In the age of dangerous disinformation, it’s time to get serious about online harms

How can a multicultural society function when hateful lies are allowed to spread like wildfire on the very platforms on which we rely for information?
Information blackout still shrouds investigation of shocking murder of Ontario resto owner

Fourteen months later, Owen Sound citizens continue to deal with a troubling lack of information about a murder that cast a cloud of anxiety over the city.
DND access-to-info woes persist as compliance with law drops, backlog grows

For the third straight year, the Department of National Defence is going the wrong way when it comes to respecting access-to-information laws and timelines.
Canada faces a cybersecurity crisis with critical infrastructure at risk

From energy grids to health-care systems, our nation’s most essential assets are being targeted by an ever-evolving array of sophisticated threats from both state and non-state actors.
Let Ukraine strike back

The restraints put on Ukraine by its western allies to not attack missile launch sites in Russia have become a major barrier to Ukraine’s success.
Who’s standing up to the danger of World War III?

For the peacemakers’ work to bear fruit, Canada’s political leadership will have to find the courage necessary to sign the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
The sad saga of Afghan-Canadian military advisers

Veterans’ benefits have improved considerably in recent decades, but not all Canadians sent into war zones are treated equally.
‘Each of our voices matter’: disaster survivors call for greater climate action in Ottawa advocacy push

If personal stories of loss ‘can’t resonate with political leaders, I really don’t know what is going to,’ said the Sierra Club’s Conor Curtis.
The security clearance process: an explainer from ex-CSIS director Ward Elcock

As politicians politick over Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre not having a security clearance, former CSIS director Ward Elcock breaks down the process.
PBO report pokes holes in feds’ plan to meet NATO defence target

The government’s figures projecting military spending to reach 1.76 per cent of GDP by 2029-30 ‘are based on an erroneous GDP forecast,’ says the Parliamentary Budget Officer.