Analysis

Opinion

Music as therapy — singing through tears

Pam Frampton 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

It’s Sunday and I arrive in the middle of hymn sing. Mom and her roommate are dozing on the couch in the lobby as the songs swell around them, the recorded music supplemented by a choir of earnest voices.

The diminutive lady with the horn-rimmed glasses who had vigorously belted out Nancy Sinatra’s These Boots Are Made for Walkin’ at last week’s singalong is more subdued today, her voice soft and plaintive during Why Me Lord?

Indeed, there is an air of sadness to this gathering, the musical selections steeped in nostalgia. It feels more like group therapy than joyful noise.

But then the residents here are grieving. They have lost two of their number in recent weeks, both wonderful women whose company I enjoyed on many previous visits, and today’s music session has been dedicated to their memories.

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Opinion

Words matter

Frances Ravinsky 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

I have been following with interest the media’s reporting of the ban in Manitoba’s Legislative Assembly on the use of the words racist, bigot, homophobe, misogynist and transphobe to call out hateful speech. The stated goal of the ban is “to improve House decorum.”

I’ve appreciated the fulsome coverage of this issue in the Free Press through the publishing of editorials, op-eds and letters to the editor. I was in particular struck by Premier Wab Kinew’s comments during his May 7 monthly interview with Marcy Markusa on CBC Radio.

Kinew’s strong opposition to the ban raises a critical question: How do we keep democratic civil society alive while silencing the calling out of discriminatory language and behaviour? Of course we can’t. By confusing decorum with silence we run the risk of contributing to a “head in the sand” mindset; to what American journalist and activist Barbara Ehrenreich referred to as a “Smile or Die” culture.

But then a followup question emerges: How do we effectively voice our legitimate dissent in ways that move us towards correcting discriminatory practices? A “no holds barred” approach to voicing our opposition may not be the answer. It’s all too easy to slip into shaming people by lobbing ad hominem/ad feminam attacks across partisan lines.

Opinion

Designated encampments are a poor solution

Kate Sjoberg 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

The overall shrinking of public space and degradation of the policy environment on use of public space is contributing to people experiencing homelessness being less safe — and contributing to interest in ideas like designated encampments. Unfortunately, this direction fails to centre the interests of people living unhoused. Further, we forget too easily that any consideration of land use on Treaty 1 land needs to start with historic claims and ancestral rights.

Among people experiencing homelessness, Indigenous people are overrepresented. Many people are living unsheltered on their own ancestral territories. Having endured intergenerational theft that started with land (transferred to settlers whose descendants now enjoy generational wealth), and continued with limits on movement, ability to make money, access to education and more, they are now actively surviving homelessness. Yet, the limits on their person continue.

Recent years have seen the closure and limits on use of public space throughout the downtown and broader city. These include Portage Place mall, the Millennium Library and Winnipeg Transit, and previously through the closure of downtown single-room occupancy hotels and their barrooms.

For some time, the city has been telegraphing an intention to limit access to outdoor public space according to housing status. At every opportunity, those cautioning against this move have raised the problem of limiting those with ancestral rights, and further limiting free movement of citizens on public land. The latter has been decided through B.C. legal process, and suggests the City of Winnipeg’s exposure to risk as it moves forward.

Opinion

It takes a village to raise — and educate — a child

Jerry Storie 6 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

The oft-quoted saying, “it takes a village to raise a child,” resembles an African proverb. In the Yoruba language, the saying goes “two eyes birth a child, but 200 eyes raise it.”

Over the past several decades, that saying has come to mean something entirely different from what villagers meant, in Africa and in the small town where I grew up. The saying meant two, equally important things. It meant the community has a stake in ensuring that children are properly cared for, but the saying also meant that children must be taught and understand their obligations to the community at large.

The 200 eyes raising the child in the village did not look away when the parents or a child failed to observe community standards. When a child disrespected someone in the community, they were corrected. The village had a clear code of conduct that governed what was expected behaviour. These mores, or societal expectations, were understood and enforced by both parents and community members.

Everyone needs to understand their society’s written and unwritten rules. It is our obligation to teach our children the expectations we have of each other.

Opinion

The folly of war: the wisdom of peace

John R. Wiens 6 minute read Preview

The folly of war: the wisdom of peace

John R. Wiens 6 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Some things never seem to change.

In the 1980s I was a peace advocate —I still am. One of the founders and first president of the Educators for Social Responsibility, I helped organize, promote and speak at peace and anti-nuclear rallies and marches. We developed, collected and distributed peace curricula from across Canada for teaching in Manitoba schools.

We made presentations to government task forces opposing nuclear arms and the military industrial complex. We argued that peace was more than the absence of war. Now, I would be happy with that as a starting point for political and moral thought and action. I trust I am not alone.

This is not a new struggle. In 1795, Immanuel Kant, a philosopher sometimes mentioned alongside Aristotle and Plato as one of the greatest philosophers in the Western world, wrote Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch. His ideas are reflected in the 1949 Geneva Conventions; international laws regulating the initiation of armed conflict and conduct during war.

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

A premier firmly caught in her own trap

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

A premier firmly caught in her own trap

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026

Pickle, meet petard. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is now in a political pickle having been hoist with her sovereigntist petard.

The province’s Court of King’s Bench ruling last week that no referendum on Alberta separation can proceed without prior consultation with First Nations is a body blow to the double-game her United Conservative Party government has been playing for the past year.

At least the sovereigntist Parti Québécois is honest in their intentions. They’ve been separatists since the 1970s. Smith’s two-term UCP, which never campaigned on separation, has been trying to have it both ways. A strong Alberta in a united Canada on the one hand, a secessionist-threatening referendum on the other. Their weapon of choice: referenda. Lots of them. Nine, to be exact, to be voted on Oct. 19.

Smith’s referendums are a hodge-podge of performative policy questions that have all been written in a way to yield a yes vote. They range from more provincial control over immigration, controlling health-care access for non-citizens, and requiring proof of identity to vote (all hot-button UCP concerns) to working with willing provinces to amend the Constitution to get more provincial powers to appoint judges, abolish the Senate, opt out of federal programs and secure provincial primacy over federal laws.

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Saturday, May. 16, 2026

Opinion

Canada already has agtech ideas — it needs the next step

Jacqueline Keena 4 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026

Canadian labs and startups are overflowing with brilliant agtech ideas. So why do so many promising tools stall at the farm gate instead of moving from a successful trial to broad use on the farm?

If our country is serious about harnessing its potential to be a global food superpower, this gap between innovation and adoption deserves far more attention.

Agriculture isn’t an afterthought in Canada’s economy. It is one of the few sectors where better tools can improve efficiency, decision-making and competitiveness within a relatively short window.

Canada’s agtech ecosystem is among the world’s best. Yet innovation support is often too focused on getting startups off the ground, rather than helping proven technologies through this critical growth phase and into the market.

Opinion

A critical project in waiting

Stuart Williams 4 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026

Like most Manitobans I live in the city. I live in a home built about a century ago, in a well-treed neighbourhood. A 27-year-old gas furnace heats my home — one that needs replacing soon. I’d love to quit burning gas and electrify.

The options aren’t great. Electric heat costs more than double what gas does. Air source heat pumps work much of the winter, but fail during our worst cold snaps, leaving us dependent on expensive electric heat or gas backup — plus a noisy outdoor unit that ruins the patio.

If I had more land, like those with larger rural properties, I could bury horizontal coils in the ground for a fraction of the cost of drilling. But on my small city lot the only option is drilling 400- to 500-foot boreholes in the front yard. Expensive, even with Efficiency Manitoba incentives.

So: keep burning gas, or put up with a noisy compressor and still need a backup heat source. Those are my choices. But they don’t have to be.

Opinion

World Cup trolling takes to the air

Jerrad Peters 4 minute read Preview

World Cup trolling takes to the air

Jerrad Peters 4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

You know you’ve done something very, very foolish when an airline is trolling you.

People don’t generally like airlines. Or, they’re at least apathetic to them — relying on the check-in staff, flight attendants, pilots and actual planes to get them from one place to another, preferably safe and sound and with a modicum of dignity.

The soaring price of jet fuel, a consequence of the pumpkin patch baby’s Iranian adventure, and resulting rise in fares has only made the carriers even more unpopular.

They know it. They also know they’ve still got a healthier brand, somehow, than FIFA.

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Friday, May. 15, 2026

Opinion

A third world war — not as close as many fear

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Preview

A third world war — not as close as many fear

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

A Politico opinion poll conducted in the four biggest NATO countries in February revealed almost identical popular expectations about the likelihood of a global war in the next five years. In every one — the U.S., the U.K., France and Germany — they think it is quite likely.

Forty-six per cent of Americans think that, and so do 43 per cent of British and French people. The Germans are the optimists in the group, but even 40 per cent of them think a third world war is no more than five years away. Canadians agree about that, but unlike the Europeans, who see the Russians as the biggest threat, Canadians fear an American invasion most.

These expectations and fears are not exactly wrong, but they are certainly premature. A world war is a war that involves all the great powers, and almost certainly involves nuclear weapons use. We haven’t had anything like that for 80 years. The probability that it will happen in the next five years is not zero, but it is a very, very small number.

Now, if you want to count every conflict where organized groups are using state-of-the-art weapons — let’s say, machine-guns and drones — then there are at least a dozen wars going on. There is the Sudanese civil war, and the heavily armed anarchy of Haiti, and the border skirmishes between Thailand and Cambodia, and quite a few you haven’t even heard of.

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Friday, May. 15, 2026

Opinion

The dangers of gambling on nuclear power

Anne Lindsey 5 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

Dismissing climate science, setting Canada apart from most nations and planting us firmly in the United States’ camp, the Carney government is betting the farm on a “nuclear renaissance.”

There have been numerous indications this was coming. But Energy Minister Tim Hodgson’s April 29 statement to the Canadian Nuclear Association, following immediately on the launch of the “Canada Strong Fund” left no doubt that our investment banker prime minister is determined to pursue his nuclear energy superpower dreams.

As the UN Climate Envoy, Mark Carney famously said there is “no path to net zero without nuclear.” This has been a mantra of successive Liberal governments even as Canada’s last nuclear build was in the 1980s, and nuclear’s share of global electricity production has been steadily declining. It’s also been the rallying cry of nuclear advocates spending big to persuade anxious populations experiencing floods, droughts and wildfires that nuclear power will solve our climate disaster in the making. That claim is false.

Eight years ago, the Liberals rolled out their “SMR roadmap,” predicting the first (slightly) smaller new reactors would be operational in 2026. It isn’t happening. A new report by M.V. Ramana and Susan O’Donnell — Assessing Small Modular Nuclear Reactors in Canada — details the $4.5 billion spent by Canadian governments on SMRs with zero kilowatts of electricity generated to date. Most of that money went to the potential first SMR in Canada, the BWRX 300, an American design by GE Hitachi that uses enriched uranium fuel, not available in Canada.

Opinion

Skilled trades: a first-choice career

Fred Meier 4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

Skilled tradespeople have always played a leading role in shaping Canada.

They’ve built, modified and maintained infrastructure that houses us, keeps us safe and makes it possible for us to have an advanced and diverse economy for generations.

Yet, somehow, we’ve failed to communicate this to young people at the family dinner table, in primary, middle and secondary school classrooms, at virtually any point of influence when discussing post-secondary education options.

This neglect around the optics of skilled trades has created a gap in public knowledge about what they entail. Skilled tradespeople have evolved their roles and capabilities in lockstep with the complexity of the world in which they work.

Opinion

What Tannis Richardson taught me about museums

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Preview

What Tannis Richardson taught me about museums

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Tannis Richardson believed museums should never intimidate people. That sounds obvious. It is not.

Since her passing in April, I have often found myself thinking about the many conversations we shared over my nearly two decades as director and CEO of the Winnipeg Art Gallery–Qaumajuq. Some took place in galleries, boardrooms and community events. Others unfolded quietly in her home, surrounded by art and memories gathered over a lifetime of curiosity and generosity.

Our conversations repeatedly returned to the same questions: What makes a museum meaningful? Who is it for? And why do so many cultural institutions still make ordinary people feel they are standing on the outside looking in?

Tannis helped shape my answers to those questions.

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Opinion

The house Speaker, heckling and ‘banned’ words

Paul G. Thomas 5 minute read Preview

The house Speaker, heckling and ‘banned’ words

Paul G. Thomas 5 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

On May 4, when providing his ruling on one of the many recent disorderly incidents in the legislature, the Speaker, Tom Lindsey (the NDP MLA for Flin Flon) announced that henceforth MLAs who engaged in “excessive” heckling would be called to order. If this happened three times the offending member would not be recognized to speak for the remainder of the day.

Failure to respect the order of the chair could result in expulsion from the chamber for the rest of the sitting.

The Speaker also announced that five words — “bigot,” “racist,” “homophobe,” “transphobe” and “misogynist” — would be added to an existing list of words already considered unparliamentary language.

Depending on how they are used, the offensive words are deemed to impugn the character of another member. Ordered to withdraw the words, a failure to comply would result in the offender not being recognized to speak until a withdrawal occurred.

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Opinion

Manitoba’s flag: A symbol of shared heritage at 60

John Andrew Hart 4 minute read Preview

Manitoba’s flag: A symbol of shared heritage at 60

John Andrew Hart 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 13, 2026

On a fair spring afternoon 60 years ago, the Flag of Manitoba made its debut at the provincial legislature. In what the Winnipeg Free Press called an “impressive ceremony,” then-lieutenant-governor Richard Bowles formally proclaimed the new provincial flag on May 12, 1966.

Premier Duff Roblin presided over the flag raising, joined by opposition politicians and dignitaries, including Archbishop Maurice Baudoux of St. Boniface. The Mennonite Children’s Choir performed the old school song Manitoba, while 2,000 flag-raising events took place simultaneously across the province.

The two men selected to hoist the flag in Winnipeg were deliberately chosen to represent the unity of Manitoba’s Indigenous and British heritage.

Cornelius Bignell, former councillor and chief of Opaskwayak Cree Nation (then The Pas Indian Band) and later a founder of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, stood for the Indigenous side. Beside him was Edward Button, a descendant of Sir Thomas Button, the English explorer credited with raising the first British flag in the region at the Nelson River in 1612.

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Wednesday, May. 13, 2026

Opinion

Why health spending funds aviation over infrastructure

Rafiq Andani 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 13, 2026

Sir Richard Branson famously said, “If you want to be a millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline.” It is a notoriously brutal business model.

Just look at the headlines. Canadian carriers like Lynx Air and Canada Jetlines have completely collapsed, while American budget giants like Spirit Airlines are filing for bankruptcy.

Running an airline is an incredibly efficient way to burn through cash. Yet, looking at health-care spending, it appears to be standard operating procedure in Manitoba.

We did not set out to launch an airline, but we are certainly funding one.

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