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Canada's oldest military partnership with the United States has been quietly suspended. The UN has walked back its worst-case climate scenario. And Alberta has a signed pipeline agreement with a construction date.Jim Csek and Iain Burns work through the latest developments in a Canada-U.S. relationship that is deteriorating in real time, from the suspension of the oldest bilateral military body on the continent to Washington's formal trade investigation into Canadian broadcasting law. They also put the Alberta-Ottawa pipeline agreement under the microscope. Is this a genuine commitment to construction, or another round of heel dragging dressed up in signed paperwork? And the question underneath all of it remains the same one Canadians have been asking for a decade. Will this country ever actually capitalize on its resources?Today on The Really Big Show:- The United States has suspended the Permanent Joint Board on Defence, an 86-year-old bilateral military cooperation body established in 1940, with no public explanation from either government-Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announces a signed agreement with Ottawa establishing a formal pathway to a new Pacific oil pipeline, with a project proposal due to the Major Projects Office by July 1, a national interest designation targeted by October 1, and construction as early as September 2027- Conservative Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs Michael Chong visits Taiwan this week in direct defiance of China's ambassador, who explicitly instructed Canadian MPs to refrain from travelling to the island- The UN's climate science body has retired its worst-case warming scenario in what scientists are describing as the most significant shift in climate modelling in decadesGlenfarne Alaska LNG signs a 30-year gas supply deal with ConocoPhillips as global energy partnerships consolidate without Canadian participation-Canada has posted the highest food inflation rate among G7 nations since November 2025, with the average family of 4 now spending $17,571 annually on groceries- An Alberta judge has struck down the Stay Free Alberta separation petition for the 2nd time in 6 months, ruling the province failed to consult First Nations on treaty rights, with Premier Smith calling the decision "anti-democratic" and vowing to appeal to the Supreme CourtNissan is weighing plans to export Chinese-built EVs to Canada in partnership with Dongfeng Motor Group, a direct consequence of the Liberals' decision to reduce Chinese EV tariffs from 100% to 6.1%- Ontario is spending an estimated $20 million annually to warehouse $79.1 million in unsold American alcohol pulled from LCBO shelves in March 2025 as a tariff protest, with $2 million already expired and the province refusing to confirm storage costs to taxpayers- The U.S. has launched a formal Section 301 investigation into Canada's Online Streaming Act, with retaliatory tariffs and CUSMA modifications on the table if the legislation is found to be discriminatory- Signal threatens to exit Canada, while Apple, Meta and U.S. congressional committees warn that Bill C-22's surveillance architecture is broader than any comparable Western law and creates cross-border privacy risks for Americans- CBC and APTN's taxpayer-funded prank production allegedly lured retired RCMP veterans to a Vancouver studio under the guise of a "Life After Service" tribute, confiscated their phones, seated them before a live audience, and ambushed them with institutional criticism- Postmedia is withdrawing its 130 titles from The Canadian Press by May 25, gutting the wire service's revenue and its 600-outlet subscriber base, as Postmedia posts a $16.9 million loss despite receiving $15.6 million in government subsidies- A federal judge dismissed a bid to guarantee legal counsel for all foreigners in immigration proceedings, as federal legal aid for asylum seekers has already risen 378% to $55 million annually and immigration court filings have quadrupled since 2017- Is Canada finally turning a corner on energy, or is the pipeline deal just the one good headline in a week full of warnings? Let us know what you think in the comments.The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed.🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media.#canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #thereallybigshow #albertapipeline #billc22 #canadiandefence
On this episode of The Really Big Show, Jim Csek and Iain Burns analyze the potential "deal with the devil" between Danielle Smith and Mark Carney regarding the Pacific pipeline. Is the promised infrastructure worth the $130 per tonne industrial carbon tax that industry warns will kill the sector anyway? We dive into Adrian Dix's wind power gamble in B.C., the slow-motion death of the Canadian auto sector, and the shocking claims that the feds are actively nudging Canadians toward Chinese e-commerce despite massive security warnings.We also look across the pond where Nigel Farage is drawing a line in the sand against Digital IDs, while Keir Starmer clings to power despite a historic wipeout in local elections. From the "shambles of shame" at the CBC to the latest COVID whistleblower, we’re asking the question: Has Canada lost its mind on morality and economic common sense?
Trump is sitting across from Xi. Reform UK just wiped out Labour in Wales. And Canada's biggest energy opportunity in a generation is stalled over a carbon tax negotiation. The world is moving. Today on The Really Big Show, Jim Csek and Iain Burns ask why Canada isn't.Not every story today is a scandal. Canada's skilled trades sector is positioned for a decade of demand, Canadian-owned lumber companies have quietly outflanked U.S. tariffs by producing American lumber on American soil, and Ottawa says regulatory reform is coming. The bright spots are real. The question is whether this government can get out of the way long enough to let them happen.Today's show covers:- The largest corporate delegation ever to accompany a sitting U.S. president has landed in China, with Trump set to meet Xi Jinping in what is expected to be the most significant U.S.-China summit in years- Bloomberg reports Canada's surge in exports outside the U.S. is driven almost entirely by rising gold and oil prices, not by businesses breaking into new markets, undermining government claims that Canada is successfully diversifying its trade- TC Energy CEO François Poirier says Mexico approves pipeline permits in 8 months while comparable Canadian projects face years of regulatory delays, calling Mexico's framework a model Canada should follow, as Ottawa prepares new regulatory reform legislation it says will streamline major project approvals- Canada's Food Price Report 2026 confirms tariffs and counter-tariffs have increased grocery costs while U.S. food prices have remained relatively stable, with the average family of 4 now spending $17,571 annually on food, up nearly $1,000 from last year and 27% more than 5 years ago- Federal managers proposed copying a Liberal Party logo for a government housing program, while the Treasury Board secretary admitted the "Canada Strong" slogan used in Liberal fundraising has effectively become official government branding, despite Treasury Board policy explicitly banning taxpayer-funded advertising from containing political party slogans- Zelensky announces Canada and Ukraine have begun preparations for a military drone deal with no confirmation from the Canadian government, on the same day Zelensky's former chief of staff Andriy Yermak appeared in court in Kyiv as a suspect in a $10.5 million money laundering scheme involving suspected corruption in Ukraine's drone and military equipment procurement- The U.S. lumber lobby claims Trump's tariffs have cut Canada's share of the American lumber market from 36% in 2016 to 19% today, while obscuring the fact that West Fraser, Interfor and Canfor have quietly acquired sawmills across the U.S. South, meaning Canadian-owned companies are now producing American lumber to avoid the tariffs entirely- CBC has confirmed it ran an undercover media sting targeting commentators who questioned claims around the Kamloops residential school discovery, with the taxpayer-funded project involving American activist Igor Vamos, co-founder of hoax group The Yes Men, and funded in part by Canadian Heritage grants-Canada Post lost a record $1.57 billion last year, has received $2.04 billion in government loans and has not turned a profit since 2017, while the Parliamentary Budget Office says Canada Post refused to disclose the cost of operating its 3,361 rural post offices as cabinet prepares to lift a moratorium on rural closures- Retired Supreme Court justice Jack Major, 95, says Canada has entered an era of judicial supremacy and court overreach, with courts increasingly striking down democratically enacted policy based on activist litigation rather than legal interpretation- The UN has directed Canada to eliminate the Indian Act's second-generation cutoff, warning the rule amounts to forcible assimilation and will progressively reduce the number of people Canada recognizes as having treaty, Aboriginal and inherent rights- Health Canada confirms Canadians with past drug convictions can obtain federal licences to grow, process and sell cannabis, but refuses to disclose how many of its 891 licensees have criminal records, despite RCMP warnings before legalization that organized crime would attempt to infiltrate the industry, with roughly 1 in 5 cannabis purchases still coming from illegal sources- As world powers reshape the global order, is Canada positioned to seize its moment or too busy managing its own contradictions to notice? Let us know what you think in the comments.The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed.🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media.#canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #nowmedia #thereallybigshow #trumpxi #foodprices #canadapost
On this episode of The Really Big Show, Jim Csek and Iain Burns tackle the absurdity of a "Buy Canada" policy that allows the Bank of China to qualify as a local supplier while actual Canadian energy firms "build big" in the U.S. to escape domestic gridlock. We look at the "poop show" of European diplomacy versus the reality of Musk and Rubio heading to China with Trump, and ask why the Carney government is still obsessing over plastic straws while Canada Post returns to the begging bowl for more taxpayer billions.From the investment-killing uncertainty of DRIPA in B.C. to the "mirage" of affordability, we’re digging into the numbers the mainstream media won't touch.Support The Really Big Show . We’re building independent Canadian media into a powerful voice and we can’t do it without you. Contribute here: https://thereallybigshow.ca We tell real Canadian stories the mainstream won’t. Become a member and be part of it.
The pipeline may be moving, the Chinese Communist Party is making bomb threats in Canadian cities, the Prime Minister had a closed-door dinner with Barack Obama and Alex Soros, and Ottawa is blacklisting journalists it doesn't like. The gap between what this government is saying and what Canadians are actually living has never been wider. A lot happened this weekend, Jim Csek and Iain Burns are here to break it down.Today on The Really Big Show:- Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says a pipeline deal is now a matter of "when" not "if" after a direct conversation with Carney, while Carney acknowledged for the first time Canada needs "a willingness to use all sources of energy, including some gas"- Carney told a Democratic Party-aligned think tank Canada remains open to deeper U.S. integration under a "Fortress North America" framework, while the $130/tonne carbon price floor and $16.5B carbon capture requirement continue to stall the Alberta-Ottawa MOU- Prime Minister Carney met with Barack Obama and Open Society Foundations head Alex Soros at a closed-to-media dinner at the Fairmont Royal York, on the sidelines of a joint summit between Canada 2020 and the Centre for American Progress- The RCMP has launched an investigation into bomb and mass shooting threats targeting Shen Yun performances across Canada, with Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand confirming the threats are suspected to involve Chinese Communist Party agents engaged in transnational repression on Canadian soil- Liberal MP Lori Idlout remains a major shareholder in a firm that has received $583,848 in federal contracts since she was elected in 2021, with 7 departments awarding contracts to the same company whose owner sits in the governing caucus-Staff from the Privy Council Office, Treasury Board, CRA and Foreign Affairs met behind closed doors to decide which journalists get government access, with preferential treatment going to reporters in federally subsidized newsrooms, while Carney marked World Press Freedom Day 3 weeks later calling for "a strong, independent and free press"-Dalhousie University projects a net loss of 4,000 restaurants in 2026 following 7,000 closures in 2025, with 41% of remaining restaurants operating at a loss or break-even as Canadians cut discretionary spending- Old Age Security is now Canada's single largest federal program at $89.3 billion in 2026, consuming 1 in every 6 dollars of federal spending, projected to hit $108.5 billion by 2030, while 80% of Canadian pensioners already earn more than $60,000 annually- India's Prime Minister Modi has urged citizens to work from home, cut gold purchases and reduce fertilizer use by 50% as the Iran war drives a global energy crisis, with India importing approximately 90% of its oil- Putin told reporters Saturday he believes Russia's war in Ukraine "is coming to an end," as independent Russian media report more than 350,000 Russian troops killed since February 2022- Reform UK gained over 1,300 council seats across England as Labour lost 1,000 seats and was ousted from power in Wales after 27 years, with Nigel Farage calling the results "a historic shift in British politics"- Surrey, B.C. recorded its 3rd shooting in 7 days after 2 men were killed in an underground parking garage Sunday night, with the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team now leading the investigationWhen the government is choosing which journalists cover it, which MPs get contracts and which energy projects get approved, is Canada still a democracy or just a managed narrative? Let us know what you think in the comments.The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed.🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media.#canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #nowmedia #thereallybigshow #albertapipeline #shenyun #pressfreedom #markcarney
2.2 million Canadians visited a food bank in a single month. 112,000 jobs gone in four months. Youth unemployment at 14.3%. Jim Csek and Iain Burns ask how much worse it has to get before Ottawa admits the truth. The data is in and it tells a story the government refuses to acknowledge. While Liberals point to polls and promise deals that never arrive, Canadians are lining up for food, losing full-time work and watching the cost of a new home climb past what any government fee schedule can justify. This is not a transition. This is a decline.Today on The Really Big Show: - The IEA warns Canada "doesn't have the luxury to be slow" on energy development while the Bank of Canada says regulatory delays are driving investment out of the country, yet the Major Projects Office has approved zero major energy projects since its creation and Alberta-Ottawa pipeline talks remain stalled- Bill C-5 has never been formally invoked raising serious questions about why Ottawa needed sweeping powers to override any federal law with no criteria, no public explanation and no parliamentary oversight- Statistics Canada reports 112,000 jobs lost in the first 4 months of 2026, youth unemployment at 14.3%, student unemployment at 16%, and Canada's jobless rate now sitting 1.4 percentage points above the United States- 58% of Canadians tell Abacus Data that Carney is handling trade negotiations well, despite no deal being reached nearly a year after he promised one in 30 days, with the U.S. ambassador confirming no formal negotiations have taken place since October 2025- Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke says Canada has a dangerous case of "Trump Derangement Syndrome," warning that cooperation not confrontation is the only trade strategy that preserves Canadian jobs, with 96% of Canadian auto exports going to the U.S. and no viable alternative market- The Carney government is exploring selling Canada's 23 federally owned airports to foreign investors, with an Australian expert warning that privatization ultimately means consumers pay more, and critics noting that Heathrow's privatization handed ownership stakes to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and China- Food Banks Canada recorded 2.2 million visits in a single month, double the number from 6 years ago, with 1 in 3 clients being children, nearly 30% employed, donations falling and 90% of B.C. food banks reporting a drop in contributions- Government fees, taxes and charges add 25 to 30% to the cost of every new home in Canada, averaging $195,300 per unit in Toronto alone, with some municipalities raising those charges by 1,000% in recent years and no requirement to disclose them to buyers- Lafarge Canada received $46.6 million in federal funding despite its parent company's executives being convicted of paying bribes to Islamic State fighters, while SNC-Lavalin escaped the same blacklist after a $280 million fraud conviction because Public Works said the misconduct was "20 years ago"Canada's Lobbying Commissioner has referred 19 cases to the RCMP, identified more than a dozen Act breaches including violations of the 5-year post-government lobbying ban, and secured exactly zero charges, with no authority to name names if police decline to prosecute- Governor General Mary Simon solicited $350,000 from Power Corporation for a private rink at Rideau Hall, with donors receiving tax receipts and VIP access, while Carney sat on the foundation's board, and access to information records revealed it was only phase one of an $8 million project with no public tender- Telesat received a $5 billion military satellite contract while facing fraud allegations in 2 courts, a Moody's junk rating, a $1.7 billion debt wall due in December 2026, with its CEO a personal friend of the Prime Minister who was in government when the company received its previous $2.14 billion federal loan- Premier David Eby's approval has collapsed 20 points in a year to 33%, with 98% of B.C. Business Council members cutting investment or hiring due to DRIPA, and 47% of British Columbians now calling for the legislation to be repealed entirelyWhen the food banks are full, the jobs are gone and the contracts keep going to friends of the Prime Minister, how much longer will Canadians accept this as normal? Let us know what you think in the comments.The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed.🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media.#canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #nowmedia #thereallybigshow #foodbanks #telesat #dripa #joblosses
A decade of broken promises, quietly corrupted institutions and policies designed for everyone but ordinary Canadians has left the country hollowed out and its people on their knees. Jim Csek and Iain Burns are not letting it slide.The bills are in. The committees are closed. The contracts went to the connected. And the man promising fiscal restraint just opened an embassy in Fiji. Today's show is about the full weight of what a decade of Liberal governance has actually cost this country.Today's on The Really Big Show we cover:- Carney insisting a $130/tonne carbon tax and a $20B carbon capture requirement will make Canadian oil competitive, while no other oil-producing nation on earth faces equivalent conditions and Alberta's own industry warns investment is leaving the province- Canadian vehicle production has collapsed 46% over the past decade, from 2.4 million units in 2014 to 1.3 million in 2024, with Honda indefinitely suspending its $15B Ontario EV plant and Japanese automakers now producing 77% of what remains- Carney has still not delivered a trade deal with the United States despite repeated pre- and post-election commitments- Finance Minister Champagne approved a $175M loan to Ekati diamond mine after its own financial statements warned it could not meet its obligations. The mine has now declared insolvency with $655M in liabilities, a $100M remediation shortfall, and taxpayers potentially on the hook- A six-person company with $14,980 in revenue and a $47M annual loss received $200M in federal contracts for a gravel pad in Nova Scotia, with its board chair selling $1.8M in shares days after the government announcement sent the stock surging- PrescribeIT collected nearly $300M in taxpayer funding over eight years, processed fewer than 5% of Canadian prescriptions, paid its outgoing CEO $900,000 in its final year, and handed 85% of the intellectual property to Telus Health before shutting down May 29- Liberal majorities voted to adjourn committees studying both the Nova Scotia spaceport contract and PrescribeIT, while moving other committee meetings behind closed doors, with parliamentary reporters saying they witnessed no obstruction to justify either decision- Three $30B investment funds personally co-chaired by Carney at Brookfield were registered in Bermuda and the Cayman Islands, while Brookfield is accused of avoiding $5.3B in Canadian taxesCanada spent $774,000 opening a new embassy in Fiji weeks after Carney warned Canadians to prepare for sacrifices and pledged to cut a tenth of the federal payroll- The housing department quietly moved $3M out of a veteran homelessness program it said had no eligible recipients, while refusing to redirect the funds to a Veterans Emergency Fund auditors say is chronically underfunded and could literally save lives - Millennial homeownership has hit a postwar low at 49.9% for citizens aged 25 to 39, with young Canadians increasingly living with parents, less likely to marry and less able to build equity than any previous generation- Mercosur beef imports to Canada have surged 238% since 2021 with the annual quota already filled by mid-January, the Canadian Cattle Association warns a free trade deal with Argentina and Brazil will devastate domestic ranchers and irritate the U.S. ahead of the CUSMA review- Agriculture Minister Heath MacDonald extended plant breeders' patent protections while restricting farmers' ability to save and replant their own seed, dismissing the National Farmers Union and over 6,000 petition signatories as ideologically opposed to intellectual propertyHow much more can Canadians absorb before someone is held accountable? Let us know what you think in the comments.The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed.🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media.#canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #prescribeit #ekati #brookfield #liberalcorruption#canadiannews #canadapolitics #canada #nowmedia #thereallybigshow #jasperfire #billc22 #maid #albertaindependence
Canada is losing investments it never built, stalling pipelines it promised, and writing surveillance laws that could turn every connected device in your home into a listening post. Jim Csek and Iain Burns cut through the noise today on The Really Big Show.From a $15 billion Honda plant going dark to a surveillance bill that could turn your smart fridge into a listening device, from Jasper's preventable inferno to a mental health system being asked to greenlight assisted dying, the stories today are not unrelated. They are a pattern. And Canadians are paying the price.Today's show covers:- Honda indefinitely suspends its $15B EV manufacturing plant in Ontario, with scrapping the project entirely still on the table, citing sluggish U.S. EV demand and stalled Canada-U.S. trade negotiations- Alberta-Ottawa pipeline talks remain stalled over the industrial carbon tax timeline and a $16.5B carbon capture requirement, while the IEA and Canada's own energy minister warn allies are weeks away from being forced to shut down operations-Stay Free Alberta submits 301,620 signatures, nearly double the threshold needed to trigger consideration of an independence referendum, as Carney questions whether it will proceed-Bill C-22 would require telecoms to build interception capabilities for law enforcement and CSIS, and could compel retention of every Canadian cell phone's location data for up to one year, with critics warning it creates a greater surveillance state than its predecessor- Canada's MAID eligibility is set to expand in March 2027 to include mental illness as a sole underlying condition, despite 10 provincial health ministers, the UN and Canada's own experts calling for an indefinite pause- Carney appoints former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour, 79, as Governor General, while neither the finance minister nor the Bank of Canada governor will say where the $25B Canada Strong Fund is coming from or what it will cost Canadians to borrow- Parks Canada left 577,431 acres of dead pine standing at Jasper National Park, cut its fire budget by 23%, turned away 50 firefighters and 20 firetrucks during the blaze, and senior officials had discussed cancelling prescribed burns for political reasons months before the fire-A coalition of 14 Alaskan Indigenous nations is using B.C.'s DRIPA legislation to challenge an approved B.C. mine, with legal experts warning the case could allow U.S.-based groups to assert standing in Canadian resource decisions- Former Vancouver mayor Kennedy Stewart says he was interviewed for four hours by federal lawyers about a sitting B.C. cabinet minister under RCMP investigation for allegedly collaborating with the Chinese government, with Premier Eby denying any knowledge- A federal judge approves an $8.7 million settlement after hackers accessed nearly 54,000 CRA and Service Canada accounts during the pandemic, stealing millions in benefits, with individual payouts ranging from $80 to $5,000Is this what a government that has lost the plot looks like, or is someone actually steering us here? Let us know what you think in the comments.The Really Big Show: The thinking Canadian's daily briefing, independent and informed.🔴 Live every weekday at 9AM PST 📍 Independent. Unapologetic. Canadian. 👉 Support the show: https://thereallybigshow.ca Subscribe | Share | Comment — help us grow independent Canadian media.License Details:Asset Title: Epic Cinematic TrailerAsset ID: #88511Licensee: jim csekYouTube Content ID Owner: Epic EliteDownload Code: 6672e6a932b35e075a59dd6b7d14cb6e4b7fdfad51c60cf2680961fa94c47cd5:88511-253313
The Really Big Show is a Canadian news hour done differently. We discuss the news of the day through a Canadian lens with analysis and commentary from Jim Csek & managing editor Iain Burns. We translate the rhetoric into reality with common sense on the news that affects Canada, BC and our region. We are live five days a week around 9 am. Recorded sessions available on KelownaNow.com, Youtube, X and many podcast channels.
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