Long before borders reached the top of the map — and before Greenland began making headlines — the Arctic was already an international world, shaped by Indigenous peoples, movement, and shared responsibility.
When the Anchor Drifts
Canada has spent decades building its economy and security around American predictability. That assumption is now under strain. This essay explores what it means to live next door to a politically unsettled United States — in a world with no reliable referee — and the risks Canadians should be watching as 2026 unfolds.
Canada Can Feed the World. So Why Are So Many Canadians Struggling to Eat?
Canada feeds nations around the world — yet food insecurity at home has reached record highs, especially across the Prairies. This longform report traces how we arrived here: from rising household costs and missing-middle processors to stalled provincial supports and an export-first system that leaves families exposed. A kitchen-table look at a national problem, grounded in evidence from PROOF, Statistics Canada, and the lived experiences shaping today’s food economy.
Why Tidewater Access Defines Canada’s Next Century
Canada’s access to tidewater — our ability to reach the Atlantic, Pacific, and Arctic on our own terms — shapes far more than trade. It influences our sovereignty, our climate commitments, and our economic resilience in a world where shipping routes, critical minerals, and Arctic corridors are becoming geopolitical battlegrounds. This longform explainer breaks down why tidewater access matters, how our geography both helps and hinders us, and what Canada must build to remain a self-determining nation in a rapidly changing century.
After the Age of Acceleration: Turning Technological Abundance Into Renewal
For nearly a century, we’ve lived in humanity’s long summer — an age of exponential growth and instant innovation. But every season has its limits. As technology reaches its natural boundaries and societies grow weary of constant acceleration, a new challenge emerges: learning to renew rather than to consume. After the Age of Acceleration reflects on what it means to move from growth to stewardship — and how Canada, uniquely, might lead the repair economy ahead.
The Wrong Fixation: Why Canada’s Healthcare Crisis Is a Provincial Accounting Problem
Canada’s healthcare debate isn’t just about how much Ottawa pays — it’s about what happens after the cheque clears. Provinces collect the funds, but too often, the trail goes dark. Until Canadians can trace their healthcare dollars from transfer to treatment, the wait in the room — and the wait for answers — will only grow longer.
Canada’s ASEAN Bridge: Building Strength in a World of Shifting Tides
The Calm After the Storm When Mark Carney stepped to the podium in Kuala Lumpur, his tone was steady — the kind of composure that comes from long years at the financial front lines. Behind him, the ASEAN banners glowed in blue and gold: Inclusivity and Sustainability. He thanked his Malaysian hosts, spoke of hospitality, then — without a hint …
Who Pays for Growth? The Spider Web Beneath the Streets
When new neighbourhoods rise on the edge of town, most of us see the houses, not the hidden invoices. Development Charges — the one-time fees builders pay to fund roads, water lines, and parks — are meant to ensure growth pays its own way.
But what happens when those fees are frozen, reduced, or quietly delayed? This full-length Between the Lines investigation follows the money beneath our streets, tracing how towns like Wasaga Beach, Ontario keep the pipes flowing while senior governments pull the strings.
Cauldron of Chaos
The United States has become a boiling pot of contradictions — a cauldron of chaos where every tariff, photo-op, and political spectacle keeps the world mesmerized while deeper forces reshape the foundations of power. Canada can no longer mistake this transformation for a phase. What’s happening south of the border isn’t a detour; it’s a rebuild — one that demands we keep our eyes firmly on the ball.










