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  1. Keep the original title when submitting an article. You can put your own commentary in the body of the post or in the comment section.

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founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
2026
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/54800550

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rezz

Isabelle Rezazadeh (born 28 March 1995), who is known by her stage name Rezz (stylized in all caps), is a Ukrainian–Canadian DJ and record producer from Niagara Falls, Ontario.

Rezz is an electronic music producer and DJ; her sound has been described as "midtempo bass" and a modern styling of "new beat".[1] In 2015, MTV called her the "new queen of the dark techno scene", writing she had been "making electronic and techy beats for two years" at that point.[3] EDM.com's Niko Sani wrote Rezz's "deliciously ominous, often alien-sounding bass music" helped gain her popularity within the electronic music scene in around 2016.[54] Other music writers have referred to Rezz's music as sounding "dark",[55] as well as "menacing", "mechanical", "haunting and industrial".[56] Spotify's outlet For the Record profiled Rezz, calling her "one of the most highly regarded producers of downtempo soundscapes", and saying she "strikes a firm balance between minimal original tech compositions and the all-heavy bass"

2027
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/54800379

I loved Wolf Castle's other album, 'Waiting for the Dawn'. Stephen Hero is new to me.

https://www.wolfcastle.ca/

Wolf Castle is an Indigenous rapper, producer and singer from Pabineau First Nation, New Brunswick.

https://www.conservationcouncil.ca/community-engaged-art/featured-artist-stephen-hero/

Stephen Hero (Matthew Elliot) makes raw, working-class hip hop from Canada’s east coast. His style is influenced by alt-rap legends like Kool Keith and MF DOOM, with a strong penchant for the relaxed and joyous experimentation of groups like De La Soul and Beastie Boys, but with a contemporary feel.

2028
36
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by BrikoX@lemmy.zip to c/canada@lemmy.ca
 
 

Martin Lukacs and Desmond Cole discuss the Liberal government’s Harper-esque budget

2029
2030
2031
 
 

I'm ditching YouTube and cancelled my Premium account because they recently purged videos and accounts of Palestinian human rights organizations, and I'm generally trying to boycott the US and Google further.

I'm switching to podcasts to give myself something to listen to instead. I found CBC Podcasts and TVO Podcasts. I also found this Lemmy thread from 2 years ago, but I'd figure it's time to ask the community again.

What are your suggestions for Canadian or non-US podcasts?

2032
2033
 
 

Archive: [ https://archive.ph/mP7Xd ]

2034
 
 

Archived link

As a new Liberal-sponsored petition targets Postmedia’s American owners and their alleged “influence” on domestic journalism, NDP MP Gord Johns says the federal government needs to take action to “plug the industry's economic leak” of jobs and tax subsidies south of the border.

...

It calls for legislation to require majority Canadian ownership and control of all print, digital, and other non-audio-visual news media “to protect Canadian sovereignty, ensure journalism integrity, and guarantee that our media reflects Canadian priorities and values.” The petition argues that independent Canadian journalism is “essential to democracy, ensuring accountability, accuracy, and representation of Canadian voices,” and points to policies established in Australia and France as models that can be followed to “safeguard domestic control” of news media in Canada.

While said legislation would have far-reaching impacts for many outlets operating in Canada, including Politico and Bloomberg, the petition singles out Postmedia, arguing that its majority ownership by Chatham places “a key part of Canada’s news media under foreign influence,” and “introduces perspectives shaped by American political and cultural priorities,” which risks “skewing news coverage, and “eroding public trust.”

...

2035
 
 

Archived link

...

For too long, Canada has lived within a cocoon of peace and predictability, where our political class rarely needs to think or act like a country prepared for even slight pressure. That calm has bred complacency. We have forgotten how to meet challenges with clarity, confidence, and conviction.

Ottawa’s tariff on Chinese EVs was not just symbolic. It addressed legitimate national-security risks—including the data collection possible through connected vehicles, and our growing dependence on Beijing’s control of global battery supply chains. It also recognized that state-subsidized EV imports could erode North America’s manufacturing base. However, we should separate the talk between trade and national security, which Beijing wants to muddle.

...

Beijing’s retaliation was anything but random. Its decision to target Canadian agriculture is deliberate and sophisticated—a message to Western Canada that Ottawa’s “Laurentian elites” make decisions at their expense. It’s a classic divide-and-rule tactic: pit sector against sector, province against province. We can already see the fault lines cracking: premiers of Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Alberta on one side; and the premier of Ontario on the other. This is combined with the lack of leadership from the federal government.

China understands this well. It has responded the way it always does: by striking exports that hurt politically, targeting Prairie farmers and sectors that influence votes. It’s a calculated, classic Chinese Communist Party move—divide the country, isolate provinces, and undermine national resolve.

We’ve seen this playbook before. During the Meng Wanzhou and “Two Michaels” affair, China’s trade restrictions and diplomatic retaliation exposed how easily our economic levers could be turned against us. Now, the same tactics return, once again through canola.

Other democracies have learned to respond differently. When Taiwan was punished with a sudden ban on its pineapples in 2021, its people responded with unity, proudly consuming and exporting their own produce as a symbol of resilience. When Australia faced restrictions on lobsters, wine, and coal, it refused to bend, choosing sovereignty over convenience. Both nations discovered something Canada still struggles with: adversity can reveal, and strengthen, national purpose.

That’s why Parliament must urgently reconstitute the Special Committee on Canada–China Relations (CACN). During its previous mandate, the committee produced some of the most thorough work ever done on our Indo-Pacific strategy, foreign interference, trade dependencies, and human-rights abuses in East Turkistan and Hong Kong. Its reports informed stronger transparency rules and laid the groundwork for a long overdue foreign-influence registry.

...

2036
 
 

With ArcelorMittal Dofasco stalling on its green steel plans and releasing emissions above Ontario’s air-quality regulations, Hamilton resident Jochen Bezner says Canada’s largest steelmaker needs to be held accountable.

Bezner and another, unnamed resident have formally requested that the Ministry of the Environment, Climate and Parks (MECP) investigate Dofasco, alleging it’s “emitting dangerous pollutants” at levels far above Ontario’s regulatory standards.

“We don’t want to shut them down,” Bezner told CBC Hamilton. “We just want them to be responsible.”

2037
 
 

The province’s car sales regulator, the Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council (OMVIC), says the advertised price in a dealership ad must include all fees the consumer is expected to pay, except HST and licensing. In fact, it’s been Ontario law since 2010 that dealership ads must set out the total amount.

The investigation found six of the 15 dealerships charged more than the advertised price. Four of 15 dealerships showed a photo of a more expensive version of the vehicle in the ad than the one they were actually selling. And six of 15 included extra features the undercover shoppers didn’t ask for — though most of the extras were built into the advertised price and some dealerships agreed to remove them when we asked.

2038
 
 

The Canadian economy added a surprising 67,000 jobs in October and the unemployment rate ticked down to 6.9 per cent, Statistics Canada said on Friday, beating economists' expectations for the month.

While the majority of the jobs gained in October were part-time positions, "that doesn't do much to detract" from the strong headline number, wrote CIBC senior economist Andrew Grantham.

Both full-time and part-time work were up on a yearly basis. By sector, the influx of work was driven by wholesale and retail trade — which added 41,000 jobs — as well as transportation and warehousing, information, culture and recreation, and utilities.

2039
2040
2041
 
 

Relevancy in Canada being the owner of indigo book chain Heather Reisman is listed as one of the 12 billionaires who were onboard the plot to spy on Americans.

A Canadian billionaire, acting with a foreign government intelligence service/military, to subvert free speech and spy on Americans.

Are we cool with that?

2042
 
 

See the link for the interactive graphs

TLDR:

  • Most Americans trust Canada is negotiating in good faith
  • A majority of Americans view Canada as an ally and partner
  • Most Americans Still Believe [the overall relationship is] Good
  • Carney mostly unknown, but viewed positively by Americans
2043
2044
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/54716891

2045
 
 

Colleges and universities earn revenue each year by licensing their trademarks to major apparel companies, including Lululemon and Fanatics. These companies, in turn, rely on vast supplier networks located primarily in countries with weak labour protections and regulations.

2046
 
 
2047
 
 

The title is a bit clickbait-y. I went into this one feeling strongly opposed it. Afterwards I'm still not sure, but I get that there's some nuance to it.

Relevance:

In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

Author: Steve Lorteau | Long-Term Appointment Law Professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa

Excerpts:

Interactions between different users on roads are often a source of frustration, the most prominent being those between motorists and cyclists.

For example, many motorists are frustrated when they see bicycles cross an intersection without coming to a complete stop, which drivers are required to do.

As a professor of law at the University of Ottawa who specializes in urban law issues, I have studied various regulatory approaches that have been adopted around the world, each with different advantages and disadvantages.

The uniform application of traffic rules may seem fair, but in reality, it can create a false sense of equality.

On the one hand, the risks associated with different modes of transport are incommensurate. A car that runs a red light can cause serious or even fatal injuries. A cyclist, on the other hand, is unlikely to cause the same degree of damage.

Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed. Having to stop completely over and over discourages people from cycling, despite its many benefits for health, the environment and traffic flow.

Treating two such different modes of transport the same way, therefore, amounts to implicitly favouring cars, something akin to imposing the same speed limit on pedestrians and trucks.

Since 1982, cyclists in Idaho have been able to treat a stop sign as a yield sign and a red light as a stop sign. Several American states (such as Arkansas, Colorado, and Oregon) and countries, such as France and Belgium, have adopted similar regulations.

In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

It’s important to note that the goal of the Idaho stop rule is not to legalize chaos on the roads. Cyclists must still yield to cars ahead of them at stop signs, as well as to pedestrians at all times, and may only enter the intersection when it is clear.

2048
2049
 
 

Some medical professionals say detaining highly intoxicated people for up to three days could put lives at risk if it's not accompanied by proper care.

On Wednesday, the Manitoba Legislature passed the NDP government's Bill 48, the Protective Detention and Care of Intoxicated Persons Act, which will allow it to establish a "protective care centre," or detox facility.

But Dr. Jim Simm, the province's former chief psychiatrist, said there's little precedent backing it up.

"There's been several studies looking at involuntary treatment for substance use. The results are generally actually worse," he said.

"I am skeptical [the centre] would have positive results, and [it has] the added risk of medical complications without proper medical supervision."

2050
 
 

Tuesday's federal budget offers a glimpse into how dozens of government departments plan to rein in spending following this summer's comprehensive expenditure review.

The review aimed to find "ambitious savings" of up to 15 per cent over three years. The results were included with the budget, which still needs to pass a confidence vote.

(Full department listing in the article.)

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