Carbon taxes may slow economic growth for decades, says a Bank of Canada report. The outlook follows a Budget Office forecast that taxing fuel to lower emissions would cut workers’ net income: 'Canada has unique needs as a vast northern country for heating and transportation.'
Labour Loses On Vax Privacy
Teamsters Canada has lost a challenge of a workplace vaccination order. The union appealed on behalf of an employee at the Toronto Maple Leafs’ home arena who was suspended without pay after declining to reveal his medical status: 'Personal medical information should not be the subject of disclosure.'
“In Case Of Emergency”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday: “Inside the building, signs in English and French direct me to First Aid stations, fire extinguishers, defibrillators…”
Review: Zombies
Canada’s last military conscription was popular. Resisters were scorned as weaklings who failed the tests of manhood and citizenship. Perceptions of the draft today are coloured by unpopular American wars – even deserters are treated as heroes – but facts are facts. Our conscription experience is a uniquely Canadian story, and Professor Daniel Byers of Laurentian University tells it well.
“The impacts of conscription and the National Resources Mobilization Act were largely forgotten in almost every way after the Second World War,” writes Byers. “For almost five full years the country had been mobilized to an extent that Canadians had not experienced before, nor have they since. Dozens of training centres and military camps stretched across the country. More than a million men and women served in the armed forces, over 150,000 of them as conscripts.”
Mandate Climate Insurance On Canadians: Gov’t Report
Canadians homeowners could be forced to buy climate change insurance, says a federal report to Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair. “We welcome and support the core findings,” Blair said yesterday in a statement: "There’s important work to be done."
House Probes Phone Tracking
The Commons ethics committee yesterday voted 10-0 to examine federal monitoring of 33 million Canadian cellphone users in the name of lockdown enforcement. Conservative MP John Brassard (Barrie-Innisfil, Ont.) accused cabinet of using Covid as cover for “massive overreach.”
Firefighters Oppose Vax Rule
A British Columbia labour adjudicator has rejected firefighters' appeal to suspend a mandatory vaccination order. A firefighters' union local in Richmond, B.C. challenged the program as intrusive and heavy-handed: 'They must choose between getting a vaccine they do not want or giving up on their careers as firefighters.'
Bible No Documentary: Judge
The Bible is no documentary, Ontario Superior Court has ruled. A judge rejected a filmmakers’ claim for an 85 percent "documentary" tax credit for a TV series depicting readings of Scripture with images of the Rocky Mountains: 'This is just a Christian thing.'
Want First Nations At Capital
Most Canadians surveyed want more representation of Indigenous cultures on Parliament Hill, says a Department of Public Works survey. It follows a cabinet proposal to address “colonialism, patriarchy and racism” in historical commemorations: 'Parliament Hill should reflect the values and aspirations of all Canadians.'
MPs To Probe Cost Of Living
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday was summoned by the Commons finance committee for questioning on the cost of living. The committee voted unanimously to conduct lengthy hearings on inflation and rising house prices one MP likened to a big balloon: "Our economy has become a gigantic inflated balloon."
Quits Pro-China B.C. Council
A B.C. senator has resigned his longstanding membership in a pro-Beijing group, the University of British Columbia China Council. Senator Yuen Pau Woo as a Council member once complained of the “sour attitudes many Canadians have about Beijing.”
Vax Tax Is No Answer: NDP
Taxing unvaccinated Canadians is no substitute for education in raising immunization rates, the federal New Democrat health critic said yesterday. A Québec proposal to impose a medicare surcharge raised unsettling questions, MP Don Davies (Vancouver Kingsway) told reporters: "We believe passionately in universal access to our health care system without financial barriers."
Compulsory Vax ‘Benevolent’
Governments mean well in considering compulsory vaccination, Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said yesterday. “On vaccine mandates, the key word here is benevolence,” said Duclos.
$48B Loan Holiday Extended
Cabinet yesterday extended by one full year a payment holiday for small business borrowers who received more than $48 billion in emergency loans. Small Business Minister Mary Ng called it “the best thing for our economy.”
One Climate Flight At $10,843
A deputy minister who called climate change a “massive issue facing humanity” billed nearly $11,000 in first-class airfare to attend a climate conference, records show. Cabinet has yet to detail all expenses for Canada’s 277-member delegation to the October 31 United Nations Conference on Climate Change in Glasgow: "It is important to make a positive contribution to what I think is a massive issue facing humanity, climate change."



