Oil shocks are about to hit your grocery bill
Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz are pushing oil higher and driving up food prices across Canada
Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz are pushing oil higher and driving up food prices across Canada
Motivation is a fair-weather friend that disappears the moment things get difficult
Thin margins make big savings impossible. When government steps in, costs don’t fall. They shift to taxpayers
Governments are negotiating Indigenous land agreements that critics warn could reshape ownership, taxation and development across Vancouver
The appeal forces the Supreme Court to rule on a case tied to Chief Justice Wagner’s past public condemnation of the trucker’s protests
The rise of DEI is undermining the foundation Canada was built on: the simple idea that people succeed on merit and effort
Some Canadians are relying on debt to manage the high cost of food
Democracy doesn’t disappear. Citizens just stop showing up and government is left to the elites
The consumer carbon tax is gone but industrial carbon pricing isn’t. You pay it every time you buy food
Walk into one now and you’ll see men everywhere
The world knows otherwise. Canada has the oil but years of political obstruction keep it from reaching markets
The rise of the pajama grocery run reflects how inflation and convenience are changing consumer shopping behaviour
Years of deficit spending are making it harder for Gen Z to build the kind of financial security earlier generations took for granted