Parliament should consider an excess profits tax on grocers, the Commons agriculture committee said yesterday. Grocers testifying at committee hearings denied profiteering on food inflation: "The Government of Canada should consider introducing a windfall profits tax on large, price-setting corporations."
Left Tree Pledge To Provinces
Cabinet was never in a position to plant two billion trees without provincial help, Environment Commissioner Jerry DeMarco said yesterday. The Liberal Party announced the tree planting blitz as a 2019 election promise and has not met targets to date: "They have to be realistic with their programs."
‘Cannot Buy Us For $200,000’
A gift of $200,000 is not enough to buy influence in the Government of Canada, former Trudeau Foundation CEO Morris Rosenberg testified yesterday. One MP on the Commons public accounts committee noted the figure is 117 times larger than the federal campaign contribution limit in Canada: "“I honestly don’t think $200,000 is very significant in the greater scheme of things."
25% Would Cut Foreign Aid
Canadians share “fairly negative views” about foreign aid with a quarter nationwide favouring funding cuts, says in-house research by the Department of Foreign Affairs. Spending on aid abroad costs $6.4 billion a year excluding extraordinary funding for pandemic relief or Ukraine’s war effort: "More than half of Canadians say a lot of international aid from Canada ends up in the pockets of corrupt politicians in the developing world."
Dep’t Calls In 269 Corrections
The Department of Health issued hundreds of “corrections” to subsidized news media, records show. Subsidized newsrooms are obliged to grant federal agencies a “rebuttal opportunity” as a condition of accepting federal aid: "Lots of people think there are factual errors in the newspaper that are just things they don’t like."
Panel Clears Disclosure Bill
The Commons industry committee last night approved a cabinet bill to mandate disclosure of ownership of federally registered corporations. Police acknowledged the bill would not include 85 percent of Canadian companies that are provincially registered: "Criminals will simply use a province that doesn’t have a registry."
MP O’Toole Bids Farewell
Erin O’Toole in his farewell address to Parliament yesterday urged MPs to avoid the “sinkhole of diversion and division.” O’Toole is resigning as a four-term MP (Durham, Ont.) after accepting blame for the Conservative Party’s 2021 election loss: "I am responsible for that."
Seniors’ Incomes Doing Well
Eighty percent of Old Age Security pensioners earn more than $60,000 a year, new data show. Payouts include pensions to retirees with six-figure incomes, according to figures tabled in Parliament: "Many seniors receiving these payments aren’t struggling financially."
Climate Plan Is ‘Incompetent’
Canadians rate cabinet’s climate program incompetent, unfair and lacking in transparency, says in-house Privy Council research. The Access To Information document did not identify Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault by name but found widespread distrust of his policies: "Few Canadians strongly agreed, and only a small minority somewhat agreed, that the federal government demonstrated competence, fairness, openness and care when it comes to climate change."
Seek Judge On China Inquiry
Conservatives, New Democrats and Bloc Québécois MPs this week will discuss nominees to head a public inquiry into suspected election fraud by foreign agents, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. An independent judge must “get all the truth on the table” before the next campaign, he said: "We are working on that right now."
Careful Hugging Kids: Memo
The Public Health Agency of Canada in a 2022 memo said families must “assess everyone’s risk” before hugging small, unmasked children. The memo was released through Access To Information: "Hugs are safer if the child wears a mask."
MP Claims Spitting, Shoving
Freedom Convoy protesters were violent bigots who assaulted Asian people with spitting and shoving, says a New Democrat MP. The claims, contradicted by sworn testimony at a judicial inquiry, were raised by MP Alexandre Boulerice (Rosemont-La Petite Patrie, Que.) in Commons debate on a motion condemning anti-Asian racism: "People were spit on, people were shoved because they were of Asian descent."
CBC Decision On Racial Slur
CBC Radio has won a “free speech” ruling in the Federal Court of Appeal over use of the n-word. Judges quashed a CRTC order condemning a radio show deemed so offensive it breached the Broadcasting Act: "The decision makes no mention of CBC Radio’s freedom of expression."
A Poem — “Eavesdropping”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “In Heaven, Moses chats with Christ, Muhammad, and the Buddha. I wonder if they figured out which of their followers got it right…”
Book Review — Nazis & Tin Foil
Read this book and you’ll never think the same way again in reaching for a roll of kitchen foil to cover your barbecued chicken. Authors in searing detail document aluminum production from open-pit Third World bauxite mines to toxic refineries to the $2.90 kitchen convenience. The supply chain is coldly efficient.
Aluminum Ore is stark and meticulously researched. Authors Robin Gendron of Nipissing University and two faculty members at Norway’s University of Science & Technology tell the very human story of an everyday commodity we only think we know.
Making one ton of aluminum requires 1,380 tons of water, produces 85 tons of industrial waste and 10 tons of greenhouse gas emissions. Its main source, bauxite, can only be refined through heating and cooling with caustic soda in a process that annually produces 120 million tons of toxic discharge the industry calls “red mud.” In Hungary, the 2010 collapse of a red mud reservoir at an alumina plant flooded villages, caused 131 casualties and nearly poisoned the Danube. In India, bauxite labourers are paid $2 a day and hundreds of thousands of villagers have been displaced to make way for strip mines and refiners’ plants.



