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  • Canada legitimizes Guantanamo Bay ‘justice’

    The story of Omar Khadr has now become a familiar one to many: a Canadian citizen, captured in Afghanistan in July 2002 at the age of 15, and whisked off to Guantanamo Bay, the U.S.‘s most notorious prison.

  • Exploring polyamory

    First things first, friends. I cannot hope to represent every polyamorous couple out there in 500 words, but my humble aim is to explore an often misunderstood lifestyle.

  • The mass exodus of respect

    Like many hockey fans in Winnipeg, I’m trying to figure out how to justify eating wings and drinking beer three nights a week with no National Hockey League (NHL) season for the foreseeable future.

  • Men can be victims, too

    A news headline like “Prostitute found in dumpster” might have been a thing of the recent past, but it’s all but vanished from Canada’s mainstream media landscape these days thanks to an effective public awareness campaign against the harmful effects of victim-blaming.

  • New office of religious freedom exclusionary

    The Conservative government’s Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird has established the new Canadian Office of Religious Freedom, which is soon to be unveiled.

  • TV trauma

    Even though they make headlines pretty regularly these days, outcries of enraged parents rallying against the graphic depictions of wanton violence present in today’s video games - or the blatant promotion of female objectification in some popular music - are hardly enough to faze this jaded, broken husk of a man.

  • What’s the U of W doing in the North End?

    The University of Winnipeg’s Department of Urban and Inner-City Studies (UIC) is located on Selkirk Avenue, in Winnipeg’s North End - and exciting things are happening there.

  • Selkirk settler commemoration problematic

    This year marks the 200th anniversary of the Red River Settlement, an agricultural colony founded by a Scottish “noble” named Thomas Douglas, the Fifth Earl of Selkirk.

  • Time to acknowledge privilege

    It took me a long time to come to terms with the concept of white privilege.

  • Social democracy spreading across Canada

    Even after visiting the site of a massive oil sands project in Alberta, and changing his tone marginally in order to emphasize environmental ramifications, it seems the Western premiers and most Canadian media are unanimous in viewing NDP leader Thomas Mulcair’s position on the oil sands as his first significant gaffe since taking the official Opposition leadership reigns.

  • A handbook for rebellion

    It is difficult to overstate the role of the written word in helping to form and foster the idealism that has sparked activism in our society.

  • Self-love and bad grammar

    I started writing zines when I was 16.

  • In print

    You could say I’m a book snob.

  • Why books matter

    Many of us also often point to a certain book or movie as having had a powerful effect on us.

  • Let’s unlearn slut-shaming

    There is a “War on Women” being waged in the U.S., defined by violent opposition to women’s contraceptive rights.

  • Ellice Café was more than a restaurant

    For the past three years we have lived in an accessible apartment in the West End because both my wife and I are in wheelchairs.

  • Time to ban lawn chemicals

    In Manitoba, we welcome spring each year with great enthusiasm — but amid the birdsong and blossoms lurks a distinctive and unpleasant odour.

  • My West End walk

    On a cold January evening, after missing my bus on my way to class, I decide to walk through my West End neighbourhood.

  • Walking together against victim-blaming

    By now, most of us are familiar with SlutWalk, the global movement triggered last year after Toronto police constable Michael Sanguinetti told a group at York University that women should avoid dressing like “sluts” in order to not be victimized.

  • A timeless system of ethics

    I believe in chivalry.

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