International law only works if we’re willing to defend it
The U.S. capture of Nicolás Maduro shows how quickly power can override international law
The U.S. capture of Nicolás Maduro shows how quickly power can override international law
Alarming claims out of P.E.I. point to deep foreign interference, and the federal government keeps stalling. Why?
Oil markets are shrugging off war and sanctions, a sign that oversupply now matters more than disruption
Inflation is down, poverty is falling and Argentina’s economy is growing as Javier Milei pushes reforms many skeptics said would fail
If Venezuela restores production, U.S. refiners would have new options that could erode Canada’s long-standing position in the heavy-crude market
Cheney and Kennedy shaped U.S. politics in starkly different ways. Their legacies reveal how much American power and party identity have changed
They weren’t at D-Day or Passchendaele but they died in service just the same. And we rarely talk about them
The peak-oil narrative has collapsed, and the IEA’s U-turn marks a major strategic win for Alberta
María Corina Machado risked everything to fight tyranny. Why couldn’t Mexico’s Sheinbaum offer even a single word of support?
The privately-funded Trump ballroom is sparking outrage, while Obama’s taxpayer-funded renovation barely got a mention. Why the double-standard?
Genocide begins with fear and false accusations that turn victims into threats. Understanding this tactic is the first step in stopping it
Canadian-backed relief teams are feeding children and fighting disease where global help has all but vanished
OPEC+ is bracing for an oil oversupply. That should scare every Canadian energy insider