The globe and mail ottawa quebec edition




















Between Belarus and Poland, Yazidi refugees find only cold and hunger. The unnoticed slimming of police budgets. It will be painful.

But the sooner we reduce inflation, the better. Comparing the best streaming services in Canada. An epic of fortune and fantasy. Populations fall in Toronto, Montreal as urban exodus accelerates.

Mannix family buys stake in fast-growing telemedicine company Maple. CPI report for December suggests U. Real estate investing spreads to small cities. Conservatives call for formal security review in takeover of Neo Lithium. With online home auctions, startup Unreserved takes aim at blind bidding. Britain hit by record staff shortages because of Omicron. Population: Data illustrate accelerating trend of migration from large urban centres.

Trichur: Canada should make as much beneficial ownership data public as possible. Quebec: Track record shows most sin taxes have muted, gradual effect on behaviour.

How convenience can help Canadian companies drive greater customer engagement. Restaurants enrich communities and society, but now — more than ever — they need support. Helping eateries reach the finish line with customer loyalty and government programs. Why investors should be paying attention to the violence in Kazakhstan. Bank stocks are soaring. How to leave more to your heirs. Investors brace for U. Markets summary. Let us know what you think. Story here. Moe said in a tweet.

Story here from CBC. The Toronto Star looks here at the situation. The House of Commons has adjourned until Jan. The issue is detailed in a story here and a Campbell Clark column here. Plus Dr. Janine McCready , an infectious-diseases physician at Michael Garron Hospital in Toronto talks about what is known about Omicron and kids so far, and the tools needed to keep transmission down in both schools and in the wider community.

The Decibel is here. Private meetings, Ottawa. The Globe and Mail Editorial Board on whether the unvaxxed should pay a special tax? There were no details, which is why this smells more like public relations than public health. Tax The Unvaxxed looks like a bid to channel public frustration away from government and on to another target. That said, Mr. Legault picked a good target. The nine out of 10 Canadians who are vaccinated have every reason to be furious at the one in 10 who are not.

Hospitalization stats — more on those in a moment — are a reminder that individual choices, good and bad, have collective consequences. But of course they can. They can raise funds in almost all the same ways that Ottawa can, from the same taxpayer. Only provinces, not Ottawa, can make choices about how the health care system works, to make it more efficient or provide better care.

One likes to flash his intellectual prowess, while the other emphasizes his common sense.



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