Social Studies Grade 12
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
It’s easy to take arts and culture for granted. Not because they don’t matter, but because they’re woven so deeply into our daily lives.
They’re in the stories we tell, the music in our earbuds, the festivals that bring neighbours into the streets and the murals that brighten our downtowns.
Arts and culture are part of who we are as Manitobans.
But the arts aren’t just “nice to have.” They’re essential. Especially right now.
Decades-long fight to repeal discriminatory second-generation cut-off rekindled on Parliament Hill
9 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025Winnipeg MP’s private member’s bill would make residential school denialism a crime
2 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025Winnipeg students develop critical aptitude essential for navigating media landscape
14 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025A century later, Ukrainian church still helping new Ukrainians
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025The road not taken: lowest number of Manitobans in three decades cross border at Pembina in July, August
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025On second anniversary of Oct. 7 attacks and start of Gaza war, officers say rushing to cover painful vandalism reduces odds of arrests
8 minute read Preview Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025Roasters and cafés grapple with rising coffee bean prices
4 minute read Preview Monday, Oct. 6, 2025Muslim-Jewish dialogue group encourages empathy
5 minute read Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025Three days after Oct. 7, 2023, Ari Zaretsky received an email message that brought him to tears. The message expressed deep condolences for the massacre of Israeli civilians at the hands of Hamas, and a recognition of the pain and grief that Zaretsky and his family must be enduring.
The email was sent from Wesam Abuzaiter, who, like Zaretsky, worked at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto. Abuzaiter, a pharmacist, is a Canadian-Palestinian Muslim originally from Gaza. Zaretsky, a psychiatrist, is a Canadian Jew and Zionist.
Together, they are the founders of the Sunnybrook dialogue group.
Abuzaiter and Zaretsky had crossed paths in the hospital a few years before —when he invited her to share her personal journey as an international graduate during an educational session with her colleagues. During that presentation, Zaretsky also shared that he was a child of Holocaust survivors.
Ottawa orders unprecedented posthumous appeal of fourth Indigenous man’s conviction in 1973 slaying
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 29, 2025Chinese landscape architect Yu Kongjian among 4 killed in a plane crash in Brazil
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Only moratorium can save moose population: MWF
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025Manitoba Crown attorneys take important step toward meaningful bail reform
5 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025For years, politicians have been locked in an endless cycle of sloganeering about bail reform. You’ve probably heard it, especially from the federal Conservatives: “jail, not bail.”
The idea is that Canada’s bail laws are too weak, too “soft on crime,” too quick to release dangerous offenders back onto the street. It’s an easy line to deliver, and it taps into public anger over violent crime. But like most easy lines, it’s not grounded in reality.
We’re now beginning to learn, at least in Manitoba, why some repeat offenders charged with serious crimes may be released on bail when they shouldn’t be. And it has nothing to do with the law itself. It has everything to do with how bail court is actually run day-to-day — the nuts and bolts of how cases are handled.
On Monday, the Manitoba Association of Crown Attorneys pulled back the curtain on a system that is in disarray. They released a discussion paper and held a news conference to tell Manitobans what really goes on in bail court. Their message was clear: prosecutors often don’t have enough time, information or resources to properly argue bail cases.
Another subdivision, another city problem
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Wildfires like this aren’t normal. Stop trying to normalize them.
“Bring a pair of pants and a sweater to Clear Lake — it’s unseasonably cool because of the wildfires.” That was just one of those meteorological idiosyncrasies, attempting to reach back deep into long-forgotten geography lessons, that may seem obvious to those on the Prairies. But for the outsider, a visitor from Toronto, and indeed a relative newcomer to Canada, it was certainly a shock, and a stark reminder that I would be flying into a province still under a state of emergency, which had until recently been decimated by wildfires. It was also an introduction into what may be considered ‘normal’.
Visiting Manitoba this August was extraordinary — the people most certainly lived up to the “friendly” billing that adorns the licence plates, and the scenery of Riding Mountain National Park was worth the trip alone. However, there were a number of topics of conversation that made me question what I had come to know as accepted wisdom.
Talk about fishing restrictions, Indigenous rights, oil and gas permeated discussions, with healthy, good spirited debates. But for me, the most vexing issue was wildfires. More specifically, the extent of their aftermath, effects, and associated restrictions, have become normalized.
In cold blood: the death of American media
5 minute read Monday, Sep. 22, 2025Independent mainstream legacy media in the United States is dead. The funeral just hasn’t been held yet.