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It just keeps getting worse and worse for disabled people

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It's nice to see that we no longer trust privatization as a the magic wand that solves public institution problems.

That said I think the 52% support for non-union gig work in Canada Post is indicative of the mindset that needs shifting if Canada is to change course in a way that makes most people better off long term.

Source: https://angusreid.org/canada-post-privatization-strike-service-disruption-vote-union/

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Well written article. Worth reading

Characterizing Trump’s tariff war as an emergency that demands drastic action, the province of British Columbia has passed Bills 14 and 15, expediting resource extraction and development.

In Ontario, Bill 5 was whipped through the legislature in recent weeks, creating Special Economic Zones that the premier says will fast-track mining in the “Ring of Fire” – a vast region of boreal peatlands rich in critical minerals.

Carney has introduced an equally authoritarian legislative proposal called the Building Canada Act, which will grant to cabinet the extraordinary power to waive the application of almost any federal law in respect of projects it deems to be in the “national interest”

These so-called “emergency” levers being pulled in the national interest are a complete stunt. Besides a couple of thousand new security recruits – and a small surge of workers for a short period of construction – there is no job creation here, no reduction in cost of living, no difference to Canadians at the grocery store.

Instead, let’s look at who really gains from this concentration of new power in the executive branches, and who loses.

(...)

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/18/canada-trump-flood-zone

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The « man » in question was 19.

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Vending machines that used face detection technology to track information about users on the University of Waterloo campus breached privacy rights.

In February 2024, the university removed 29 vending machines that were tracking the age and gender of customers without their knowledge or consent. The move came after opposition from University of Waterloo students, who became aware of the technology after a Reddit user spotted an on-screen error message on one of the machines, which indicated an apparent problem with its facial recognition program.

Invenda, the Switzerland-based manufacturer of the vending machines, told CBC at the time the machines use facial analysis, not facial recognition, software, and that it isn't storing data or photos. The company says its technology is mainly used to tell when a person is standing in front of a vending machine, and to change the screen from "standby" mode, which shows ads, to "sales" mode, which shows different products.

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