[go: up one dir, main page]

For Sale

National Post- Global News parent company Corus explores potential sale

Corus shares have tumbled into penny-stock territory on growing concerns about a tough advertising market and the company’s debt load. They’ve lost more than 80% of their value this year, making Corus’ stock market capitalization around C$23 million. As recently as 2022, it was more than C$1 billion.

The company has more than C$1 billion in debt, including C$500 million in bonds maturing in 2028 and another C$250 million in notes due in 2030.

“Trudeau, sociologically and politically, is an idiot … and you can actually quote me”

Ujjal Dosanjh on why PM is to blame for Sikh extremism in Canada;

“A silent majority of the Sikhs do not want to have anything to do with Khalistan. They just don’t speak out because they’re afraid of violence and violent repercussions,” reports Ujjal Dosanjh, as a Sikh living in Vancouver, B.C.

The call for a separate Sikh homeland in Punjab, India — to be called Khalistan — has been brewing since the 1930s, when British rule in India was nearing its end. Although the movement now has marginal support in India, it has taken wings in Canada and escalated into the present derailing of relations between two friendly Commonwealth democracies, India and Canada.[…]

Without hesitation, Ujjal points to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

For two reasons, Ujjal blames Trudeau: “One, he’s never really understood the vast majority of Sikhs are quite secular in their outlook, despite the fact that they go to the temple,” he says. And the second reason: “Khalistanis are not a majority, and the fact nobody speaks against them is out of fear.” Through intimidation, Ujjal elaborates, Khalistani supporters control many of the temples in Canada. And it’s Trudeau’s fault, he asserts, “that Canadians now equate Khalistanis with Sikhs, as if we are all Khalistanis if we’re Sikhs.”

Your Moral And Intellectual Superiors

All the news that’s fit to spit.

The New York Times covered Harris’s claim in an Oct. 20 report that called skepticism about the job “burgerism,” a new form of “birtherism,” a reference to the belief that former president Barack Obama was not born in the United States. The Times said the Harris campaign “did not make any of Ms. Harris’s friends or family members available for interviews about their recollections of her experience.” It nonetheless concluded that Trump’s allegation that Harris did not work at McDonald’s “appears to be false.”

Navigation