Opinion

Opinion

Banning five words won’t clean up the legislature

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Banning five words won’t clean up the legislature

Editorial 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Back in the 1960s, legendary counterculture comedian George Carlin gained notoriety — and sparked no small measure of controversy — with a standup bit in which he described the seven words that can never be said on television.

The monologue was, in keeping with Carlin’s body of work during a politically charged career that spanned more than five decades, insightfully hilarious with a clear intention to provoke. A brilliant rumination on the power of speech, it cleverly dissected the profane nature of the seven words while also stripping them of their impact by repeating them out loud for comic effect.

The question of whether certain words should or shouldn’t be said was front and centre this week — albeit in a decidedly less chucklesome context — in the Manitoba legislature with the declaration by Speaker Tom Lindsey that five specific words are heretofore considered unparliamentary and banned from use in legislative proceedings.

In an ongoing — and, by all appearances, generally futile — effort to re-inject a measure of decorum to a chamber in which debate and discourse have grown more fractious, coarse and belligerent over time, Lindsey ruled MLAs can no longer call one another any of these: “bigot,” “homophobe,” “racist,” “misogynist” or “transphobe.”

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Opinion

Letters, April 20

8 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

A place for garbage

Re: Spruce-up spree sweeps through downtown (April 15)

Much is being said about the garbage and dirt that is visible on Winnipeg’s streets now that the snow is gone. I am glad to see that efforts are being made to clean up what has been revealed.

However, some of that garbage would not be on the streets had there been receptacles for it.

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Opinion

Health care delayed, health care denied

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Health care delayed, health care denied

Editorial 4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 31, 2026

Manitobans have grown accustomed to hearing about long wait times in emergency rooms, delayed diagnostic tests and months-long backlogs for surgery. They are often framed as inconveniences — frustrating, yes, but often manageable.

The province’s latest critical-incident report should put an end to that illusion.

Delays in care are not merely an inconvenience. They can be fatal.

Between April 1 and Sept. 30, 2025, 16 deaths and 43 major injuries in Manitoba’s health-care system were deemed critical incidents requiring investigation. Among those deaths were five patients who experienced delays in accessing care, delays in treatment or delays in the system’s response to their deteriorating condition.

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Tuesday, Mar. 31, 2026

Opinion

Winds strip soil, seed, fertilizer — add stress

Laura Rance-Unger 4 minute read Preview

Winds strip soil, seed, fertilizer — add stress

Laura Rance-Unger 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

On the days those big, gusty winds swept across the Prairies earlier this month, I was driving to Alberta and pulling a camper.

Springtime wind events are nothing new for this region, but what was unusual about this one was its force and how widely it extended through Saskatchewan and Manitoba.

We changed our route to travel north and avoid the gusts that toppled semi-trailers near Regina, but we were still driving into headwinds of up to 80 km/h past fields where the seeders were stopped in their tracks, with the soil around them moving instead.

The aftermath was fully visible as we made our way home this week.

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Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

Opinion

Pushing back against AI’s‘inevitability’

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

There is a great scene in a recent episode of the HBO Max comedy Hacks, in which comedian Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), takes a meeting with a Tech Bro who wants her to train an LLM (large language model) in her style of comedy so that people can write funnier bridesmaid speeches, essentially. Her collaborator/head writer Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder) has reservations.

“AI is here and it’s here to stay, so you either get on board or you get left in the past,” the Tech Bro tells her.

“See, that is a big part of why I hate it, this forced inevitability,” Ava responds. “People like you are always saying, ‘It’s happening whether you like it or not,’ but you’re the ones making it happen.”

Ding, ding, ding. “Forced inevitability” is exactly it, and it’s the thing I hate about it, too.

Opinion

Grounding of the Snowbirds example of military’s treatment

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

Grounding of the Snowbirds example of military’s treatment

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

This column is irrationally angry. Furious, even. Born of deep frustration and irritation with my government. Not any one government but successive governments. Not because of something they did, but something they didn’t do.

They failed to keep Canada’s iconic Snowbirds flying. They knew they had to and still didn’t. They knew the aircraft had to be replaced and waited and waited until it was too late. They kicked the decision can so far down the road, it may be a decade after this season before Canada’s elite aerobatics team punches the sky to thrill Canadians.

Last week’s decision to ground the Snowbirds cannot be challenged when it comes to crew safety.

The 11 CT-114 Tutor aircraft of 431 Squadron are 60 years old. Tune-ups go with aging.

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Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

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Opinion

Can’t a fridge just be a fridge?

Russell Wangersky 6 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 AM CDT

I don’t want it.

I know this is going to sound a lot like “old man shakes fist at clouds,” but I don’t want it.

Nor do I need it.

The Samsung Bespoke AI refrigerator uses the internet, the cloud and Google AI to precisely identify the food it’s chilling inside. You can use in-fridge cameras to show you on your phone what’s in there while you’re at the grocery store, in case you’ve forgotten to make a list. A voice-command door opener saves wear and tear on your hands. It can, apparently, make you “classic cubed ice, crushed ice, chewable Ice Bites™, or slow-melting Sphere Ice™.”

Opinion

Outrage over Northland Tales program hypocritical

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview

Outrage over Northland Tales program hypocritical

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Friday, May. 22, 2026

Progressive Conservative MLA Wayne Ewasko was suspended from the Manitoba legislature earlier this month for yelling at Premier Wab Kinew: “You’re drunk, you’re drunk. I thought you quit drinking.”

I talked about the racist comment in my weekly Free Press newsletter Biidaajimowin: News from the Centre (check it out at wfp.to/niigaan).

Racism is not an individual problem, it’s a community problem.

A single person doesn’t make racist comments without learning them from someone else.

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Friday, May. 22, 2026

Opinion

Bread, milk… and ID? Beleaguered biz could eye Liquor Mart model

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Preview

Bread, milk… and ID? Beleaguered biz could eye Liquor Mart model

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Friday, May. 22, 2026

Not long ago, the idea of lining up and showing identification before entering a retail store in Winnipeg would have seemed absurd. That was something people associated with high-security government buildings, not buying a bottle of wine or picking up groceries.

Today, it has become routine at Manitoba Liquor Marts, and given the growing retail crime crisis in Winnipeg, it may only be a matter of time before more stores follow the same path.

Few customers enjoy waiting at the entrance of a liquor store while security staff check their identification. It’s inconvenient, slows down shopping and creates the uneasy feeling that everyone is being treated with suspicion because of the actions of a relatively small group of chronic offenders.

But after years of escalating shoplifting, violent incidents and threats against Liquor Mart employees, Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries made a decision that produced undeniable results.

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Friday, May. 22, 2026

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