Feature

Suffer the Little Children: The Liberals’ $10-a-Day Childcare Disaster

Matthew Lau
April 14, 2026
Waiting lists stretching years. Plummeting quality. Outraged parents. Providers slowly strangled by red tape. The federal Liberals’ vaunted $10-a-day childcare program has proved an expensive disaster. Five years in, Matthew Lau digs into the many problems and inequities this landmark social policy has delivered. Lau finds B.C., which had a three-year head start on the rest of the country and an enthusiastic NDP government leading the way, in the worst straits of all. With an irretrievably flawed system clearly failing Canadian families, Lau argues that Prime Minister Mark Carney should pivot to a fairer, cheaper and more effective alternative.
Feature
Waiting lists stretching years. Plummeting quality. Outraged parents. Providers slowly strangled by red tape. The federal Liberals’ vaunted $10-a-day childcare program has proved an expensive disaster. Five years in, Matthew Lau digs into the many problems and inequities this landmark social policy has delivered. Lau finds B.C., which had a three-year head start on the rest of the country and an enthusiastic NDP government leading the way, in the worst straits of all. With an irretrievably flawed system clearly failing Canadian families, Lau argues that Prime Minister Mark Carney should pivot to a fairer, cheaper and more effective alternative.
Energy Security

From the Strait of Hormuz to Cuba, Net Zero is Dying – Mark Carney Needs to Let Go

Gwyn Morgan
April 7, 2026
Fixing Our Infrastructure

Busted Flush: Why Your Next Mayor Should Be an Engineer

Greg Wilson
March 31, 2026
Free Expression

We Have Ways of Making You Talk: The Tyranny of Land Acknowledgements and Other Compelled Speech

George Ramsay
March 23, 2026

Current News

The Surveillance Society
Generation Z should know better than anyone the risk that technology poses to personal privacy. They are after all the first generation to grow up entirely in the digital age. Jessica Nwaefidoh knows from personal experience how vulnerable your most intimate information can be. With companies anxious to profit from everyone’s personal data, politicians happy to play along for their own selfish reasons and most people willing to sacrifice their own privacy for convenience, amusement or just to get by, Nwaefidoh argues that it’s time to fight back. The right to be left alone, she finds, requires constant vigilance – and she offers some practical tactics to reclaim that right.
Generational Economics
Older generations often roll their eyes when young people seek to blame them for their woes. But if Canada’s Gen Zers feel betrayed by the Boomers, they are right to do so, argues Gwyn Morgan. Years of irresponsible fiscal and regulatory policies have hamstrung the Canadian economy and left younger generations facing a bleak future of stagnant wages, rising taxes and shrinking opportunities. A former business leader who created more than his share of jobs and prosperity during his long corporate career, Morgan casts a worried eye over the next generation – and offers sympathy for the situation they’re inheriting.
Economics of Air Travel
Ireland’s Ryanair will fly you from London to Geneva for $49. Flying from Calgary to Vancouver – a shorter trip – likely will set you back four times as much. Canadians suffer some of the highest-priced, least-convenient and most unpleasant airline service in the world, and mainly for one reason: forestalled competition. In fact, creating barriers to prevent any meaningful competition has been the main goal of Canadian airline policy since the formation of Trans-Canada Air Lines in 1937. Simon Michell explains how this sorry situation came to be and reveals how opening up our skies – as so many other countries have already done – would make things much better for us all.

On Point

Defending the Law

The Law Society of Alberta’s Wokism Will Dissolve the Rule of Law

Glenn Blackett
September 15, 2025
Trudeau Legacy

Appetite for Destruction: How a Decade of Liberal Rule Cratered Canada’s Economy

Gwyn Morgan
March 21, 2025
Crime and Punishment

Knives Out! As Manitoba Regulates Machetes, Could a National Knife Law Be Next?

Peter Shawn Taylor
December 10, 2024

Global Newsstand

Reason
Paul Ehrlich, author of the spectacularly incorrect 1968 best-seller The Population Bomb, recently died at 93. Despite his longevity, Ronald Bailey points out in Reason, Ehrlich did not live to see even one of his numerous apocalyptic predictions come true. The world’s population certainly grew, but not merely larger, richer and fatter too. Most famously, Ehrlich once bet economist Julian Simon that the world was approaching economic collapse – but in 1990 had to mail Simon a cheque.
Washington Monthly
Markos Kounalakis, writing in Washington Monthly, explains that Cuba’s 65-year-old Communist regime – “one of the world’s longest-surviving single-party states and the oldest in the Western Hemisphere” – is on its last legs. Running out of other people’s money is the least of it worries. Says Kounalakis: “President Donald Trump and his team have all but said that they want to topple the government just as soon as he receives Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender.’”
The European Conservative
Ixtu Diaz believes recent regional elections in Castile and León, Spain, foretell what could happen throughout the West. Despite past publicized corruption, Diaz points out in The European Conservative, the ruling Socialist Party (PSOE) under Pedro Sánchez was able to keep its 30 percent vote share, which Diaz ascribes to Sánchez’s tight media control, opposition strategies and engagement of far-left voters. Meaning, socialists cling to power despite the people’s somewhat rightward shift.

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Stories

Canadian History
Canada, the old saying goes, suffers from too much geography and too little history. That ratio is getting even more out of whack. Since the election of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in 2015 and gathering speed following allegations of mass graves in Kamloops in 2021, many of Canada’s most important historical figures have been erased in a tidal wave of cancellations and repudiations – all driven by a mob of woke activists uninterested in the true facts of Canada’s past. But as Jerry Amernic discovered while researching a book on historical revisionism, there are still those who believe Canadians can handle the truth. And they’re working hard to rescue our nation from the history hijackers.
Resisting Cancel Culture
For years now the Left has shown itself eager to claim hatred as the motive for anyone who opposes its worldview. This impulse has become a poisonous social force – elevating identity politics, quashing freedom, driving cancel culture and threatening the very foundation of Western liberal democracy. But where did it come from? Collin May, a former Chair of the Alberta Human Rights Commission who himself experienced cancellation, explores the deep origins in this thoughtful and wide-ranging essay. From Ancient philosophers and early theologians through Renaissance scholars and fashionable modern intellectuals, May traces this dark pathology’s evolution and explains why it’s so dangerous.
Rule of Law
It’s a rare and beautiful thing to see Canada’s courts strike a blow for individual freedom, but that’s what happened in an Ottawa courthouse last month. In a ringing and powerfully-reasoned decision, the Federal Court of Appeal found the Justin Trudeau government’s invocation of the Emergencies Act during the 2022 Freedom Convoy protests violated the law and the Constitution. Civil rights lawyer Christine Van Geyn, who was in the thick of the nearly four years of litigation the event triggered, explains why the court agreed that Trudeau’s actions constituted a draconian abuse of power – and why its ruling could prove a historic victory for Canadian civil liberties.
Education Policy
B.C.’s decision to abandon letter grades in favour of four vague “proficiency” categories is the latest example of the move to do away with objective standards throughout Canada’s public education system. Traditional grading methods are too hard on the tender egos of young students, the logic goes. And the possibility of failure is outdated, if not downright racist. Christina Park reveals how this new system is failing parents, who have a right to know how their child is doing, and harming students, who may be denied the help they need. She also uncovers some “gritty optimism” about the possible return of coherent educational standards.
European Affairs
Germany was postwar Europe’s most successful nation – until it was seized by an arrogant leftist ideology that led it down a ruinous path. Its government abandoned safe, zero-emission nuclear power for inefficient wind and solar plus natural gas from Vladmir Putin. It threw open its borders to millions of asylum-seekers with barely a thought to the enormous costs or the difficulties of social integration. Today, at the 11th hour, Germany is at last struggling to turn around its decade of economic decline and social disintegration. In this cautionary tale, Gwyn Morgan sees a profound warning for Canada.
Property Rights
“The whole meaning of life,” famed comedian George Carlin once observed, “is trying to find a place for all your stuff. That’s what your house is, it’s a place for your stuff with a cover on it.” If so, then Canadians should be very concerned about their stuff. Unlike nearly every other modern nation, Canada lacks constitutional affirmation of the right to own property and as protection against its unjust seizure. With a recent B.C. Supreme Court ruling putting the very notion of home ownership at risk, Peter Shawn Taylor seeks out legal opinions on Canada’s surprisingly lax attitude towards property rights, how it differs from other countries and what that means for everyone’s possessions. If Canadians really want to protect their homes, belongings and personal finances, Taylor concludes, now’s the time to get loud.
Countering Anti-Semitism
Canadians frequently criticize U.S. President Donald Trump’s projection of American power. But in the fight against anti-Semitism, Canada could learn a thing or two from our neighbour to the south. In Part One of this series, Lynne Cohen revealed how Canada’s political and civic leaders have chosen to ignore or even abet the hate crimes and abuse Jews have suffered since October 7, 2023. In this second installment, she shows how the U.S. – from the President on down to local officials and law enforcement – has fought back. Where Canada has been cowering and cowardly, the U.S. has resolved to fight anti-Semitism, protect its Jewish citizens and defend Israel’s right to live freely as a Jewish state.
Cosmology
A new year has dawned and, as the light strengthens across the Northern Hemisphere, David Solway reminds us that how we choose to experience our world is at least as important as understanding how it came to be. In the first instalment of this two-part series, the writer illuminated the irreducible paradox at the heart of all theories concerning the universe’s creation, then scrutinized the seemingly unbridgeable gap between quantum physics and the physical world we live in. In Part II he considers an even tougher and, so far, unsolved scientific challenge: gravity. Some of the finest minds in science think it actually is insoluble without some kind of creative intelligence to oversee it. In other words, a miracle. To Solway, the true miracle is the fact of a marvellous world and our freedom to experience and wonder at it.
Cosmology
We’ve long been told that science and religion occupy two incompatible poles – one of reason and fact, the other of faith, superstition and even irrationality. But what if it isn’t so? In this two-part series, David Solway proposes a new Grand Unified Theory of cosmology aimed at bringing science and religion back together. In the opening instalment, Solway illuminates the irreducible paradoxes at the heart of all theories concerning the universe’s creation, then scrutinizes the seemingly unbridgeable gap between quantum physics and the physical world we live in – a gap that nevertheless is bridged into an integrated and orderly reality. What, then, might this say about the apparently irreconcilable differences between 21st century science and theology? Perhaps, Solway ventures, they’re more like two peas in a pod – and should consider forging a new entente to support humanity’s eternal search for Truth.
Countering Anti-Semitism
Canada has seen a troubling rise in anti-Semitism in the last two years. Hatred of Jews is now expressed openly, shamelessly, without restraint – and without consequence for those engaged in it. In part one of a two-part series, Lynne Cohen explains why Canada’s political and civic leaders seem unwilling to call out anti-Semitism or take any meaningful action to stop it. Whether driven by bias, cowardice or cold political calculation, the country’s political class is not just failing Canada’s Jewish population. It is choosing to do so. If the brutal massacre of innocent Jews by Muslim terrorists at Bondi Beach in Australia teaches anything, it’s that allowing anti-Semitism to spread has murderous consequences. Canada should take heed.
Stories
U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade policy may be chaotic and punitive, but he’s right about one thing: Canada’s agricultural supply management system has to go. Not because it’s unfair to America, though it is, but because it punishes Canadians. The price-fixing scheme limits consumer choice, requires a huge bureaucracy and prevents farmers from producing more in the face of shortages, forcing them instead to dump excess production. Worst of all, writes Gwyn Morgan, it drives up prices for milk, cheese, chicken, eggs and other essential foods — all for the benefit of a few thousand farmers, largely in Quebec. For Canada’s trade negotiators, argues Morgan, ending this mad racket should be job one.
Indigenous Reconciliation
What do children owe their parents? Love, honour and respect seem like a good start. But what of parents who were once political figures? Does the younger generation owe a duty of care to the beliefs of their forebears? In a fascinating study on the nexus of familial responsibility and present-day policy choices, Peter Best examines two recent cases of inter-generational conflict over Indigenous relations in Canada. One concerns Prime Minister Mark Carney and his father Robert. The other is a recent book on the work of noted aboriginal thinker William Wuttunee edited by his academic daughter. In each case, Best finds, the current generation has let down its ancestors – and left all of Canada worse off.
Euthanasia
In her autobiography, famed mystery novelist Agatha Christie wrote that, “The saddest thing in life and the hardest to live through, is the knowledge that there is someone you love very much whom you cannot save from suffering.” Christie was speaking as a parent watching her daughter learn that her husband had been killed at Normandy. Even sadder may be the plight of a parent with a severely ill or disabled child for whom there is no cure. But is it so sad as to warrant euthanasia? Anna Farrow takes an unflinching look at efforts to expand Canada’s MAID program to include babies. If Canada eventually legalizes the “compassionate” killing of infants, Farrow points out, it will be following in the heartless footsteps of the country that pioneered the concept – Nazi Germany.
Indigenous Reconciliation
Unfounded claims about buried bodies. Lies about missing children. Attacks on those who challenge the dominant narrative on Canada’s former Indian Residential Schools. This is just some of the ground Dead Wrong: How Canada Got the Residential School Story so Wrong covers in its look into the latest falsehoods and distortions spinning around the controversial issue. Dead Wrong – which officially launches today – is a follow-up to the best-seller Grave Error. In this exclusive preview, co-editor and noted historian Tom Flanagan recounts the many ways politicians, activists, the media and some Indigenous leaders have tried to suppress the truth, and warns of the latest and most dangerous tactic: the attempt to criminalize “Residential School Denialism” and use the power of the state to silence those who try to set the record straight.
Stories
Artificial intelligence is the most hyped, most feared and most misunderstood technology of our times. But just how worried should we be? Technology analyst Gleb Lisikh demonstrated in Part One of this series why large language models can’t be trusted to provide answers that are factual and true. In this instalment he shows why AI will have huge impacts all the same on how society functions. The technology can, in fact, make everything from finance to education and health care more efficient. And even though it merely mimics human thought and interaction, people will still rush to use it. Because, as even Lisikh admits, it’s so dang useful. Thankfully, a few simple rules can help you get the most out of it – and avoid being tricked.

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