Similar Posts
Tobah: Protests make me fear for my freedom from violence
I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t extremely concerned about Canada’s direction right now. I’ve been watching the convoy that settled in Ottawa and its sympathetic arms closely over the last few weeks. I’ve done so from the perspective of someone from a community that has faced repeated continuous white supremacist violence, especially in […]
Cornies: B. Davison debacle result of bias in school board structure
There is an irony in the fact that Lester B. Pearson school for the arts and B. Davison secondary school sit side by side along Trafalgar Street near London’s Old East Village, separated only by a parking lot and a patch of grass.
SIMS: Dropping of mask rules for returning travellers sign of federal enlightenment
Somewhere in the public health bureaucracy on Parliament Hill, a light bulb went on.
Dyer: North Korea isn’t going to give up nuclear weapons, but that’s not a crisis
“They want to have a deterrence system that is like a scorpion’s tail,” said Prof. Kim Dong Yup, a former South Korean naval commander. “North Korea’s main purpose is not to attack but to defend themselves.” They want a “diversified deterrent capability,” adds Kim — and who could blame them? North Korea’s missile tests are […]
London homeless crisis: Transformation hard but needed
Most of us know from experience that quick-fix, Band-Aid solutions to anything are woefully inadequate.
Pearson: Former Libro head coach served community, shareholders equally
When Stephen Bolton retired as CEO and head coach of Libro Credit Union a short while ago, he left behind a legacy and a financial institution that cut across the grain of the rampant corporatism characterizing the post-pandemic era.