Search Results
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Bearing witness to what should never have been
5 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025In recent days I have been listening again to the voices of adults who shared what they went through in the foster care system, residential schools and the forced adoption practices of the ’60s Scoop.
Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg set Emmy record with comedy wins for ‘The Studio’
5 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 14, 2025Manitobans raise more than $81,000 for cancer research at Terry Fox Run
3 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 14, 2025First Anishinaabe woman Bar Association president prioritizes mentorship, protecting the rule of law
8 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 14, 2025Manitoba cabinet briefing on landfill search for murder victims not being released
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 22, 2025Blame game after acts of political violence can lead to further attacks, experts warn
6 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 10, 2025Prairie harvest a mixed bag as tariff strife casts shadow over healthy crop
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Equatorial Guinea enforces yearlong internet outage for island that protested construction company
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025‘Safety is our ultimate goal’: Steinbach cancels annual Pride event
6 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 14, 2025Local engineer was a real game changer
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Very hungry caterpillars very good for biodiversity
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Canadian farmers facing harvest cash-flow crunch, talking support
4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Canadian farmers are understandably disappointed the federal government’s response to China’s punishing import tariffs on canola, pork, peas and seafood hasn’t so far included direct compensation.
After all, the duties are widely seen as retaliation for Canadian tariffs effectively locking Chinese electric cars out of the local market — a policy decision that had nothing to do with agriculture. This is the second time in recent memory China has targeted Canadian farmers to score points on unrelated issues. It’s unlikely to be the last.
While the full impact remains unclear, when Canada’s second-largest canola customer imposes tariffs of 75.8 per cent on seed and 100 per cent on oil and meal, it’s a safe bet demand will be curbed and prices will be lower than they would have been otherwise. Industry estimates place the eventual costs in the range of $2 billion.
However, commodity prices this year are depressed across the board — for a host of reasons. Much of the new-crop canola has yet to be harvested and very little has been sold.
The reality of the Canadian criminal justice system
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 15, 2025Nation building needs research — not just infrastructure
4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Living through the second Trump administration as a Canadian has been likened, by one commentator, to a teenager being kicked out of the house. We must grow up fast and deal with the fact that we can now only rely on ourselves. So, the federal government is moving fast on files related to security, sovereignty and connectivity. The Liberals passed Bill C-5 to expedite projects that will help Canadians live on our own. Wonderful.
But.
In our rush forward, we cannot overlook the power of nation-building research, which must go hand-in-glove with these infrastructure projects. Research and infrastructure are not competing priorities: they are essential partners in nation-building.
Bill C-5, the Building Canada Act, grants the federal government sweeping powers to quickly build large projects that help goods move faster and more easily. This act intends to strengthen our security, autonomy, resilience and advance the interests of Indigenous Peoples. But there can be no nation-building without nation-building research.