Analysis

Opinion

The beautiful promise of the Pantages project

Stephen Borys 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Last Saturday evening at Philips Square, I was reminded how profoundly the space in which we experience music shapes what we hear.

We welcomed friends and patrons of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra — alongside eight extraordinary musicians — for an evening of chamber music. It was part of the WSO’s Concertmaster’s Bow series: intimate salon-style gatherings where music is not just heard, but fully experienced.

In a beautifully restored space, with exceptional acoustics and a warmth that most concert halls rarely achieve, we listened. Mendelssohn’s String Octet — famously virtuosic, exuberant, and demanding — filled the room. Eight musicians playing as one, just feet from the audience.

No distance. No barrier. Just music, unfolding in real time.

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The best hockey I knew was the first

Robert Milan 6 minute read Preview

The best hockey I knew was the first

Robert Milan 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

“Nothing is as good as it used to be and it never was. The ‘golden age of sports,’ the golden age of anything, is the is the age of everyone’s childhood.” — Ken Dryden

I grew up in Winnipeg, in a small suburban enclave called Morse Place. Not exactly the centre of the hockey universe, but it was home. A little working-class pocket in the north part of the city. Terry Sawchuk, the great Detroit goaltender was probably our best known hockey export.

Dad worked in an iron foundry, and mom ran the house like a general. My older sister excelled at school and her choir singing. We weren’t poor, but let’s just say there was very little money left over after dad brought home the paycheque.

We didn’t have much, but we, or rather I, had the rink. The community club had one glorious sheet of outdoor ice with real boards, an old streetcar converted into a clubhouse, and a pot-bellied stove that tried to keep your toes from freezing. And yet … it was magic.

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2:00 AM CDT

AI and new era of cyber threats

Kyle Volpi Hiebert 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

The chief promise of artificial intelligence is turbocharged productivity.

The trade-off? Epic disruption.

As AI outpaces regulation, many things will worsen before they improve. That includes malicious cyber threats.

Earlier this month, AI developer Anthropic decided against publicly releasing its latest tool, Mythos Preview. Despite not being trained for cybersecurity, the model’s superpowered coding skills have unearthed thousands of global internet vulnerabilities. It easily spotted flaws in all major operating systems and web browsers.

Improving mental health supports

Kevin Rebeck 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

This week includes the National Day of Mourning, a day that is observed every year to remember and honour workers who have been injured, suffered illness or lost their lives due to workplace hazards.

It is a day to think of loved ones, friends and co-workers who we have lost and those who have had their lives permanently altered because of their jobs. It is also a day to recommit ourselves to continuing to make workplaces safer and free of hazards so that all workers come home safe and whole at the end of every shift and workday.

In Manitoba, our workers compensation system is built upon the foundational principle that when a worker is injured on the job, they are entitled to supports to help them recover from their injury, replace lost employment income and safely return to work.

The Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba was set up over a century ago at a time when work, and our understanding of the effects of work, were a lot different than they are today. Understandably, much of the laws and rules that the WCB is based upon were set up to help workers with physical workplace injuries, because for a long time that was our society’s common understanding of the types of injuries that people could suffer at work.

Time to act on provincial autism strategy

Suzanne Swanton 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

I was in attendance in the gallery of the Manitoba legislature on March 19 when Bill 232, The Autism Strategy Act, introduced by Liberal MLA Cindy Lamoureux, passed second reading and moved to the committee stage.

The following week, March 24, the provincial budget included an increase in funding to St.Amant of $5 million for a total of $30 million annually, to reduce wait-lists for autism assessments and case management services provided to children and youth with autism and their families throughout Manitoba.

While this is welcome news for some families who will benefit from this support, much more needs to be done to truly address the issues and barriers that people with autism, of all ages, and their families experience in their daily lives.

We know from research that the rate of autism is increasing in Manitoba. Deepa Singal published a research study in 2025 that cited the prevalence and incidence of autism in children and adults in Manitoba. It went from 0.79/1,000 in 2011 to 3.06/1,000 in 2022. This study only included diagnosed children and youth, therefore, we know it is an underestimate of the actual number of autistic Manitobans. Many go undiagnosed until adulthood, or are not diagnosed at all.

No quick resolution for CUSMA trade deal

Deveryn Ross 4 minute read Preview

No quick resolution for CUSMA trade deal

Deveryn Ross 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

A few days ago, a reporter asked an adviser to Prime Minister Mark Carney to summarize Canada’s strategy regarding the upcoming Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) negotiations. He declined, saying it would undermine our interests to reveal our strategy in advance of the talks.

It was the right response, but the strategy is obvious to those who are paying attention.

Contrary to what some politicians and pundits have suggested, the free trade agreement is not due to expire any time soon. Rather, it faces a mandatory review beginning on July 1, nine weeks from today.

The agreement is scheduled to expire in 2036, but this year’s review gives the parties the opportunity to renegotiate or potentially end the agreement if a 16-year extension (to 2042) is not agreed to. That said, any party can withdraw from the agreement by giving six months’ notice of its intention to do so.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

What about health workers who fill gaps and cost less?

Steven Piotrowski 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

There is a lot to like in Budget 2026’s health-care chapter. Building and expanding emergency departments, investing in home care and increasing health workforce training positions are just a few examples. The Kinew government deserves credit for listening to the concerns of Manitobans and putting real money into a struggling health-care system.

But buried in the highlights are two lines worth examining: $223 million for more doctors and an additional $6.3 million to recruit more doctors to rural Manitoba.

There is no question, Manitoba needs more doctors. However, a question the budget doesn’t answer, and frankly, one nobody in the legislature seems to be asking is: why are we spending $229.3 million exclusively on physicians when that same investment could fund more than 1,700 physician assistants — and get patients seen faster, in more communities, starting now?

This is not a rhetorical question. The “math isn’t mathing.”

Speaking English badly

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

It is a matter of chronic surprise that politicians, otherwise well-trained in saying just the right thing for the audience they are addressing, forget that whatever they say can be heard everywhere. Right away. By anybody who cares to listen, including journalists always hungry for the next story.

So it is with Kenya’s President William Ruto, who was in Italy last week talking up his country’s virtues. One of his claims was that Kenyans speak “some of the best English in the world” — and then, noticing that the audience was dozing off and in need of a joke, he went on to say that Nigerian-accented English, by contrast, was incomprehensible.

He got such a big laugh (most of the audience were Kenyans living in Italy) that he kept going. “If you listen to a Nigerian speaking, you don’t know what they are saying — you need a translator.” Another big laugh — and then social media all over Africa lit up with protests.

How dare Ruto mock fellow Africans? Why should Africans be speaking a colonial language like English anyway? And who the hell did he think he was to judge the quality of Nigerian English? He was thoroughly spanked and sent to bed without supper by the media — but it does open some interesting questions.

Climate change’s threat to agriculture

Norman Brandson 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Spring has sprung and young mens’ thoughts turn to … agriculture. Well, at least let’s hope that the young men and women who comprise the government of Manitoba brain trust are turning their thoughts in that direction.

Manitoba agriculture isn’t the economic powerhouse it once was, but in terms of traditional economic calculus it remains a significant contributor, accounting annually for more than $9 billion in exports. But the usual statistics don’t tell the full story.

Food is not quite like most other things we produce, many of which are non-essential or in time will be displaced by substitutes or changes in fashion. Food, and food security, like water, are essential for human life. In addition, as we shift alliances and seek to diversify our markets, food shops well.

Manitoba has the largest percentage of young farmers in Canada. Average farm size exceeds 1,000 acres, and although there are a number of viable smaller farms, large operations dominate the landscape. These are sophisticated, high tech operations. Witness the diversity of crops and the rapid adjustment to changing markets.

A civic sermon: teaching our children well

John R. Wiens 6 minute read Preview

A civic sermon: teaching our children well

John R. Wiens 6 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Globally and domestically, the world we adults have created is in a mess right now and we don’t like it!

Absurd and unjustified wars rage, extreme and divisive partisan politics prevail, violent and toxic religiosity abound, and human empathy and decency wane. For me, however, the surest sign that we can’t stand today’s human world is our antipathy toward the education of our children.

Around the world and closer to home we are simply denying our children an education. What they are experiencing and learning is not how, through adult instruction and example, to become better people and in the process improving on the human condition.

Instead, they are learning that children are expendable, and there’s little hope of things getting better. They are learning that politics and governments are exploitative, untrustworthy and selfish, that rich and powerful people can deny them an education. Some are learning that war is inevitable, a constant presence in their lives, and has no regard for them, their parents, siblings and friends. War means hunger, injury, illness, displacement, hatred and the destruction of their schools.

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Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Trump’s lust for mining lucre now too close for comfort

Russell Wangersky 5 minute read Preview

Trump’s lust for mining lucre now too close for comfort

Russell Wangersky 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

I get a sinking feeling when I read news stories about the Boundary Waters in northern Minnesota. And it’s a familiar sinking feeling.

More so when those news stories included the revelation the Trump administration has reopened the process that could allow a giant copper mine near the Boundary Waters Canoe Area, one that would be operated by a Chilean mining enterprise.

Copper demand is high, in part from construction needs for heating and cooling data centres. And about one-third of the known copper reserves in the U.S. are located in the area that could potentially allow mining, after a reversal of earlier protected status.

The Boundary Waters flow into the Rainy River watershed, into Lake of the Woods and eventually into Lake Winnipeg. And while the Boundary Waters Treaty from 1909 provides stewardship by the International Joint Commission for waters shared by Canada and the U.S., Donald Trump’s America-first (and always) stance means we can’t depend on guarantees that exist now.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

On Trump’s monumental hunger

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

On Trump’s monumental hunger

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

During the Second World War, the United States sought to preserve Europe’s cultural landmarks from destruction. They created a special unit to follow the front line and save cathedrals, paintings and sculptures from being damaged and restore looted art to its rightful owners. Dramatized by a George Clooney movie (The Monuments Men), they exhibited a reverence for history and art.

Today, the U.S. has a new Monuments Man. His name is U.S. President Donald Trump. He has monumental reverence only for himself. Like any true narcissist, he requires ever-increasing tribute in the form of personal glorification and worship. And, as it turns out, monuments.

The real estate mogul turned president has asserted control over the most valuable political real estate in his country — Washington, D.C. He wasted no time in remaking the seat of American democracy in his own image. In the first year of his second presidency, he has had banners emblazoned with his face hung from government buildings, redecorated the Oval Office with a Mar-a-Lago vibe, gold and gilt, renamed the Kennedy Centre for Performing Arts to the Trump-Kennedy Centre, bulldozed the East Wing of the White House to build a grotesquely oversized ballroom without official approvals, and even instructed the U.S. Mint to forge a new US$1 gold coin featuring his profile — a living, not a dead president — to mark America’s 250th birthday.

But that’s small beer compared to the monument he most wants: the “Arc de Trump.” Taller than the U.S. Capitol Building, twice the height of the Lincoln Memorial, and a full 100 feet higher than the world-famous Arc de Triomphe in Paris, Trump’s 250-foot Triumphal Arch was given approval to proceed by his hand-picked Commission of Fine Arts. It would be built on a plot of land across the Potomac River from the White House and serve as a gateway to Arlington Cemetery, the official gravesite and resting place for America’s military heroes and national figures such as former president John F. Kennedy.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

Trust and AI in Manitoba’s public sector

Paul G. Thomas 6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

The Kinew government has embraced new technology as the basis for innovation and enhanced productivity in the economy, including the modernization of government operations. It established a new department for innovation and new technology, created a “blue-ribbon” advisory task force on the use of technology to support the economy, and launched public consultations on how AI systems could be used to promote the rights and opportunities of citizens.

This is part of the background to the Public Sector Artificial Intelligence and Cybersecurity Act (Bill 51) which is about to be sent to a committee of the legislature for detailed study. The bill represents a cautious first step to set some guardrails on the design, application and outcomes of AI in the public sector broadly defined.

Some brief, incomplete comments on AI and its potential impacts set the stage for the analysis of Bill 51.

AI is global in its reach, is evolving rapidly and is largely under the control of a small number of major technology companies. This means regulation of the private-sector use of AI must come mainly at the national level, with the provincial government potentially supplementing those rules.

Let us not follow Alberta’s education dept.

Jordan Laidlaw 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

There has certainly been a flurry of discussion regarding the province’s recent public funding announcement.

Consequent to the proposed budget, numerous school divisions have outlined prospective plans to raise property taxes to maintain existing infrastructure.

This is perhaps an opportunistic moment to critically reflect on the foundational importance of public education, and to advance a timely advocacy to not follow the trajectories of our Albertan and American neighbours.

I have written extensively on the cruciality of public education as a fundamental pillar of our social democracy. If we yearn for an egalitarian society whereby all children and youth — regardless of culture, gender, sexual orientation, ability and socioeconomic upbringing — are represented and have the capacity to pursue meaningful lives, we need adequately funded public educational systems that function premised upon the principles of diversity, equity and inclusion.

Changing a broken economic system

Alex Passey 5 minute read Preview

Changing a broken economic system

Alex Passey 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Thanks to the blockade at the Strait of Hormuz, gas prices are higher than they’ve ever been.

For a moment, after threatening to wipe out “an entire civilization,” it appeared sanity might prevail and U.S. President Donald Trump would back down from his warmongering in a manner that would allow the trade route to reopen. But clearly that was only a step back from his fully apocalyptic bluster, and not the total capitulation his blundering warrants.

Instead, as of this writing, we have a childish back and forth that essentially boils down to Trump declaring “well if you’re going to block the strait, I’m going to block your blockade.” It is impossible to know what degree of goofy doom we will face tomorrow. Truly, we suffer under the tyranny of a toddler.

But even if the powers that be were wise enough to end this conflict today, the economic ramifications would reverberate for some time. It will take months for supply chains to be fully re-established, and that is only the material side of things. Confidence surrounding security in the region has been lost. The market is not going to see it as the stable route it once was, which in itself will drive up the price.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Learning to embrace poetry

Riley Enns 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Love it or hate it, April is National Poetry Month.

I’ve tried to love it, but it doesn’t always work out between us. More often than not I get a few pages into the new and selected poems of a well-known poet and I begin to wonder what I’ve gotten myself into. Maybe you’ve had a similar experience. Upon reaching the last line you scratch your head and ask yourself: “What the hell are they even talking about?” When this happens enough times, you may decide to throw in the proverbial towel.

This week Ada Limon, the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States, released her closing lecture in the form of a book, Against Breaking: On The Power of Poetry. This slender book is her attempt to make a case for poetry. I would like to join her in attempting to convince you of the power and importance of poetry.

Although you may have been confused and perplexed by a hundred poems before it, there is always that one precious string of words waiting for you. Yes, the odds are against you, but it is worth the struggle — through limerick, haiku, free verse and sonnet — to find that diamond in the rough that speaks to exactly what you’ve felt but could not find the words to describe. I don’t want to sugarcoat this; it will not be easy. But so often, the most rewarding things in life are also the most challenging.

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