

This is pointless without support services to help marginalized people get a solid footing to rebuild their lives.
This is pointless without support services to help marginalized people get a solid footing to rebuild their lives.
Let’s be real, there’s a lot of abusive employers in Canada especially within industries that cater to the foreign “education” programs. Some security companies in BC have very suspect hiring and payroll practices. We need to clean house and see where we stand first.
The forestry industry should be forced to plant protctected biodiverse patches when replanting trees for harvest.
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The “doctor”, Administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, needs to prioritize American citizens over this. Such a douce bag.
With a majority at that!
Gambling ads need to go the way of cigarette ads.
I wish there was some way of organizing a protest. Not with signs or bullhorns, just people laughing and pointing at Trump whenever he’s in public in Canada. I mean laughing hysterically in epidemic proportions.
Agreed, it was an attempt to simplify the thought to gain an entry point into the gender normative mindset.
This is not what many ignorant, unintelligent people will claim it is.
Sometimes intersex variations are identified when children are born and their genitals look different from what you might expect. These variations might mean that a baby’s sex isn’t obvious. In this situation, your doctor will carefully examine your baby and might ask to do some tests to work out your baby’s sex.
Canada: Bordering on Insanity.
Sing it! … LET’S FINALLY DO THIS
It would be interesting to see the difference between Indigenous and colonial statistics.
I think that increasing the basic personal exemption would have helped a lot more lower income Canadians
See!! More Canadians are staying south of the border! /s
U.S. President Donald Trump announced Friday that he would set tariffs on steel imported into the United States at 50 per cent, double their current rate.
At a U.S. Steel facility in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania, Trump said he had a “major announcement.” To an applauding crowd of U.S. Steel employees, Trump said he would jack up the tariff to protect America’s steelworkers.
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“We are going to be imposing a 25 per cent increase,” Trump said. “We’re going to bring it from 25 per cent to 50 per cent, the tariffs on steel into the United States of America, which will even further secure the steel industry in the United States. Nobody’s going to get around that.”
Trump said he was considering a 40 per cent tariff, but industry executives told him they wanted a 50 per cent tariff.
“At 25 per cent they can sorta get over that fence,” Trump said. “At 50 per cent nobody’s getting over that fence.”
He later posted on social media that the higher tariff rate would take effect on Wednesday, June 4th.
“It is my great honor to raise the Tariffs on steel and aluminum from 25% to 50%, effective Wednesday, June 4th. Our steel and aluminum industries are coming back like never before. This will be yet another BIG jolt of great news for our wonderful steel and aluminum workers. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
Trump on March 12 imposed sweeping 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports, which were met with immediate retaliation from Canada and dismay from America’s auto industry. The European Union also lashed out and announced retaliatory tariffs that it ultimately rescinded.
Trump on Friday praised his tariffs for saving the U.S. steel industry, claiming American steelmaking would have disappeared if he hadn’t acted to impose tariffs. He said all steel would have been foreign-made and factories would have closed.
Although tariffs may have given the moribund American steel business a much-needed boost, they could raise prices on a key ingredient for American construction and manufacturing – two industries Trump has said he wanted to support. Spot prices for domestically-sourced steel have increased since the announcement of the 25 per cent tariff in March, as American producers didn’t have to worry about as much competition from foreign steel.
In 2018, when Trump imposed some steel tariffs in his first term, U.S. production expanded modestly, but it sent costs rising for cars, tools and machines and shrank those industries’ output by more than US$3 billion in 2021, the International Trade Commission found in a 2023 analysis. The costs may have outweighed the benefits.
Trump used a law commonly referred to as Section 232, which gives the president the authority to impose higher tariffs on national security grounds, to put increased levies on foreign steel.
In total, the U.S. imported $31.3 billion worth of iron and steel last year, according to data from the U.S. Commerce Department. (The government data groups iron and steel together.) Canada was the top source of iron and steel, shipping $7.6 billion worth it to the U.S. ‘Watching over you’
Trump during Friday’s speech also celebrated the deal he approved to allow Japan’s Nippon Steel to buy a controlling stake in U.S. Steel.
During his campaign, Trump opposed US Steel being purchased by a foreign entity. It was one of the few things he and former U.S. President Joe Biden agreed on: Biden blocked the deal, citing a national security threat.
But Trump on Friday said he became convinced that Nippon could ultimately save U.S. Steel and its workers.
“U.S. Steel was being sold into foreign hands with no protections for our great steel workers,” Trump said. “And I said there’s no way we’re gonna let that happen. I was watching over you.”
But then Trump said Nippon and U.S. Steel’s executives continued to push the issue, and the deal became good enough for Trump to ultimately relent. One key factor, he said, was a so-called golden share that gives the United States a say in how the company is run.
“They kept asking me and I kept rejecting them: No way, no way, no way,” Trump said. “Every time they came in, the deal got better and better and better for the workers.”
“I’m going to be in Washington; I’m gonna be watching over it,” Trump added.
With the new tariffs and the Nippon deal, Trump said U.S. Steel workers had much to celebrate. He invited several workers on stage who lamented the state of America’s steel industry and offered praise for Trump.
“This is going to be a very big day,” Trump said. “This is going to be one of the biggest days in your life.”
This story has been updated with additional context and developments.
Article by David Goldman and Elisabeth Buchwald.
CNN’s Alejandra Jaramillo contributed reporting.