Wednesday, April 2, 2025

News roundup, 2 April 2025

 - A wide range of tariffs are set to be announced today by the Trump regime, taking effect immediately. Trump is calling this "Liberation Day". Some background info here. A resolution before the US Senate from Virginia senator Tim Kaine is expected to make things awkward for Republicans representing states expected to take a hit from the tariffs, but won't have a real impact even if it passes, since it is nonbinding.

- Mark Carney plans to carve out an exemption for New Flyer in the countertariffs imposed on US manufacturing; meanwhile the company is working towards all buses for the Canadian market being assembled here.

- Former parliamentary reporter Rachel Gilmore had been asked by CTV to do an election-related fact-checking segment on their morning show, but the network cancelled the segment after a single episode following pressure from the Conservatives and their fellow travellers.

- The cancellation of the carbon tax took effect yesterday. This is expected to bring some savings to consumers, but preventing backsliding on emissions will require measures that may well cost more overall in terms of public funds. The question I've never been able to find a clear answer to, though, is this: If tax relief is politically necessary, why not provide said relief by reducing or eliminating the GST (or PST for provinces) rather than the carbon tax? That way everyone sees relief, not just those who drive. I guess they're afraid of worsening the urban-rural divide, but I think that divide is basically beyond healing at this point anyway.

- The Trump regime has admitted that they shipped an innocent man to their contracted prison in El Salvador due to what they call an "administrative error". They say it's now out of their hands, though, as he's no longer in US custody.

- Wisconsin held an election for a vacant seat on the state supreme court yesterday. A liberal judge squeaked a victory despite Elon Musk having spent millions of dollars on her opponent's campaign.

- Western Australia's police force has repurposed a Maserati seized from a repeat driving offender into a publicity device to warn people not to drive like idiots.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

News roundup, 1 April 2025

- French far-right leader Marine Le Pen has been banned from running for political office for five years after being convicted of illegally siphoning millions of euros in public funds for her own party's use. She also received a four year suspended sentence. Predictably, Le Pen as well as her fellow deplorables around the world are having a conniption, saying that the decision saying the decision is politically motivated. Admittedly, it is very convenient for Emmanuel Macron, but it's a bit of a stretch to think the whole court system is in his pocket. A recent poll indicates that a majority of French citizens think the court ruled fairly, bit it's a slimmer majority than one might like (57%).

- The Liberal candidate in Markham-Unionville, Paul Chiang, has withdrawn from the race following his unfortunate remarks about how someone ought to claim a bounty on his Tory opponent. Probably a good move, especially since the RCMP is now looking into the matter.

- The University of Winnipeg is the latest post-secondary institution to face a financial crunch, partly as a result of cuts to international student visas. Last week the university's president brought up a clause in the faculty's collective agreement that could allow for layoffs. The fact that universities across the country are facing the same problem make this a bad time for academics.

- The Sioux Valley Dakota Nation has banned provincial courts from holding sessions on its jurisdiction until a suitable facility can be built. Community leaders say that what has been done up until now, which is for the court to use the community's mature student centre for its semi-monthly hearings, is not satisfactory because the student centre does not have the security measures needed to handle some of the violent criminals the court is dealing with (such as partitions separating the accused from witnesses). This is especially unfortunate because the circuit court arrangement was designed to make the courts more accessible to the community.

- The Green Party is calling for Canada's military reserves to be expanded by 20,000 people. Not an April Fool's joke; that's just the world we live in now. The party's co-leader Jonathan Pedneault made the announcement in Whitehorse yesterday, saying in addition that he wants to create a 120,000 person civil defence corps.

- A Canadian has been detained in the Dominican Republic because his name was similar to someone whose name was on a checked bag that was full of drugs. Maybe those who aren't deterred by the climate footprint of air travel or the Dominican Republic's problematic human rights record should look at this as another reason to stay home.

Monday, March 31, 2025

News roundup, 31 March 2025

- The new tariffs that the Trump regime is going to impose on automobiles and parts is going to impact all automakers, including American ones, but one automaker is expected to be impacted a lot less than the others. Guess which one.

- The regime is continuing with their efforts to curb activism by international students. Hundreds of students have already had their visas revoked, apparently for participating in protests against the war in Gaza. Last week Rumeysa Öztürk, a Turkish-born PhD student, was arrested by masked ICE officers and taken away in an unmarked vehicle; she had co-authored this op-ed for the university's newspaper last year, which I guess in their eyes constitutes "supporting Hamas".

- A fan was removed from the Toronto Blue Jays' home opener on Thursday for wearing a "Canada Is Not For Sale" hat, with security guards citing a ban on "political statements". Following the inevitable bad publicity, the organization has apologized to the man, and attributed the incident to an "error" on the part of staff. Some folks on the related Reddit thread have their doubts, though, saying that the Jays' chair Ed Rogers is a big Trump supporter and that security was going around in the stands stopping people from booing the American anthem.

- The Conservatives are doing their utmost to stop their supporters from saying the quiet part out loud. At Poilievre rallies across the country, they are seizing items such as MAGA hats and signs (as well as more mundane items such as knives and e-cigs) from people attending the events, presumably not wanting to give the media the opportunity to remind the non-crazy part of the Canadian population what the Cons are actually like. Stuff like this adds to fears among party insiders of division and dysfunction within the organization.

- The National Post is claiming to have found evidence of plagiarism in Mark Carney's 1995 PhD thesis. Funny thing is, most of the academics who actually went on record for the article dismiss the accusations. I guess the Post hopes that most people won't read beyond the headline.

- Paul Chiang, the Liberal candidate in the suburban GTA riding of Markham-Unionville, is facing criticism and calls for his withdrawal from the race after suggesting in a Chinese-language news conference that people should claim the bounty that China has placed on his Tory opponent, Joe Tay.

- The Vancouver Auto Show broke attendance records despite calls by the MAGAts for a boycott over their exclusion of Tesla from the event.

- A gospel singer is facing criticism for his fundraising pitch after delivering a speech to the 109th Pentecostal Assemblies for the World Convention in Baltimore last summer. Following the speech he asked church ushers to lock the doors until he got $40,000 in donations.

- China hopes to have a 100 megawatt hybrid fission-fusion reactor operating by 2030. The idea is to use the neutrons from deuterium-tritium fusion to induce fission in uranium; since no chain reaction is involved it is considerably safer than many fission reactors and no enrichment is necessary (natural or even depleted uranium would suffice). If this could be achieved, this could be an important stepping stone to a pure fusion reactor.

Friday, March 28, 2025

News roundup, 28 March 2025

- Protesters in the UK who broke into a factory owned by an Israeli weapons manufacturer, Elbit Systems last year, causing over a million dollars worth of damage, have been locked up indefinitely under anti-terrorism legislation. Evidently the British are going along with the Americans and treating politically motivated vandalism as if it were violence against actual people (which is usually what is usually meant when one speaks of "terrorism"). Some of the protesters have even been denied access to lawyers. I have to assume that the reason for such draconian measures is that the protesters have been effective - nine British companies have cut ties with the firm, and the landlords of one Elbit site in Leicester have sold the property.

- Donald Trump initially nominated Elise Stefanik, a Republican member of Congress from New Jersey, to be the next ambassador to the UN. However, he has now withdrawn the nomination - apparently due to fears that the Republicans' majority in the House is a bit to slim for comfort.

- When Marjorie Taylor Greene was asked a question by journalist Martha Kelner of UK outlet Sky News about the scandal now being referred to in some circles as "Signalgate", Greene refused to answer and told her to "go back your country".

- Jason Stanley, a Yale University professor and author of a book entitled How Fascism Works, has given up his post to take one at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, saying that he has lost confidence in American academia's ability and/or willingness to resist the regime. He says that the last straw was when Columbia University agreed to take several disturbing measures, including a crackdown on campus protests as well as "internal reviews" of some academic programs, in order to retain millions of dollars in federal funding. If that's not a warning to take seriously, I don't know what is.

- A BBC reporter was arrested and deported from Turkey as a "threat to public order" following his coverage of widespread protests against the government. Expect the US to do the same thing to foreign journalists before long.

- A Manitoba judge has ordered CityNews journalist Morgan Modjeski to hand over the raw footage of an on-camera interview with a man at a rooming house in the aftermath of a shooting there. Modjeski had challenged an order to hand the footage over on the grounds of protecting journalistic sources, however the judge ruled that this was irrelevant because the man interviewed was not an anonymous source. His lawyer, though, is concerned about the precedent set by effectively turning journalists into tools of law enforcement.

- The Canadian Research Insights Council (CRIC), an industry group for polling agencies, is warning about an organization called  ERG National Research, which is not a member of the group. ERG has been texting people with election polls, and then asking for their names, something polling agencies generally don't do. The CEO of CRIC has done some digging, but found little about the organization other than the fact that it shares a mailing address with an organization called ElectRight, and that the two organizations list each other as "communication service providers".

- A man has been charged with dangerous driving following an investigation into a crash on St. Mary's Road last October in which a Dodge Charger left the road while doing 213 km/h in a 60 km/h zone and collided with a building. The (surprisingly uninjured) driver fled the scene on foot; I have to assume that he tried to claim that the vehicle was stolen and the delay in pressing charges resulted from an investigation into this claim.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

News roundup, 27 March 2025

- Winnipeg police now believe that the woman hitherto known as Mashkode Bizihiki’ Ikwe ("Buffalo Woman") was Ashlee Shingoose of St. Theresa Point First Nation, who went missing in March 2022. Moreover, based on when she is believed to have been killed and the location of the bin where she was dumped, they now believe that her remains were taken to the Brady Landfill. This does offer at least some hope that something of her will be found. 

- Jagmeet Singh admits that the NDP faces "massive challenges" in the coming election, as the anti-Conservative vote is coalescing almost entirely around the Liberals. Former leader Tom Mulcair sums it up in terms of what is known as "the ballot question"; the threat from the US is the sole deciding factor for most voters, and it's increasingly turning into a two party race (Mulcair notes that the Bloc is struggling as well).

- Wildfires in South Korea have killed at least 24 people and destroyed a 1,300 year old temple in Uiseong City, though fortunately relics from the temple were removed in advance of the fire. Wildfires have historically not been common in the country, and this is the biggest death toll from such fires that the country has experienced.

- Eascan Automation Inc., a Winnipeg-based company that provides custom-built industrial robots to manufacturers, has laid off a third of its workforce owing to the fact that while most of their clients are Canadian, the products they manufacture are heavily dependent on the US market, meaning they're not in a hurry to upgrade their equipment right now.

- Immigration lawyers are advising Canadians living in the US to avoid international travel for the time being, given the increasingly unpredictable nature of ICE. One Toronto-based lawyer points out that even people who successfully got green cards after having previously gotten into trouble have had their old mistakes brought up at the border when they try to reenter; in addition, there is a danger that anything you might have ever posted online could be dug up and used against you. Myself, if I were giving advice, I wouldn't be advising against international travel. Quite the contrary - I'd advise any Canadian - or other foreign citizen - living in that benighted country to take a one-way international trip as soon as possible.

- It seems that the Atlantic journalist who was inadvertently sent sensitive military plans was not the biggest security risk in that chat group. Steve Witkoff, who serves as an envoy to the Middle East as well as Ukraine, was part of the chat group - and he was actually in Moscow at the time it was sent.

- The estranged wife of slain California fire captain Rebecca Marodi has been captured alive by Mexican authorities and sent back to the US to face trial for first degree murder. She has pleaded not guilty. Somehow I doubt she'll get it knocked down to manslaughter like she did last time she did something like that, though.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

News roundup, 26 March 2025

- So it appears that the risks associated with Trump regime's use of the Signal app are not limited to inadvertently sending sensitive information to the wrong person. Apparently the Pentagon is now warning that the app is not as secure as it's supposed to be anyway; it seems that the end to end encryption can be bypassed by clever hackers, potentially including state actors.

- Besides the entirely justified anger at the US for electing a guy who is threatening to invade his neighbours and is in the process of tanking the world economy and making climate change even worse than it was going to be already, there is another factor keeping tourists away - fear. Fear that an innocent mistake regarding the terms of your visa could get you shackled and hauled off to some hellhole prison for an indeterminate period, even if you had previously thought you were immune to that sort of thing due to being a white person from a well-off country. That suits the regime just fine, of course; I suspect that they want to reduce the amount of contact between their own citizens and the rest of the world as much as possible. After all if an impoverished little country like the DPRK can survive almost total isolation, they must figure it should be a cinch for a wealthy country like the US. Especially if they can pick up some Lebensraum (not to mention resources) in the form of Canada and Greenland. 

- The Canadian Security Intelligence Service says Pierre Poilievre's campaign for the Conservative leadership received assistance from the Indian government. While CSIS is careful to say that it hasn't been shown that Poilievre knew about said assistance, this might go some distance to explain why he refuses to get a security clearance.

- China has freed employees of an American corporate due diligence firm who had been detained two years previously, apparently as a way of attracting new investment. What's interesting, though, is the circumstances of their detention - their employer had been "conducting unauthorized statistical investigations". It seems they may have feared that this would reveal a bit too much about human rights abuses.

- Just as surely as the fossil fuel industry, the beef industry knew decades ago that their industry is a major contributor to climate change - and like the fossil fuel industry, they did their darnedest to keep this information hidden from the public

- Joe Rogan, who a few days ago was saying that the Trump regime's behaviour towards Canada was "ridiculous", has now fallen in line. He had been scheduled to work as a commentator at a UFC event in Montreal in May, but now says he'd "rather go to Russia". I guess the MAGA crowd made enough threats to his livelihood - and his life - to get him to reconsider his views on Canada.

- The former CAO of Gilbert Plains, Manitoba had an arrest warrant issued after failing to appear in court on charges of faking a cyberattack in order to defraud the municipality of more than half a million dollars. I guess her lucky VLT didn't come through in time to pay the money back.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

News roundup, 25 March 2025

- The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs is calling for the search of Prairie Green Landfill to continue, in the hope of finding the remains of the woman known as Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe ("Buffalo Woman"). This may be a tall order, since the information publicly available only gives the approximate time of her murder (mid-March 2022) and the approximate location where she was dumped (a bin behind a business on Henderson Highway, though it's possible that the police know which business and haven't made it public). But it's definitely worth looking further into. 

- Danielle Smith is coming under considerable criticism for the interview she gave to far-right news site Breitbart, in which she asked that Trump hold off on the tariffs until after the election so as to improve the Conservatives' chances. Whether the publicity over this interview will help the Cons is another question. It's not likely to help Smith, but she isn't up for reelection for a couple more years so maybe she hopes Albertans will have forgotten by then.

- Democratic Congresswoman Jamine Crockett made a statement in support of the "Tesla takedown" rallies, which happen to coincide with her birthday on the 29th of March. But when she said that "all I want to see happen on my birthday is for Elon to be taken down", this led to a statement by Attorney General Pam Bondi that Crockett should "tread very carefully" with such statements. 

- Jeffrey Goldberg, who writes for the Atlantic, got added to a Signal discussion group that included several prominent figures in the Trump regime, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. He ended up becoming privy to secret plans for bombing in Yemen in advance of the raid after Hegseth casually spilled the beans in the discussion group. One wonders if Hegseth is keeping his promise to quit drinking if appointed.

- Prepac, a manufacturer of ready-to-assemble furniture founded in Delta, BC in 1979 has shut down its Canadian manufacturing, citing "an altered economic environment" for the move. Unifor, which represented the workers at the Delta plant, is calling for a nationwide boycott of the company. Prepac was family-owned until Torquest, a private equity company, snapped it up in 2019; two years later it opened a plant in North Carolina, which will become their main site.

- DNA testing firm 23andMe has filed for bankruptcy, having apparently been unable to recover from the bad publicity resulting from a data breach two years ago. This has led to fears that people's genetic data might fall into the hands of folks who might have other things in mind than people's wellbeing (like, say, health insurance companies). The company's privacy policy says that any company buying the company's data is bound by the same policy; the only problem is, when they adopt 23andMe's privacy policy, they adopt the line in said policy that says it can be changed at any time. That doesn't sound reassuring. California's attorney general has even released a consumer alert complete with instructions on how to delete your account.

- The concept of a "Dyson swarm", in which vast numbers of solar collectors are placed around the Sun to form a huge spherical shell, has been around for a long time. The question of what that would do to the Earth's climate hasn't really been looked at until recently. But it seems that if such a swarm were placed just outside Earth's orbit, it would heat the planet's surface by an average of 140 K (or 140°C), enough to boil the oceans. If it were placed further out, say just past Mars, it would still heat the Earth by about 3°C, and building all those solar collectors would require about 10²³ kg of silicon, meaning a heck of a lot of asteroid mining.

- A woman was run down in the parking lot of a kids' recreational facility in suburban Winnipeg over the weekend, after standing in an open parking spot to hold it for another person. Apparently a 40 year old woman became so incensed at this that she ran her over, then backed out and fled the scene.