POD: Everyone deserves to know what's in their drugs

The podcast is back from its summer break with an extended conversation with Angus Quinton with Get Your Drugs Tested. This Vancouver based organization has done the most testing of the illicit drug supply of anyone in the world and it's a model that has huge public health implications in dealing with the drug poisoning crisis. 

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Drug checking saves lives and changes the narrative around the drug poisoning crisis. So when will it come to Alberta?

The terrible surge in fatalities among people who use drugs in the last decade is called a drug poisoning crisis for a reason: the iron law of prohibition means more concentrated, more dangerous drugs keep making their way into the drug supply with tragic results.

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‘They won a war of attrition.’ HH speaks out after police commission releases report on Sean Chu misconduct investigation

The Calgary Police Commission’s recently released report on how the Calgary Police Service investigated an alleged sexual assault by councillor Sean Chu of a 16-year old girl is bringing little comfort to Sean Chu’s victim.

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The end of UCP rule is in sight

Nine months! A mere three quarters of one year are all that remains for Alberta’s UCP administration, and the governing party is already falling to pieces.

The membership drive ahead of the UCP’s October 6 leadership election has now ended, and if you didn’t buy a membership to vote, I congratulate you on not being scammed out of ten dollars. Travis Toews (formerly Kenney’s finance minister, and the architect of most of the brutal austerity since 2019), former Wildrose party leader Brian Jean, and other former Wildrose party leader Danielle Smith are the only candidates not polling within the margin of error of zero. One will briefly be Premier, from October through to the election scheduled for next May.

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Alberta’s wicked continuing-care system must be reformed

I was waiting for the results of a COVID-19 test when the long-term care home called to say my mom didn’t have long to live.

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EPS forecast to run unprecedented $5.4 million deficit, might affect upcoming police budget conversation says councillor

The police budget debate that’s coming this fall as Edmonton city council decides on the next four year budget cycle is set to get even more contentious as recently released budget documents show that the Edmonton Police Service has burned through its financial reserves and expects to run an unprecedented deficit of $5.4 million this year. 

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The EPS go to 'absurd' lengths to keep the identities of cops who break the rules a secret

Two separate police disciplinary decisions from this year show the lengths that the Edmonton Police Service (EPS) will go to keep the identities of police officers who break the rules a secret. 

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Complaint into the Edmonton Police’s convoy response ’concerns the legitimacy of the Edmonton Police Commission’

Chief McFee investigated a citizen’s complaint into the Edmonton Police Service’s response to the February demonstrations by the anti-vax "Freedom Convoy,'' and Chief McFee discovered in his investigation that Chief McFee did a great job and that Chief McFee wouldn’t change a thing.  

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Chief of Alberta’s Human Rights Commission called Islam ‘not a peaceful religion’ and ‘one of the most militaristic religions known to man’ in 2009

The next chief of Alberta’s human rights commission, Collin May, wrote “Islam is not a peaceful religion misused by radicals. Rather, it is one of the most militaristic religions known to man,” among several other questionable remarks in his glowing 2009 review of Islamic Imperialism: A History by British-Israeli historian Efraim Karsh in C2C Journal. 

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The Alberta government just fell face-first into a pile of money. What are they going to do with it?

Alberta’s coffers are suddenly overflowing. Thanks to a few matters out of the control of anyone around here (the Russians invading Ukraine, mostly) the price of oil has been flying higher and higher since about February. And that’s changing the agenda for next year’s election dramatically.

The price of a barrel of Western Canada Select is higher now than it was before the precipitous collapse at the end of 2014. In fact, if I’m reading these charts correctly, Alberta oil has only once ever been worth more, during the brief spike in 2008—and for all we know it could get there again soon.

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