Business
Canada’s Jordan Peterson proposing alternative to “apocalyptic narrative” of the World Economic Forum

From Jordan B. Peterson
Recently, on the Joe Rogan Experience, I announced the establishment of a new international movement, open to the public, devoted to developing an invitational vision of the future, trying to collectively formulate the answer to six key questions. We invite all those who might be interested to contribute to the conversation. Our inaugural conference will take place in London, England Oct 31, Nov 1 and Nov 2, 2023. More details about the organization, public participation and the conference will be announced as soon as possible. Watch the full episode: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4GJZ…
Automotive
Federal government should swiftly axe foolish EV mandate

From the Fraser Institute
Two recent events exemplify the fundamental irrationality that is Canadaās electric vehicle (EV) policy.
First, the Carney government re-committed to Justin Trudeauās EV transition mandate that byĀ 2035Ā all (thatās 100 per cent) of new car sales in Canada consist of āzero emission vehiclesā including battery EVs, plug-in hybrid EVs and fuel-cell powered vehicles (which are virtually non-existent in todayās market). This policy has been a foolish idea since inception. The mass of car-buyers in Canada showed little desire to buy them in 2022, when the government announced the plan, and they stillĀ donāt want them.
Second, President Trumpās āBig Beautifulā budget bill has slashed taxpayer subsidies for buying new and used EVs, ended federal support for EV charging stations, and limited the ability of states to use fuel standards to force EVs onto the sales lot. Of course, Canada should not craft policy to simply match U.S. policy, but in light of policy changes south of the border Canadian policymakers would be wise to give their own EV policies a rethink.
And in this case, a rethinkāthat is, scrapping Ottawaās mandateāwould only benefit most Canadians. Indeed, most Canadians disapprove of theĀ mandate; most do not want to buy EVs; most canāt afford to buy EVs (which are more expensive than traditional internal combustion vehicles and more expensive to insure andĀ repair); and if they do manage to swing the cost of an EV, most will likely find it difficult to findĀ public charging stations.
Also, consider this. Globally, the mining sector likely lacks the ability toĀ keep upĀ with the supply of metals needed to produce EVs and satisfy government mandates like we have in Canada, potentially further driving up production costs and ultimately sticker prices.
Finally, if youāre worried about losing the climate and environmental benefits of an EV transition, you should, well, not worry that much. The benefits of vehicle electrification for climate/environmental risk reduction have been oversold. In some circumstances EVs can help reduce GHG emissionsāin others, they can make themĀ worse. It depends on the fuel used to generate electricity used to charge them. And EVs have environmental negatives of their ownātheir fancy tires cause a lot of fine particulate pollution, one of the more harmful types of air pollution that can affect our health. And when they burst into flames (which they do with disturbing regularity) they spewĀ toxicĀ metals and plastics into the air with abandon.
So, to sum up in point form. Prime Minister Carneyās government has re-upped its commitment to the Trudeau-era 2035 EV mandate even while Canadians have shown for years that most donāt want to buy them. EVs donāt provide meaningful environmental benefits. They represent the worst of public policy (picking winning or losing technologies in mass markets). They are unjust (tax-robbing people who canāt afford them to subsidize those who can). And taxpayer-funded āinvestmentsā in EVs and EV-battery technology will likely be wasted in light of the diminishing U.S. market for Canadian EV tech.
If ever there was a policy so justifiably axed on its failed merits, itās Ottawaās EV mandate. Hopefully, the pragmatists weāve heard much about since Carneyās election victory will acknowledge EV reality.
Business
Prime minister can make good on campaign promise by reforming Canada Health Act

From the Fraser Institute
While running for the job of leading the country, Prime Minister Carney promised to defend the Canada Health Act (CHA) and build a health-care system Canadians can be proud of. Unfortunately, to have any hope of accomplishing the latter promise, he must break the former and reform the CHA.
As long as Ottawa upholds and maintains the CHA in its current form, Canadians will not have a timely, accessible and high-quality universal health-care system they can be proud of.
Consider for a moment the remarkably poor state of health care in Canada today. According to internationalĀ comparisonsĀ of universal health-care systems, Canadians endure some of the lowest access to physicians, medical technologies and hospital beds in the developed world, and wait inĀ queuesĀ for health care that routinely rank among the longest in the developed world. This is all happening despite Canadians paying for one of the developed worldās most expensive universal-access health-care systems.
None of this is new. Canadaās poor ranking in the availability of servicesādespite high spendingāreaches back at least two decades. And wait times for health care have nearly tripled since the early 1990s. Back then, in 1993, Canadians could expect to wait 9.3 weeks for medical treatment after GP referral compared toĀ 30 weeksĀ in 2024.
But fortunately, we can find the solutions to our health-care woes in other countries such as Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Australia, which all provide more timely access to quality universal care. Every one of these countries requires patient cost-sharing for physician and hospital services, and allows private competition in the delivery of universally accessible services with money following patients to hospitals and surgical clinics. And all these countries allow private purchases of health care, as this reduces the burden on the publicly-funded system and creates a valuable pressure valve for it.
And this brings us back to the CHA, which contains the federal governmentās requirements for provincial policymaking. To receive their full federal cash transfers for health care from Ottawa (totalling nearlyĀ $55 billionĀ in 2025/26) provinces must abide by CHA rules and regulations.
And therein lies the rubāthe CHA expresslyĀ disallowsĀ requiring patients to share the cost of treatment while the CHAās often vaguely defined terms and conditions have been used by federal governments to discourage a larger role for the private sector in the delivery of health-care services.
Clearly, itās time for Ottawaās approach to reflect a more contemporary understanding of how to structure a truly world-class universal health-care system.
Prime Minister Carney can begin by learning from the federal governmentās ownĀ welfare reformsĀ in the 1990s, which reduced federal transfers and allowed provinces more flexibility with policymaking. The resulting period of provincial policy innovation reduced welfare dependency and government spending on social assistance (i.e. savings for taxpayers). When Ottawa stepped back and allowed the provinces to vary policy to their unique circumstances, Canadians got improved outcomes for fewer dollars.
We need that same approach for health care today, and it begins with the federal governmentĀ reformingĀ the CHA to expressly allow provinces the ability to explore alternate policy approaches, while maintaining the foundational principles of universality.
Next, the Carney government should either hold cash transfers for health care constant (in nominal terms), reduce them or eliminate them entirely with a concordant reduction in federal taxes. By reducing (or eliminating) the pool of cash tied to the strings of the CHA, provinces would have greater freedom to pursue reform policies they consider to be in the best interests of their residents without federal intervention.
After more than four decades of effectively mandating failing health policy, itās high time to remove ambiguity and minimize uncertaintyāand the potential for politically motivated interpretationsāin the CHA. If Prime Minister Carney wants Canadians to finally have a world-class health-care system then can be proud of, he should allow the provinces to choose their own set of universal health-care policies. The first step is to fix, rather than defend, the 40-year-old legislation holding the provinces back.
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Crime1 day ago
āThis is a total fucking disasterā
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International2 days ago
Chicago suburb purchases childhood home of Pope Leo XIV
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Fraser Institute1 day ago
Before Trudeau average annual immigration was 617,800. Under Trudeau number skyrocketted to 1.4 million annually
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Daily Caller2 days ago
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MAiD1 day ago
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Daily Caller2 days ago
āI Know How These People Operateā: Fmr CIA Officer Calls BS On FBIās New Epstein Intel
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Economy1 day ago
The stars are aligning for a new pipeline to the West Coast
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Red Deer1 day ago
Join SPARC in spreading kindness by July 14th