Andrew Yang captioning New Yorker cartoons is the best thing on the internet today.
The predilection of blaming everything on race doesn’t make much sense in a society where a race didn’t play a factor in a woman becoming a Duchess.
“Where was your outrage last month when the regime slaughtered 1600 kids for peaceful protests?” asks an Iranian activist. A great question for the media.
The supreme leader of Iran seems to have left his Twitter DMs open, so the internet did its thing.
Canadian journalists disgracefully pushed the narrative that Trump and the U.S. were to blame for Iran shooting down the plane that killed 63 Canadians.
If we let this ruling stand, then we are accepting that when it comes to participation in spiritual rituals, some Canadians are more equal than others.
80s icon Boy George has joined the ranks of Morrissey and Kanye West by rejecting woke ideology and advocating for common sense.
Tim Hortons boldly went where no company has gone before—offering free coffee for life to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.
Canadian cities like Edmonton should leave open public transit stations for the homeless population to sleep in during frigid winter months.
Ted McCoy, professor of sociology at the University of Calgary, has tweeted out that any student who cites Dr. Jordan Peterson in his class will fail.
Elizabeth Warren had declined to use the term “terrorist” to describe Soleimani, calling him a “bad guy,” a “murderer.” McCain insisted on clarification.
Allegations have surfaced regarding Tiffany Michell Moore, who rose to infamy and internet memehood after her shocking public freakout in GameStop.
Explicitly stating that your site is satire, as The Babylon Bee does, is not good enough for CNN expert in disinformation Donie O’Sullivan.
What Gervais does is hold a mirror up to the Hollywood elite, but for once, they don’t enjoy looking into it.
Here is how the Conservative Party of Canada can fight back in 2020.