When is a war crime not a war crime? Forget for the moment Stephen Harper’s gratuitously partisan smear of "virtually all of the candidates" in the federal Liberal leadership race as somehow "anti-Israel" for not agreeing with him that Israel must be right even if it is wrong. Forget too the predictably wounded, angry — […]
‘Bold’ leadership or caving to reality I couldn’t help but wonder whether my usually button-downed, clear-headed colleague David Rodenhiser had been smoking something illegal (perhaps in preparation for a screening of Trailer Park Boys: The Movie ) when he sat down at his computer to write his Thursday column on Nova Scotia’s new Sunday shopping […]
Reluctant Genius The Passionate Life and Inventive Mind of Alexander Graham Bell. By Charlotte Gray. HarperCollins Publishers Ltd. 448 pages, hardcover. Did Alexander Graham Bell invent the telephone and change our world forever? Or does that honour more properly belong to Elisha Gray, an electrician, inventor and founder of the Western Electric Manufacturing Company who […]
Signs of the times by Stephen Kimber On Tuesday, a beaming federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and his Treasury Board President colleague John Baird stood proudly in front of an oversized $13.2-billion stage-prop cheque made out to Canadians. While the cameras rolled and the flashes popped, Flaherty declared: "We are trimming the fat and refocusing […]
The Arar case is not the end Reaction to Mr. Justice Dennis O’Connor’s $15-million report into the wrongful arrest, deportation and torture of Maher Arar has been fascinating. And instructive. Consider the Harper government. When the then-Liberal government began belatedly, timidly asking for Arar’s release from his Syrian torture chamber in the fall of 2002, […]
Horne case isn’t over Last week’s decision in the Gabrielle Horne case has clarified a couple of key issues in the ongoing dispute at the province’s largest hospital. For starters, we now know the Capital District Health Authority had no legitimate reason to vary Dr. Horne’s hospital privileges on a supposed “emergency” basis four years […]
Why are we there? Jack Layton may not be right, but he is not wrong either. The NDP leader’s call for Canada to immediately pull our troops out of Afghanistan and press for multilateral negotiations — including with the Taliban — has roused righteous and predictable furies. His political opponents, thankful that Layton had put […]
Press, politicians and private lives In last week’s letters-to-the-editor section, reader Chris Chisholm took me to task for writing a “pile of sanctimonious crap.” Which was how Chisholm ever-so-gently characterized my column from the week before in which I’d argued the public doesn’t need, or have the right to know the salacious details — if […]
The price of speaking the truth So let me get this straight. Liberal MP Borys Wrzesnewskyj is forced to resign as his party’s deputy foreign affairs critic for the crime of telling the truth about the situation in the Middle East — which is that the only way to achieve any lasting peace in that […]
Tom Martin is a legendary cop obsessed with solving Halifax’s increasing number of unsolved murders. “There’s nothing cold about these cases,” he says. “They just haven’t yet been solved.” by Stephen Kimber Tom Martin wasn’t “full.” Not yet. He could still remember what Frank Hoskins, Sr., the legendary Halifax cop, used to tell the younger […]
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