Comments

  • The clarity of separating church and state

    Whenever I hear someone questioning the need for a separation between church and state, I shake my head. In response to Josh Bernier’s article “The ambiguity of separating church and state” in the Feb. 11 edition of The Uniter, I don’t understand how such a fundamental principle of a modern democratic society can be questioned or considered ambiguous.

  • Canadians ‘get tough’ on crime for all the wrong reasons

    A new poll shows that Canadians are favouring harsher punishments for criminals than previously shown. The latest Angus Reid poll found that 62 per cent of respondents in Canada favour capital punishment for murderers and 31 per cent believed that rapists should be put to death.

  • Cougars make the personal political

    I’ve been doing a lot of thinking lately and I’ve come to two very earth-shattering conclusions.

  • The ambiguity of separating church and state

    Whenever I hear someone call for the separation of church and state, I shake my head. Not because I disagree with them, but because church and state (in many parts of the world) are already separate. There hasn’t been a fusion of church and state in Western Civilization for hundreds of years, so why are we trying to reinvent the wheel?

  • Happiness is what you make of it

    Recently, I embarked on a new stage in my academic life. I applied to go to graduate school, hoping to do a Master’s degree in Criminology.

  • What the Citizens’ Coalition could be

    In June 2008, over 180 excited citizens formed the Winnipeg Citizens’ Coalition, a progressive political movement that would challenge our pro-business city council headed by Mayor Sam Katz.

  • Is it too late for Portage Avenue?

    Recently, a New York marketing firm was hired to look into the prospects of downtown Winnipeg’s retail. Focusing on the three retail nodes – Graham, Portage and the Exchange District – the report assessed current realities and tabled recommendations for the future.

  • Environmental realism could be the solution to climate change

    According to British-Canadian geopolitical expert Gwynne Dyer’s latest book, Climate Wars, two degrees Celsius is the maximum “safe level” to which global temperatures can rise compared to pre-industrial times without ensuring catastrophic climate change consequences.

  • My economic action plan

    I’ve been thinking a lot lately about ways to make extra money and I’ve come up with an ingenious plan.

  • Electric transit: Ahead of its time

    In the 1920s and ‘30s, the Winnipeg area had more than 200 miles of streetcar track operated by the publicly-owned Winnipeg Electric Company. Not only did the tracks run up and down almost every major street in the city (Ellice Avenue was a rare exception), but it was possible to travel from St. Norbert to Stonewall, or from Headingley to Selkirk on electric-powered rail transit.

  • Aboriginal leadership and its responsibility to the environment

    As an aboriginal scholar, I feel lucky to have been taught by some of the great aboriginal leaders and elders of the past generation.

  • Consuming ourselves out of the environmental hole

    The state of the human effects of pollution and wastefulness upon our world permeates our guilt-filled North American lives.

  • Canada at Copenhagen

    They came in private jets. They came in limousines. One hundred and nineteen heads of state – the largest-ever assembly of UN member states – descended on Denmark in December to tackle the difficult problem of climate change.

  • A five-point plan towards environmental harmony

    Unless you’ve used this page to wrap fish and you’re reading this column off the side of a delicious halibut, you’ve probably noticed by now that the theme of this week’s Uniter is environmentalism. I’ve decided to stick with this theme and write to you all today about some very simple things we can do to live a more environmentally-friendly life.

  • Late-night letdown

    I have to say that I’m one of the many people who are saddened that Conan O’Brien is leaving his Tonight Show post on NBC. I do not understand what NBC is doing. Forcing out the popular O’Brien is certainly not the solution that will lead back to successful ratings for the battered network.

  • When power trumps justice

    Darfur, an area in western Sudan, is the site of the first genocide of the 21st century.

  • Haitian history lesson

    The earthquake in Haiti is not the first calamity that has befallen the people of this beautiful Caribbean island of Hispaniola. The first was a man-made one.

  • Negotiations on climate change must include more than governments

    Another international climate change conference, another failure. The trend is holding steady, and the willingness to counteract global climate change seems to be at an ultimate standstill.

  • RCMP were part of the Canadian colonial project

    Recently, from their abuse of power, there has been increased debate regarding the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). Unfortunately, what is focused on reflects the dearth of critical material on the history of Western Canada and the role of the Mounties in colonizing it.

  • A people-powered solution to the gun control problem

    Recently, I’ve been thinking a lot about how to properly protect myself from evildoers, and I realized that some time in the last few years, I’ve changed my mind completely on an important issue: gun control.

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