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I am a business economist with interests in international trade worldwide through politics, money, banking and VOIP Communications. The author of RG Richardson City Guides has over 300 guides, including restaurants and finance.

If We had a Functional Constitution, We Wouldn’t have an Illegal War

If We had a Functional Constitution, We Wouldn’t have an Illegal War

If We had a Functional Constitution, We Wouldn’t have an Illegal War
MAGA stooges destroyed the rule of law

Jennifer Rubin
Jan 05, 2026





Donald Trump’s unprovoked and unconstitutional war against Venezuela demolished any notion that we live in a rules-based, constitutional democracy. If the Constitution—which explicitly grants Congress the exclusive power to declare war—were operative, lawmakers would have been briefed before the operation, robust debate would have ensued, and Congress would have voted (or not) to go to war.

Instead, without legal justification, Trump blithely killed scores of civilians on boats, launched an illegal war on Venezuela (killing more civilians), kidnapped its president, and declared he wants to take its oil and “run” a sovereign country. (Aside from its constitutional defects, an unprovoked war to extract oil is a moral disgrace, depriving us of moral standing to contest others’ nations’ wars of aggression.)

While egregious, this is not an isolated assault on the rule of law. Under Trump’s regime, the Constitution has begun to resemble Swiss cheese, or perhaps the redacted Epstein files—displaying more blacked out sections than text. The sections in Article I that establish Congress’s powers have all but been eliminated. In the words of Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, MAGA Republicans “have abolished the Congress.” She accurately observed, “They just do what the president insists that they do.”

Specifically, MAGA lackeys in Congress have allowed Trump to abscond with, among other things, the powers to declare war and make rules regulating the military (e.g., allowing Trump to violate the prohibition on murder of shipwrecked civilians), enact tariffs, establish uniform rules of naturalization (Trump now claims the power to “de-naturalize” enemies), and coin money (no pennies!). Trump’s stooges have also ceded the power to appropriate money from the Treasury (by condoning rescission), and to legislate for the District of Columbia (making a mockery of home rule).

The MAGA Senate gave away its power to confirm “officers of the United States” (e.g., U.S. attorneys), leaving it up to litigants such as James Comey and Letitia James to defend the Senate’s advice and consent role. As for Cabinet officials, MAGA senators have refused to render independent judgment on nominees they know to be unfit, including Pam Bondi, RFK, Jr., and Pete Hegseth. (In acquitting Trump for the insurrection that he staged 5 years ago, MAGA senators put a stake through the heart of the impeachment power.)

United States Capitol Building viewed between columns of the Supreme Court at sunset

The erasure of the Framers’ handiwork does not stop there. The president’s Article II obligation to faithfully execute the law has been deleted as he repeatedly ignores court orders and now contemptuously rejects the notion that our obligations under the United Nations are binding on the U.S. He runs roughshod over First Amendment protections for speech, press, and association, and has attempted to brush aside the 14th Amendment (affirming birthright citizenship and disqualifying insurrectionists from federal office).

Certainly, the overthrow of our constitutional order could have been stopped by minimally responsible House and Senate Republican majorities. But we cannot ignore the Supreme Court’s responsibility for wrecking the Constitution.



Despite Chief Justice John Roberts’s preposterous ode to the “rule of law” in his year-end report, he and fellow partisan hacks on the Supreme Court have made mincemeat of the Constitution. (In declaring our founding documents to be “firm and unshaken,” he reminds us that “hypocrisy is the compliment vice pays to virtue.”) Roberts’ 2024 majority opinion, devoid of textual or historical legitimacy, granted Trump immunity for virtually all crimes while in office, thereby ushering in his return to office, unprecedented executive overreach, reign of domestic terror, and now an unconstitutional and shameful war for oil. No chief justice has done more to destroy the “rule of law” than Roberts.

Since Trump’s return, Roberts and the other robed-MAGA functionaries have continued to hack away at Article I by bestowing on Trump unilateral power to destroy congressionally enacted departments and override statues (which, for example, establish independent regulatory bodies and mandate spending). Arrogantly disregarding the need for briefing or explanation, the MAGA justices summarily have overturned numerous decisions of lower courts to greenlight Trump’s executive overreach.

It would be useful if members and judges such as Roberts aligning themselves with the “Federalist Society” would actually read the Federalist Papers, which cautioned about the very outcome Trump achieved. “The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny,” James Madison warned in Federalist No. 47. Madison’s notion that “the preservation of liberty requires that the three great departments of power should be separate and distinct” now sounds quaint, archaic and foreign.

Before the 2024 election, Protect Democracy warned:


Authoritarian projects cannot succeed without the cooperation or acquiescence of legislatures, courts, and other institutions designed to provide checks and balances. In some cases, authoritarians explicitly rewrite the rules to strengthen executive power and weaken legislatures, while in others they simply stack these competing institutions with lackeys and compliant allies or engage in “constitutional hardball” by manipulating existing loopholes or pushing boundaries of existing laws. Authoritarians also often justify the expansion of executive power with cults of personality and aggrandizement of the trappings of office, while denigrating checks and balances as corrupt obstacles to the popular will.

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Put differently, the “Constitution” as drafted and amended over more than two centuries is unrecognizable, and concepts such as “rule of law,” “separations of powers,” and “checks and balances” have become meaningless platitudes. We are left with a wholesale obliteration of checks and balance, which in turn resulted in an illegal war with uncertain consequences.

However, while Trump and his MAGA acolytes certainly have made considerable headway in destroying the exoskeleton of our democracy (a written constitution in which power is divided to thwart tyranny), done incalculable damage to our democracy, ruined countless lives (e.g., fired civil servants, deported hard-working immigrants), endangered our troops, and destroyed our moral standing in the world, we should not conclude the Constitution is gone for good.

We can begin to restore constitutional order with sustained, robust, and peaceful protest to educate the public and hold Republicans responsible for serial outrages. Democrats should be encouraged to use every device to stop the slide into fascism and focus on Trump’s multiple outrages and broken promises. (Prices are up, corruption is at unprecedented levels, and a new illegitimate war is underway.)

With that predicate, Democrats then must run up the score in the midterms, the essential mechanism to halt further constitutional vandalism and set the predicate for democracy’s revival. The latter will require curtailing president powers through elections, legislation, constitutional amendment, and/or judicial decisions; electing a Congress that fulfills its constitutional obligations; and reforming an anti-constitutional Supreme Court by limiting justices’ terms, expanding the court, and shrinking its appellate jurisdiction.

In sum, we must be honest about the constitutional wreckage, the culprits responsible, and the work that we must undertake. If Americans rise to the occasion, they can deliver an historic rebuke to scads of Republicans, allowing the hard work of repair to begin. Our failure to do so would spell catastrophe for democratic recovery.




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80th ROLEX Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

80th ROLEX Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

Master Lock Comanche takes Line Honours


Home2025Master Lock Comanche takes Line Honours



Matt Allen and James Mayo have sailed Master Lock Comanche to Line Honours in the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart, the 80th edition of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia’s 628 nautical mile race.
news—
28 December 2025 at 6:37 pm


28/12/25 - 18.15pm ( 53.15 hours after start) 

After an all-day game of cat and mouse with three other yachts, Master Lock Comanche, the race record holder since 2017, finished the race at 18.03.36 this evening, in the time of 2 days 5 hours 3 minutes 36 seconds to claim the title. Her finish time was nowhere near her record time of 1 day 9hrs 15mins 24secs.



Master Lock Comanche powering away - ROLEX/Andrea Francolini pic.

Master Lock Comanche, LawConnect (Christian Beck) and SHK Scallywag 100 (owned by Seng Huang Lee and skippered by David Witt) were locked in a battle for the lead, each taking the race lead during today, with Bryon Ehrhart’s Lucky (USA) snapping at the heals, little more than a mile separating the four which were in sight of each other most of the day.



LawConnect was unable to catch Master Lock Comanche - ROLEX/Andrea Francolini pic.

However, this afternoon Master Lock Comanche made her escape, leaving the rest in her wake.



SHK Scallywag held the lead earlier in the day - ROLEX/Andrea Francolini pic.

Allen and Mayo’s victory put to bed the pain of last year when Master Lock Comanche, the newest of the 100 footers, became one of the early casualties of the race when her mainsail tore, forcing her retirement.

Di Pearson/RSHYR media

Liberal Party leadership race begins in Quebec with Charles Milliard

Liberal Party leadership race begins in Quebec on Monday

Quebec Liberal Party leadership race begins Monday
ByErika MorrisOpens in new window


Updated: January 11, 2026 at 11:57AM EST

Published: January 11, 2026 at 11:50AM EST

Charles Milliard, candidate for the leadership of the Quebec Liberal Party, delivers a speech at the Quebec Liberal Party leadership convention in Quebec City on Sat., June 14, 2025. (Joel Ryan/The Canadian Press) (Joel Ryan/La Presse canadienne)

The latest Quebec Liberal Party (PLQ) leadership race kicks off Monday to find Pablo Rodriguez’s successor after he resigned while mired in controversy last month.

So far, one candidates has officially thrown his name into the ring: Charles Milliard — former head of the Quebec Federation of Chambers of Commerce.

Milliard came in second behind Rodriguez in the previous race.


Others have floated the idea of vying for the leadership, including farmer Mario Roy, who would be running a second time, former Via Rail Canada President and CEO Yves Desjardins-Siciliano and former Desjardins Group President and CEO Guy Cormier.

Desjardins-Siciliano announced Sunday he changed his mind despite “having received expressions of confidence ... [and] support.”

The former president of the Conseil du patronat, Karl Blackburn, has already announced that he will not be running.

Hopefuls have until Feb. 13 at 5 p.m. to register and enter the leadership race. The new head of the party will be chosen at the PLQ convention March 14.


The latest race will be significantly shorter than the previous, which officially started Jan. 13, 2025 and ended when Rodriguez was elected on June 14.READ MORE: Quebec Liberal leadership hopeful wants to bring back to ‘bread and butter’ issues

The party announced last week it has appointed a “compliance and ethics officer” to ensure compliance with the Election Act in terms of financing for its new leadership race.

Just months after winning his bid last June, Rodriguez was severely criticized following reports alleging some party members were paid to vote for him in the campaign.

Last November, The Journal de Montréal alleged that some 20 donors had been reimbursed for their $500 contributions at a fundraising event.

As a result, the National Assembly adopted a “no-brownies” law, effectively closing a loophole in the province’s electoral law which technically allowed offering a donation in exchange for a vote — provided all candidate expenses were submitted to Quebec’s chief electoral officer.

The PLQ launched an internal investigation into the allegations. Quebec’s anti-corruption police is also investigating the party.

BC’s population has dropped: Why it’s lower and what it means - Victoria Times Colonist

BC’s population has dropped: Why it’s lower and what it means - Victoria Times Colonist

B.C.'s population has dropped: Here's why it's lower and what it means
Between July and October of this year, over 26,000 non-permanent residents left B.C. as part of a trend that dropped Canada’s overall population by 0.2 per cent.
Alec Lazenby, Vancouver Suna day ago





For the first time in recorded history, B.C.’s population has dropped. MARK VAN MANEN, PNG

Listen to this article
00:05:35



For the first time in recorded history, B.C. has finished the year with fewer people than it started with.

Experts say that while the population drop could help drive down rents in some parts of the province, it is unlikely to help the struggling health-care system — and it could exacerbate shortages of workers in certain sectors.

“We’re definitely seeing the impacts on the post-secondary system in the country because a lot of institutions are struggling financially,” said Lisa Brunner, a research associate at the University of B.C.’s centre for migration studies.

“We’re also starting to see it in some companies that are saying that they’re having difficulty hiring workers.”

Between July and October of this year, more than 26,000 non-permanent residents left B.C. as part of a trend that dropped Canada’s overall population by 0.2 per cent.

That is the second-highest drop in population in the country over that period, behind only Ontario. Only Alberta and Nunavut saw their population increase.
How does the population drop compare to past years?

Premier David Eby and his government have been pointing to B.C.’s population growth as part of the reason for the increasing demand for housing, health care and other public services.

In September, he drew a correlation between Canada’s temporary foreign worker program and high youth unemployment, which saw 18,500 young people stop their search for a job in June.

“We can’t have an immigration system that fills up our homeless shelters and our food banks. We can’t have an immigration system that outpaces our ability to build schools and housing. And we can’t have an immigration program that results in high youth unemployment,” said Eby, drawing rebuke from some members of his party.




B.C. gained large numbers of people in 2022, 2023 and 2024, and its population soared from 5.3 million to just under 5.7 million.

Losses in the first quarter of this year were due to a decline in natural population growth and interprovincial migration. But decreases in the past two quarters, making up the vast majority of the decrease, have been due to out-migration.

Jobs Minister Ravi Kahlon said in a statement that the reduction gives the province “a moment to breathe,” but said he recognizes that immigration will be needed to help fill gaps in the labour force.

Brunner said the caps on international students and federal changes to work permits and permanent residency have made it harder for work permit and study permit holders to stay in Canada permanently.

She criticized the federal government for encouraging people to come to Canada during and immediately after the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 with the promise of permanent residency, only to take that away.

“Those temporary residents became a political liability, and so the government is choosing to send home many members of our communities that our society has really depended on during the pandemic,” Brunner said.



Kevin Root, chairperson of the Alliance of B.C. Students, said many international students have told him they “feel like the rug has been pulled out from under them.”
Will it address issues surrounding housing and health care?

Rentals.ca has logged a 6.8 per cent drop in average rents across the province, while the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation reported this month that vacancy rates have risen in both Vancouver and Victoria.

Andy Yan, director of the City Program at Simon Fraser University, said most non-permanent residents are renters, meaning that a drop in their numbers could be good news for those looking for more affordable housing.

But, he said, most non-permanent residents are of working age, meaning their exit is unlikely to make much of a difference to the health-care crisis.

“Certainly they may need some health care, but they’re not necessarily in the kind of more expensive types of care,” Yan said.

Brunner said many high-income countries are struggling with an aging population, and Canada is no exception.

She said that the country will have to make some difficult decisions if it no longer plans to rely as much on immigration to solve its demographic challenges, though she recognizes that Ottawa isn’t fully moving away from welcoming new residents.

“It’s not just about demographics, it’s about the social services that we provide for our community members,” Brunner said.

“Canada will still need to rely on immigration.”
What does it mean for employers?

Since the pandemic, many sectors have been having trouble attracting the kinds of workers they need, and business leaders fear the changes will affect their ability to hire skilled employees.

Ryan Mitton, director of legislative affairs for B.C. for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, said a recent poll conducted by his organization found 47 per cent of small businesses are struggling to find employees.

“We are asking the federal government and the provincial government to pursue permanent paths to citizenship for current economic immigrants,” Mitton said.

“Temporary foreign workers who have already come into Canada, who have received the skills training, who have been here for several years, they’re looking for a permanent path to citizenship, and we need to enable that, because businesses have already spent time investing and training these workers.”

Read more stories from the Vancouver Sun here.

TrumpDance

 TikTok signed agreements to create a new US joint venture. The company said yesterday that it had signed the deals, moving forward with a plan to avoid the app being banned in the US. The agreements are with Oracle, Silver Lake Management, and Abu Dhabi-based MGX. When the deal closes, which is expected to happen next month, it will create a company separate from TikTok’s Chinese parent, ByteDance, that will be majority-owned by the American investors. The new company will be responsible for protecting data, moderating content, and the algorithm’s security in the US, according to a memo to TikTok employees viewed by news outlets.


There'll be no iPhone 18 launch this year

 

Secure Proton eMail

 Proton Mail: https://go.getproton.me/aff_c?offer_id=7&aff_id=13658 I never intended to switch away from Gmail. But I went ahead and set up an account with Proton Mail anyway, and I haven’t opened Gmail since.


The Politics of Plunder


The Politics of Plunder
Trump’s domestic and foreign policies have one consistent theme.



WILL SALETAN, CATHY YOUNG, ANDREW EGGER, SAM STEIN, AND JIM SWIFT



DEC 26

READ IN APP

MAGA Christmas was a choose-your-own-adventure affair this year. Did you want to hear Donald Trump wax eloquent, in what is definitely his own writing, about “the graces of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection” that “pour out on all who believe”? Just head over to his “Presidential Message on Christmas,” posted to the White House website. Are you the sort who found all that a little pious and drab? You might find Trump’s Truth Social message a little more your speed:




Joy to the World! Happy Friday.



President Donald Trump on Christmas Eve at his Mar-a-lago club in Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP via Getty Images)
The President Is a Pirate

by Will Saletan

Donald Trump calls himself the “Peace President.” But this week, as he outlined his plans to capture Greenland and hijack Venezuelan oil, his real agenda became obvious. It’s not peace. It’s extortion, conquest, and theft.

Trump spent his life pursuing wealth, not public service. As president, he reduces every question to money. He arm-twists companies into giving the government a chunk of their stock. He withholds food stamps as a bargaining chip. He calls low-income housing an offense against rich people. He muses about awarding himself $1 billion from the Treasury.

He treats international relations the same way. He slaps our allies with heavy tariffs, insisting that they “pay for the privilege of access to our market.” He bails out Argentina, meddles in its election, and then brags that his candidate’s victory “made a lot of money for the United States.” He bars immigrants from “third world countries” and sells visas to multimillionaires instead.

He also exploits war. Two months ago, in a speech to American troops in Japan, he fondly recalled the days when “they used to say, ‘To the victor belong the spoils.’” In more recent wars, he complained, “We’d win, and then we’d leave.” He made it clear that he would restore the doctrine of spoils. “Unlike past administrations, we will not be politically correct,” he told the troops.

In some parts of the world, Trump has cashed in on the use of force by other countries. In February, after Israel had leveled much of Gaza, he announced a plan to seize the territory, “own it,” and develop it into “the Riviera of the Middle East.” A reporter asked the president whether he truly meant permanent occupation. “I do see a long-term ownership position,” Trump replied.

In Ukraine, Trump has taken advantage of Russia’s invasion. By choking off Ukraine’s access to military aid and intelligence, he extracted Kiev’s agreement to give much of its mineral wealth to the United States. “I made a deal to take rare earth,” he boasted. “That’s the equivalent of much more” than the aid Joe Biden had sent to Ukraine, he said.

Trump also found a second revenue stream from the war: selling weapons to NATO—at “full price”—which NATO would then deliver to Ukraine. “We’re making money,” he told reporters. “We have the hottest company,” he added a minute later. Then, catching his slip, he corrected the last word to “country.”

Like Vladimir Putin, Trump has concocted grievances to justify aggression against other nations. In his inaugural address, he vowed to seize the Panama Canal, claiming that Panama had violated its 1977 agreement to keep the canal neutral. Then, in a bid to annex Canada, he threatened to choke off that country’s foreign trade. To rationalize his coercion, he alleged that Canada “stole” its auto industry from the United States.

Now Trump has deployed the Navy, the Coast Guard, and other forces to harass and intimidate Venezuela. Last week, he issued an ultimatum, warning that the military buildup would continue until Venezuelans “return to the United States of America all of the Oil, Land, and other Assets that they previously stole from us.”

Trump’s tales of oil and land theft apparently date to 1976, when Venezuela nationalized its oil industry. As usual, he’s wrong—American companies didn’t own any of Venezuela’s land or oil—but he’s plotting to capitalize on his propaganda. On Monday he said he had spoken to “all the big” U.S. oil companies about returning to Venezuela once the current government, under American pressure, is ousted.

And oil companies aren’t the only ones who stand to profit. Last week, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, a Trump ally, introduced legislation authorizing “private American citizens and their businesses” to confiscate boats and other alleged property of drug cartels.

Meanwhile, after months of hectoring Greenland to separate from Denmark and join the United States—under threats of tariffs and military force—Trump announced on Monday that he had appointed a special envoy whose self-described assignment was to “make Greenland a part of the U.S.” Trump dismissed Denmark’s sovereignty over Greenland, scoffing, “They say that Denmark was there 300 years ago or something with a boat. Well, we were there with boats, too, I’m sure.”

This isn’t the foreign policy many of Trump’s voters wanted. They thought “America First” meant staying home. Instead, Trump has gone abroad to seize land and treasure. He’s a pirate. And being a pirate is all fun and games until somebody loses an island.

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Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender | CBC News

Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender | CBC News

Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender
'I'm telling you, this is not a nice place to be,' he told CBC News
The Canadian Press · Posted: Dec 23, 2025 1:39 PM PST | Last Updated: December 24


Cape Breton fiddler Ashley MacIsaac said 'I'm not the first and I'm sure I won't be the last,' after a Google AI-generated summary mistakenly confused him with someone else with the same last name. (Kelly Clark/The Canadian Press)

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Cape Breton fiddler Ashley MacIsaac says he may have been defamed by Google after it recently produced an AI-generated summary falsely identifying him as a sex offender.

The Juno Award-winning musician said he learned of the online misinformation last week after a First Nation north of Halifax confronted him with the summary and cancelled a concert planned for Dec. 19.

"You are being put into a less secure situation because of a media company — that's what defamation is," MacIsaac said in a telephone interview with The Canadian Press, adding he was worried about what might have happened had the erroneous content surfaced while he was trying to cross an international border.


"If a lawyer wants to take this on (for free) ... I would stand up because I'm not the first and I'm sure I won't be the last."

MacIsaac said the summary falsely asserted he had been convicted of a series of offences including sexual assault, internet luring, assaulting a woman and attempting to assault a minor. As well, he said the Google entry accused him of being listed on the national sex offender registry, which is also untrue.

"I could have been at a border and put in jail," he said. "So something has to be figured out as far as what the AI companies are responsible for ... and what they can prevent."

MacIsaac performed at the 2013 East Coast Music Awards in Halifax. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)
First Nation apologizes

The 50-year-old virtuoso fiddler said he later learned the inaccurate claims were taken from online articles regarding a man in Atlantic Canada with the same last name.

Google Canada spokesperson Wendy Manton issued a statement saying Google's "AI overviews" are frequently changing to show what she described as the most "helpful" information.
With gigs dried up, Cape Breton's Ashley MacIsaac wants to play in your living roomFamed fiddler Ashley MacIsaac first to buy legal marijuana in Cape Breton

"When issues arise — like if our features misinterpret web content or miss some context — we use those examples to improve our systems, and may take action under our policies."

Meanwhile, the Sipekne'katik First Nation issued a public apology to MacIsaac, saying in an online post that the cancellation was based on incorrect information.

"We deeply regret the harm this caused to your reputation and livelihood," the message says. "Chief and council value your artistry, contribution to the cultural life of the Maritimes, and your commitment to reconciliation."

As for the cancelled concert, MacIsaac says he's looking forward to rescheduling the event. But he said he wanted things to settle down before setting a date.
People reading AI summaries on Google search instead of news stories, media experts warnTop AI assistants misrepresent news content, study finds

"I don't feel comfortable about going there right now because I don't think the proper information can be disseminated within a week. It's seen so many shares," he said. "I didn't want to bring any attention negatively to the community."


He speculated about how the misinformation might have prompted the cancellation of a concert scheduled for earlier this year in Mexico.

MacIsaac said he doesn't have the money to pay for a lawsuit that could take years to settle.

But when CBC News reached him by phone on Christmas Eve, he said he'd already received queries from law firms across the country interested in taking it on pro bono.

He says he's considering his options in the hopes that he can prevent other people from experiencing something similar in the future.

“I'm telling you, this is not a nice place to be," he said. "I'm sitting outside my grandmother's going in for Christmas. This isn’t a conversation I want to have today — 'Oh, yeah, somebody called me a sex offender.'”
No stranger to controversy

MacIsaac burst onto the music scene in the 1990s as a wildly talented teenager who blended traditional Celtic music with a high-energy, rocking style.

To be sure, he is no stranger to controversy.

During a 1999 concert in Halifax, he launched into a profanity-laced rant that ended the show and resulted in widespread cancellations of his gigs. And in early 1997, he attracted attention for discussing his sexual proclivities with a reporter and flashing his private parts during an appearance on a late-night U.S. talk show.
WATCH | MacIsaac buying pot in 2018:




First to buy 'in God's country': Ashley MacIsaac talks his pot purchase
October 17, 2018|
Duration0:57Fiddler Ashley MacIsaac was the first to buy legal cannabis in Cape Breton on Wednesday. He discusses what he bought.

But he hasn't had any real run-ins with the law, aside from receiving an absolute discharge and no fine in 2001 for possessing marijuana in Saskatchewan. When Judge Linton Smith granted the discharge, he told MacIsaac's lawyer, "The only condition I'd like to attach is if you could get my wife an autograph."

When cannabis was legalized in Canada in October 2018, MacIsaac was the first in line at a Nova Scotia Liquor Corp. branch in Cape Breton, which was about to become the only legal place to buy recreational cannabis on the island.


"I don't need to be a criminal anymore, and that's a great feeling," he said at the time. "And my new dealer is the prime minister!"

Federal judge upholds $100,000 H-1B visa fee

Federal judge upholds $100,000 H-1B visa fee

A federal judge on Tuesday ruled in favor of the Trump administration, upholding its $100,000 H-1B visa fee.

U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell rejected a challenge filed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Association of American Universities, which alleged the move was unlawful. Earlier this month, 18 Democratic states also filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the H-1B visa application fee.


Pirates descend on Spotify’s entire library

 

Illustration of Spotify logo prodded by robot arms and magnifying glass

Niv Bavarsky

The world’s biggest music streaming service got scraped like bare knees on asphalt. A pirate activist group called Anna’s Archive allegedly pulled 300 terabytes of data from Spotify, creating what might be the largest open-music database ever, Billboard reported on Sunday.

According to a blog post from the anonymous group:

  • The scrape includes ~99.6% of songs that actually receive listens on Spotify (about 86 million tunes).
  • It also swiped metadata (e.g., album art and song titles) from 99.9% of Spotify’s 256 million total tracks.
  • The metadata has been released, with music files to follow soon.

Spotify said in a statement that it “disabled the nefarious user accounts that engaged in unlawful scraping,” “implemented new safeguards,” and is “actively monitoring for suspicious behavior.”

Anna’s Archive is a shadow library, aka an online database of pirated content, with a stated mission of “preserving humanity’s knowledge and culture.” It referred to the Spotify scrape as an attempt to start preserving music, after having mainly targeted books and academic papers before.

But…the data dump is likely also a big win for AI developers, as long as they don’t get caught using it. This year, Anthropic agreed to pay $1.5 billion after a federal judge found that it wrongfully acquired pirated books to train its chatbots.—ML

My Latest Letter to CBS

My Latest Letter to CBS

By Ben Meiselas

Dear CBS News Editor Bari Weiss,

This is the second letter I am writing you and the third letter I have sent CBS warning about the dire consequences of the actions being taken. We previously wrote when Stephen Colbert’s contract was not renewed and when you killed the 60 Minutes episode on Trump torturing people in CECOT in El Salvador. I am writing again based on the recent videos and posts made by CBS announcing that the “new CBS” is launching in 2026.

According to the recent videos and posts, the new CBS will not focus on experts, scholars, scientists, and facts, but will instead be driven by the voices of its perceived audience. You have previously described the voices of your audience as resembling Trump’s lawyer, Alan Dershowitz. That is very odd and dangerous, in my opinion.

The recent posts announcing the “relaunch” of CBS have been widely mocked. Your viewership appears to be down massively. In record time, you’ve destroyed the legacy of a great news institution that I admired my entire life until recently. This is all the more ironic, given that you built a successful Substack before others joined this platform, only to cause serious harm to your Substack community and destroy a legacy media brand like CBS.

Your loss is our gain. Your “relaunch of CBS” is only leading to more people subscribing to this MeidasTouch Substack. If you want to know where your audience is going, Bari, they are coming here to the MeidasTouch Substack and to our YouTube channel.

Although your failures and destruction of CBS have resulted in further accelerating the growth of MeidasTouch, I still hate to see CBS fall this badly. I still hope one day that it can be restored to operating with integrity and not whatever it’s doing now.

As 2026 kicks off, it is a responsibility I take seriously that the MeidasTouch Network is now watched significantly more than CBS. We have a bigger audience because our reporting is fact-based and we are not afraid of this regime. Whereas CBS has bent the knee, MeidasTouch will report fearlessly in 2026. I guess we will see you on the other side of this, CBS. You do you, and Meidas will keep on growing.

A quick reminder to everyone: make sure to subscribe now to this Substack and send a strong message in 2026 and help Meidas expand and grow.

Olympic sailing shakeup: Breaking down the new Olympic sailing format

Olympic sailing shakeup: Breaking down the new Olympic sailing format




Yachting World · 11 days ago
by Toby Heppell · Comment and opinion


Matt Sheahan reports on the new Olympic sailing format, which see the Medal Race replaces with a new system (and not the winner-takes-all options so decried by many)Paris 2024 Olympic Sailing Test Event, Marseille, France. Day 3 Race Day on 11th July 2023.

Most of us are off the water and counting down the weeks to the start of the new season as the northern hemisphere delivers this season’s offering of short days, long nights and hardcore weather systems that slide across the Atlantic. But for some, the training programme continues as they focus on the road to the next Olympic Games in Los Angeles in 2028.

Many have headed to warmer locations to train where they often buddy up with some of their arch rivals to compete as if the Games were on in a few weeks. It’s a mark of just how important the summer of 2028 is. But also the importance of how one specific day could play out.

And while the Olympic medal race day is more than two and a half years away, it’s not just their performance that’s important either, the specific details as to how the competition will be run is crucially important. Not only do athletes and coaches need to know how gold, silver and bronze medals will be decided, but they also want to ensure they can maximise their chances of getting to that point.

Understanding the Olympic format may sound obvious but, as I wrote recently, the mooted plans for the next Games looked very different.

For many sailors the proposals put far too great an emphasis on a single short race that would take no account of their performance in the selection series. The worry was that, despite years of training and a string of good results, victory would come down to one extremely short race in an area that could likely have more variable conditions.

And any points buffer they’d built during the series beforehand would be scrubbed in favour of a winner-takes-all single race.

Sailors were so concerned at the little – if any – word from World Sailing as to what was on the table, that they made a fair bit of noise about it leading up to the World Sailing conference. Now it seems, things have changed.


Photo: Mark Lloyd/World Sailing

Following that conference in Dublin significant modifications to the medal races have been made and agreement reached to provide two interesting new formats: one for windsurfing and kites; the other for the dinghy, skiff and multihull classes.

For the windsurfers and kites it looks to be a fairer system than that which existed for the last Games.

After a selection series, the top 10 competitors head into quarter-, semi- and grand finals. In the quarter-final, places 6 to 10 race against each other in a single race with the winning two proceeding to the semi-final to join places 3-5. From this race the winning pair go to the grand-final to race against the top two.

The advantage of this system is that taking the top two from each stage is considered to be better than taking just the winner, as it should both change the tactics and reduce the influence of a lucky win.

In the final with four competitors, the top two start with a win apiece, the other two start on zero. From here the first competitor to achieve two wins takes gold with silver and bronze decided on the number of wins. Under this system it seems more likely the winner will be the dominant/consistent performer in the series.

The format for the sailing classes is a bolder change.

Here, the opening series of 8-9 races seeds the fleet as usual, with the top 10 going through to finals day. The difference is that once the selection series is completed the total points for the top 10 are adjusted (if required), to ensure no competitor is more than 9 points ahead of the next placed competitor. From 4th to 10th position, no competitor can be more than 18 points behind 3rd.

With this compressed points board, all 10 sailors then go into the final (which consists of two single-point races), with a chance of winning a medal. Closing the points gap should mean the racing is more exciting while also allowing a team that has been dominant to maintain a points advantage (the previous idea had been to wipe the scoreboard back to zero ahead of the medal race.)

The new formats will be trialled in a number of the major Olympic classes events this season, the first being the Trofeo Princesa Sofía regatta in Mallorca in late March.

So, while the sailors are relieved that the most important regatta in the world should still rely on a consistent performance, the chances are this coming season will be scrutinised far more than before.
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United States unlawful invasion of Venezuela today

 Warmonger's illegal invasion.

The United States began a full-scale military operation against Venezuela early Saturday morning. We’ll call it what it is: an unlawful invasion.

US President Donald Trump says Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro has been captured after US conducted a "large-scale strike" on the South American country.

US President Donald Trump has confirmed US strikes on Venezuela on Saturday and said President Nicolás Maduro and his wife were "captured and flown out of the country," in a post on his social media platform Truth Social.

"The United States of America has successfully carried out a large-scale strike against Venezuela and its leader, President Nicolas Maduro, who has been, along with his wife, captured and flown out of the country," Trump said.

"This operation was done in conjunction with US law enforcement. Details to follow," he added.

"There will be a news conference today at 11 am (5 pm CET) at Mar-a-Lago. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President Donald J Trump."

At least seven explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard around 2 am local time Saturday in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, according to initial reports.

Venezuela’s government accused Washington of attacking civilian and military installations in multiple states. It said attacks took place in the cities of Caracas, Miranda, Aragua and La Guaira.

Jim Beam to pause production at Kentucky distillery for 2026

 Jim Beam to pause production at Kentucky distillery for 2026. The bourbon-maker said it would halt production at its main facility in Clermont, KY, for at least a year as of Jan. 1. It’s opting for a dry January (and rest of the year) at the distillery as bourbon supplies have increased despite US adults slowing their drinking, and as retaliation against President Trump’s tariffs has injected uncertainty into sales abroad. Distillers must calculate how much bourbon to make since it has to age in barrels for years before being bottled and sold—and the state of Kentucky charges taxes on those barrels. Suntory-owned Jim Beam said it would use the time to make improvements at the distillery. The company said the plant’s workers would be reassigned.—AR


Carney DOMINATES Trump as LEADER OF THE YEAR 2025

In this video, we break down why Carney is being celebrated as the stan Mark Carney has just been officially named The Canadian Press Newsmaker of the Year, and political analysts are calling his first year in power nothing short of historic. This is not a symbolic title. This is Canada’s major newsrooms and political experts acknowledging that no leader shaped Canadian politics — and Canada’s global position — more than Carney this year. In this video, we break down why Carney is being celebrated as the standout global political leader of 2025, how his shocking rise to power stunned critics, and why analysts believe his leadership has fundamentally reshaped Canada’s political and economic future. From rebuilding confidence at home to navigating Trump, international trade tensions, economic instability, and global uncertainty, Carney’s first year is being described as unprecedented in Canadian political history. This isn’t just praise. This is recognition of transformation, strength, and leadership at a moment when Canada — and the world — needed it most. Stay tuned with Canada Today for powerful storytelling, sharp analysis, and the truth behind every headline. Mark Carney Newsmaker of the Year recognition from the Canadian Press confirms what many political analysts are saying: this has been a historic year. With Carney’s first year as Prime Minister dominating Canada political news 2025, experts describe a Carney historic year defined by leadership success, stability, and global influence. As Canada Today politics coverage highlights, Carney beats political odds, earns global leader recognition, strengthens Canada government stability, reshapes Canadian politics, and leads confidently through the Carney vs Trump era leadership challenges — marking a truly unprecedented rise in Canadian history.