ont. auto parts plant in 1935. It became the fastest-growing labour group in the country.

“A union leader must be an incurable optimist,” one organizer told the CIO’s inaugural national conference in Ottawa just weeks after war’s outbreak in 1939. Their slogan: “C-anada I-s O-rganizing!”

Author Wendy Cuthbertson recounts a story that is rich in anecdotes. An English-born organizer marveled that in Canada, union members drove automobiles and wore fur coats. “Unthinkable in a European union meeting,” she said. Another recalled the  gratitude of Polish and Ukrainian immigrants organized in the slaughterhouse trade: “I’d hand them a leaflet and they’d take it and smile and go into the plant and wave out the window. They knew it was about the union, even if they didn’t know what it said.”

Afghan Flight Remains Secret

The Department of Foreign Affairs is censoring records detailing Canada's hurried flight from Kabul in 2021. Staff in one memo confirmed Taliban terrorists confiscated diplomatic offices but would not “disclose further details due to security considerations.”

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Hiked Emissions 257K Times

A pre-election carbon tax break on home heating oil will increase the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions by more than a quarter million tonnes, new figures showed yesterday. The Prime Minister called it a break for Atlantic Canada where oil is a mainstay of home heating and Liberals held 24 seats: "We have heard clearly from Atlantic Canadians."

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Mortgage Fraud Is Up: Gov’t

Mortgage fraud and money laundering are growing worse in real estate despite new federal laws dating from 2020, cabinet said yesterday. The Department of Finance detailed new anti-fraud rules to take effect October 1, 2025 affecting realtors and title insurers: 'Fraud is on the rise.'

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‘Unwise’ To Rely On CBC-TV

It is unwise for CBC TV viewers to rely on the network “if you want to be fully informed,” says CBC Ombudsman Jack Nagler. The 34-year employee in his final report as Ombudsman faulted the CBC as “too timid” in failing to acknowledge differing points of view in its news coverage: "We aren’t hearing enough information that conflicts with our pre-existing views, and when we do, too often we reject it out of hand."

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Say Web Rule Is A Life Saver

The Department of Transport effective yesterday finalized regulations to aid millions of drivers unwittingly operating vehicles subject to safety recalls. New rules require that automakers post keyword-searchable recall notices on their websites and keep them posted for 15 years, enough time to cover the typical life span of passenger vehicles in Canada: 'It would mean fewer severe injuries and fatalities.'

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