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Opinion: Letters, May 8

Opinion: Letters, May 8

Opinion Scheer the wrong pick
Re: Conservatives choose Scheer as interim leader in House (May 7)
I cannot imagine a worse choice for an interim Opposition leader. Anyone who doubts this needs to read Andrew Scheer's online bio which describes his dual American-Canadian citizenship.
It is a big mistake to allow an American citizen this power at a time when Canada's very existence is being threatened by an American president. People holding American-Canadian citizenship should not be allowed to hold office in the Canadian government.
In 2020 Scheer refused to renounce his American citizenship. His dual citizenship is far too close for comfort for a nation that has declared it is not for sale to the U.S. This is a very dangerous move.
Ariel Lee
Winnipeg Carney right for the job
Watching the first part of the meeting between Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump was the first step toward a new beginning.
Following that, Carney took questions from reporters from the roof top of the Canadian Embassy where all questions were answered. From the get-go, it was clear Carney was the right person to be dealing with Trump.
Listening to the many political analyst, politicians of all stripes and reporters evaluating this meeting, they all came away with very positive reviews.
It became very clear to me, and I am sure to a majority of Canadians, that Carney was by far the right person to be at the White House for this very important meeting. It also became abundantly clear that Pierre Poilievre would have been way over his head intellectually. Canadians needed an intellectual there and that was Carney.
Ian MacLean
Kelowna, B.C. Grading and motivation
Re: Getting beyond just grading and tests (Think Tank, May 6)
Ken Clark described grades as causing humiliation, disengagement and dispiritedness in students. However, Rethinking Assessment with Purposes in Mind (the same Manitoba Education document quoted by Mr. Clark in his article) recognizes that 'the relationship between grades and motivation is neither simple nor predictable. Grades have been found to be motivating for some students, and demotivating for others.'
By adopting a mandatory ungraded assessment system at Glenlawn, the Louis Riel School Division removed the incentive for students who are motivated by grades, a benefit available to the vast majority of high school students across Manitoba.
Mr. Clark also makes reference to parental concerns raised regarding Glenlawn's ungraded assessment system that are based on 'anecdotal comments from community members.'
Unfortunately, due to the LRSD's deliberate choice not to provide applicable data to the public, this is the only way for parents to evaluate the effectiveness of Glenlawn's specific implementation of an ungraded assessment system. In fact, I have specifically asked the LRSD for the collection and public release of data-driven reports evaluating Glenlawn's assessment system, including aspects such as perceived fairness, student wellness, post-secondary outcomes and provincial exam performance.
Until such data is available, I don't see how these discussions can be robust or productive.
Celia Valel
Winnipeg Industrial tax works
Re: End the industrial carbon tax (Think Tank, May 6)
Yet another article from someone calling for the end of carbon taxes. While there might be some doubt that the retail carbon tax was effective, the industrial carbon tax actually seems to be doing what it is designed to do.
According to the research conducted by the Canadian Climate Institute, industrial carbon pricing is single largest driver of emissions reductions and is expected to be responsible for 20 per cent to 48 per cent of our emissions by 2030. Yes, there is a cost to industry, but those that beat the limits have credits they can sell, minimizing the cost to the business and to consumers. The research by the CCI shows that industrial carbon pricing has almost no effect on consumer pricing in 2025 and is forecasted to only increase to half a per cent by 2030.
Furthermore, failure to collect carbon taxes would expose businesses to additional tariffs when those products are exported to countries that have a carbon pricing plan. That money doesn't go to our government for us to use, but goes to the benefit of our trading partner.
We need to realize that pollution has a cost. Back when there were a few billion less of us, we could ignore the byproducts of industrialization and our ecological footprint. We can no longer do that, our impact on the planet and environment is slowly making the world uninhabitable.
But this isn't about saving the planet. No matter what happens (including everything up to a full blown nuclear winter), the planet will be fine. In another 100 million years there would be almost no trace of whatever disaster occurred. This is about ensuring that we can still live here today and into the future.
Maybe this is why we can't find a trace of other advanced civilizations. They progress to the same point we are at, then turn their planet into a Venus-like hellscape and disappear, leaving no trace.
I know this is a hard problem for humanity to deal with because it's happening so slowly and we're not mentally geared for handling slowly approaching problems, but make no mistake, it is happening. We need to persevere and take the necessary steps to save ourselves. Will it be painful? Probably — there's a price to be paid for the damage we have already done.
The industrial carbon tax has to stay, it's one of the few things that are actually working.
Jean Neron
Winnipeg On separation
I am writing to acknowledge Alberta's right to hold a referendum with respect to separation from Canada. In the same spirit that negotiating parties review a contract, I would like to explore this in three dimensions:
As reported widely in the media the first dimension is the requirement that Alberta negotiate with Canada and also with First Nations communities whose treaties are with Canada rather than Alberta.
Secondly, in today's world, Alberta is rich in petroleum and its wildflower Prairie. In years to come, petroleum may not be as popular or the supply may be depleted. With expected global climate change, the Prairie may become a dust bowl. This would shift the balance of strength for the purpose of negotiating separation.
Lastly, I propose a counter-offer, inspired by a potential response to a union's strike threat. The 'company,' in this case 'Canada,' should have the right to 'lock Alberta out.' If Alberta can hold a referendum to consider separation perhaps the rest of Canada should hold a referendum to decide if we still want Alberta in our ranks.
Bob Steinberg
Winnipeg

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‘Lost his mind': Fallout from Trump-Musk feud shows quick truce unlikely
‘Lost his mind': Fallout from Trump-Musk feud shows quick truce unlikely

Global News

time32 minutes ago

  • Global News

‘Lost his mind': Fallout from Trump-Musk feud shows quick truce unlikely

The very public, very online fallout between U.S. President Donald Trump and his so-called 'First Buddy' Elon Musk spilled over into Friday morning, with Trump saying he's 'not particularly' interested in talking to Musk right now. The president made the comments to ABC News early Friday, when the outlet inquired about reports that the two had a call scheduled for later in the day. 'You mean the man who has lost his mind?' he asked, saying he's not ready to talk to Musk, despite saying Musk wanted to talk to him. Trump seemed rather nonchalant about the issue, although perhaps not yet ready to bury the hatchet, telling CNN Friday morning that he's 'not even thinking about Elon. He's got a problem, the poor guy's got a problem.' Story continues below advertisement 'Oh it's OK,' he told news site Politico. 'It's going very well, never done better.' Trump, one of the most powerful political leaders on the planet, and Musk, the world's richest man, battled openly on Thursday in an extraordinary day of hostilities — largely over social media — that marked a stark end to a close alliance. 1:17 Trump 'very disappointed' in Elon Musk after billionaire calls his budget bill an 'abomination' It began with Musk complaining about the centrepiece of Trump's legislative agenda, which the president at first took in stride. Eventually, Trump let slip that he was disappointed in his former adviser, prompting Musk to unleash a flood of insults and taunts via social media. He accused Trump of betraying promises to cut federal spending, agreed with an X user that the president should be impeached and claimed without evidence that the government was concealing information about the president's association with deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. In another bombshell accusation, Musk insisted that Trump wouldn't have won last year's election without his help. Story continues below advertisement 🚨 NEW: Trump speaks on Elon coming out against the BBB 'I would have won Pennsylvania regardless of Elon…I'm very disappointed with Elon. He knew this bill better than anyone and he only developed a problem when he found out I would cut the EV mandate… When he left he said… — Autism Capital 🧩 (@AutismCapital) June 5, 2025 Trump, not holding back anymore, wrote on his own social platform that Musk had been 'wearing thin' and that he had 'asked him to leave' his administration, adding that the Tesla CEO had 'gone CRAZY.' @realDonaldTrump / Truth Social He even threatened to cancel Musk's companies' contracts and subsidies, a move he said would save 'billions and billions of dollars' for taxpayers. Story continues below advertisement Musk's companies, including Tesla, SpaceX and Starlink, have direct contacts with the American government and, like many other businesses, also benefit from subsidies and tax breaks. In turn, Musk threatened to decommission a space capsule used by NASA to ferry astronauts and supplies to and from the International Space Station, although, a few hours later, he told a user on his X platform that he wouldn't do it. Aside from saying he had no plans to talk to Musk at the moment, Trump largely ignored the feud in his Friday morning social media posts. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy He shared several posts to his Truth Social media site, but didn't bring up the fight, instead attacking the reporting of several media outlets and bragging that 'Our country is BOOMING!' 'AMERICA IS HOT! SIX MONTHS AGO IT WAS COLD AS ICE! BORDER IS CLOSED, PRICES ARE DOWN. WAGES ARE UP!' he shared in one post. Story continues below advertisement Opposites attracted (for a time) Trump and Musk, as a pair, initially seemed contrasting. Trump, 78, comes from old-school New York real estate and never appears in public without a suit and tie unless he's on the golf course. Before running for president, he became a household name as a reality television star. Musk, 53, is an immigrant from South Africa who struck it rich in Silicon Valley. In addition to running Tesla and SpaceX, Musk owns the social media company X. He's fashioned himself as a black-clad internet edgelord, and his wealth vastly outstrips Trump's. But Trump and Musk are kindred spirits in other ways: they're experts at generating attention, who enjoy stirring the pot by riling up their opponents. Each has sought more power to accomplish existential quests. Trump assails the federal 'deep state' that resisted him during his first term, while Musk warns about the country going bankrupt from excessive spending and promotes an interplanetary future powered by his rocket technology. Musk endorsed Trump after the Republican candidate was nearly assassinated in Butler, Pa., and he began spending millions to support him. His social media megaphone was a powerful addition to Trump's comeback campaign, magnifying his efforts to court tech leaders and young men online. Trump rarely tolerates sharing the spotlight, but he seemed enamoured by his powerful backer, mentioning him in stump speeches and welcoming him onstage at rallies. Story continues below advertisement View image in full screen FILE – Tesla CEO Elon Musk (R) jumps on stage as he joins former U.S. president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump during a campaign rally at the site of his first assassination attempt in Butler, Pa., on Oct. 5, 2024. Jim Watson / AFP via Getty Images After the election, Musk was a fixture around Mar-a-Lago, posing for photos with Trump's family, joining them for dinner and sitting in on meetings. Instead of growing tired of his 'First Buddy,' Trump made plans to bring Musk along to Washington, appointing him to lead a cost-cutting initiative known as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). View image in full screen Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and U.S. President Donald Trump appear during an executive order signing in the Oval Office at the White House on Feb. 11, 2025 in Washington, D.C. Andrew Harnik / Getty Images Other politicians, public figures enter the chat Thursday's spectacular infighting left the world stunned and rapt, and politicians in Washington found ways, often humorous, to express their thoughts on the feud. Story continues below advertisement Vice-President JD Vance piped in with a post Thursday night, joking about the tension that had just unfolded. 'Slow news day, what are we even going to talk about?' Vance wrote on X, along with a photo of him and podcaster Theo Von. Slow news day, what are we even going to talk about? @TheoVon — JD Vance (@JDVance) June 6, 2025 Democrat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez pithily quipped to a reporter outside the Capitol: 'Oh man, the girls are fighting, aren't they? I would say that this was something that was a long time coming, where we've been seeing that these two huge egos were not long for being together in this world as friends.' On the Trump-Musk feud, @AOC: 'Oh man, the girls are fighting, aren't they?' — Anthony Michael Kreis (@AnthonyMKreis) June 6, 2025 Story continues below advertisement She wasn't the only Democrat to find levity in the situation. Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Oman wrote 'I can't believe he went there,' in response to Musk's allegation that the Epstein files haven't been fully released because Trump is named in them. I can't believe he went there 😮 — Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) June 5, 2025 Meanwhile, Democrat Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota shared a Spotify breakup playlist. Story continues below advertisement 'I don't think you need to be a genius, though, to foresee that this eruptive and public display of divorce was gonna happen at some point,' Democrat Rep. Vicente Gonzalez told CNN on Thursday night. 'I mean, we had wagers going on on the floor.' 'It's like India and Pakistan,' Republican Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana told The Associated Press, referring to two nuclear-armed nations that recently skirmished along their border. 'It just escalates and neither one of them seem to back down and understand the strength of each other.' 2:52 Musk says Trump 'is in the Epstein files' amid escalating feud Some House Republicans called for cooler heads to prevail. Rep. Troy Nehls of Texas demanded Musk stop attacking Trump and said 'this tit-for-tat going back and forth, isn't helping.' While he praised Musk to CNN as 'very gifted and talented,' Nehls said that 'to start making statements like that, I think, are irresponsible and certainly not healthy. So stop. You've lost your mind.' Story continues below advertisement Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, a hardline conservative who's objected to parts of the bill, told CNN flatly 'no' when asked if he was concerned about Trump and Musk's public breakup. 'I think maybe they should count to 10,' Roy said when asked about Musk's supporting calls for Trump to be impeached. 'I hope it doesn't distract us from getting the job done that we need to,' said Rep. Dan Newhouse, a Republican from Washington state. 'I think that it will boil over and they'll mend fences.' Sen. Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, was similarly optimistic. 'I hope that both of them come back together because when the two of them are working together, we'll get a lot more done for America than when they're at cross purposes,' he told Fox News host Sean Hannity on Thursday night. Meanwhile, some of Trump's allies plotted revenge. Steve Bannon, a former Trump adviser and host of an influential conservative podcast, told The Associated Press that the president should direct the U.S. government to seize SpaceX. He also encouraged Trump to investigate allegations that Musk uses drugs and 'go through everything about his immigration status' in preparation for potential deportation. 'We'll see how good Elon Musk takes a little of that pressure,' Bannon said, 'because I happen to think a little of that pressure might be coming.' Story continues below advertisement — With files from The Associated Press and Reuters

Canada and the US share the same economic goals: Ambassador Pete Hoekstra
Canada and the US share the same economic goals: Ambassador Pete Hoekstra

National Observer

time35 minutes ago

  • National Observer

Canada and the US share the same economic goals: Ambassador Pete Hoekstra

U.S. President Donald Trump's goal of enhancing American power aligns with Prime Minister Mark Carney's aim of making Canada's economy the fastest-growing in the G7, Trump's envoy to Canada said Friday. "It's going to continue to be a very strong and friendly relationship," Ambassador Pete Hoekstra told The Canadian Press in an interview Friday, adding the two leaders are in frequent contact. "You've got two leaders that are invigorating and transforming their economies, to benefit the people of the U.S. and the people of Canada." Hoekstra insisted there is no "discrepancy" between his calls for win-win economic arrangements between Canada and the U.S. and Trump's repeated claim that America doesn't need Canadian imports and doesn't want Canadian-made cars. "There is absolutely no discrepancy between me and the president. The president clearly is the decision-maker," he said. Though he said the U.S. intends to continue imposing tariffs on imports from multiple countries, including Canada, he argued there's room to resolve irritants in the economic relationship. "The president is ... saying tariffs are part of our new framework. That's not a Canadian problem. That's a global issue," he said. Canada and the US share the same economic goals, says US Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra "The great thing is you've got the top leaders involved in the discussions, which means that both countries view this as being important, serious, and they want this to get resolved." He said the fact that Trump and Carney have been engaging in private talks that haven't been leaked to the media indicate a mutual focus on making progress. He also insisted the talks aren't happening in secret, although neither side has released readouts reporting on the content of the meetings. "I don't think the president or the prime minister are going to put out a statement every time that, 'Oh, I texted the president last night, and he responded,' or you know, 'We had a five-minute call,'" he said. "Everybody knows that right now, tariffs, economic growth and these types of things are the top of the agenda. That for the prime minister being the No. 1 growing economy in the G7 is one of his goals and objectives, and knowing that our President Donald Trump is doing everything that he can he can to ignite the U.S. economy. "Why is anybody surprised that there may be different levels of communications going on to make that happen?" Hoekstra admitted he isn't informed every time Carney and Trump talk. "I'd be interested in knowing exactly how often it's happening. I don't need to know," he said. "There (are) multiple channels between key decision-makers that are open and are being used, but I don't need to know the quantity or the frequency. I just need to know that they exist, because that tells me that we can be making progress." Hoekstra did not offer a timeline for trade talks as discussions continue between Ottawa and Washington on tariffs and a possible early start to a review of the North American trade deal this fall. The ambassador said Trump, Carney, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and various Canadian ministers are negotiating with advice from businesspeople on both sides of the border. "They all understand that great negotiations, great discussions, end with a win-win," he said. Hoekstra said America wants strong borders, an end to fentanyl deaths and sustainable spending, and said Canada can partner with the U.S. on shared security and prosperity. "Our objective is to stay the most powerful country in the world," he said. The ambassador said he's had a warm reception in Canada, despite the tensions in the relationship that he had been reading about in the six months leading up to the start of his posting in April. "I knew that there was a tension, a different tone and tenor than what we normally expected from our northern neighbours," he said. "But you know, we're going get past this."

Canada's housing crisis calls for more than ‘cranes on the skyline'
Canada's housing crisis calls for more than ‘cranes on the skyline'

Vancouver Sun

time37 minutes ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Canada's housing crisis calls for more than ‘cranes on the skyline'

This week three of four Canadians declared they have no confidence in Prime Minister Mark Carney's ideas for solving the country's housing affordability crisis. Like most premiers and mayors, Carney is promising to 'build, baby, build' to stimulate a record amount of housing construction. But Angus Reid Institute polling suggests the public is more than skeptical, perhaps in despair. While voters understandably get lost in the complexities of solving a house-price catastrophe that sees average prices at a ridiculous $1.2 million in Greater Vancouver and $1.1 million in Toronto, at least one veteran housing analyst is making a clear and devastating case that Canada's dilemma is being significantly fanned by a wave of investors. Stay on top of the latest real estate news and home design trends. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Westcoast Homes will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. John Pasalis, author of a new report titled The Great Sell Off: How Our Homes Became Someone Else's Business , says politicians are abandoning people who want to live in their homes, and they're selling a generation of voters a 'fantasy' that their worn ideas will lead to affordability, he writes. 'As long as politicians and housing economists insist that 'more supply' is the only solution — ignoring the financial dynamics driving demand from investors — we will continue to fall short. This is not just a supply problem. It's a financialization problem, and solving it requires more than cranes on the skyline,' writes Pasalis, president of Realosophy. 'We are at a crossroads. For too long, we've operated under the assumption that today's housing market is simply a more expensive version of the one our parents knew. It isn't. We are living through a paradigm shift — one in which homes are no longer primarily bought by local families, but by global investors. Housing has become a financial asset unbound from local incomes, and policy has yet to catch up.' Last year 30 per cent of all homes in Canada were owned by investors —domestic and foreign — who buy properties they don't intend to occupy. That's a 50-per cent jump in 10 years. In B.C., an incredible half of all condos built in the past decade have been snapped up by investors. In Ontario, the proportion is 57 per cent. Pasalis says government policies are largely to blame. The frenzy of investment is forging two big problems. First, it's excluding younger generations from home ownership. Second, it's creating a bizarre economy where investment money passively goes into hoarding homes, rather than into business innovation and creating good jobs. Who are the investors? The answer may hit close to home for many readers. As opposed to 'end users' who live in the dwellings they buy, Pasalis says there is a tremendous range of investors. 'From a family purchasing a home near a university for their child — renting it out when it's not in use — to foreign investors buying condo units on speculation, and billion-dollar corporations acquiring low-rise houses to rent out in communities across Canada and the U.S. — all fall under the broad category of investors.' Alas, most politicians show no interest in curtailing this giant cohort. One reason may be that many politicians are themselves investors: A study in 2023 found almost two in five federal MPs are real estate financiers or landlords . We don't know if Carney owns investment property because he's not making public his personal assets , which he says are in a blind trust. Also, most politicians rely heavily on property developers for donations. Carney, for instance, took part in a Liberal party fundraiser in Vancouver in February that included a who's who of B.C. property developers. 'Canada has built an economy where the best way to get rich isn't to invent, create or build anything, it's to own homes and wait for prices to rise,' says Pasalis. That means the usual free-market belief that increasing supply to meet demand will eventually lower prices does not stand up in regard to houses. That's because homes are not like manufactured widgets, such as vacuum cleaners. One big difference with widgets, says Pasalis, is housing is a 'human necessity.' The other is that widgets, once bought, go down in price. Homes tend to appreciate. Pasalis describes how an affordable house used to be one that costs four times a household's annual income. Now, in Toronto the actual ratio is a grim 10 to one. In Vancouver it's a destructive 12 to one. As if that isn't bad enough, the industry's addiction to investors is causing the wrong kinds of homes to be built. 'Investors tend to drive up condo prices beyond what they would be in a more balanced market because of their better access to capital than end users,' says Pasalis, noting that global access to wealth, credit and leverage for some is almost limitless. 'Equally as important, investors have come to shape the projects that developers build — small units that offer the highest returns.' Metro Vancouver and Toronto offer prime examples of this problem — with their flood of tiny new apartments in towers, which can most easily be rented. It would be better if developers built more medium-rise, three-bedroom dwellings suitable for young families. What can governments do to help so many who are frozen out of the market — especially the almost three in five young and middle-aged adults who told a TD Bank survey they feel buying a home is unattainable? Reducing record population growth is one thing. But the best way to fight investment mania is to make it less lucrative, says Pasalis. One of Pasalis's ideas (there are many in his clearly written 82-page report) is to hike taxes on the way investors profit from their dwelling's increasing value, referred to as capital gains. 'Today, capital gains from real estate are taxed at a lower rate than income,' Pasalis says. 'The solution is to remove this preferential tax treatment and tax any capital gains from single-family homes used as investment properties at the same rate as income.' Such a tax reform would not be meant to be a punishment, but a realignment of incentives, says Pasalis. Developers and most politicians will no doubt protest. Yet Pasalis is dead-on that Canada is going through a housing paradigm shift— and revolutionary new solutions must be attempted. dtodd@

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