Sunday, 15 February 2026

Canada, the living hell you don't know about, "a monstrous prison we choose to live in"

      

The pursuit of profits can be corrupting, while financial independence is necessary for ethical reporting.                                                                              5 Photos Of Jesse Strang 

  Photo of Jesse Strang the Attacker

                             Attacker (Confusion - Doubt - Suicides)

What happened in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, Canada, is an unprecedented tragedy, but the truth is not what the police are telling us about Jesse Strang, the attacker. What the public wants to know is what happened in his short life, especially during his school years, and what motivated him to choose this school to commit murder.

When Your Government Wants to Remove Sex From Sex-Ed

Doug Ford's fight against Ontario’s curriculum is an assault on reality

Doug Ford’s first five weeks since winning Ontario’s provincial election carry a clear message: the undoing has begun. The new premier has restricted universal pharmacare for those under twenty-five, cut the $377 million Green Ontario Fund, cancelled school-infrastructure repairs, reversed a decision to increase police oversight, and refused to help the federal government shoulder the financial burden of housing asylum seekers in the province.

Turns out he was just getting started. Ford also wasted no time fulfilling his most populist campaign promise: to scrap the province’s controversial sex-ed curriculum introduced in 2015 by the previous Liberal government. Last week, a mere twelve days after Ford was officially sworn in, his education minister announced that, come fall, Ontario will revert to its old syllabus, a nearly two-decade-old approach more in line with the socially conservative views of Ford’s so-called Nation, like-minded parent-action groups, and powerful Christian right-wing organizations, such as Campaign Life Coalition.

Ford sold his decision as a temporary, back-to-basics fix to give his government time to develop yet another new curriculum via a “fulsome consultation respecting parents.” In truth, he gave many of his right-wing supporters their most significant policy victory in years. Those who have criticized the 2015 curriculum often rail against its “radical” agenda, one that “has nothing to do with science, health or the wellbeing of children,” as the CLC argues in an online post, “but rather, everything to do with a political agenda by adults whose goal is sexual revolution.” These groups aren’t entirely wrong: in addition to updating the document to include a focus on navigating social media and the internet, the 2015 curriculum prioritizes consent and is built on a LGBTQ-positive framework. If that’s a radical revolution, however, it’s one that coincides with Canada’s Human Rights Act and also its Criminal Code—the former of which is often viewed by conservatives as an affront to freedom of speech.

Of course, all this pearl clutching belies the anti-sex-education advocates’ own agenda. That is, to send us all back to a past in which masculinity and femininity fit into neat boxes and follow a Leave it to Beaver–style moral code. In this world, the nuclear family rules, faith governs sexual acts, and nobody ever has premarital sex. If you believe in this world, then the former curriculum is a threat because it “detaches sex from love, commitment, responsibility, marriage, faith, moral values and social consequences”—that’s according to one of the main lobby groups, the Parents Alliance of Ontario for Better Education (PAO). Or, you might believe, as a sex-ed opponent wrote to the Toronto Star in 2015, that it would “teach Gay-Trans propaganda” and “[d]estroy the idea of gender, natural law, heterosexual family normalcy.”

Complaints against the former curriculum, are, by now, both well worn and, largely, debunked. Many of them—including that children would learn “graphic” lessons on body parts in grade one and that by grade six they’d be “encouraged” to masturbate—indicate a willful misreading of the document. Others—such as what older children and teens would learn about anal sex and gender identity—are steeped in homophobia and transphobia.

Groups that attacked the 2015 curriculum frequently relied on the argument that it is parents, not schools, who should be teaching children about sex. Often, that was just code for: we want the absolute power to protect our moral beliefs from outside challenges. One high-school principal in BC, for instance, even wondered in 2015 whether Ontario’s curriculum amounted to “cultural genocide” against Christians. Sex-ed may be one of the religious right’s most high-profile moral battles, but it’s also one front in a larger war for ideological sovereignty.

The education minister has since announced that schools will continue to teach things like consent and gender identity this fall, but addressing such topics is not the same as building an educational framework around them. Her statement also flatly contradicts the message of the very groups Ford has sided with in his fight against the 2015 curriculum. Many of those who carried the “stop sex ed” call forward, for example, are also the same people who fought Ontario’s Bill 89, which essentially brings the province’s definition of child and youth well-being in line with its Human Rights Code, as well as Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms. That is, under the bill, a child’s right to their own sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression are protected within the home. During the provincial election, three candidates even ran under the brand new Stop the New Sex Ed Agenda Party and extended their target to the bill. Much like they did with the sex-ed curriculum, far-right conservatives positioned the bill as a totalitarian attempt by the Liberals to control them. “As a parent in Ontario today, you have no say in the classroom, but you have a say in your own home,” wrote Faith Goldy for Rebel Media, introducing a petition against the bill.

Like Donald Trump has done in US with immigration and trade, Ontario conservatives have used sex ed—and the surrounding issues of gender and LGBTQ rights—to stoke a colossal fear that a certain way of life is under attack. Viewed that way, Ford scrapping the province’s modernized sex ed is only the latest sign of the growing political clout of a once-fringe brand of social conservatism. It’s also a reminder that we may be entering an era of regressive values, one that will be marked by a push to reset everything from racial privilege to gender roles.

In so many ways, Doug Ford’s decision isn’t about sex education at all; it’s about a moral show of strength. By contesting the 2015 curriculum, Ford, and others, are asserting who is—and who is not—entitled to a healthy sexual life. Asserting that the document is dangerous because it “equalizes homosexual and heterosexual acts in the young minds,” “confuses children with six genders,” and “promotes sexual knowledge, sexual pleasure and sexual freedom,” isn’t so much a way to keep sex ed in the home or to protect children, as the PAO argues. It’s a way to undermine modern, progressive views on sex and gender. If one removes the positive references to consent and the LGBTQ community, the 2015 update is strikingly similar to much of the ’90s-era curriculum. If Ontario does indeed revert to the old approach, first graders will still learn how to properly identify their body parts. By grade five, students will have lessons on puberty. Two years later, the focus will be on sex and STIs.

Teens, however, will no longer learn—as a matter of policy—to combat discrimination and to embrace different sexual orientations and gender identities as normal. Without such frank, supportive conversations in the classroom, students will have one less forum to confront the prejudices that cause LGBTQ youth to struggle with much higher rates of substance use, self-harm, homelessness, and abuse. That’s scary enough. But the rewind will also introduce daunting knowledge gaps on the changes that technology has brought to the sexual landscape, including cyberbullying, sexting, and increased access to online porn.

Teachers will no longer have a curricular space to teach teens to navigate demands for “nudes” on Snapchat and Instagram or what to do if a peer starts sharing such photos. There will be no pressure to confront and dismantle harmful messages about gender and sexuality found in a lot of online porn. Many of these realities didn’t exist when the last curriculum was written. They are inescapable now. As a recent New York Times Magazine feature showed, teenagers are watching a lot more pornography than their parents think, with half of parents wrongly guessing their teen’s exposure. What’s more, there are hints that teenagers’ sexual habits are shifting as their porn consumption increases. In one survey, sixteen-year-old girls exposed to pornography were twice as likely to have anal sex than non-exposed girls. In another, roughly one-sixth of teen boys reported having ejaculated on a partner’s face or choked them. Approximately one in three Canadians will have intercourse before the age of seventeen. Should teens not be learning how to hook up safely and with clear consent?

For many conservatives who are against sex ed, the answer seems to be no. In their minds, teaching consent seems to give students carte blanche to have as much sex as they want—an apparently inevitable, and terrifying, side effect of learning sexual agency. “This curriculum leaves young children with the perception that it is acceptable to have sex with any ‘partner’ of any kind as long as they get ‘sexual consent’ and they can just ‘do it,’” admonishes the PAO on the group’s website. “Consensual sex doesn’t make sex safe!”

Other groups argued that teaching young children the proper names for their body parts and about consensual touching—like hugging—would groom them for pedophiles. Never mind that such lessons are meant to protect children and teens by giving them the language to identify abuse. But facts don’t seem to matter here—not when fear is a far more influential political tool.

Sex-ed curricula in other parts of Canada have not faced the same level of backlash from conservatives as in Ontario, but it isn’t inconceivable that it may happen—and soon. In May, Alberta’s premier, Rachel Notley, indicated she’d like to introduce consent into the province’s sex ed, starting in kindergarten. And, late last year, British Columbia’s move to expand its schools’ anti-bullying policies to include sexual orientation and gender identity triggered the ire of parent groups who complained that the move “abused” children.

There’s also the real potential for harm to children if other jurisdictions use Ontario’s sex-ed reversal as momentum to stop, or undo, similar efforts at progress. Shortly after Ford announced his decision, Rehtaeh Parsons’s father, Glen Canning, responded. Canning’s daughter experienced months of bullying and harassment after a photo of her circulated, in 2011, that was taken the night she said she was assaulted. In 2013, at the age of seventeen, she killed herself. No sexual-assault charges were ever laid, but two boys were convicted of child pornography. In his comments to Toronto Star, Canning praised the 2015 curriculum. “I really wished there was something like that in Nova Scotia 10 years ago,” he said. “Because if there was—and if consent and empathy and respect were being taught in schools in Nova Scotia—I honestly believe that I would still have my daughter with me today.”

I do not have children, but I do have a stake in how sex education is presented in Ontario and elsewhere in Canada. I have a stake in a future that promotes progress and equality. I have a stake in equipping the next generation with more information, not less. The old curriculum did not protect me—and many other teens—in high school. It did not protect me from being exposed to certain sex acts before I was ready, and it did not protect me from experiencing sexual violence. It did not protect me from forming disastrous, dangerous ideas of what my sex life or my worth as a person should look like. It never addressed the idea of sexual consent at all. Of course, I don’t know if the lessons in the 2015 curriculum would have protected me either. But I do know it would have given me the tools to understand what happened was wrong and that I did not have to be silent about it.

I don’t want us to go back to a time where anyone thinks they have to be silent either.

Lauren McKeon is deputy editor of Reader's Digest Canada and the author of two books, F-Bomb and No More Nice Girls.




Saturday, 24 January 2026

Canada, the living hell you don't know about, "a monstrous prison we choose to live in"

 May be an image of text that says 'SPEECHES IN DAVOS, PROBLEMS AT HOME. WORLD ECO ECONOMIC FORUM WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM EC AFTER NEARLY A YEAR OF CARNEY: DEFICIT DOUBLED FOOD INFLATION DOUBLE U.S. WORST HOUSING COSTS IN THE G7 ZERO PIPELINES APPROVED UHLOCK RESOUTICES CANADA NEEDS RESULTS. cyT THE IADUSTRLAL CARBON Tax FUECEPENCE'

Carney’s Empty Words in Davos as a Cover-Up for Western Barbarism
 
By Ray ​​Achison: The Canadian Prime Minister’s speech in Davos failed to mention the West’s contribution to the destruction of international law, human rights violations, and inequality
 
On January 20, 2026, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney declared the death of the so-called rules-based international order. In a speech praised by many, Carney urged countries to stop complying with hegemonic regimes, to stop hoping for a return to the past, and instead to build new coalitions to survive what lies ahead.
 
But the Prime Minister’s speech lacked an honest reflection on the contribution of Canada and other major powers (or “middle powers,” as they are now called) to the destruction of international law, human rights violations, and global inequality. These governments screwed up, and now they are realizing it. They emboldened the US to reach its current position, supporting and facilitating its rise for so long because it suited their interests. Many "middle powers" also colonized other countries, extracting wealth, resources, and labor from the Global South and overthrowing democratically elected leaders in those countries in favor of those willing to serve the imperial core.
 
Now, these same "middle powers" are discovering what it means to be on the other side of the equation. To be the ones threatened with economic assimilation being weaponized against them, with tariffs being imposed on them, with their governments being overthrown, and with their countries being invaded and occupied.
 
Recognizing their own crimes and privileges is essential if the governments of these countries want to build meaningful and lasting coalitions that truly protect people and the planet, and not just serve their own short-term interests. If the “middle powers” ​​do not want to suffer what they have done to others, these countries must take seriously the construction of alternatives, led by the Global South and the populations that have been harmed by their 
 past actions.
 
Recognizing reality as a “radical act”
 
The fundamental admission in Carney’s speech, which highlights the farce of the rules-based order, is a good starting point. “We knew that the story of the rules-based international order was partly false,” he stated. “That the strongest would get away with it when it suited them. That trade rules were applied asymmetrically. And we knew that international law was applied more or less rigorously depending on the identity of the accused or the victim.”
 
He said that this fiction was useful (he omitted for whom, but it was useful for imperialist countries like Canada), but that it no longer works. Instead of pretending that the rules-based order works as advertised, Carney urged states to “call it what it is: a system that intensifies great power rivalry, in which the most powerful pursue their interests using economic assimilation as a weapon of coercion.”
 
Proclaiming that the world faces a breakdown, he noted that “great powers” ​​are using economic assimilation as a weapon and tool of subjugation. In banking parlance, he urged countries to “diversify” their alliances, make “collective investments in resilience,” and embrace “values-based realism.” He announced that Canada would seek “different coalitions on different issues based on shared values ​​and interests.” He specifically urged so-called middle-power countries to join, noting that “if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu.” Most importantly, he said, these states must act consistently, “applying the same standards to allies and rivals.”
 
However important this admission and the calls for coalition building may be, beneath the rhetoric lies a call for countries to redouble their efforts regarding capitalism, resource extraction, free trade, artificial intelligence, and militarism. It is a call to strengthen neoliberalism under the pretext of combating fascism, even though these are the very options that have led to the imperialist international order that Carney claims to oppose.
 
Integrated Militarism
 
Let's start with militarism. Carney stated in Davos that he will double Canada's military spending by the end of the decade. Last year, he announced a military budget of 81.8 billion Canadian dollars (about 50.6 billion euros) for the next five years. Although he advised countries in Davos not to "build fortresses," it appears his government is investing in precisely that. Doubling the military budget is not enough to deter a US invasion; the Canadian military recently simulated a response to a US attack on Canada, predicting that US forces would crush "strategic assets" at "lightning speed." The Canadian military stated that it would have to resort to unconventional warfare inspired by the Mujahideen in Afghanistan, as well as guerrilla warfare by armed civilians. It is assumed that the fighting would last for decades.
 
What Carney also failed to mention in Davos is the fact that the Canadian military and intelligence services are deeply intertwined with the US. US troops are stationed in Canada at North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) bases. Canada is part of the Five Eyes alliance, an intelligence-sharing coalition comprised of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK, and the US. Of course, there is also the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), toward which the Trump administration has been openly hostile, but which has historically complied with US directives regarding the bombing of other countries, hosting US nuclear weapons, participating in war games, escalating tensions with Russia, and spending ever-increasing amounts of taxpayer money on arms and war (all members except Spain recently agreed to spend 5% of their gross domestic product on militarism).
 
Like Canada, the rest of NATO has been thoroughly militarized by Washington. The US has troops stationed at at least 38 military bases across Europe. It has around 100 nuclear weapons stationed on five of its bases. This makes the European stance of not wanting to cede European territory to the US somewhat ironic, since large swathes of European land already belong to the US.
 
Canada and the European members of NATO also have significant investments in American arms companies. Canada hosts manufacturing plants for Boeing, General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, and others. The Canadian military buys billions of dollars' worth of weapons from the US and continues to do so. Canada is a key partner in the US F-35 fighter jet program, one of the weapons systems for which Canada has been supplying parts and components to Israel for its genocide of Palestinians. The same is true for many European NATO members and other "middle powers."
 
Canada's Complicity and Crimes
 
All this entanglement leads us to the importance of recognizing the role each has played in the current situation. If Carney is serious about forging new alliances based on trust and equality, he should acknowledge that Canada, under his leadership and that of previous administrations, was not a passive observer of the rules-based order. Canada did not simply “hang a sign in the window,” as he suggests in his speech. Canada actively participated in violating international law for economic gain, applying the rules asymmetrically to benefit itself and its allies.
 
For example, the Canadian government helped the US invade and occupy Afghanistan; pretended not to support the invasion of Iraq, even though it actually aided and abetted it; helped stage a coup in Haiti; provided money and weapons to the neo-fascist dictatorship in Ukraine; and has helped overthrow governments and destabilize societies in Latin America in places where its companies own mines.
 
The erosion of international law does not stem solely from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the US invasion of Venezuela, or the threats against Greenland. Canada has been a full and active partner in violating the very norms it helped establish, particularly through its continued arms shipments to Israel. Canada has been a consistent partner of Israel in its genocide of the Palestinians, in violation of the Genocide Convention, the Geneva 
 
Conventions, the Arms Trade Treaty, and other international agreements.
 
The Canadian government has also violently suppressed any opposition to its complicity in the genocide. Police evicted student encampments at universities, arrested activists for criticizing the Israeli regime online, criminalized solidarity actions and marches, conducted unannounced nighttime raids on the homes of activists accused of damaging the property of complicit institutions, and predawn raids on others who allegedly organized blockades of weapons factories.
 
In Davos, Carney spoke grandly of Canada as “a pluralistic society that works,” where “the public square is loud, diverse, and free.” In reality, the public square is shrinking and becoming increasingly criminalized. It is not only anti-genocide activists who are threatened. The Canadian government has repeatedly deployed its most militarized police force, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), to unceded Indigenous lands to violently arrest First Nations organizers and activists for protecting land, water, and forests from fossil fuel extraction. The RCMP, whose precursor was formed to commit genocide in the early days of the expanding colonial state, is now deployed by the federal government to protect the interests of fossil fuel companies.
 
This makes Carney’s boasts about Canada’s critical energy and mineral resources especially troubling. Canada already extracts oil from Alberta’s tar sands—the dirtiest form of oil extraction in the world—for which Carney recently granted Alberta’s far-right premier permission to build a new pipeline in what activists have called the “sale of the century” and a “shocking betrayal of federal commitments on climate change and Indigenous rights.” Canada also extracts gas and coal from British Columbia, uranium from Saskatchewan, and much more. Carney’s celebration of environmentally devastating artificial intelligence and Canada’s status as an “energy superpower” and possessor of “vast reserves of critical minerals” is a stark warning about the future he envisions for Canadians and the planet. More extraction and mining, more energy use, more human rights abuses.
 
Canadian companies have a terrible human rights record in mining operations around the world. And Mining Watch Canada warns that “the way the metal-intensive energy transition is proceeding is fundamentally incompatible with respect for human rights globally.” It notes that “the rush for critical minerals is rapidly encroaching on sensitive environments, encroaching on Indigenous territories without their consent, further endangering the lives of human rights and environmental defenders, and violating the basic rights to health, clean air and water, and the safety and security of local communities.”
 
If Carney believes that increased mining activity will save the Canadian economy, it will inevitably lead to more human rights violations, including those related to freedom of expression. In addition to the violent crackdown on First Nations organizations, the Canadian government has also deported non-citizens for their climate activism. In this respect, Canada is in the midst of a crackdown on immigration. It has deported more than 400 people a week, mostly asylum seekers and refugees. The government states that it intends to deport even more people in 2026, despite the fact that doing so costs millions of dollars. This is what has become of Canada’s pluralistic society.
 
Building a New World Order
 
All of this means that the “solutions” Carney proposes against aggressive US imperialism will continue to harm people, continue to destroy the environment and exacerbate the climate crisis, continue to maintain a rigid hierarchy in international relations that privileges some at the expense of others, and continue to violate the human rights of activists, Indigenous peoples, migrants, and others. This is not standing up to a bully; it is becoming one.
 
Carney is right to say that the world needs global coalitions to prevent the Trump regime from crushing all those it decides it dislikes or wants to control. Carney is also right to say that countries need to “diversify” their allies. But we must go far beyond what his capitalist and extractive imagination allows.
 
On the one hand, Carney imagines that the US and other so-called great powers will act on their own. But that's not the plan, according to Trump's own National Security Strategy. His regime is interested in allying itself with other authoritarian states to control "spheres of influence" and jointly rule the world. His preferred partners are mafia capitalists and despotic megalomaniacs who fear women and queer people and think the world owes them something. These partners don't even have to be all white, which is especially unbelievable when you realize that part of the reason he's tearing apart his European allies is that their countries are no longer white enough for him. His new friends just have to have enough money and be repressive enough to play the game he wants to play.
 
These alliances of the worst of the worst are already forming, and anyone who wants to stand up to them needs to realize this. Because this also changes Carney's apparent calculation that "middle powers" simply need to stick together or form alliances with other economically powerful fascist states like China or India. In reality, "middle powers" must overcome their prejudices, acknowledge their contribution to the destruction of international norms, rules, and laws, and form coalitions with those they have harmed in the past. This is not about colonial relationships or condescending extractive agreements, but about genuine alliances.
 
There is no time for more Western domination. "Middle powers" must learn from countries that have suffered oppression under tyrannical states (most of them fostered and financed by these same powers). They must discover how to establish equitable and reciprocal economic and security relationships that are not based on extraction, imperialism, militarism, and violence. Relationships that prioritize the well-being of all people, not just those in the imperial core, and that guarantee the survival and health of the planet.
 
If Carney is willing to admit that the rules-based order was a sham, he shouldn't try to replicate it with other Western states, but rather build genuine solidarity with the rest of the world. He must decouple Canada from the US, not only economically, but also militarily. And he must defend international law, which, as he has acknowledged, the "middle powers" have only partially upheld.
 
Changing the Language
 
He must also stop calling countries "great powers" and "middle powers." We all must. These terms grant certain governments a status they don't deserve. The US, Saudi Arabia, and other countries with which the Trump regime wants to build an alliance of autocrats are not great powers. They are heavily militarized states seeking global dominance through violence. They are thugs.
 
Canada, European countries, and other colonial states that claim Western status regardless of their geography, such as Australia and New Zealand, are not middle powers. These are countries that plundered and exploited the Global South to build and maintain their economies at the expense of the vast majority of people and the planet. They are not in the middle; they are at the top, and only now are they experiencing the full weight of what it means to be subordinated to a hierarchy imposed by those more violent than themselves.
Equality means getting rid of the concepts of "big" and "middle" and the idea of ​​"power" in general, and calling things as they are. Power should not refer to economic or military force, but to what people can do together, in solidarity, to improve us all. May this rupture not be one that brings the world to its knees before the boot of violent thugs, but rather one that serves to build something that truly helps us all survive and thrive.
 
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