Wednesday, December 24, 2025

News roundup, 24 Dec 2025

 Just a note that I plan on this being the last blog post until the new year. That may change if something happens that seems worthy of interrupting the break, but otherwise I will resume posting in January. For now, though, here's the latest:

- A Perimeter Airlines Dash 8 preparing to take off from Winnipeg on a flight to Thompson via Manto Sipi and Shamattawa was stopped on a taxiway and evacuated on Monday after a flight attendant and ground control reported that the aircraft was on fire. There were no injuries in the evacuation, and the fire was limited to the right main landing gear assembly.

- The executive of Winnipeg's Granite Curling Club is requesting a judicial review of the city's plans to fight the ruling of the Manitoba Municipal Board regarding an affordable housing project planned for an adjacent city-owned parking lot. The city has received advice suggesting that the board's ruling can be ignored; the executive wants this reviewed by the courts. Notably, a substantial minority of the club's members are in favour of the housing project. If I had to guess, the members in support of the development probably live mostly in Wolseley, West Broadway, and Osborne Village and see homelessness every day as they walk or bike through their neighbourhoods, while those in opposition live in the suburbs and thus find homelessness less inconvenient for them than having to take the bus to the curling club.

- The waters around southwestern England are seeing a huge surge in the octopus population. The Common Octopus (Octopus vulgaris) accounts for most of the surge; this species is not unknown in British waters but has historically been more common in the Mediterranean. Since they prey on other molluscs as well as crustaceans, this may have implications for the shellfish industry if the "bloom" persists. Warmer winters due to climate change are the suspected reason, though maybe they're just the advance party for the Cthulhu as he gets ready to come out of the seabed and ravage the world. We'll have to see.

- The FBI and a New York prosecutor sought to interview the Andrew formerly known as Prince over possible connections to Peter Nygard. It's like all the rich scumbags out their know each other or something.

- A raid on a house in Winnipeg's North Point Douglas neighbourhood last Friday resulted in arrests and the seizure of two crossbows and a grenade as well as more conventional weapons including several firearms, brass knuckles, and a canister of bear spray. Two people are facing multiple charges for the weapons as well as methamphetamine, fentanyl, and lockpicks. Meanwhile in the suburban neighbourhood of Westwood, a cop apparently managed to lose their service weapon with 17 rounds of ammunition in it.

- Far right influencers Andrew Tate and Jake Paul both got soundly beaten in separate boxing matches. It's almost as if hypermasculine macho nonsense isn't enough to actually win a fight.

- A mall Santa in the Edmonton suburb of Sherwood Park was fired after allegedly slapping the hand of a child who tugged at his beard. I could certainly see the temptation, but really, all he needed to say was "No presents for you!"

- A driver in Salmon Arm, BC cut off a vehicle at high speed, flipping the bird while doing so. Unfortunately for him and his passengers, the vehicle turned out to be an unmarked police car, and when they were pulled over the police noticed some unstamped (i.e. black market) cigarettes in their car. Upon further investigation they found cannabis that was also from non-approved sources; they also found 29 grams of cocaine and a wad of cash.

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

News roundup, 23 Dec 2025

- Mark Carney has appointed Mark Wiseman to take over as ambassador to the US, replacing Kirsten Hillman who announced her resignation earlier this month. Wiseman has previously served as chair of several investment funds, including that of the Canada Pension Plan, as well as having served as a manager at BlackRock. The choice has raised alarms in Quebec, though, because Wiseman has questioned the merits of supply management in the past, and there are thus fears that he might cave too easily to American demands on the matter. Carney, for his part, insists that supply management is safe on his watch; we'll have to see how that goes.

- The website for Global News, which has a brand licensing agreement with CBS for 60 Minutes, briefly hosted the segment that was spiked on the orders of CBS news chief Bari Weiss. The segment was removed from Global's website after about two hours. Global hasn't said why, but my guess is legal threats from CBS. In any case, screen recordings of the segment were taken by some users; a clip may be seen here.

- Security upgrades at a troubled Manitoba Housing complex in inner-city Winnipeg seem to be paying off, with a drastic drop in police calls to the building. Two years ago the police were attending daily and the place was so bad that no further placements were being made at the building and residents were getting their mail sent offsite due to the amount of theft. The controlled entry has no doubt helped, though one resident is ambivalent - even though he recognizes that things are much safer now, he says it "kinda brought me back to when I was in a residential school where we had more rules". Unfortunately tradeoffs like this are inevitable when trying to bring about a short-term solution to crime.

- The Kinew government plans to address differential pricing for groceries such as that used by third-party delivery service Instacart. The service, for their part, say that they aren't a retailer and don't control base prices; they've now also announced that they're stopping the practice that they say they never did before anyway.

- An AI weapons detection system recently installed at Lawton Chiles Middle School in Oviedo, Florida sent the school into a lockdown after mistaking a band student's clarinet for a gun.

Monday, December 22, 2025

News roundup, 22 Dec 2025

- Less than a day after a large dump of Epstein-related documents on the US Justice Department's website, several of the files were suddenly removed, including a photo of Trump with Epstein. Other information seems to have not been posted in the first place, given how few of the photos and documents refer to Trump. Naturally the DoJ has not held back on stuff connecting Epstein to other people, such as Bill Clinton. Information from court documents and other sources reportedly suggests that Trump tried to have his name removed from the files entirely (not that we didn't all already suspect that). Two co-sponsors of the House resolution that ordered the release of the files are now calling for Attorney General Pam Bondi to be held in contempt of Congress.

- The largest isolated power grid in the world, the South West Interconnected System which serves Western Australia, is scheduled to close all of their coal plants by 2029. Interestingly, while a spike in natural gas usage is expected at that time, the spike is not expected to last long as battery storage will enable renewables to pick up much of the slack.

- Manitoba premier Wab Kinew has announced that a public inquiry will be held as early as next year into the outgoing Conservative government's attempts to approve the Sio Silica project in Springfield.

- The company that makes Jim Beam bourbon will be suspending production at its main location in Kentucky for all of 2026, ostensibly to upgrade the facility. Distillers in that state have lost some $75 million this year due to the Trump regime's trade policies and the resulting boycotts.

- Russian Lt Gen Fanil Sarvarov, who headed the military's operational training department, was killed by a car bomb in Moscow this morning. Russian authorities suspect Ukrainian intelligence services were involved in the bombing. This may very well be true; on the other hand, it's also possible that this was "defenestration by other means".

- Bari Weiss, the news editor for CBS, spiked a story on the mistreatment of detainees who had been sent to El Salvador by the Trump regime. The piece had been scheduled to run on yesterday's edition of 60 Minutes, but Weiss ordered the story pulled because it did not include an on-the-record comment from an official of the regime.

- A fire at a PG&E substation in San Francisco cut power to 130,000 residents for several hours. Notably, it also revealed an interesting problem with Waymo robotaxis - they don't know what to do at an intersection if the traffic signals aren't working.

- An EasyJet A319 preparing to take off from Malaga, Spain on a flight to to London, England was delayed for 12 hours after flight attendants discovered that one of the passengers was dead. The deceased, an 89 year old British woman, had been wheeled onto the plane by relatives, who said that she had fallen asleep after feeling unwell at the airport, but further investigation showed that she was not, in fact, just resting. Many passengers suspected that she may have already been dead by the time she was wheeled on; perhaps her family didn't realize, or maybe they hoped to avoid the inconvenience of having to report a death in a foreign country.

Friday, December 19, 2025

News roundup, 19 Dec 2025

 - A resolution in the US House of Representatives ordering the Trump regime not to wage war with Venezuela without the consent of Congress (like, you know, the constitution already saysnarrowly failed despite having two Republicans, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Thomas Massie of Kentucky, as co-sponsors. 

- The suspect in the mass shooting at Brown University has been found dead after apparently shooting himself. Claudio Neves Valente is also suspected of killing MIT professor Nuno F Gomes Loureiro, with whom he had attended university in Portugal many years ago.

- Quebec Liberal Party leader Pablo Rodriguez has resigned, only six months after taking the position. This follows months of dysfunction in the party, and comes only 10 months before Quebec goes to the polls in an election that is thought to favour the separatist Parti Quebecois.

- Toronto has found a potential workaround for the Ford government's restrictions on bike lanes. Instead of removing traffic lanes entirely, which would be prohibited by provincial legislation, the city is narrowing the traffic lanes to make room for nearly 20 kilometres of bike lanes. As an added bonus, the narrower car lanes will tend to have a psychological effect on drivers, slowing them down.

- Conestoga College in Kitchener is laying off 181 full-time instructors. This follows 190 layoffs earlier this year. The college has also suspended 82 programs and has not renewed leases for two of its satellite campuses, one in downtown Kitchener and one in Brantford. The institution has depended heavily on international students; they had more of them than any other postsecondary institution in Canada, and with the heavy cuts to student visas the school is taking a big hit.

- A student at Vancouver Island University in Nanaimo who was suspended for two years for pro-Palestinian activism (including hanging a banner on a building as well as a noisy protest that disrupted exams) has lost in court after attempting to challenge the suspension. 

- A Hanukkah ceremony at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre was disrupted by a man who called the participants "genocidal terrorists" and "fucking baby killers". In response, extra precautions were taken at a similar ceremony at the Asper Jewish Community Campus yesterday, with an enhanced police presence.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

News roundup, 18 Dec 2025

- The Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUMSA) is currently being reviewed. Mark Carney denies that Donald Trump has threatened to abrogate the agreement in its entirety, but US Trade Representative Jamieson Grier says that the possibility is still on the table unless agreements can be made on some key issues, including supply management for dairy as well as the Online Streaming Act. It seems worthwhile to ask whether the renewal of the agreement would insulate Canada from tariffs, though; it hasn't done that so far, so perhaps cancelling the deal wouldn't make things worse than they already are. The US still does need our exports, after all.

- A federal court has ruled that National Guard troops can remain in DC while a panel of judges looks at the legality of the deployment.

- The European Union is looking into the possibility of using seized Russian assets to help fund Ukraine's war effort. They are also looking at other measures, including borrowing money to fund Ukraine, however such a move would require unanimity among member states, and Viktor Orban's Hungary is not expected to agree to it.

- A man who posted video evidence of the mistreatment of Uyghurs in his native China, then fled to the US, was given a work permit but nonetheless could now face deportation after ICE raided his residence while investigating his roommate.

- B’nai Brith Canada is going to court in the hope of having the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba's dismissal of a complaint against a physician overturned. The organization alleges that Dr. Barry Lavallee made antisemitic posts on X in 2024. The exact content of the posts has not been made public; presumably B’nai Brith wants us to take their word for it that the posts were actually antisemitic.

- A French anesthetist has been sentenced to life in prison after intentionally poisoning some 30 patients, 12 of them fatally. Dr. Frédéric Péchier had apparently contaminated infusion bags with toxic substances.

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

News roundup, 17 Dec 2025

- The surviving suspect in the Bondi Beach attack has been charged with 15 counts of murder as well as 40 counts of causing grievous bodily harm as well as with committing a terrorist act. 

- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is willing to consider a referendum on the surrender of territories occupied by Russia. The Trump regime is demanding that Ukraine withdraw from the Donbass region as a condition of peace; Zelenskyy is not willing to unilaterally offer this but has offered a referendum to placate Trump and Putin.

- Winnipeg's executive policy committee plans to hire a full-time transit planner in order to address the concerns about Winnipeg Transit's new network. Whether this can resolve the issues remains to be seen, though one transit activist is hopeful.

- Brayden Bushby, who was convicted of manslaughter in the death of Barbara Kentner in Thunder Bay in 2017, has been granted day parole for the second time. The first time it was granted, it was subsequently revoked following numerous breaches of conditions, including associated with people he'd been ordered not to as well as theft and impaired driving. He also got a Confederate flag tattoo while on day parole, and after he was locked up again he was seen on video mowing a swastika into a prison lawn. None of this seems to bode well for his rehabilitation prospects.

- A professor of nuclear science and engineering at MIT has died after being shot in his home on Monday. Nuno F Gomes Loureiro had been working on developing nuclear fusion technologies; a suspect and motive for the killing have not been identified so far.

- A Chilliwack, BC woman was killed by a falling tree after taking her kids to a local park. The children escaped injury.

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

News roundup, 16 Dec 2025

- A proposed 800 unit housing development in north Toronto is at risk as the provincial government considers imposing a municipal zoning order that would limit the height of the complex to 33 metres (around 10 storeys). The developer wants three connected towers, with the largest being 133 m tall (39 storeys); the proposed height limit would kill the viability of the development. The pretext that the government is giving for considering killing the project is an odd one - Sanofi Pasteur, a pharmaceutical company that neighbours the project, allegedly fears that allowing tall residential buildings near their facility would be a security risk. It's not entirely clear that this is the real reason, though; it doesn't make much sense. Do the folks at Sanofi Pasteur really think people in the apartments will be able to sit there with binoculars and read their employees' notes and sample labels? I kind of doubt that, even if they're so careless as to do all their top-secret work next to windows. More likely the Ford government has another reason for wanting to kill the project (e.g. not wanting to normalize the kind of housing that would make their opponents' votes more efficient).

- Winnipeg councillor Janice Lukes has hired private security for a community consultation event related to the recent changes to the Winnipeg Transit network. Lukes, who is chair of the city's public works committee, has been harshly criticized for the way the changes have been implemented.

- The suspects in the Bondi Beach terror attack had apparently undergone paramilitary training in the Philippines last month. The younger of the two was apparently a follower of Wisam Haddad, an extremist imam based in Sydney. Haddad is thought to have connections to the Islamic State but denies any involvement in the recent attack. The surviving suspect is apparently now conscious and under guard in hospital.

- A Canadian military counterintelligence officer has been charged with leaking operational secrets to Ukraine without getting the approval of his superiors. Prosecutors say that he "was not motivated by personal or financial gain or to cause harm"; nonetheless, this would seem to be a significant overstep on his part. It could also have backfired; it's not hard to imagine a scenario where a Russian agent poses as a Ukrainian agent to get backdoor information.

- A consortium consisting of Vancouver-based Consensus Core and Las Vegas-based Jet.AI wants to build a data centre near Île-des-Chênes, in the rural municipality of Ritchot, Manitoba. What makes this problematic, though, is that they want to generate their own electricity from natural gas; under new legislation companies wanting to connect highly energy-intensive projects to the power grid are subject to added scrutiny, so the consortium wants to get around this by generating their own power instead.

- Nick Reiner, the middle child of Rob and Michelle Reiner, has been arrested for the murders of his parents. He has a long history of homelessness and substance abuse. For his part Donald Trump says that Reiner, who had long been a vocal support of Democratic candidates, may have died "due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction with... Trump Derangement Syndrome".