Navigating consumer choices can make you feel like a character on The Good Place, where the ethical score sheet for a virtuous life had become so complex, nobody had made it to paradise in over 500 years. You could walk an extra six blocks to fill your reusable mug with fair-trade, non-dairy latte from a unionized Starbucks, and the carbon footprint of your organic pea sprout milk might still doom you to eternity in “the bad place.” Read More
Similar Posts
Choi and Denice: How to build more virus-resilient cities
Amenities, especially in low-income neighbourhoods, keep city dwellers safe from viruses like COVID-19
Baranyai: Ontario Gen Z’s home ownership hopes in jeopardy
Amid her generation, Mattea Roach is a unicorn. Not only did the young Jeopardy! contestant ride a 23-game winning streak straight to the circle of super-champions; with over US$560,000 in winnings, the 23-year-old believes she may actually buy a house one day. Average home prices in the GTA, where Roach lives, hit $1.25 million last […]
Orchard, Chamberlain: Online groups toe line between protecting women, defaming men
Infidelity and deception have always been part of dating and relationships.
MacKillop: Why Weed-Free January is a good idea, too
By now, most are familiar with the idea of Dry January, a voluntary month without alcohol that follows a month when many drink more than usual.
Anastakis: Rogers joins history of Canadian business family feuds
Edward Rogers’ power play against his mother and sisters smacks of hubris rather than wisdom
Tallman: Pope Francis’ achievements dwarf Benedict’s, with one exception
March 13 was the 10th anniversary of the pontificate of Pope Francis, and since Emeritus Pope Benedict died just a few months ago (Dec. 31), it seems like a good time to reflect on what they achieved.