Elevate your local knowledge

Sign up for the iNFOnews newsletter today!

Select Region

Selecting your primary region ensures you get the stories that matter to you first.

Opinion

POULSEN: Canadian mint celebrates Bugs Bunny

You may have heard the ads from the Canadian mint to sell $20 silver coins honouring Bugs Bunny. Sounds Goofy. But what better way to make money . . . than to make money? That’s what sets the Canadian Mint apart from other federal institutions. By law, the mint conducts its business “in anticipation of...

ANDERSON: Bill S-7: Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act

“Be it so. This burning of widows is your custom; prepare the funeral pile. But my nation has also a custom. When men burn women alive we hang them, and confiscate all their property. Let us all act according to national customs.” Sir Charles Napier is famously credited with the above quotation in reference to...

PARKER: Burning Man: trendy, but thankfully not fashionable

In 1986, upon the evening of the summer solstice, Larry Harvey, Jerry James and a handful of other Haight-Ashbury beatniks gathered on Baker Beach in San Francisco, California and set a nine foot wooden man and his little wooden dog on fire. The dog has since been taken out of the equation, but the wooden...

HELSTON: If a tree falls in Vernon, does it matter if herons used it?

I’ve been asking a lot of questions about herons lately, and whether or not they were in a grove of trees that got chopped down in advance of a housing development. I don’t know if the birds were ever there, but the City of Vernon, which issued the removal permit, seems pretty confident they weren’t....

POULSEN: Speeches in one minute or less . . .

* Mike Duffy smiling for the cameras is not a sight most people want to see, while they are eating or otherwise. His lawyer has been making trouble for Nigel Wright and – by extension, of course, Stephen Harper – and Duffy had the grin of a man exonerated. Not so fast, smiley face. Duffy...

LOEWEN: The foul mouth of Canadian politics

It would seem that PR-massaged optics has supplanted good old-fashioned and honest content these days. Especially on the Canadian federal election campaign trail.

ANDERSON: The Age of Atonement

"As the first thousand years of our calendar drew to an end, in every land of Europe the people expected with certainty the destruction of the world. Some squandered their substance in riotous living, others bestowed it for the salvation of their souls on churches and convents, bewailing multitudes lay by day and by night...

PARKER: The original high school glee

The ten-year high school reunion is something that has gained a reputation as being both tedious and terrific, equal parts stressful and successful, both a blast and a bomb. It is something teenagers think about in the throes of being pushed up against lockers and being the chubby girl in the locker room. It is...

POULSEN: Shakespeare smoked what? Not in Harperland, he better not

The actor in the Conservative's TV ad is beside himself. Hearing that Justin wants to legalize marijuana, he sneers: “Is that really the biggest problem we have?” Seeing how he asked, I sneered back: “Close to it!” Canada needs the revenue and doesn’t need the gangs to keep getting Lamborghini-rich off the proceeds. Yes, they...