Cabinet advisors yesterday questioned whether legalizing marijuana achieved what advocates promised five years ago. Legalization neither eliminated the black market nor protected children from unregulated marijuana use, wrote an Expert Panel: "Rates of cannabis use among youth in Canada remain high."
Warning On Tax File Security
Computer security at the Canada Revenue Agency remains poorly monitored years after hackers breached taxpayers’ accounts, says an internal audit. The Agency maintains electronic records on more than 27 million individual and corporate tax filers: "Did these attacks not demonstrate there was a total failure?"
Old Auto Safety Bill Enforced
The Department of Transport is finally enforcing an auto bill passed by Parliament in 2018 that grants regulators new powers to recall faulty cars. Millions of “unsafe vehicles” are on Canadian roads, by official estimate: "Yes, there is always room for improvement."
Charity Calls Israel “Sadistic”
A federal charity called Israel “sadistic” and “barbaric” after terrorist attacks in that country left 3,100 casualties, mostly Jews. Directors of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East include one former MP and a current Government of Canada manager: 'Charities may not support one or another political faction or prolong violence.'
Would Cut ‘Best Before’ Date
A decades-old federal law mandating labels on date-expired food is under review. The Department of Agriculture said it supports in principle the removal of “best before” dates as Canadians face rising food costs: "The government supports in principle this recommendation."
Taking ‘Anti-Racism Journey’
The Canadian Human Rights Commission says it has stopped mistreating Black employees but acknowledged “there is a long road ahead on our anti-racism journey.” Critics have demanded the entire management be fired for discrimination: "We do have some senior Black executives."
Big Electoral Change April 22
The next election will see fewer MPs in Toronto and northern Ontario and more in the Okanagan and suburban Alberta. Historic changes under the Electoral Boundaries Readjustment Act take effect April 22, 2024, according to a legal notice: "It is necessary."
Drop The Labels, CBC Told
The CBC should rethink news coverage that disparages cabinet critics as extreme or disreputable, warns the network Ombudsman. The advisory follows a 2021 attempt by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to act as a political fact checker: "When they do so they had better be right."
For 12 Years Of Thanksgiving
We are grateful this holiday to friends and subscribers as Blacklock's embarks on a 12th great year of independent, all-original Canadian journalism. On behalf of all our contributors, please accept our thanks. We're back tomorrow -- The Editor.
Poem: ‘A Place In November’
Poet S.M.G. Dupel writes: “A gun-metal sky hangs over the lake, which is oil-black and loud as it folds into itself again and again until it reaches the shore and my boots. Behind, town lights blink on…”
Book Review — Age Of Empires
For Canadians who recall when the U.S. won its wars and paid its bills, it’s now popular to consider America as a wheezing empire in decline, to which Professor Tanner Mirrlees replies, ha! Mirrlees’ Hearts and Mines is a bird’s-eye view of a U.S. cultural industrial complex so vast its reach is taken for granted. It is a very sad Third World village that has never heard of Mickey Mouse or Marlboro cigarettes.
“The United States’ cultural reach is unparalleled,” writes Mirrlees, an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology. “The U.S. culture industry’s global economic power and the near omnipresence of American cultural commodities – news programs, motion pictures, TV shows, video games and interactive digital content – are facts.”
Uproar Over Secret Nazi List
Cries of “fascists” yesterday rang out in the Commons as MPs pressed for release of a secret federal blacklist of 20 Nazi fugitives in Canada. Demands for disclosure of the 1985 list came as the Liberal chair of Parliament’s Canada-Ukraine Friendship Group expressed unease with disclosure: "I prefer not to speak to that."
Budget Officer Defends Data
Budget Officer Yves Giroux yesterday defended research indicating cabinet misled taxpayers on the recovery of green technology subsidies. “I don’t have a vested interest,” Giroux told the Commons industry committee: "As soon as we publish a report that sets the record straight there are accusations we have not understood the problem or have a bone to pick."
Says Hotel Loan’s Grotesque
Federal financing for energy refits of a luxury Toronto hotel is “grotesque,” says Conservative MP Leslyn Lewis (Haldimand-Norfolk, Ont.). The MP challenged the Minister of Housing to justify the funding when “Canadians are sleeping in garages.”
Sees Budget Going To Pieces
Parliament must curb deficit spending now or “pick up the pieces” later, former Bank of Canada governor David Dodge yesterday told the Senate banking committee. Canadians had no choice but to confront an “unpleasant” future, he said: "I mean, Canadians are pretty realistic."



