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Sunday, April 30, 2023

Meat is crucial for human health, scientists warn

Meat is crucial for human health, UK scientists have warned, as they called for an end to the 'zealotry' pushing vegetarian and vegan diets.

Meat is crucial for human health, scientists warn  | The Telegraph - Sarah Knapton

April 29, 2023 - "Meat is crucial for human health, scientists have warned, as they called for an end to the 'zealotry' pushing vegetarian and vegan diets. 

"Dozens of experts were asked to look into the science behind claims that meat eating causes disease and is harmful for the planet in a special issue of Animal Frontiers. They warned that it is difficult to replace the nutritional content of meat, arguing that poorer communities with low meat intake often suffer from stunting, wasting and anaemia driven by a lack of vital nutrients and protein.

"In recent years, there has been a widespread societal push towards plant-based diets, with schemes such as Veganuary and meat-free Mondays encouraging the public away from meat. The major Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries and Risk Factor Study, published in The Lancet in 2020, also suggested that a diet high in red meat was responsible for 896,000 deaths worldwide, and was the fifth leading dietary risk factor.

"But researchers argue that unprocessed meat delivers most of the vitamin B12 intake in human diets, plays a major role in supplying retinol, omega-3 fatty acids and minerals such as iron and zinc, as well as important compounds for metabolism, such as taurine and creatine.

"In one paper published in the issue, experts found no good evidence to support red meat being dangerous below intakes of 75g per day, and argued that the link between red meat and disease vanished when part of a healthy diet, suggesting it was the rest of the diet that was fuelling health problems. Dr Alice Stanton, of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, one of the authors of the review, said: 

The peer-reviewed evidence published reaffirms that [the 2019 Global Burden of Disease Risk Factors Report] which claimed that consumption of even tiny amounts of red meat harms health is fatally scientifically flawed. In fact, removing fresh meat and dairy from diets would harm human health. Women, children, the elderly and low income would be particularly negatively impacted....

"The new edition includes a declaration signed by nearly 1,000 scientists across the globe arguing that livestock farming was too important to society to 'become the victim of zealotry'. The Dublin Declaration includes signatories from the universities of Cambridge, Edinburgh, Bristol, Belfast, Newcastle, Nottingham, Surrey as well as several scientists from Britain’s world-leading agricultural and farming university Harper Adams. 

"'Livestock-derived foods provide a variety of essential nutrients and other health-promoting compounds, many of which are lacking in diets even among those populations with higher incomes,' the declaration states. 'Well-resourced individuals may be able to achieve adequate diets while heavily restricting meat, dairy and eggs. However, this approach should not be recommended for general populations.' The researchers warned that those who need to eat animal products included young children, adolescents, pregnant and lactating women, women of reproductive age, older adults and the chronically ill....

"The intervention was welcomed by the National Farmers Union (NFU) who were this week promoting Great British Beef Week. Richard Findlay, the NFU livestock board chair, said: 'This peer-reviewed research confirms what we’ve always known – that red meat is a quality, nutritious protein that plays a critical role in a healthy, sustainable balanced diet.'"

Read more: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/04/29/vegan-diet-meat-scientists-british-beef-livestock-farming/

Read Dublin Declaration: https://academic.oup.com/af/article/13/2/10/7123469?searchresult=1 

Saturday, April 29, 2023

More labor unrest in store for Canada

As PSAC strike drags on, experts say Canadians should prep for more labour unrest | CBC News - Pete Evans:

April 26, 2023 - "As a strike by Canada's largest public sector union drags on, experts say Canadians should expect more and more labour unrest this year as workers use the sudden leverage to claw back the inflationary hit they took in the pandemic. 

"Last week, more than 150,000 civil servants represented by the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) walked off the job, slowing government services ranging from immigration, citizenship, passport, licensing and tax services to a glacial pace.... [T]he two sides remain far apart on the major issue that tends to bog down most labour disputes: compensation. The federal government has offered a nine per cent raise spread out over three years, a move that negotiators say would add $6,250 to the pocket of the average worker.

"The union, meanwhile, says the majority of its members make less than $70,000 a year, and is requesting a 13.5 per cent raise over the same time period. PSAC workers have been working without a contract since 2021, and the union says the cost of living in that time frame has risen by more than the pay bumps they're asking for....

"After plummeting in the early days of the pandemic due to reduced demand for goods and services, inflation came roaring back starting in 2021, peaking at more than eight per cent last summer. Policy makers at the Bank of Canada quickly hiked interest rates to slay the inflationary dragon, and with the rate having fallen by almost half from its peak, that strategy appears to be working.

"As recently as last week, however, central bank governor Tiff Macklem was warning that the battle isn't over, and urging restraint on demands for wage gains that threaten to bake-in inflation to come. But that request isn't resonating with workers.... Across the country and in various industries, more and more labour disputes are looming with compensation disputes at their heart. From Vancouver Symphony Orchestra stagehands to nurses in Ontario, and from WestJet pilots to flight attendants at that airline and others, it's a sentiment echoed by workers across the country right now.

"Flight attendants represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees staged demonstrations across Canada on Tuesday, with union members across the country telling CBC News they want an end to what they call rampant abuse of unpaid work in the airline industry.

"Larry Savage, a professor of labour studies at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ont., says the current era of high inflation has emboldened workers to seek solutions for problems that predated the sea change to working life that COVID-19 brought about.... Union confidence in pushing for job actions typically come at a time when the job market is tight, Savage notes, and that's certainly an apt description of the situation right now, as Canada's official jobless rate currently sits at five per cent, barely above the all-time low of 4.9 per cent set last summer.

"Instead of trying to shed excess workers, in the aggregate there's a war for talent right now, with many employers reporting they can't find enough staff to meet their demand. That's an ideal scenario for workers to fight for concessions, and unions are doing exactly that, Savage says — and not only for their own benefit. 'If these workers are able to win their bargaining demands, I think we'll see similar demands from public servants at the provincial and the municipal level and in the private sector as well,' he said. 'Whenever a union has a win at the bargaining table, that's contagious.'

"Doug Porter, an economist with Bank of Montreal, says all eyes are on the PSAC dispute right now, because the outcome is likely to impact a slew of other negotiations down the line. 'The very public wage negotiations come at an incredibly delicate time for the inflation backdrop, potentially setting the tone for a vast array of settlements elsewhere,' he said in a note to clients last week. 'A wave of wage settlements in the zone of four per cent or higher across the economy ... could put a hard floor under inflation and make the Bank of Canada's job of getting back to target that much more difficult.' 

Read more: https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/psac-strike-labour-1.6821590

"Canada Federal Workers on Strike," Immigration and Migration, April 21, 2023: 



Friday, April 28, 2023

Gov't workers close Burlington Canal Lift Bridge

Striking Canadian federal government workers shut down the Burlington Canal Lift Bridge, stopping bridge traffic and ships trying to enter or leave Hamilton Harbour.  

Eric Marshall, Burlington Canak Lift Bridge, 2011. CC BY 3.0, Wikimedia Commons


April 27, 2023 - "The Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) strike, one of Canada’s largest labour disruptions, is now on its ninth day.... And strike action is reportedly ramping up. A tweet from a Global News reporter claimed organizers are 'escalating' actions including blocking access to passport offices, closing waterways and reducing access at borders.

"The Burlington Canal Lift Bridge is one of the waterway access points named and a PSAC spokesperson confirmed strikers were blocking access today (April 27) and yesterday. 'This morning our striking members picketed the Canal, as they did yesterday as well. Shutting it down and delaying ships,' Lino Vieira, a PSAC Ontario Political communications officer said in an email to intheHammer. 

"The vertical lift bridge ... allows vessels to enter and exit from Hamilton Harbour into Lake Ontario.

"It appears there is no end in sight for the strike. The Liberal government is showing no hints it will end the strike by legislating 155,000 federal civil servants back to work. The NDP say they will not support back-to-work legislation, while the Conservatives have not weighed in on the matter.

"The government is warning the strike is causing backlogs for immigration and passport applications, as well as massive Canada Revenue Agency slowdowns at the height of tax season."

Read more: https://www.insauga.com/strikers-close-burlington-canal-lift-bridge-delaying-ship-access-to-hamilton-harbour

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Citizens Inquiry on pandemic crossing Canada

The National Citizens Inquiry on Covid-19 has been holding hearings across Canada to little media attention so far. 

The amazing, unheralded National Citizens Inquiry on COVID-19 | Western Standard - Lee Harding: 

April 25, 2023 - "A most amazing thing is happening in Canada, where scant domestic media coverage is inversely related to its significance: the National Citizens Inquiry on COVID-19.... TNCI hearings began in Truro, NS, then went to Toronto. They even got a blip of CBC coverage in Winnipeg two weeks ago. Seating was sold out for some sessions in Saskatoon last week. And on Wednesday, NCI hearings begin in Red Deer.

"The NCI is the brainchild of Preston Manning [see video], who continues to make major contributions to Canadian public life that rival that of any young person. Top-notch lawyers and commissioners dedicated their time. Having been there, allow me to say the same for the volunteers.... [T]he NCI is setting an example many other countries will follow. This is the inquiry government should have, however, none but Alberta’s will. Those who mishandled the pandemic have no incentive to facilitate a recap of their misdeeds. 

"Therefore, it falls to the people to do what public officials will not. The inquiry website explains: 'The NCI’s purpose is to listen, to learn, and to recommend. What went right? What went wrong? How can Canadians and our governments better react to national crises in the future in a manner that balances the interests of all members of our society?'

"Truths shared at the NCI were sobering. There are few good news stories to be found in a pandemic that was made worse by those who handled it. Most of the inquiry is not about suffering from the virus itself, but from the government and a propagandized public. Here lies the real tragedy of the past three years. 

"The ugliness of the pandemic response took many forms. Expert testimony was given on how the vaccines were inadequately tested and had poor quality control. The painful experiences of the vaccine injured and those who grieve them have also been welcomed by the NCI. Other witness testimony relates to compounded suffering of those who wouldn’t or couldn’t mask when they went to hospital and services they were denied. The unvaccinated testified on the social ostracism they received. Their stance was ridiculed by friends and family members who called them selfish. Not in all circumstances have these relationships been reconciled. Some reported long-term psychological effects from their pandemic experience..... Distrust of the medical profession has become acute....

"Following Day 2 of the NCI in Saskatoon, I told NCI commissioner Bernard Massie I appreciated the endurance he and his colleagues showed to bear such awful truth day after day. He reminded me that the NCI brought them healing because victims have finally been given a platform to be heard. In Saskatoon, participating lawyer Shawn Buckley lamented the NCI had not received much media coverage. I've written three articles on the NCI (this is the fourth), and also written about some of its witnesses in the past. However, there is room for more....

"The NCI will host hearings at the Baymont by Wyndham in Red Deer from 9 am to 5 pm, April 26 to 28. Tickets for live attendance are available. Live coverage streams on the NCI website, Twitter, Rumble, YouTube, and Facebook. Live is best, because Big Tech still can’t handle the truth. An April 24 evening round table discussion with Dr. Mark Trozzi and embalmers has already been removed for violating YouTube’s terms of service."

Read more:  https://www.westernstandard.news/opinion/harding-the-amazing-unheralded-national-citizens-inquiry-on-covid-19/article_fe76b91c-e3b4-11ed-aa9c-8b1b296c0b9e.html


"Citizen-Led Inquiry Into Canada’s Pandemic Response with Guest Preston Manning," Faytene Show, January 6, 2023:

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Striking gov't workers shut down 3 Canadian ports

[Updated April 27, 2023]

Striking public servants block access to government buildings and key infrastructure | CP24 - Cindy Tran & Laura Osman, Canadian Press:

April 25, 2023 - "Federal ministers said Tuesday they are monitoring for blockades of critical roads and infrastructure as striking federal workers ... ramp[ed] up their picket efforts by disrupting traffic and limiting access to office buildings in downtown Ottawa. More than 150,000 federal public servants with the Public Service Alliance of Canada were on strike for the seventh straight day as their union representatives continued to negotiate with the government for a bigger wage increase and more flexibility to work remotely.

"Around the National Capital Region, hundreds of striking workers made their presence felt and heard, circling buildings, chanting through megaphones and blasting music throughout the morning. Hundreds of public servants marched across the Portage Bridge between Ottawa and Gatineau, Que., where some of the biggest federal buildings are located, holding up traffic for a short period Tuesday morning. Outside the Prime Minister's Office building and the Treasury Board headquarters a few blocks away, strikers limited entry to just one person every five minutes.

"The escalation in the strike activity comes after a promise by union president Chris Aylward that picket lines would move to more 'strategic locations,' including ports of entry where the strike would have a greater economic impact. PSAC said on Monday they 'shut down' the ports in Montreal, Vancouver and St. John's. 

"Federal ministers meeting in Ottawa for the "weekly cabinet meeting said they were keeping an eye out for blockades at critical infrastructure.... Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said he has been in contact with ports and airports to make sure they have contingency plans in place....

"Federal and provincial governments are more aware than ever about how vulnerable and critical major roadways and ports of entry are after last year's 'Freedom Convoy,' said Ambarish Chandra, an associate professor of economics at the University of Toronto. Demonstrators took over major roads in downtown Ottawa for three weeks and blockaded several border crossings for days in February 2022 to protest vaccine mandates and the federal government. The protest precipitated the first use of the federal Emergencies Act.... [F]ederal workers' decision to target points of critical infrastructure could inspire copycat events, said Chandra.."

Read more: https://www.cp24.com/news/striking-public-servants-block-access-to-government-buildings-and-key-infrastructure-1.6370885

April 25, 2023 - "The Public Service Alliance of Canada’s strike continues, and has escalated into blocks of government buildings and other infrastructure. Union president Chris Aylward even said striking public servants may go to ports of entry to maximize the economic impact.... In spite of this, no one in the federal government is talking about [using] the Emergencies Act, True North’s Andrew Lawton points out. Canadian Taxpayers Federation federal director Franco Terrazzano joins to talk about the latest strike news."

Read more: https://tnc.news/2023/04/25/alshow-public-servants-strike/

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

NY governor 'test markets' ban on cigarette sales

Governor Kathy Hochul's administration is gauging support for a ban on cigarette sales in New York state. 

NY Gov. Kathy Hochul ‘test-marketing’ a ban on all tobacco sales | New York Post - Rich Calder:

April 22, 2023 - "The ...  Hochul administration is quietly trying to fire up support for a complete ban on the sale of tobacco products in New York, The Post has learned. The state Health Department commissioned a new survey aimed at gauging support for an all-out prohibition — despite Gov. Hochul’s failure to secure support from state legislators to include a ban on menthol cigarettes and other flavored tobacco products in the yet-to-be-approved state budget.

"'What is your opinion about a policy that would end the sale of all tobacco products in New York within 10 years?' were among the questions asked last week in the 'New York Local Opinion Leaders Survey,' examined by the Post. Another asks: 'What is your opinion about a policy that would ban the sale of all tobacco products to those born after a certain date? For example, those born after the year 2010 or later would never be sold tobacco.'

"The poll also solicited input on whether there’s backing for other tobacco-related measures, including capping the number of retailers who can sell 'products in a community' and prohibiting its sales near schools.

"The survey, conducted by nonprofit research organization RTI International, was distributed to 'community leaders' statewide, including 'county legislators and county directors of public health,' according to an April 13 memo to prospective participants....

"Hochul’s own budget proposal noted banning flavored tobacco products [see video] would cost the state $133 million in lost tax revenues this fiscal year, which began April 1.

"It’s obvious the Health Department is 'test marketing' potential new smoking policies, and such surveys are not typically funded by taxpayers but through private companies, think tanks, or political campaigns, an Albany insider said.... 'And I’ve never seen anything like this where [the state] uses this kind of focus grouping, alliance building, momentum building.'

"Kent Sopris, president of the New York Association of Convenience Store Owners, predicted a ban would put many stores out of business but wouldn’t stop tobacco use because smokers would just buy cigarettes out of state, online, or illegally on the black market. 'I think it would be bizarre for the state to create another category of illegal product that could lead to more conflict between law enforcement and the community,' he said."  

Read more: https://nypost.com/2023/04/22/kathy-hochul-test-marketing-ban-on-all-ny-tobacco-sales/

"The possible banning of menthol cigarettes in New York," WGRZ-TV, February 16, 2023:

Monday, April 24, 2023

Liberals reveal cost of VW subsidy: $13 Billion

After weeks of stonewalling, the federal Liberals have revealed the amount of the subsidy they promised Volkswagen to build an EV battery 'gigafactory' in St. Thomas, Ontario: $13 billion, the largest single corporate welfare payout since the building of the Canadian Pacific Railroad.    

Billions in secret subsidies for Volkswagen | Western Standard - Christopher Oldcorn: 

Mar 31, 2023 - "Volkswagen received secret subsidies approved by the Department of Industry for a battery plant in Ontario.... According to Blacklock’s Reporter, terms of federal concessions were not disclosed....

"'All Canadians are 'celebrating the fact Volkswagen chose St. Thomas,' Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters on March 22. 'What it says to me, to the whole world, is Canada can win and as Canadians, we can win big at a time where obviously there is a lot of competition for these investments,' Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne told reporters on March 21. 'When are we going to found out how much we had to give?' a reporter asked. 'We are going to do that in due course,' replied Champagne."
Read more: https://www.westernstandard.news/business/billions-in-secret-subsidies-for-volkswagen/article_675236bc-cfdf-11ed-aa5a-73486cd50480.html

BEETLE MANIA: Liberals won’t disclose secret Volkswagen subsidies, worth up to $15 billion | Western Standard - Christopher Oldcorn:

April 19, 2023 - "The Commons Industry committee requested Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne provide information regarding new federal subsidies for Volkswagen, which are believed to be worth up to $15 billion.... 'Two things: number of jobs, amount of money,' said Conservative MP Brad Vis (Mission-Matsqui, BC). 'I am not asking for anything inappropriate. If the government stands by their investment, they’ll give us the numbers'...  The committee on March 30 approved a motion sponsored by Vis that the cabinet surrender terms of the contract to build a subsidized battery plant in St. Thomas, ON. by 2027.... 

"According to Blacklock’s Reporter, Champagne was to disclose the terms on Monday. He did not. 'The parliamentary secretary promised me he would have it here today,” said Vis. 'He didn’t follow up with an email or anything or say, "Hey, we need a little bit more time. We’re redacting certain information." Not a peep'... The Industry committee voted unanimously that Champagne surrender the contract to MPs and taxpayers by April 24."
Read more: https://www.westernstandard.news/business/beetle-mania-liberals-won-t-disclose-secret-volkswagen-subsidies-worth-up-to-15-billion/article_c48a1222-dea4-11ed-a2e3-fb9dadcd4896.html

VW's $13B is biggest corporate welfare payout in modern Canadian history | National Post - Tristan Hopper:

April 21, 2023 - "After weeks of both the Ontario and federal governments sidestepping questions about how much they paid Volkswagen to open a battery factory in St. Thomas, Ont., the final figure was just obtained by Bloomberg News: The German carmaker will be getting $13 billion in grants and subsidies over the next 10 years. It is, quite simply, the largest single payout of corporate welfare since the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railroad.

"The next leading contender would be Bombardier, which received about $4 billion in government subsidies between 1966 and 2017. But the Montreal-based aerospace firm racked up the total through dozens of tax credits, interest-free loans and subsidies spread out over five decades. Volkswagen will not only receive a payout equivalent to as much as triple Bombardier’s lifetime total, but it will receive it in one go....

"In March, the governments of both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Doug Ford offered high praise to Volkswagen’s 'vote of confidence' in choosing to build a 'gigafactory' for EV batteries in St. Thomas, Ont.... Both levels of government refused to confirm at the time whether any public money had incentivized the deal, even though Volkswagen has openly declared its intention to locate the factory wherever it could find the best subsidy offer.... At the time, VW calculated that a battery gigafactory in the United States could easily yield up to US$10 billion in subsidies....

"Bloomberg revealed the $13 billion figure on Thursday, along with a quote by industry minister François-Philippe Champagne saying the sum was necessary to seize 'generational opportunities.' When factoring in the exchange rate, the $13 billion offered by Canada effectively matches the U.S. promise of US$10 billion, which came about through the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act, a package of more than $369 billion in green technology subsidies."
Read more: https://nationalpost.com/opinion/volkswagen-13-billion-biggest-corporate-welfare-payout-in-modern-canadian-history

"Canada offers $13B in subsidies for Volkswagen battery plant," CBC News, April 21, 2023:

Sunday, April 23, 2023

Canadians want to keep working from home

It's not just the federal government employees; more than a third of Canadians working from home do not want to return to the job site.

Canadian employers facing battle to bring workers back into the office } Western Standard - Shay Bottomley:

April 22, 2023 - "Canadian employers continue to face an uphill battle to get employees back into the office, according to a new study by the Angus Reid Institute. The research from the non-profit institute comes after the federal government recently announced a mandatory return to the office for all public servants.

"Among those who currently work from home at least some of the time, which comprises three-quarters of those surveyed, 36% said they’d return to the office full-time with no issues if they were asked to do so. However, a similar proportion (31%) said they would return, but consider switching jobs, with 21% likely to hand their notice in should they be ordered back into the office.

"Remote working may have initially been seen as a temporary measure at the beginning of the pandemic, but millions remain working from home, at least temporarily, three years on.

"Only half [of] those who work from home said they enjoy either good or great connections to their colleagues, compared to 84% of on-site employees. Nevertheless, 81% of remote workers provided a positive response when questioned on their work-life balance, compared to just 54% of those who work on location. Importantly, neither work arrangement appears to be more advantageous in terms of productivity, with nearly the same proportion of on-site workers (77%) saying they are as productive as remote workers (81%).

"The data will not make decisions easy for employers whether to order their staff back into the office in Canada’s employee-favoured labour market.

"The Angus Reid Institute conducted an online survey from Feb. 9-12, 2023 among a representative randomized sample of 1,622 Canadian adults who are members of Angus Reid Forum. For comparison purposes only, a probability sample of this size would carry a margin of error of +/- two percentage points, 19 times out of 20. Discrepancies in or between totals are due to rounding."

Read more: https://www.westernstandard.news/alberta/canadian-employers-facing-battle-to-bring-workers-back-into-the-office/article_5762e170-dd4a-11ed-89a0-2f8b0178b67c.html

"Companies forcing return to office a dealbreaker for some, survey suggests," CBC News, March 23, 2022:

Saturday, April 22, 2023

How "impartial and independent" is CBC?

CBC’s recent spat with Twitter over a 'government funded media' label has many Canadians paying attention to the broadcaster’s political bias.

Seven times the CBC showed they were anything but “impartial and independent” | True North - - Cosmin Dzsurdzsa

April 21, 2023 - "CBC’s recent spat with Twitter over a 'government funded media' label [see video] has many Canadians paying attention to the broadcaster’s political bias. True North has compiled seven times the CBC’s bias against conservative politicians and causes was on full display in recent years.

  • A prime example of the state broadcaster’s left-wing bias and attempt to silence its critics on the right was when the CBC decided to sue the Conservative Party during the 2019 election. The CBC alleged that the party’s use of excerpts from its programs infringed on the so-called ‘moral rights’ of two of its employees.... Two years ago, a federal court dismissed the CBC’s frivolous lawsuit. Federal Court Justice Michael Phelan ruled that the Conservative Party of Canada (CPC) did not violate CBC’s copyright when it used excerpts from the broadcaster’s footage in an online ad and tweets.... 'There was no evidence presented that a broadcaster’s segment disclosed in a partisan setting reflected adversely on the broadcaster,' ruled Phelan....
  • "In Jan. 2022, ... [d]uring a Power & Politics segment, a CBC anchor baselessly suggested that Russia was involved in organizing the Freedom Convoy.... 'Given Canada’s support of Ukraine in this current crisis with Russia, I don’t know if it is far-fetched to ask, but there is concern that Russian actors could be continuing to fuel things as this protest grows, perhaps even instigating it from the outside?' asked Nil Köksal.... [T]he CBC Ombudsman called out their bias saying ... 'It was not clear to viewers whether anyone was offering evidence that Russia was involved in the convoy – or why they would have such a concern. Asking the question in this way left room for people to surmise that CBC believed such evidence existed\....
  • "The CBC gave more coverage to American Democrat vice-presidential nominee Kamala Harris as the “first woman of colour to compete on a major party’s presidential ticket” thanthey did the Canadian Conservative leadership candidate Leslyn Lewis – despite Lewis being the first black woman to run to lead the party. According to a True North review of articles from the time, Harris received 500% more headlines from the CBC mentioning her name than Lewis.... By law, the CBC is required to 'be predominantly and distinctively Canadian, reflect Canada and its regions to national and regional audiences, while serving the special needs of those regions.'
  • "Also during the 2020 Conservative leadership race, the CBC was caught ... selectively editing candidate Erin O’Toole’s comments on defunding the public broadcaster. During the interview on CBC’s The House, guest host David Cochrane asked O’Toole about his plan to defund the outlet. His response and the question were entirely removed from the interview that was broadcast across Canada despite not removing any other portion of the interview.... [T]he CBC claimed they edited that part of the interview 'for time'.... 
  • "At the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, the CBC failed to report on important conflicts of interest when it came to the push for vaccination of 5-11-year-olds. The CBC and other media outlets have failed to disclose nearly $2 million in funding from Pfizer Pharmaceuticals received by pediatrician Dr. Jim Kellner who was cited as an expert in articles by the broadcaster.... A search on the outlet’s website turned up Kellner’s name over 41 times.... 
  • "Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took the drastic measure of triggering the Emergencies Act to quash the Freedom Convoy last year based on misleading and biased analysis from the CBC.... 'The importance of this measure is highlighted by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s recent reporting about the crowdfunding website, GiveSendGo.com, which indicated that the majority of the donations to the protests were made by donors outside of Canada,' claimed evidence submitted by the federal government. Testimony by GiveSendGo executives and debunked CBC’s claims that a majority of the donations came from outside of Canada, saying that 63% of the donations were from Canadian sources....
  • "CBC News’ political bias came through most recently when it refused to retract its story that accuses Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s office of meddling with Crown prosecutors over Coutts border blockades cases. Although it printed the story based on anonymous sources and emails it had not seen, the CBC has stuck by the article, risking a lawsuit with Smith. Not only has Smith called the article “defamatory,” [but] its ...claims were debunked by the civil service and Crown prosecutors."

Read more: https://tnc.news/2023/04/21/seven-times-the-cbcs-bias-was-on-full-display/

Twitter removes 'government-funded media' tags, blue checks , CBC News, April 22, 2023:

Friday, April 21, 2023

Ex-student VP settles defamation suit with McGill

Declan McCool, who had to resign as vice-president of McGill University's Students' Society after being anonymously accused of secual assault and convicted by an internal tribunal, has successfully settled his $1 million defamation suit against McGill and 10 other defendants.

D. Benjamin Miller, Arts Building, McGill University, 2022. Public domain, Wikimedia Commons.

Former McGill student politician satisfied with defamation settlement | Montreal Gazette - Michelle Lalonde:

Apr 0, 2023 - "Declan McCool, the former vice-president of the Students’ Society of McGill University who successfully appealed a sexual assault complaint by a fellow student, has reached an out-of-court settlement in his defamation suit against his accuser and 10 other defendants. In a suit launched in the fall of 2020, McCool claimed $1.5 million — later reduced to $1 million — for lost income, pain, suffering and damage to his reputation due to the actions or inactions of his accuser, McGill University, the Engineering Undergraduate Society of McGill University (EUS), the Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU), three SSMU executives, the publisher of the McGill Daily newspaper and three of its editors.

"The amount of the settlement and the details of its negotiation remain confidential, but McCool’s lawyer, Christopher Spiteri, said the matter has been settled to the satisfaction of his client.... Lawyers for McCool’s accuser and for the other defendants declined to comment on the settlement when contacted by the Montreal Gazette last week. Some did, however, issue statements to McCool as part of the settlement....

"In February 2020, McCool, then 24, was acclaimed to the position of VP internal with the SSMU. The job would have paid $35,000 for the term and was to start officially in June. But on March 12, 2020, McCool learned a fellow student had filed an anonymous complaint of sexual violence against him under the SSMU’s then-new All-Faculty Involvement Restriction Policy (IRP). The policy enables the SSMU and student associations to restrict the participation in student events of a person who is found, on a balance of probabilities, to have engaged in discrimination, harassment, violence and/or improper conduct. Although both McCool and his accuser were arts students, the complaint was filed with the Engineering Undergraduate Society.... The EUS appointed four engineering students to investigate the complaint against McCool. On April 2, McCool was informed that the committee had concluded there was a greater than 51 per cent chance that the alleged sexual violence had occurred. As a sanction, he was barred from events organized by student associations where alcohol was served.

"Both McCool and his accuser were bound by confidentiality rules outlined in the IRP, but eight hours after McCool was informed of the decision, an article was published in the McGill Daily revealing the decision against him. The article included an anonymous statement from the complainant calling upon McCool to resign as SSMU VP internal-elect, and on the SSMU to 'release a statement that condemns Declan McCool’s actions and acknowledges the continued prevalence of sexual and gendered violence at McGill.' On April 15, the newspaper published another statement by the anonymous complainant, in which she addressed McCool directly, calling him 'a perpetrator of gendered and sexual violence.' Again, she revealed no details of the allegations. McCool maintains the newspaper did not contact him for comment....

"McCool launched an appeal of the EUS committee decision on April 22. While that appeal was underway, the SSMU suspended him from his position without pay and took steps to have him removed from the position. Three SSMU executive members published a joint statement denouncing McCool and made comments on social media 'portraying him as a sexual predator,' according to the defamation claim. McCool had to step down from the McGill men’s rowing crew after the McGill men’s rowing coach advised other crew members to cut ties with him, and he was ousted from his fraternity housing.

"The EUS appointed an independent investigator, lawyer Anaïs Lacroix, to conduct the appeal.... It was during this appeal process, more than three months after the EUS committee had convicted him, that McCool was informed of the details of the allegations against him. According to Lacroix’s report, McCool and his accuser had met for drinks on Feb. 25, just weeks after he was acclaimed VP, at an off-campus bar. They later went to McCool’s fraternity room, where they had sex that night and again on the morning of Feb. 26.... The complainant alleged McCool did not receive continuous consent from her, and that he choked her, pulled her hair and pinned her down. She alleged she was unable to consent to sexual activity because of her level of intoxication. Since the case did not go to court, none of those accusations have been proved or disproved.... 

"But Lacroix’s report references screenshots of troubling text messages that the complainant sent to friends on the night of her encounter with McCool, and in the weeks following. At 1:30 a.m. on Feb. 26, the complainant texted friends to say she was considering having sex with either McCool or another SSMU executive. 'Declan it is,' the complainant texted about an hour later. When her friend asked her whether she had followed through, the complainant responded with a photo of a naked McCool, sleeping in bed beside her, according to evidence submitted in the defamation suit. 

"The text messages also revealed that the complainant may have had a motive to accuse McCool, Lacroix wrote.... 'Witness testimony and evidence suggest that the complainant had expressed a desire to run for SSMU VP internal — the position  that Mr. McCool was elected to'.... Lacroix granted the appeal, concluding that on the balance of probabilities and according to the evidence, McCool did not commit sexual violence against the complainant nor engage in improper conduct, the two were likely equally inebriated and the complainant communicated her consent affirmatively and continuously to McCool.

"McCool was initially given only a two-page summary of Lacroix’s report. He had to go to court to get access to the full report — granted in October 2021 — and again to have it unsealed so that it could be used in his defamation suit. In her Oct. 28, 2022 decision to unseal the report, Superior Court Judge Marie-Christine Hivon wrote: 'The sealing of the entire Lacroix decision constitutes a serious obstacle in (McCool’s) attempt to restore the truth and his reputation, in full view of everyone, and this, considering that Lacroix concludes that the sexual assault charges appear to be unfounded, according to the burden of proof that applies to his case.' 

"The McGill Daily did not report — until Monday in its publisher’s statement — that McCool won his appeal of the EUS sanction back in August 2020, nor did it report relevant evidence revealed in the Lacroix report, which has been public since October 2022."

Read more: https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/former-mcgill-student-politician-satisfied-with-defamation-settlement

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Cannabis users have gun rights, US judges rule

Two U.S. federal District Court judges have ruled that the national ban on gun possession by cannabis users violates the Second Amendment of the Constitution.

Another Federal Judge Rejects the DOJ's Argument That Cannabis Consumers Have No Second Amendment Rights | Reason = Jacpb Sullm:

April 11, 2023 - "A federal judge in Texas recently agreed with a federal judge in Oklahoma that the national ban on gun possession by cannabis consumers violates the Second Amendment. Kathleen Cardone, a judge on the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, also concluded that the federal ban on transferring firearms to an 'unlawful user' of a 'controlled substance,' first imposed by the Gun Control Act of 1968, is unconstitutional. The case involves Paola Connelly, who was charged with illegal possession of firearms under 18 USC 922(g)(3) after El Paso police found marijuana and guns in her home while responding to a domestic disturbance in December 2021.... Both gun offenses are punishable by up to 15 years in prison....

"Cardone held that Connelly's Second Amendment claims were not precluded by prior decisions in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, which includes Texas, upheld Section 922(g)(3). Those decisions, she noted, preceded the Supreme Court's June 2022 ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen.... Last February in United States v. Rahimi, the 5th Circuit concluded that Bruen required it to reconsider decisions upholding the federal ban on gun possession by people subject to domestic violence restraining orders. By the same logic, Cardone says in an order published last week, the 5th Circuit's precedents regarding Section 922(g)(3) are no longer binding.

"[T]he Biden administration argued that the gun ban for marijuana users meets the Bruen test because it is 'relevantly similar' to colonial and state laws forbidding people to publicly use or carry guns while intoxicated. Like U.S. District Judge Patrick Wyrick, who deemed that ban unconstitutional in an Oklahoma case last February [see video], Cardone was unpersuaded by that analogy.... A 1655 Virginia law, for example, prohibited 'shoot[ing] any gunns at drinkeing (marriages and ffuneralls onely excepted)'... State laws enacted in the 19th century likewise were aimed at people who publicly carried or fired guns when they were drunk. By contrast, Section 922(g)(3) covers all cannabis consumers, including those who live in states that have legalized marijuana, even when they are not intoxicated, and it applies to private as well as public possession.... 

"The government also argued that Section 922(g)(3) is consistent with a purported tradition of disarming 'unvirtuous' people.... Cardone ... notes colonial-era jurist William Blackstone's distinction between 'public and private vices': While the former are subject to the 'punishments of human tribunals,' he said, the latter are subject only to 'eternal justice.' Blackstone explicitly applied that distinction to drunkenness. 'Connelly's alleged drug use more resembles private drinking than public drunkenness, casting doubt on the idea that history supports criminalizing or disarming her for this behavior,' Cardone writes....

"Cardone was equally unimpressed by the government's argument that Connelly was disqualified from owning guns because she was not 'law-abiding'.... [M]arijuana use ... is a nonviolent misdemeanor, and 'no one even today reads [Second Amendment history] to support the disarmament of literally all criminals, even nonviolent misdemeanants'....  Cardone is quoting a 2019 dissent that Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit. Barrett argued that the federal ban on gun possession by people with nonviolent felony records sweeps too broadly. In making that case, she took it for granted that a nonviolent misdemeanor is not nough to justify depriving someone of his Second Amendment rights....

"Cardone also notes that Section 922(g)(3), unlike restrictions that hinge on a conviction or a judicial order, deprives people of their Second Amendment rights 'without a hearing or any preliminary showing from the Government.' They 'must choose to either stop their marijuana use, forgo possession of a firearm, or ... face up to fifteen years in federal prison'....

"[C]ases challenging the constitutionality of Section 922(g)(3) will soon be considered by three federal appeals courts: the 5th Circuit, the 10th Circuit, and the 11th Circuit. Assuming they reach different conclusions, the Supreme Court is apt to intervene, decisively settling the question of whether the right to keep and bear arms includes an exception for people who dare to consume a psychoactive substance that legislators deemed intolerable more than two centuries after the Second Amendment was ratified."

Read more: https://reason.com/2023/04/11/another-federal-judge-rejects-the-dojs-argument-that-cannabis-consumers-have-no-second-amendment-rights/ 

New Gun Law Allows Marijuana Users to Legally Own Guns | USCCA, February 7, 2023:

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Canada's Supreme Court ducked Cambie case

Canada's Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal of the Cambie case, a lawsuit over whether Canadians have a constitutional right to purchase health care outside their provincial gov't-run system.

Supreme Court can't be bothered to fix health care chaos it created | National Post:

April 15, 2023 - "Over the years, the Supreme Court of Canada has positioned itself as a staunch defender of rights Canadians didn’t even know they had. From abortion to prostitution to euthanasia, the court has shown a willingness ... to upend existing legal frameworks enacted by democratically elected legislatures based on a selective interpretation of the charter. Perhaps, then, it should be seen as a breath of fresh air that, late last week, the court declined to hear the appeal of a case arguing that access to private health services should be read into the charter’s Sec. 7 guarantee of the right to 'life, liberty and security of the person.' But it clearly highlights the type of cases the court is willing to take a bold stand on, and those that it’s more than happy to duck....

"We now live in a country where, if the substandard medicare system has left you in pain and suffering, you have a right to opt out by getting a doctor to pump your veins full of poison and end your life, but have no right to pay for the level of care you so desperately need. More importantly, in terms of legal consistency, we find ourselves in a situation in which the court has said that unnecessarily long wait times infringe the rights of Quebecers, but not those living in the rest of Canada.

"In its 2005 decision in Chaoulli v Quebec, the court ruled that the province’s ban on private health insurance for medically necessary services violated the Quebec charter’s guarantee to the “right to life, and to personal security, inviolability and freedom.” But the court could not agree on whether that extended to people outside La belle province because the [Canadian] charter’s Sec. 7 guarantee can be deprived 'in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice,' or by limits that can be 'demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society'.... 

"That contradiction has hung over the country for the past 18 years — 14 of which were spent by Dr. Brian Day, owner of Vancouver’s Cambie Surgery Centre, fighting to get some clarity. By refusing to hear Day’s appeal, the Supreme Court shirked its responsibility to sort out whether there really is a difference in law between Quebec and the other provinces. It also gave its de facto blessing to the idea that individual rights can be taken away, even if doing so causes demonstrable harms. Last summer, the British Columbia Court of Appeal declined to overturn lower court rulings in the case of Cambie Surgeries Corporation v British Columbia, but did so in such a roundabout and nonsensical way that it was almost begging for the country’s highest court to weigh in.

"At the initial trial, the court heard from numerous patients who had suffered poor health outcomes because they were forced to wait too long for medically necessary services. It was presented with a wealth of evidence showing that medical wait times were much longer in Canada than most other developed countries, and that the private surgery centres operating in B.C. had not caused harm to the public system. But these arguments were summarily dismissed.

"The Court of Appeal’s majority opinion chastised the trial judge for minimizing the harms caused by excessive wait times and failing to acknowledge that restrictions on paying to receive faster care can lead to death. This, the court agreed, is a violation of the charter’s guarantees of life and security of person....

"[N]onetheless [the court] ruled that such restrictions were in keeping with the principles of fundamental justice. To 'address the question as a matter of fundamental justice, for society as a whole,' the court made an abstract philosophical argument about what type of system people would choose if they had no idea what their lot in life would be and whether they would have the ability to pay. Which was odd, given that we can look to virtually any other advanced country to see how public and private health systems can coexist and thrive. And because we know that our system has merely limited access to private care to the ultra-rich, who can afford to travel to, and pay for care in, the United States....

"When the Supreme Court declines to hear an appeal, it usually means the lower court’s opinion becomes settled law. But in this case, we have a point of law that the Supreme Court itself could not agree on in 2005.... If ever there was a legal question calling out for a firm resolution from the highest court in the land, this is it."

Read more: https://nationalpost.com/opinion/np-view-supreme-court-cant-be-bothered-to-fix-health-care-chaos-it-created

Canadian healthcare is failing - and the courts are making it worse, Canadian Constitution Foundation, April 17, 2023:

Monday, April 17, 2023

Provincial gov'ts ending hospital mask mandates

Most Canadian provincial governments have ended their facemask mandates for hospitals.  

Why mask mandates are lifting in hospitals across Canada | CBC News - Adam Miller: 

April 15, 2023 - "Mask mandates are lifting in hospitals, long-term care homes and other health-care facilities across the country, marking an end to some of the last remaining public health restrictions against COVID-19 in Canada. British Columbia and Saskatchewan are the latest provinces to lift universal mask mandates in health-care settings, while most other provinces have either previously removed them, left them up to individual hospitals to decide, or will likely soon follow suit....

"'Clearly masks are important in health-care settings, we've used them always, and I've been a big supporter of mask wearing when it's appropriate,' Dr. Bonnie Henry, B.C. provincial health officer and chair of the council of chief medical officers of health, told CBC News. 'Nobody is telling you not to wear a mask, what we're saying is it's no longer mandatory by a provincial health officer order that everybody do it all the time.'

"Canadians can expect many areas of hospitals to still encourage masking in emergency rooms and departments with particularly vulnerable patients, like burn units and cancer wards — and health-care workers will still likely wear them in many patient-facing settings. 'If you want to or your provider wants to, masks will certainly be available. So I think it's going to be a gradual transition,' Dr. Saqib Shahab, Saskatchewan's chief medical health officer, told CBC Saskatchewan last week....

"Part of the reasoning behind the shift in policy is to remove the need for health-care workers, who have faced severe burnout throughout the pandemic, to constantly mask in every area of the hospital — while also still allowing them the freedom to continue to do so.... Dr. Alon Vaisman, an infection control physician at Toronto's University Health Network (UHN) and assistant medical professor at the University of Toronto, said removing universal mask mandates in all health-care settings would likely help to ease health-care worker burnout.... 

"Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease physician and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore, said hospitals should be able to independently set policies on masking depending on local COVID levels and expert advice. 'When you're talking about non-patient facing activities, I don't think that there's much benefit in having masks in place, he said. 'There is benefit in patient-facing activities to having people wear masks, but I think it's something that each hospital needs to make a determination on based on the local metrics and not really something for the government to necessarily be involved in.'

"Alberta is still requiring masks in patient-facing settings, Quebec and Ontario are leaving masking rules up to individual hospitals, while Manitoba has opted to still require masks in health-care settings for the time being.... 

"Canada avoided a severe winter COVID-19 wave despite a lack of most of public health restrictions, a busy indoor holiday season and a rapidly mutating virus — largely thanks to high levels of hybrid immunity from vaccination and prior infection.... But COVID hospitalization levels still remain stubbornly high in Canada, with 3,268 hospital beds occupied by COVID patients across the country according to the latest federal data, despite continuing to gradually decline since mid-January."

Read more https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/mask-mandates-canada-hospitals-long-term-care-1.6811240

COVID-19 mask mandates dropped in more hospitals | CBC News, April 15, 2023:

Sunday, April 16, 2023

This Bud's for Who? What the Bud Light marketing fiasco says about class divisions in America

Mike Mozart, Bud Light Truck at Stew Leonard's, 2014 (detail). CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons.

What the Bud Light Fiasco Reveals about the Ruling Class | Brownstone Institute - Jeffrey A. Tucker:

April 13, 2023 - "How did someone believe that making 'trans woman' Dylan Mulvaney the icon of a Bud Light ad campaign, complete with a beer can with Mulvaney’s image on it, would be good for sales?.... Dylan, who had previously been interviewed on trans issues by President Biden himself, was celebrating '365 Days of Girlhood' with a grotesquely misogynistic caricature that would disgust just about the whole market for this beer. Indeed, this person’s cosplay might as well be designed to discredit the entire political agenda of gender dysphoriacs. 

"Sure enough, because we don’t have mandates on what beers you must buy, sales of the beer plummeted. The parent company Anheuser-Busch’s stock lost $5 billion or 4 percent in value since the ad campaign rollout. Sales have fallen 50-70 percent. Now there is worry within the company of a widening boycott to all their brands. A local Missouri distributor of the product canceled an appearance by Budweiser Clydesdale horses due to public anger....

"The person who made the miscalculation is Alissa Gordon Heinerscheid, Vice President in charge of marketing for Bud Light. She explained that her intention was to make the beer King of ‘Woke’ Beers. She wanted to shift away from the 'out of touch' frat party image to one of 'inclusivity.' By all accounts, she actually believed this. More likely, she was rationalizing actions that would earn her bragging rights within her social circle. 

"Digging through her personal biography, we find all the predictable signs of tremendous detachment from regular life: elite boarding school (Groton, $65K a year), Harvard, Wharton School, coveted internship at General Foods, and straight to top VP at the biggest beverage company in the world. Somehow through all that, nothing entered her brain apart from elite opinion on how the world should work with theories never actually tested by real-world marketing demands....  

"She is a perfect symbol of a problem that afflicts high-end corporate and government culture: a shocking blindness toward the mainstream of American life, including working classes and other people less privileged. They are invisible to this crowd. And her type is pervasive in corporate America with its huge layers of management developed over 20 years of loose credit and push for token representation at the highest levels. 

"We’ve seen this manifest over three years [as] ruling-class types imposed lockdowns, masks, and vaccine mandates on the whole population without regard to the consequences and with full expectation that the food will continue to be delivered to their doorsteps no matter how many days, months, or years they stay at home and stay safe. The working classes, meanwhile, were shoved out in front of the pathogen to make their assigned contribution to herd immunity so that the rich and privileged could preserve their clean state of being, making TikTok videos and issuing edicts from their safe spaces for two or even three years. 

"In the late 19th century, the blindness of class detachment was a problem that so consumed Karl Marx that he became possessed with the desire to overthrow class distinctions between labor and capital.... In every country where his dreams became a reality, however, a protected elite took over and secured themselves from the consequences of their deluded dreams.  The people who in recent decades have drunk so deeply from the well of the Marxian tradition seem to be repeating that experience with complete disinterest in the lower classes, while pushing a deepening chasm that only became worse in the lockdown years in which they have controlled the levers of power. 

"It was startling to watch, and I could hardly believe what was happening. Then one day the incredibly obvious dawned on me. All official opinion in this country and even the whole world – government, media, corporations, technology – emanated from the same upper echelons of the class structure. It was people with elite educations and who had the time to shape public opinion. They are the ones on Twitter, in the newsrooms, fussing with the codes, and enjoying the laptop life of a permanent bureaucrat. 

"Their social circles were the same. They knew no one who cut trees, butchered cows, drove trucks, fixed cars, and met payroll in a small restaurant. The “workers and peasants” are people the elites so otherized that they became nothing more than non-playing characters who make stuff work but are not worthy of their attention or time. 

"The result was a massive transfer of wealth upwards in the social ladder as digital brands, technology, and Peloton thrived, while everyone else faced a barrage of ill health, debt, and inflation. As classes have grown more stratified – and, yes, there is a reason to worry about the gap between the rich and the poor when malleability is restricted – the intellectual producers of policy and opinion have constructed their own bubble to protect themselves from by being soiled by contrary points of view. 

They want the whole world to be their own safe space regardless of the victims. Would lockdowns have happened in any other kind of world? Not likely. And it would not have happened if the overlords did not have the technology to carry on their lives as normal while pretending that no one was really suffering from their scheme. 

"The Bud Light case is especially startling because the advent of commercial society in the high Middle Ages and through the Industrial Revolution was supposed to mitigate against this sort of myopic stratification. And this has always been the most compelling critique of Marx: he was raging against a system that was gradually winnowing away the very demarcations in classes that he decried....  Joseph Schumpeter in 1919 wrote an essay on this topic in his book Imperialism and Social Classes. He highlighted how the commercial ethos dramatically changed the class system. 'The warlord was automatically the leader of his people in virtually every respect,' he wrote. 'The modern industrialist is anything but such a leader'.... 

"But what happens when the corporate elites, working together with government, themselves become the warlords? The foundations of market capitalism begin to erode. The workers become ever more alienated from final consumption of the product they have made possible. 

"It’s been typical of people like me – pro-market libertarians – to ignore the issue of class and its impact on social and political structures. We inherited the view of Frederic Bastiat that the good society is about cooperation between everyone and not class conflict, much less class war. We’ve been suspicious of people who rage against wealth inequality and social stratification. And yet we do not live in such market conditions. The social and economic systems of the West are increasingly bureaucratized, hobbled by credentialism, and regulated, and this has severely impacted class mobility. Indeed, for many of these structures, exclusion of the unwashed is the whole point. 

"And the ruling class themselves have ever more the mindset as described by Thorstein Veblen: only the ignorable do actual work while the truly successful indulge in leisure and conspicuous consumption as much as their means allow. One supposes that this doesn’t hurt anyone…until it does. And this certainly happened in very recent history as the conspicuous consumers harnessed the power of states all over the world to serve their interests exclusively. The result was calamity for rights and liberties won over a thousand years of struggle. 

"The emergent fissures between the classes – and the diffusions of our ruling class into many sectors public and private – suggest an urgency for a new consciousness of the real meaning of the common good, which is inseparable from liberty. The marketing director of Bud Light talked a good line about 'inclusivity' but she plotted to impose everything but that. Her plan was designed for the one percent and to the exclusion of all the people who actually consume the product, to say nothing for the workers who actually make and deliver the product she was charged with promoting.

"That the markets have so brutally punished the brand and company for this profound error points the way to the future. People should have the right to their own choices about the kind of life they want to live and the products and services they want to consume. The dystopia of lockdowns and woke hegemony of public opinion – complete with censorship – have become the policy to overturn if the workers are ever to throw off the chains that bind them. The boycotts of Bud Light are but a beginning."

Read more: https://brownstone.org/articles/what-bud-light-fiasco-reveals-about-ruling-class/

Saturday, April 15, 2023

No bodies found yet at alleged mass grave sites

In the two years since the first shocking reports of mass graves at Canadian residential schools, not a single actual unmarked grave is known to have been found.

Canada’s grave errors | The Critic - Jonathan Kay: 

April 2023 - 'Since 2017, the sesquicentennial of Canadian confederation, the country has been convulsed by a process of 'reconciliation' regarding Indigenous peoples.... Canada’s historical treatment of its Inuit, First Nations, and Métis populations often was marked by bad faith, racism and brutality. To this day, many Indigenous communities suffer high rates of poverty, suicide and substance abuse. Dozens lack even clean drinking water, a problem that has outlived the best intentions of a succession of federal governments, Liberal and Conservative alike. Even the most patriotic Canadian must admit that our record on this file constitutes a stain on the public conscience. 

"Of particular note is the history of Canada’s residential schools, church-run institutions that were conceived in the nineteenth century as a means to teach English, French and job skills to indigenous students. Had this system been run on a purely voluntary basis, such a project might have been broadly defensible. But from 1920 onwards, attendance was mandatory. And so tens of thousands of homesick indigenous children were forced to attend European-style institutions far away from their home communities.... At least 3,200 Indigenous children perished after having been sent to these schools, out of a total enrolment of about 150,000. (Many believe the real victim tally is twice as high.) The main cause of death, tuberculosis, also ravaged white communities until well into the twentieth century. But even so, the death rate was markedly higher at residential schools than at other institutions. And the dark legacy of these schools was quite properly made the subject of a high-profile national commission, which reported its conclusions in 2015

"Knowledge of this backstory is required to understand what happened in the spring of 2021, when a First Nations community in Kamloops, British Columbia announced that a ground-penetrating radar (GPR) survey of the grounds of a former residential school indicated the presence of 215 presumed unmarked child graves. The story was instantly treated as a bombshell by the Canadian press corps, and by leading international media outlets as well. 

"Most spectacularly, the New York Times reported that the First Nation in question, the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc (previously known as the Kamloops Indian Band), had claimed the discovery of a 'mass grave'. In fact, the band’s leader explicitly disavowed the idea that any 'mass grave' had been found. Despite this, the original story remains on the New York Times site in uncorrected form to this day. The same is true of an equally botched New York Times story headlined 'How thousands of Indigenous children vanished in Canada' by the same reporter.

"In retrospect, it seems obvious that these claims of unmarked graves should have been taken with a grain of salt — since GPR data of this type does not directly indicate the presence of graves, much less caskets or actual bodies; but rather of soil dislocations that may also be associated with tree roots, irrigation ditches or previous efforts to locate graves.... I would like to report that I was one of those few wise owls who knew, right from the start, that the story didn’t add up. But I wasn’t. Media figures, government officials, and First Nations leaders all seemed certain that these were indeed actual graves ... of murdered children. During ... late May and early June 2021, mainstream media sources even repeated urban legends about babies thrown into furnaces and clandestine midnight burials. Surely, I thought, all of these public figures wouldn’t embrace such claims if real proof weren’t about to be sprung from the soil. After all, the GPR data indicated exactly where the remains of these supposedly murdered children were lying. All that was required was a forensic examination, something one might expect to occur within weeks....

"It’s been almost two years since those first shocking headlines broke. During this period, not a single actual unmarked grave is known to have been found — either at Kamloops, or any of the other First Nations communities that subsequently conducted their own GPR surveys. Not one. And yet, the credulous narrative that first emerged has continued to dominate Canadian discourse....

"In January 2022, a small conservative publication called The Dorchester Review published an essay entitled 'In Kamloops, Not One Body Has Been Found'. While the reporting it contained was entirely factual, [Justin] Trudeau’s Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations, his schoolboy pal Marc Miller, accused the author of engaging in 'denialism'— a word clearly chosen to suggest a parallel with Holocaust denial. Frances Widdowson, a Canadian professor, was fired by her university after pointing out that no graves had been discovered.

"Not until May 2022, on the one-year anniversary of the original unmarked-graves story, did a large national media outlet, the National Post, publish a comprehensive account of how the Canadian media had been duped. And even then, the chairperson of the Canada Council for the Arts publicly demanded that other journalists shun both the author, Terry Glavin, and his journalism. This propaganda campaign worked. To this day, no other major Canadian outlet has dared follow the Post’s example, even as foreign publications such as the New York Post offer candid reports. 


Justin Trudeau at alleged mass grave site, 2021.
PHOTO BY LIAM RICHARDS/POOL VIA REUTERS

"The personal intervention of not one but two Canadian federal officials in a bid to suppress accurate reporting provides an unusually vivid insight into the surreal state of Canadian politics under Trudeau, a man who’s made theatrical displays of national shame central to his political brand. The Prime Minister had planned an election for late 2021, and seized on the unmarked-graves story as yet another opportunity to get on one knee for the cameras. In June 2021, most notably, he hauled along a personal photographer to an Indigenous community in Saskatchewan so that he might capture the scene of Trudeau placing a teddy bear ... on the site of a former residential school. 

"For Trudeau to now candidly admit that all of this political theatre had been performed on the pretext of an overhyped story would, of course, be mortifying — especially after he ordered flags lowered on federal buildings for more than five months.... Canada is, to my knowledge, the only country on earth where the PM showcases his role as leader of a self-confessed genocide state even while preparing to campaign for his own re-election.

"How will this all end? Possibly with bodies. Until the mid twentieth century, many poor Canadians, indigenous and non-indigenous alike, were buried in simple graves marked with wooden crosses that soon succumbed to the elements... While such a finding would hardly prove the lurid claim that legions of indigenous children were slaughtered and dispatched to secret burial sites, I imagine that this is exactly how such a discovery would be breathlessly reported.... But the equally likely result is that nothing at all will happen. There will be no bodies, but also no truthful national reckoning about our social panic, because everyone involved — politicians, academics, journalists — would be made to look foolish if the truth were to be widely and candidly admitted. And so they will all continue to go double or quits on a narrative that’s been growing more doubtful by the day since mid-2021."

Read more: https://thecritic.co.uk/issues/april-2023/canadas-grave-errors/

Reprinted by permission of Mr. Kay.

Friday, April 14, 2023

Trudeau Foundation investigating $200K donation with 'potential connection' to Chinese government

The Canadian government-funded Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation is investigating a controversial donation from a businessman with ties to the Chinese government, following the mass resignation of the foundation's CEO and board of directors.

Controversial Trudeau Foundation donation from Beijing-linked businessman was not reimbursed | CBC News - Peter Zimonjic:

April 12, 2023 - "A controversial $140,000 donation to the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation has not yet been returned because the charity has been unable to find anyone able to accept the payment, say sources who have spoken with Radio-Canada. Last month, the Globe and Mail reported that Zhang Bin — a businessman later identified by the newspaper as being linked to the Chinese government — pledged in 2016 to donate $200,000 to the foundation.... Shortly after that report, foundation president Pascale Fournier said the foundation had reimbursed the full amount of the donation.... Radio-Canada confirmed Wednesday that the money has not been returned. The refund cheque was issued but it has yet to be cashed.... Radio-Canada sources say that while the donation was given to the foundation by two individuals, the cheques were in the name of a corporation. The sources told Radio-Canada that the foundation has not been able to deliver the reimbursement to that corporation.

"The foundation also said that its board would launch an independent review of its acceptance of the donation. It said that the review would be conducted by an accounting firm overseen by a law firm, and that both firms would have no prior involvement with the foundation. This week, Fournier and the foundation's board of directors resigned en masse.... Sources told Radio Canada that the mass resignation stemmed from members of the board wanting the foundation to do more to verify the provenance of donations."
Read more: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeau-foundation-china-donation-1.6808272

April 12, 2023 - "The Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation says it is launching an 'independent review' of a $140,000 donation that had a 'potential connection to the Chinese government,' as the scholarship charity is engulfed in an ongoing political firestorm over Beijing’s alleged interference in Canadian politics. In a statement Wednesday, the Montreal-based foundation said its board of directors unanimously agreed to stage an investigation before they resigned en masse this week, with an official explanation claiming the 'political climate' had made the charity’s work impossible.

"One source with direct knowledge of the situation said an internal feud erupted in recent days after the organization’s attempt to refund the donation failed. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the failure prompted a desire for an independent investigation, but there were disagreements among board members about how that review should play out. The Trudeau Foundation did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday about the source’s concern. Several officials at the charity did not respond to interview requests, while others declined to speak when contacted by the Star....

"Though it was originally billed as a $200,000 donation, Johnson’s statement said the Trudeau Foundation received only $140,000 of the pledged money. It also said the charity issued a refund cheque under the donor’s name, but did not confirm whether the money was successfully returned.... Another source with knowledge of the situation also told the Star the charity’s attempt to refund the donation failed, after Montreal’s La Presse newspaper reported an internal foundation document — which the Star has not seen — said the money could not be returned because the name on the donation cheque didn’t match the actual source of the funds....

"The Conservatives have latched on to reports of the Trudeau Foundation donation, arguing it raises questions about whether officials with ties to the charity — which Poilievre labels as 'Beijing-funded' — should be probing alleged foreign interference for the government. That includes Morris Rosenberg, a former civil servant who was head of the foundation when the donation was made in 2016, and who penned a recent report on foreign interference in the 2021 election. It also includes former governor general David Johnston, who is a foundation member tasked with examining the issue and recommending whether a public inquiry — which opposition parties are demanding — is necessary....

"Established in 2001, a year after Pierre Trudeau’s death, the foundation received a $125-million endowment from the federal government in 2002. The idea was to support the research of more than 100 scholars every year to honour the late prime minister’s memory. But with the ascent of Justin Trudeau from Liberal MP to prime minister, the foundation came to be seen by some under a more political lens. After the Liberals took office in 2015, the government came under fire for so-called 'cash-for-access\ fundraising, in which the party sought donations at events where contributors could hobnob with cabinet ministers or even Trudeau himself. 

"Chinese businessman Zhang Bin reportedly attended such an event with the prime minister. Then, in 2016, according to a news release from the Université de Montréal, Zhang and another person identified as a fellow businessman — Niu Gensheng — donated $1 million to commemorate Pierre Trudeau’s ties with China....[U]niversity spokesperson Geneviève O’Meara confirmed the school’s faculty of law was slated to receive $750,000 of this money, with another $50,000 going toward a statue on campus of [Mau Zedong and] Pierre Trudeau, who attended and taught at the university. But the statue was never built, and the school only ever received $500,000, O’Meara said by email. Another $200,000 of the money was slated for the Trudeau Foundation....

""The 2016 donation ... grew more controversial this year, after the Globe and Mail reported it was part of a suspected campaign of foreign influence by the Chinese government. The revelation added to the ongoing political firestorm involving allegations of Beijing’s election meddling and interference in Canadian politics that has troubled the Liberal government for months. And in response, the Trudeau Foundation declared on March 1 it had refunded all money received from the 2016 pledge, after learning of a “potential connection” with the Chinese government. While the foundation now says it has issued a cheque under the donor’s name, the Université de Montréal still hasn’t decided what to do with the $500,000 it received."
Read more: https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/2023/04/12/whats-going-on-with-the-trudeau-foundation-heres-what-we-know-about-the-controversy-that-led-to-a-mass-resignation.html

Brian Lilley, "Would anyone notice if the Trudeau Foundation disappeared?", Toronto Sun, April 12, 2023:

Thursday, April 13, 2023

German government pulls plug on nuclear power

 Germany turns its back on nuclear for good despite Europe's energy crisis | Euronews - AFP:

April 11, 2023 - "The German government is phasing out nuclear power despite the energy crisis. The country is pulling the plug on its last three reactors on Saturday (15 April), betting it will succeed in its green transition without nuclear power.... While many Western countries depend on nuclear power, Europe's largest economy is turning the page - even if the subject remains controversial until the end.

"Germany is implementing the decision to phase out nuclear power taken in 2002 and accelerated by Angela Merkel in 2011, after the Fukushima disaster. Fukushima showed that 'even in a high-tech country like Japan, the risks associated with nuclear energy cannot be controlled 100 per cent', the former chancellor justified at the time. The announcement convinced public opinion in a country where the powerful anti-nuclear movement was initially fuelled by fears of a Cold War conflict, and then by accidents such as Chernobyl.

"The invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 brought everything into question. Deprived of Russian gas, ... Germany found itself exposed to the worst possible scenarios, from the risk of its factories being shut down to the risk of being without heating in the middle of winter.

"With just a few months to go before the initial deadline for closing the last three reactors on 31 December, the tide of public opinion began to turn. 'With high energy prices and the burning issue of climate change, there were of course calls to extend the plants,' says Jochen Winkler, mayor of Neckarwestheim, where the plant of the same name is in its final days. Olaf Scholz's government, which the Green Party - the most hostile to nuclear power - is part of, finally decided to extend the operation of the reactors to secure the supply until 15 April....

"Sixteen reactors have been closed since 2003. The last three plants supplied 6 per cent of the country's energy last year, compared with 30.8 per cent [from all 19 plants] in 1997. Meanwhile, the share of renewables in the generation mix has risen to 46 per cent by 2022, up from less than 25 per cent a decade earlier.

"The current rate of progress in renewables does not satisfy either the government or environmentalists, and Germany will not meet its climate targets without a serious push.... The equation is even more complex given the goal of shutting down the country's coal-fired power plants by 2038, many of them by 2030. Coal still accounts for a third of Germany's electricity production, with an 8 per cent increase last year to compensate for the absence of Russian gas.

"Germany needs to install 'four to five wind turbines every day' over the next few years to cover its needs, warned Olaf Scholz. This is a tall order compared to the 551 units installed in 2022. A series of regulatory relaxations adopted in recent months should speed up the pace. 'The planning and approval process for a wind power project takes an average of four to five years,' according to the industry association (BWE), which believes that gaining one or two years would be 'a considerable step forward'."

Read more: https://www.euronews.com/green/2023/04/11/germany-turns-its-back-on-nuclear-for-good-despite-europes-energy-crisis

Germany to shut nuclear sites despite energy crunch | DW News, December 29, 2021:

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Mass resignation at Trudeau Foundation

The president and CEO, and board of directors, of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation have resigned en masse, blaming "politicization" that has "made it impossible to continue with the status quo." 

Trudeau Foundation president, board resign, citing 'politicization' of China-linked donation | CBC News - Richard Raycraft:

April 11, 2023 - "The Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation's president and board of directors have resigned en masse, citing the charity's entanglement in the ongoing foreign interference controversy. 

"In a statement, the foundation said that a $200,000 donation in 2016 from a businessman linked to the Chinese government 'has put a great deal of pressure on the foundation's management and volunteer board of directors, as well as on our staff and our community.' The charity announced last month that it would return the donation. The Conservatives criticized the government over the matter, saying the donation compromised a government report on the integrity of the 2021 federal election.

"'The circumstances created by the politicization of the foundation have made it impossible to continue with the status quo, and the volunteer board of directors has resigned, as has the president and CEO,' the statement said.

"The foundation is independent and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has no involvement with it. 'The Trudeau Foundation is a foundation with which I have absolutely no intersection,' Trudeau told a news conference Tuesday.... The charity, established in 2001 to honour former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, funds scholarships, mentorships and fellowships.

"Last month, Prime Minister Trudeau appointed former governor general David Johnston as a special rapporteur to investigate foreign interference in Canadian elections and institutions, including alleged meddling by the Chinese government. The Conservatives have questioned Johnston's impartiality, in part by pointing to Johnston's former role as a member of the Trudeau Foundation. Foundation members are responsible for appointing the board of directors. Johnston resigned from the foundation following his appointment as special rapporteur....

"The statement said three directors will remain on an interim basis to continue the charity's work while a new board is appointed. The foundation's website currently lists six members of the board of directors. Its president and CEO, Pascale Fournier, had been in the position for almost five years.

"Reacting to news of the resignations Tuesday morning, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre called for an investigation into the charity. 'We need to investigate the Beijing-funded Trudeau Foundation,' Poilievre tweeted. 'We need to know who got rich, who got paid and who got privilege and power from Justin Trudeau as a result of funding to the Trudeau Foundation.'

"Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said the resignations make the 2016 donation look more suspicious. He called on Johnston to step down as special rapporteur and for the government to call a public inquiry into foreign interference.... NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he won't comment on the Trudeau Foundation specifically. He repeated his calls for a public inquiry."

Read more: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeau-foundation-resign-1.6806482