By: Jordan Twiss The most commonly accepted definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different outcome.
Read MoreOn healthcare, Sask. Party’s silence serves no one’s interests
By: Jordan Twiss We’re now two weeks removed from the sudden resignation of Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) CEO Scott Livingstone, and the revelation that SHA COO Suann Laurent quietly retired at the end of October.
Read MoreOn poverty, Sask. Party’s silence speaks volumes
By: Jordan Twiss In 1989, federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent rose in the House of Commons and introduced a motion calling on Parliament to end child poverty in Canada by 2000.
Read MoreJustice and equality for some, but not yet for all
By: Jordan Twiss Famed novelist and social commentator George Orwell wrote in his classic work, Animal Farm, that “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”
Read MoreClimate policy outrage a wasteful distraction
By: Jordan Twiss To hear Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe tell the tale, the province’s oil, gas, and coal are so clean you could eat off of them.
Read MoreFlu, COVID can’t be compared
By: Jordan Twiss Over the past 19 months, there’s been no shortage of arguments made to downplay the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read MoreSask. Party needs new tone on pandemic strategy
By: Jordan Twiss Back on Oct. 19, when he confessed that his government could have acted sooner to introduce masking and proof of vaccination mandates, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe did something few, if any, politicians have done throughout the pandemic.
Read MoreSask. throne speech full of empty pandering
By: Jordan Twiss By now, we’ve all had just about enough of hearing about the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read MoreExtendicare’s exit brings belated justice for seniors
By: Jordan Twiss It’s finally over. Or at least it will be at some point in the hopefully near future.
Read MoreCanada faces pandemic of nonsensical government
By: Jordan Twiss Looking back to March of 2020, when COVID-19 first became a part of our daily lexicon, or even to last fall, when the pandemic truly arrived in Saskatchewan, it’s hard not to wonder how we got here.
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