Friday, July 18, 2025

News roundup, 18 July 2025

- The IDF shelled a Catholic church in Gaza on Wednesday, killing at least two people and injuring several others. The church was providing shelter to hundreds of people, both Muslims and Christians, who had been displaced by the ongoing conflict.

- Daniel Martindale, an American missionary who was living in Poland at the time of Russia's invasion of Ukraine decided he needed to do something. So he crossed the border into Ukraine, set himself up in a village near the front lines, and secretly passed intelligence over to the Russians. Once the village was captured by the Russians, they spirited him out of there and have now given him Russian citizenship as a reward for his service.

- CBS is cancelling the Late Show once Stephen Colbert's contract runs out next year, saying that this was a "financial decision". The most charitable interpretation the folks in this Reddit thread could come up with was that CBS could have to pay a lot more legal fees fighting the roadblocks the Trump regime could throw up for their business if they keep Colbert on the air.

- At a town hall event in Edmonton, Danielle Smith faced a lot of hostile questions from the crowd regarding such matters as schemes to withdraw from the Canada Pension Plan and to create a provincial police force. Notably, though, while the majority of actual speakers on the issue were opposed, a show of hands indicated that the majority of those attending were in favour of both policies.

- An independent candidate in the Alberta riding of  Battle River-Crowfoot, where Pierre Poilievre is running to pick up a seat, has stopped going door-to-door due to receiving death threats.

- Three candidates have registered so far for the byelection in the Winnipeg ward of Elmwood-East Kildonan. The byelection was necessitated by the death of incumbent councillor Jason Schreyer in April. Emma Durand-Wood, a community activist, was the first to register; she has the support of a lot of urbanist types, however the Winnipeg Labour Council has endorsed CUPE activist Carmen Prefontaine. Most recently, a 25 year old candidate named Zekaria Selahadin has entered the race; the byelection will be held in October. 

- The Rural Municipality of Alexander in eastern Manitoba has a serious problem with trolls on their Facebook page. Reportedly some councillors are thinking twice about running in the next municipal election due to the amount of abuse and threats directed at them. A cursory glance at their page failed to bring up any examples (presumably the moderators have been removing them as fast as they can) and the only thing I can see there that might have provoked this is a fire ban (since lifted) that was imposed due to the risk of wildfires. I can easily see the freedumb crowd wanting to stir the pot on such an issue. 

- Police in the Indian state of Karnataka found an undocumented Russian woman living in a cave with two of her children.

- The Oakbank detachment of the RCMP, whose jurisdiction includes Bird's Hill Provincial Park, are investigating after a Tesla Cybertruck parked at the Winnipeg Folk Festival parking lot had a naughty word written on it in marker. They've gone so far as to distribute a photo of the suspect. I have to wonder why anyone driving a Cybertruck would expect that not to happen; of the thousands of people attending a festival like that, there's sure to be at least one who would think you're enough of an asshole to warrant having your truck vandalized. 

Thursday, July 17, 2025

News roundup, 17 July 2025

- The possibility of Donald Trump firing Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell is still looming. Powell has refused to cut interest rates as Trump wants; he needs some sort of a pretext to do this, though, and the alleged mismanagement of the renovations on two Federal Reserve buildings just might be it. Trump has already been polling Republican legislators on the issue. He's denying, however, that he actually plans to do so, perhaps leery of what such an unprecedented move might do to the markets. Interfering with their central banks didn't do Hungary and Turkey any favours, after all.

- The Trump regime is doing its utmost to stop the expansion of renewable energy, even as China races ahead. China already has five times the amount of renewable energy in its grid as the US - and they have greatly expanded electricity supply without increasing their fossil fuel consumption as a result. Their crackdown on offshore wind now has Massachusetts and New York looking to buy power from an offshore project in Nova Scotia.

- The matter of the Epstein files continues to cause problems for Donald Trump. Some think that this could be thing that finally makes the MAGA crowd question their previously unquestioning loyalty to the orange monster. Then again, it might just as easily make them question their previously unquestioned belief that sexual abuse of minors is a bad thing.

- A plastic surgeon in Utah who allegedly destroyed more than $28,000 worth of government provided COVID-19 vaccines and gave kids saline shots so they would answer yes when asked if they had been vaccinated has had all charges against him dropped by the Department of Justice under Pam Bondi. Dr. Michael Kirk Moore Jr. had allegedly accepted cash bribes to distribute fraudulent vaccination cards as well.

- Two people have been arrested after allegedly using a tow truck to steal several vehicles in Transcona.  

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

News roundup, 16 July 2025

- Mark Carney has acknowledged something many of us have long believed - that it is highly unlikely that Canada will be able to satisfy Donald Trump sufficiently to avoid having to put up with tariffs. This is a good thing; how he handles the situation remains to be seen (and there may be no truly good way of doing so). It seems that other world leaders are thinking the same thing, though; hopefully our people are talking to their people to find some mutually beneficial ways to avoid dealing with the US any more than necessary. Couple that with the fact that fewer people than ever even want to visit the place now, and they're going to find themselves very lonely on the international stage, probably for a long time to come.

- Brampton, Ontario mayor Patrick Brown is under police protection following reports of threats to him and his family. According to the CBC article, the police are withholding details so as not to jeopardize the investigation; the Toronto Sun has filled the void by juxtaposing the threats to Brown with a news conference about organized crime to let readers connect the dots, whether justifiably or not.

- Immigration judges are allowing the names of lawyers representing ICE to be suppressed in the public record, possibly to make it more difficult for bar associations to take action against them in the event that they do anything unethical in the course of their work (like, I dunno, collaborate with a fascist regime maybe).

- Ro Khanna, a Democratic member of Congress from California, attempted to introduce a motion that would have allowed the House of Representatives to vote on whether to make the Epstein files public. Republicans on the House Rules Committee voted all but unanimously to stop the motion from being debated by the House; presumably this is to protect Republican members of the House from the impossible choice of having to either be seen as defending child abuse or going against the wishes of their Dear Leader.

- Gas powered motorcycles, scooters and mopeds are certainly more fuel efficient than cars, but their emissions other than CO2 are far worse due to their being exempt from a lot of the regulations on cars. Vietnam, which has rather a lot of these vehicles, is doing something about it - they're banning them from central Hanoi as of a year from now. Hopefully e-bikes and e-scooters are going to replace them.

- The two men who cut down the famous Sycamore Gap tree have been sentenced to four years and three months in prison on two counts of criminal damage - one for the tree and the other for damage caused to Hadrian's Wall itself.  

- Chinese researchers have created a chip that can be implanted in a bee so as to turn it into a cyborg. The biggest barrier to making this practical is having a power supply that is both long-lived enough to carry out a mission and light enough that the bee would still be able to fly.

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

News roundup, 15 July 2025

- Clownvoy organizer James Bauder is seeking political asylum in the US after his lawyers warned him that his chance of avoiding conviction on charges related to the protest are virtually nonexistent, given the fates of his co-conspirators.

- A man who was born in New Brunswick but has lived in New Hampshire for most of his life was denied reentry into the US after a family trip due to convictions he received some two decades ago for marijuana possession and driving while suspended. Funny thing is, he approved of the Trump regime until this happened to him, but now he's not so sure.

- The property committee of Winnipeg city council has unanimously approved an exemption to height limits for an apartment tower that's part of the Market Lands project. The tower, when completed, will include 148 units of which two thirds will be rented out below median market rates.

- The fire district serving northeastern BC could see 30% of its forested areas burn this year, according to provincial forestry minister Ravi Parmar. South of the border, an iconic lodge in Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona was destroyed in a wildfire over the weekend. Here in Manitoba preparations are being made to house thousands of people if needed; for perspective, if the city of Thompson alone were to be evacuated that would more than double the number of evacuees. Fortunately some progress is being made towards protecting Thompson. But given that there's only a single highway connecting Thompson with the rest of the province's road system, they also might not want to wait until the city is in imminent risk of burning down - if the highway is cut off, getting 13,000 people onto airplanes on short notice would not be an easy task.

- For the first time, one of Donald Trump's posts on Truth Social has been "ratioed"; in social media jargon, the ratio in question is that of replies (which are disproportionately often negative reactions to a post) compared to likes and shares (which are normally positive). The post in question was made in defense of his attorney general Pam Bondi's handling of the Epstein files.

- Nahanni Fontaine, whose cabinet post includes responsibility for accessibility, has again apologized for her unfortunate remarks about the ASL interpreter at a recent event. She has agreed to undergo training on deafness and deaf culture. That's a good move, certainly. Not such a good move was when whoever runs her official social media accounts made the decision to block the entire news team of APTN, the network whose mic picked up her remarks in the first place. Fontaine attributes this to overzealous staffers and she says she directed them to reverse this once she became aware of it. For what it's worth, I believe her (it's the norm for staffers to handle that sort of thing), but it still isn't a good look.

Monday, July 14, 2025

News roundup, 14 July 2025

- Elizabeth May is calling for the federal government to impose a potash embargo on the US. As this would devastate the Canadian potash industry if done in isolation, she is calling for the government to buy the potash that would otherwise have been exported to the States and set it aside as a strategic reserve. She is also calling for them to reinstate the digital services tax, since removing it doesn't seem to have done any good. Seems like a good idea; whether Mark Carney will take the advice remains to be seen however.

- Solar power now has the largest share of Europe's electricity generation, narrowly topping nuclear and far above fossil fuels.

- A farm worker was killed and several hundred were arrested in an ICE raid on a farm in California. The worker had climbed to the roof of a greenhouse in the hope of avoiding the raid and fell to his death.

- A US District Court in California has requested that the LAPD please stop shooting journalists, even if it's just with rubber bullets. 

- Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert has acknowledged what many of us already recognize - that Israel actually is guilty of war crimes and that not everyone who points that out is an antisemite.

- The MAGA crowd are losing whatever remained of their minds over the latest Superman movie, calling it "super woke" and accusing it of attempting to indoctrinate viewers. Their concerns centre partly around the fact that Superman/Clark Kent is explicitly called an immigrant.  This is of course true, but then the guy is from another planet, what else are you going to call him? And the pro-Israel crowd is incensed over a plot point in the film - a conflict between two fictional nations, one of which is brutally occupying the other. The countries aren't directly based on Israel and Palestine, of course (the occupier seems to be imagined as a former Soviet republic while the other is some unspecified west Asian one) but it's kind of telling that ultra-Zionists feel threatened by any fictional presentation of a brutal occupation.

- A radio station in Swan River, Manitoba was destroyed by fire on Thursday; investigators have concluded that it was arson. The incident follows a heated discussion on a social media account run by the station owner. Following the death of a passenger in the car that also killed two much loved members of the Winnipeg arts community, a post made reference to the dead passenger's criminal history. Given that he's dead there's not much of a public interest in the details of said history unless it was really weird or interesting (which it isn't), so a lot of people thought that it was needlessly hurtful to his family to dwell on the matter. That said, torching a radio station does seem like an excessive response.

Friday, July 11, 2025

News roundup, 11 July 2025

- Manitoba has once again declared a provincewide state of emergency due to wildfires. Garden Hill First Nation (population 4,000) and the town of Snow Lake (population 1,000) are being evacuated, bringing the number of evacuated communities to nine. Thompson (population 13,000) is preparing for the possibility of evacuation as well; there is a fire near the city that is estimated at over 10,000 hectares. While there has been some favourable weather that has helped those trying to protect the city, officials are pre-registering residents just in case. Meanwhile several Republican members of Congress have sent a letter to Canada's ambassador in Washington, demanding that Canada stop ruining their summer by sending smoke their way. Wab Kinew is not amused.

- Donald Trump is threatening to hit Brazil with tariffs as high as 50%, accusing the country of a "witch hunt" against its former president Jair Bolsonaro, who is being prosecuted for a Jan 6-style putsch following his defeat in the 2022 election. Trump also accuses Brazil of unspecified "attacks" on American tech companies. He's also threatening Canada with 35% across the board tariffs, citing fentanyl as well as our supply management systems as the reasons.

- The Trump regime is imposing sanctions on Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur for the Palestinian territories. Trump accuses her of "political and economic warfare" against the US as well as Israel. The executive order essentially prohibits "US persons" (which includes corporations) from doing business with her. How this will impact her work remains to be seen.

- The Market Lands project, a mixed income housing project planned for the site of the former Public Safety Building in downtown Winnipeg, is running into opposition from heritage advocates. The plan calls for a 16 storey building to be constructed on part of the site; this would require an exemption from the standard height limit of 100 ft for the area. While the site is outside the limits of the heritage-protected area of the Exchange District, Heritage Winnipeg executive director Cindy Tugwell fears that it would set a precedent that could lead to other tall buildings being built in the area. Whether this is the actual reason, or whether said heritage advocates own condos in the area that they fear could be devalued by too much affordable rental housing in the area, is unclear. In any case, city council's property and development committee will be voting on the matter on Monday.

- While the recent changes to Winnipeg Transit are getting mixed reviews, some of the complaints are downright absurd. This person has gone full Karen about the fact that a bus route now goes down Waterfront Drive; she has half-baked arguments against it but given how much she has blathered on about homeless people in the past I suspect that the real reason has something to do with not wanting to live near the kind of people who take the bus.

- The citizen science database iNaturalist is a hugely useful resource for naturalists, but it has come under some scrutiny after Erin Patterson used it to locate the mushrooms that she used to kill her in-laws. Many entries on the site give the exact latitude and longitude where something has been found; some are advocating that the precise location should be obscured on the public portion of the website. Others question this, pointing to the extreme rarity of situations like this. 

Thursday, July 10, 2025

News roundup, 10 July 2025

- Four men from Quebec have been arrested over a plot to forcibly seize land near Quebec City; they appear to have been trying to start an American-style far-right militia. They had stockpiled 83 firearms and 16 bombs, as well as such things as smoke grenades and night vision goggles; all four have ties to the military.

- Donald Trump is musing about a federal takeover of New York City and the District of Columbia. In the case of New York, he suggested that it might be necessary if Zohran Mamdani (who he called a "communist") gets elected mayor. He also fulminated about the city's use instant-runoff (ranked choice) voting. In the case of DC, he tries to justify a takeover on the basis of excessive crime (despite the fact that overall crime in the federal district is down 8% compared to last year, and violent crime is down 25%). That said, there might well be a legal route to a takeover of DC (they could theoretically repeal the Home Rule Act). Ultimately, though, even in the case of New York the ability to stop a takeover depends on the whims of the courts, which have disproportionately been stacked with Trump loyalists.

- During the Biden years, the Democrats designed their climate law in such a way that many of the new green jobs would be in red states. The idea was that the Republicans, when they took power, would be reluctant to undo work that had created so many jobs for their supporters. Unfortunately the Democrats seem to have given voters too much credit for understanding this; the Republicans are betting on the bleating masses continuing to support them. Sadly it's probably a safe bet, even supposing that next year's midterms and the 2028 presidential election are fair (which seems unlikely in any case).

- A 25 nation survey by the Pew Research Center found that 59% of Canadians now view the US as the greatest threat to the country. Canadians' resolve to boycott as many American goods as possible and to avoid travel to the country seems to remain strong as well.

- Vaccination rates in the Maritimes are too low to reliably control the spread of measles. In Nova Scotia, about 23% of children have less than the requisite two doses of the vaccine; New Brunswick and PEI are somewhat better, but 10% of kids aren't fully vaccinated. The rate should be below 5% to keep the disease under control.

- The developer of ICEBlock, an app that allows people to share sightings of ICE officers has been threatened by the Department of Justice; Attorney General Pam Bondi told Fox News that "he better watch out". Moreover, Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem is threatening CNN for reporting on the very existence of the app. Admittedly, there are people out there who would happily do harm to ICE officers, but the people who lured a bunch of them out of a detention facility in Texas and opened fire on them didn't need an app to find them in any case.