As 2025 comes to a close, it’s tempting to reduce the year to headlines or crises. But for many Canadians, this was not a year of rupture — it was a year of carrying. Of discernment, quiet engagement, and a growing refusal to let disagreement become disintegration.
Canada at the Crossroads: BRICS, Trump, and the Fight for Trade Sovereignty
BRICS isn’t a sideshow anymore. With over a quarter of global GDP and nearly half the world’s population, the bloc is reshaping trade and challenging the U.S.-led order. At the same time, Trump’s America is tearing up the rulebook of predictable trade. For Canada, that means hard choices about where we anchor our future prosperity — and whether sovereignty can survive if we tie ourselves too tightly to one neighbour.
Why Canadians Are Being Blindsided: The Broken Infrastructure of Communication
Canadians aren’t apathetic—they’re structurally cut off. When headlines narrow to five stories a day and algorithms reward outrage over substance, the decisions that shape daily life arrive without warning. Half of Canadians don’t even know about a planned 15% federal spending cut. Meanwhile, local news—the old “town hall” that published council agendas and amplified consultations—has collapsed into news deserts. This essay explains why our Broken Infrastructure of Communication blindsides families at the kitchen table (from coffee prices to hospital changes), how fragmentation across generations deepens the problem, where other jurisdictions are succeeding (Taiwan, Barcelona, Reykjavík, UK), and what governments, journalists, and citizens can do right now to rebuild civic connection. If democracy depends on informed citizens, then fixing the information plumbing is as urgent as fixing bridges or power lines.



