Alberta Pension Plan: Why Alberta wants to leave the CPP—and what would replace it + MORE Oct 4th
Finding the right balance of stocks and fixed income is the key to your investment survival + MORE Sep 14th
Tax planning for Canadians who invest in the U.S. Jun 10th
How do credit card payment deferrals work during COVID-19? Apr 17th
Who’s buying crypto in Canada, and why? + MORE Nov 19th
BlackRock hits record $6-trillion assets, helped by Trump tax law
– theglobeandmail.com
At the beginning of Donald Trump’s presidential candidacy, David Frum admits, he was “Trump-curious”—intrigued, and willing to believe the Manhattan real estate developer might shake up a staid Republican Party. That didn’t last. Now Frum, the veteran Canadian-born journalist and former speechwriter for former president George W. Bush, sees Trump and his enablers as a threat to American democracy, and as part of a widespread assault on democratic rules across the Western world. He spoke in Toronto with Maclean’s about his new book, Trumpocracy: The Corruption of the American Republic. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: One of the first things that I noticed about this book is that if you took Donald Trump out of it—if you took Donald Trump out of today’s United States—your book still describes a country that’s in a lot of trouble.
A: It describes a Western world that’s in a lot of trouble. This is maybe something that, from a Canadian perspective, I bring to this project…
At the open: TSX flat as resource stock losses offset lumber jump
– theglobeandmail.com
Organic Farming Training: Get your hands dirty in Quebec
– macleans.ca
The Organic Agricutural Complex at Cégep de Victoriaville is seeking Canada’s budding organic farmers. The school, home to a three-year technical program in agricultural study, is preparing an additional 4,400 sq. m in new facilities that include ultra-modern greenhouses, along with an investment in state-of-the-art equipment and an increase in room outdoors for young farmers to do their work.
Until recently, most of the CEGEP’s experimental farming had been done off their property, which limited research possibilities. In 2016, the school invested $550,000 to acquire 55 hectares now dedicated to development, crop breeding and vegetable production.Thanks in part to a $4.28-million grant from the federal government, which was matched by private donations and provincial funding, the complex should fully open its doors in 2018. Once complete, it will be among the largest agricultural campuses in the country.
MORE: The Maclean’s Guide to Getting In
Just in time for the 30-year anniversary of the farm program, this $20-million project is the “most important” investment the institution has made in its history, according to CEGEP director-general Paul Thériault…
Morneau orders greater diligence over North Korea money-laundering fears
– theglobeandmail.com