Lee Harding argues the 2026 mandatory long-form census has become excessively intrusive, collecting highly personal data under threat of fines while expanding state surveillance powers, weakening privacy protections, and eroding the balance between statistical research and individual freedom.
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Parliament’s genocide declaration fails Indigenous children
Five years after Parliament unanimously declared residential schools a genocide, not one body has been found at Kamloops or any other site. Marco Navarro-Génie argues the motion rested on unverified GPR anomalies and passed in moral panic rather than deliberation. Accusation is not proof; the burden of evidence rests on those who make the charge. The same logic now underpins legislation to criminalize the question. Any sitting MP can and should move to rescind it.
Shocking New Brunswick Court Decision Pushes Back on Land Claims?
Did a New Brunswick court just shift the land claims debate in Canada? A new ruling is raising major questions about how Aboriginal title interacts with private property—and whether Canada’s courts are starting to draw clearer lines after dangerous uncertainty.
The residential schools ‘graves’ narrative lives on despite zero verified finds
Five years after Kamloops, no verified residential school child graves have been found despite repeated headlines, radar anomalies, and taxpayer funded searches. Tom Flanagan argues new claims in Alberta repeat the same pattern: speculation amplified into scandal without conclusive evidence.
Immigration Reforms
Canada admitted over 1.2 million permanent and temporary residents in 2023 alone, straining housing, healthcare, and public services nationwide. Provinces bear most of the infrastructure and service burden yet have […]
Toronto’s public grocery store pilot is a financial trainwreck in the making
Jay Goldberg argues Toronto’s public grocery store plan would deliver negligible savings while creating costly inefficiencies. Real relief for consumers would come from ending supply management, removing internal trade barriers, and eliminating industrial carbon taxes that inflate food prices.
The Other Right to Choose: Reversing Canada’s Immigration Fiasco
John Weissenberger shows how dismantling Canada's once world-envied points-based immigration system, which ballooned non-permanent residents past three million, fuels youth unemployment and fiscal strain. He urges restoring the merit-driven framework that served Canada well for decades.
Are Canadians Losing Access to Crown Land?
Is public land still truly public? Most Canadians don’t think twice about Crown land—it’s where people hunt, fish, camp, and get away from the city.
Is Ottawa turning Alberta’s pipeline into a taxpayer trap?
Ottawa’s proposed conditions for the West Coast Oil Pipeline risk turning a private-sector energy project into a taxpayer-backed instrument of federal net-zero policy. Albertans should demand transparency, rigorous business analysis, and private-sector leadership before assuming financial risks taxpayers may ultimately bear.
What Alberta is asking Canada
Alberta's proposed referendum is not a vote to leave Canada, but a warning that many Albertans believe the federation no longer works for them. Rather than insults and panic, the moment calls for listening, for constitutional reform, and for serious engagement with Western concerns.
