My latest National Post column takes aim at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission for buying into a false historical account that undermines its otherwise commendable effort to get from truth to reconciliation. My criticisms of unrealism in aboriginal policy have opened me to predictable accusations of bigotry. But the reverse is true. Nowhere is frank talk more desperately needed because nowhere in Canada is policy a worse mess and it is aboriginals who suffer most even from well-meaning nonsense.
Earlier today I was on the Andrew Lawton show on AM 980 to talk about my latest National Post column. Listen below. Starts at the 1:02:00 (approx) mark. [soundcloud url="https://api.soundcloud.com/playlists/9384272" params="auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true" width="100%" height="450" iframe="true" /]
In my latest National Post column, I tell the government waiter I didn't order this patronizing rubbish.
In the National Post I ask why so many Canadian museums seem to belong in a museum. Where's our enthusiasm for our history?
Are social conservatives treated like lepers in Canadian public debate? They should be so lucky, says my latest National Post column.
My latest National Post column criticizes the obsession with solving mankind's problems, in this case poverty, with advanced mathematics, as though humans were things not people.
My latest for the National Post holds up a mirror on the mess that is modern government budgeting.
My latest National Post column gazes into Britain's navel and sees freedom receding.