Canadian reporters “who do not see themselves as racist” are responsible for “half-truths” that blame Asian investors for high urban house prices, says a Liberal Senate appointee. Senator Yuen Pau Woo (B.C.) did not comment on cabinet’s proposal for a $175 million-a year equity tax on offshore real estate speculators: "Anti-Asian racism (in) Vancouver is fueled by false narratives around ‘Chinese’ culpability for housing affordability."
Climate Leader Emissions Up
The federal Department of Environment says greenhouse gas emissions are up again in British Columbia, hailed by cabinet as a model for the federal carbon tax. The province on April 1 raised its provincial tax to $45 per tonne: "That is exactly what we know will work right across the country."
Got Help From Paid Lobbyist
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault relied on claims from a lobbyist subsidized by his own department to counter criticism of a YouTube censorship bill. Guilbeault’s department approved a $375,000 grant to the lobby group Coalition for the Diversity of Cultural Expressions of Montréal prior to its endorsement of Bill C-10: "This is a huge issue."
Labour Minister Made It Up
Labour Minister Filomena Tassi fabricated claims a “life and death” longshoreman’s strike at the Port of Montréal disrupted deliveries of pandemic medicine. The Department of Transport confirmed of thousands of shipping containers tied up at the Port not one contained vaccines: "Covid fearmongering is not a valid or compelling argument."
1,400 Covid Carriers By Air
About 1,400 Covid carriers arriving in Canada by international flights were unwittingly released from hotel quarantine, says the Public Health Agency. Cabinet last February 22 ordered passengers into three nights’ quarantine at designated hotels under a $225.6 million program: "I’m wondering how this can happen."
Calls Meth A Rural Scourge
Methamphetamine addiction has become a scourge in rural Canada, says a New Brunswick Senator. David Richards said the country has lost “a whole generation of kids” addicted to illegal drugs: "These kids are on the streets day and night with bolt cutters and hacksaws to break into places because they need a meth fix."
“Shine Light” On Shell Co’s
Cabinet must “shine light” on the true owners of corporations registered in Canada, says Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland. Testifying at the Senate national finance committee, Freeland said cabinet was committed to creating a public registry of corporate owners that would be searchable by name: "Setting up a register is pretty complicated."
Must Offer More Than Mail
Canada Post will expand services including “financial products” after suffering a record loss last year, says management. The corporation had a pre-tax loss of $779 million, the equivalent of more than $2 million a day, and saw almost half its 6,026 post offices operate in the red: "I think the word ‘banking’ scares a lot of people."
“Stand On Guard For Thee”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock's each and every Sunday: "Takeover of Canadian resources by foreign governments must not be taken lightly. Contracts that transfer control over such assets should be written and signed..."
Review: The Third Man In The Room
On March 21, 2005 a small group of men attended a secret meeting in Ottawa and committed Canadian troops to a disastrous Asian land war. No minutes of the conference exist. None of the participants had been to Afghanistan; none spoke Farsi; none had been in combat. Three participants recalled the event in their memoirs. Two of these accounts, by then-Prime Minister Paul Martin and Chief of Defence Staff Rick “Hell-ya” Hillier, are of little use.
The third man was Bill Graham, then defence minister. Graham’s account from page 373 of his autobiography rates among the most profound writing of any postwar Canadian politician. Faced with a life and death decision, Graham chose unwisely. He admits it with humility and candour. To read The Call Of The World is to sense a nagging conscience and sleepless nights. “It’s a cautionary tale that future governments might do well to heed,” he writes.
Blitz MPs On Censor Bill C-10
An internet advocacy group yesterday blitzed MPs with thousands of protest emails over a cabinet bill to censor YouTube. Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault said critics were confused: 'He lied to us and inserted a Trojan Horse regulatory power over all user audiovisual content.'
Complainers Take Time: CEO
A federal air passenger rights regulator in a confidential letter to the airline lobby complained hearings on travelers’ complaints were “time consuming,” and proposed to “minimize the number of complaints” formally reviewed by the Canadian Transportation Agency. CEO Scott Streiner wrote the letter as 19,000 passengers contacted his Agency for help after being denied cash refunds for prepaid tickets: "I recognize how challenging and unprecedented this period is for the members of the National Airlines Council."
Wrong Up To 13% Of Time
Taxpayers calling the Canada Revenue Agency may have a better than one in ten chance of getting bad advice, records show. The Agency has said it is not liable for costs incurred by tax filers who act on inaccurate information: "You're the big machine."
Was Oversubscribed By $1.6B
A federal loan program for small business has been oversubscribed by more than a billion, according to Department of Industry figures. Records show a quarter of applications for interest-free $60,000 loans were rejected, on average: "It was oversubscribed in the very first round."
Waited To Report IT Breach
Languages Commissioner Raymond Théberge waited nearly two weeks to notify internet users of a privacy breach at his office. Staff mistakenly disclosed the IP addresses of more than 1,500 people who filed complaints with Théberge over a two-year period: "I have a responsibility."



