Emilee Gilpin
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News
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July 2nd 2019
It’s the latest move in what has been decades-long fight to protect Teẑtan Biny (Fish Lake) from mining construction that would devastate land, waters, rights and ways of life.
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More in today's news
Far-right activists descend on Portland weekly and usually bring violence, including a very notable killing in May 2017. Local antifascists come out to defend minority communities and other vulnerable people. National media usually overlook the context and keep falling for the far-right narrative. Here's how a disinformation campaign went mainstream.
Caroline Orr
News
| July 2nd 2019
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A paper milling company from Finland says it can make a plastic-free coffee cup for pennies more per cup, which could help solve the problem of the mixed-material cups otherwise ending up in landfills or oceans.
Morgan Sharp
News, Business
| July 3rd 2019
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A recent editorial cartoon taking aim at Donald Trump may have brought an Atlantic Canadian artist to international attention, but the man behind the image does not believe the sketch itself is what resulted in the loss of a working relationship he had for nearly two decades.
Michelle McQuigge
News, US News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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An Algonquin grand chief's hunger strike is over after an agreement with the federal government on a project to create a major Indigenous centre in Ottawa.
Christian Paas-Lang
News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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The sexual-assault trial of former Afghanistan hostage Joshua Boyle is dealing with more concerns about admitting evidence of the alleged victim's past sexual history.
Mia Rabson
News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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Ukraine's new president makes his North American debut in Toronto later today, July 2, 2019, — more than a month before he is to visit the United States — and the country's envoy says that's no mistake.
Mike Blanchfield
News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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The Global Energy Monitor says an international boom in liquefied natural gas exports is undermining global efforts to stop climate change and Canada is one of the industry's biggest players.
Mia Rabson
News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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The Saulteau and West Moberly First Nations have been working to bring back the Klinse Za caribou herd from the brink of extinction. Five years after they started a maternal pen for pregnant mothers to raise their calves in a protected area, the mountain herd has gone from 16 animals to nearly 100. Caribou guardian Julian Napoleon said his people share the herd's story of strength and survival .
Emilee Gilpin
News, Entertainment, Politics, Culture
| June 27th 2019
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The United Nations' latest world drug report shows more Canadians started using cannabis each year in the lead-up to the drug's legalization for recreational use.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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Fisheries and Oceans says it will try to find and tag a North Atlantic right whale that is entangled in the Gulf of St. Lawrence when the weather clears up.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| July 1st 2019
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Amelia Jasper-Laurin dreams of living in a community of tiny house owners, where like-minded neighbours all pitch in to share chores and property maintenance.
Morgan Lowrie
News, Politics
| July 2nd 2019
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Bills are spending more than twice as long in the Senate since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's reforms to the upper house of Parliament, raising the question of who should get the credit for the chamber's more thorough approach — or the blame for its plodding pace.
Christian Paas-Lang
News, Politics
| July 1st 2019
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