Target Gangs Like Terrorists

Cabinet under a private bill introduced yesterday would gain new powers to blacklist criminal gangs similar to terrorists. Current law enforcement is ineffective, said the sponsor of the bill: "Will the government support us?"

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Says Feds Omitted Fine Print

Cabinet’s pre-election proposal to issue $250 cheques to millions of tax filers yesterday was cast in doubt. New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh said he was not told of key details of the program before he expressed support: "It is a slap in the face."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Anti-Jewish Riot “Disgusting”

Attorney General Arif Virani yesterday said he was disgusted by anti-Semitic rioting in Montréal. One advocacy group asked that Virani vigorously pursue hate crimes prosecutions of street demonstrators targeting Jews: "Enough with the Hitler salutes in our streets."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

CBC Confirms $497,000 Club

Payments to CBC vice presidents are a half million each, CEO Catherine Tait yesterday disclosed at the Commons heritage committee. One Liberal MP defended the pay, saying executives were motivated by “love of country.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Counts On ‘Voluntary’ Leave

Foreigners who have no legal right to stay in Canada are expected to leave voluntarily, Immigration Minister Marc Miller said yesterday. The Commons immigration committee was told nearly five million temporary permits will expire over the next year: "That is what is expected."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Count This As Nat’l Defence

Cabinet includes millions spent on the Canadian Coast Guard as part of its NATO commitment for national defence, figures confirm. Costs were among $6.5 billion in non-military spending included in Canada’s NATO arithmetic: "We are on a clear path."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

MPs Liked Decriminalization

MPs by a vote of 210 to 117 have endorsed a recommendation to decriminalize possession of heroin, cocaine and all other illegal drugs nationwide. The result came with little comment during a flurry of Commons votes on committee reports: "We have reached the end of the road."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Heated Views OK Says Court

Heated debate “is what a free and democratic society does,” an Ontario judge has ruled in a ten-year legal dispute over political opinion. The key decision on free expression came in the case of 2014 commentaries by Jerry Agar of Radio CFRB Toronto: "Views may at times be expressed in colourful terms."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Outcry Over Minister’s Insult

Immigration Minister Marc Miller was denounced after describing an Independent MP’s immigrant employees as lazy and useless. MPs expressed astonishment at the personal insult: "They are lazy. They don’t get anything done."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Broadcasters Oppose Ad Ban

Television broadcasters rely on food advertising to offset part of the expense of their newsrooms, says the Canadian Association of Broadcasters. The trade group petitioned senators against a private Liberal bill to ban food ads targeting children: "When the ability to advertise with Canadian companies is constrained it directly impacts the ability for broadcasters to support essential democratic activities."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Can’t Say That In Parliament

Cabinet is dismissing complaints of wasteful spending as this year’s deficit approaches $50 billion or more. Conservative MP Corey Tochor (Saskatoon-University) provoked a formal protest for rough language after telling the Commons that cabinet was “pissing away taxpayers’ money.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Feds Counting The Homeless

A federal count on homeless people will be updated by Christmas, the first revision in two years, says the Department of Infrastructure. It follows a Budget Office report pointing to a steady increase in the number of homeless: "The next update is expected by late 2024."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Sunday Poem: “The Centre”

Poet W.N. Branson writes: “Snug against the Laurentians, Commerce and import flow out along the river. Older ways brush against myths older still…”

Review: Ilse’s War

The Second World War altered a quarter billion lives. The number of eyewitnesses dwindles. We are left with personal accounts of ordinary people who saw extraordinary things. Surviving The Gulag is one.

Ilse Johansen in postwar years worked as a school janitor and cruise ship stewardess in Vancouver. Friends recall she seemed friendly enough but could not bear to throw out even scraps of food. Johansen wrote her memoirs, translated here from the original German. Surviving the Gulag is like pulling a loose thread that slowly unravels a tightly-knit narrative leading to unexpected places.

Johansen at first glance is not a sympathetic character. She was a German nationalist with an office job in Romania and a Nazi membership pin. “She herself wore the uniform of the Nazi Party for her civilian duties as a secretary in Bucharest,” writes editor Heather Marshall of the University of Alberta.

Tax Perks Widen Budget Hole

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday outlined pre-election perks for taxpayers that open a budget hole worth $5 billion to $10 billion, figures show. The finance department declined comment on the impact on this year’s deficit that is already 17 percent over estimate: "That sounds like a trick."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)