Featured posts
Is Canada betting too much on the U.S.?
Canada should hedge its bets and more aggressively pursue trading arrangements with others. Instead of continuing to resist opening our highly protected and low-productivity sectors—like dairy—we should embrace as many markets as possible.
Journalism schools are failing a generation of students
Skyrocketing MAID deaths must prompt urgent reassessment
Canada’s commitment to multiculturalism is reaching a breaking point
How to fix our ‘sectarian’ universities
Hub Exclusive: Supreme Court Justice Malcolm Rowe warns about judicial overreach
Five Tweets on Alberta’s new parental rights policy
Toronto’s West End Phoenix: A local newspaper rising from the news industry’s ashes
Five Tweets on mental health MAiD expansion being paused
The cost of living has led us into record debt. What does that mean for Canadians?
Even if Trump loses, is ‘America First’ trade protectionism here to stay?
Five Tweets on Tucker Carlson’s Alberta visit
Game changer Supreme Court cases to watch for in 2024
Five Tweets on the Federal Court declaring the use of the Emergencies Act unconstitutional
Are international students singlehandedly saving Canadian universities from bankruptcy?
Former Heritage Minister James Moore on the CBC and the future of public broadcasting
The Roundtable and Tara Henley on what’s wrong with Canada—and why there’s reason for hope
David Frum discusses decolonization efforts on university campuses
Jessica Pierce on the fascinating and complex dynamics between humans and dogs
Steve Paikin on how journalism has evolved over the course of his career
The Roundtable on the return to Parliament and Tucker Carlson’s Alberta revival
Amanda Lang on the federal government’s international student cap
Popular Posts
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See moreMarc-David Munk on his time practicing medicine in East Africa
In this episode of Hub Dialogues, Marc-David Munk, author and U.S.-based emergency physician, discusses his must-read book, Urgent Calls from Distant Places: An Emergency Doctor’s Notes about Life and Death on the Frontiers of East Africa.
The consequences of Canada’s housing-based inequality are immeasurable
There’s something conceptually incompatible with the egalitarian promise of Canadian society for the “haves” to be able to own homes and have children and the “have nots” to have neither. These basic milestones shouldn’t be treated as luxury goods.
Were Premier Smith’s gender and sexuality policies fair, or go too far?
If passed, Premier Smith’s legislation would make Alberta the third province to implement a policy around parental rights, with her plan being the most far-reaching.
Policing misinformation is futile. We have to trust that the truth will win
It’s widely accepted that truth is generally preferable to lies. In the past, we could expect news outlets to objectively report the facts, but recent events would suggest either a lack of journalistic integrity or—more concerningly—ideological capture in our mainstream media institutions.
Calm down about 15-minute cities
The idea behind 15-minute cities is pretty simple: we should build communities where people can fulfill most of their needs within a 15-minute walk. Some terminally online people seem to believe that this would be a radical feat of social engineering that would end our free-market way of living.