Calls GST Dodge “Nefarious”

All-cash deals are illegal contracts unenforceable in court, a British Columbia judge has ruled. Avoiding paper trails to evade the GST is unlawful and “nefarious,” he said: "The scale of this fraudulent scheme is significant."

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Appointee Regretted Lecture

Ex-Canadian Human Rights Commissioner Birju Dattani says he regrets delivering a 2014 lecture in which he called terrorism a “well-calculated strategy" for Muslims. Dattani told federal interviewers he has since changed his views and concluded terrorism is wrong: "Mr. Dattani was asked about the poster for the event."

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‘I’m No Anarchist’: Blacklister

The American author of an anti-Catholic blacklist distributed by the taxpayer-subsidized Canadian Anti-Hate Network is a former participant in Anarchist Youth protests, records show. Spencer Sunshine said he was not an anarchist per se but yesterday would not take reporters’ questions: "I am not an anarchist in the anti-statist sense."

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Paid $52K To Advise Senators

Liberal-appointed senators billed taxpayers thousands for media advice from a former iPolitics editor, records show. “Journalism was never stable employment,” James Baxter earlier testified at a Commons committee hearing: "I’m not here asking for a handout."

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English “Don’t Belong”: Data

English-speaking Québecers resent “being made to feel like they don’t belong,” says in-house research by Canada's Commissioner of Official Languages. The finding follows federal data showing nearly 900,000 English speakers have left the province since the 1960s: "Forcing people to learn a language is not a solution."

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Cannot Enforce Vague Laws

Citizens cannot be charged under vague laws on the say-so of police, a New Brunswick judge has ruled. The decision came in the case of an RCMP campaign against motorcyclists: "Every citizen should know what is expected of them."

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Blacklists Whites & Catholics

Federally-subsidized activists claim a Catholic group is a “hate movement” and that most haters are white people. The Canadian Anti-Hate Network published its blacklist after receiving $640,000 from Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge’s department and others for "research."

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Two Jewish Charities Vetoed

The Canada Revenue Agency on Saturday stripped tax status from two Jewish charities including one whose fundraising Negev Dinners hosted prime ministers since John Diefenbaker. Litigation is pending: 'They failed to meet parts of the Income Tax Act.'

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Want Chretien-Style Cutbacks

Cabinet must cut spending 15 percent, says a Canadian Chamber of Commerce submission to the Commons finance committee. The figure represents the steepest cuts since then-Prime Minister Jean Chretien’s 1995 austerity program that eliminated 45,000 federal jobs: "Canadians are right to be concerned."

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Teaching “Needs And Wants”

A federal agency is expanding a program to educate high schoolers on credit, debt and “the difference between needs and wants.” The Financial Consumer Agency of Canada has faulted parents for failing to teach children about basic budgeting: "Parents are the first place where children should be learning something."

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NDPers Breach Labour Law

The Ontario New Democratic Party Caucus breached the Labour Relations Act, says an arbitrator. The Caucus was censured for firing a employee who complained of workplace groping and lewd misconduct by her boss, a member of the legislature: "The Caucus issued a termination letter."

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Sunday Poem: “The Forest”

Poet W.N. Branson writes: "Psychology of place, The weight presses down. Plans are laid, The best laid plans. Cartier and Donnaconna, Did they know?..."

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Book Review: Holiday Road

Papua New Guinea is best known as the malarial graveyard of 8,000 Australians in World War Two and the jungle spot where oil heir Michael Rockefeller vanished on a 1961 canoe trip. He is believed to have been eaten by tribespeople. Here is where Tony Robinson-Smith and his wife Nadya, of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., decided to take their holiday.

The point of travel is to see, smell and taste a different world. Of Canoes And Crocodiles achieves this with humour and meticulous note-taking. The couple set out to cover the 1,126-kilometre Sepik River by dugout canoe. “It will be dangerous,” warns one villager. “You should not go alone,” says another.

They carry no firearms but 20 cans of tuna, instant coffee and mosquito netting. The result: Of Canoes And Crocodiles is the best of travel writing, rich and vivid. “It is an overcast, windless day and the air seems soupy and stale,” writes Robinson-Smith. Any reader could smell it.

Seek “Randy” Texts & Emails

Employment Minister Randy Boissonnault faces new demands for records after his business partner admitted lying to reporters. The Commissioner of Ethics yesterday disclosed he asked Boissonnault for emails and texts: "I am concerned about this."

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Rights Commissioner Is Out

Cabinet yesterday refused to release findings of its investigation into a former Muslim Students’ Association activist appointed Canada’s Chief Human Rights Commissioner. Birju Dattani's appointment was suspended only minutes before it was to take effect following protests from B’nai Brith and others: "Dattani has a history of anti-Semitic commentary."

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