The standoff between Twitter and Trump escalated this morning, when Trump took to the platform to express his dismay over the protests that have rocked Minneapolis.
What we now know in May, but did not know in March, is that the global COVID-19 death toll is at the low end of the range of deaths resulting from the annual flu.
Many are left wondering why we can crowd around in a Walmart or Canadian Tire, but are not able to be with our loved ones in the final days of their life.
A gunfight that killed Dimarjio Jenkings in Toronto has footage that reveals bullets fired nearly also hit a mother and her six-year-old son.
On Thursday, Doug Ford released a post to Twitter paying tribute to his late brother Rob for what would have been his 51st birthday.
A First Nations Chief in Manitoba says they will go ahead with their annual powwow despite the province's public health orders to limit the size of gatherings.
Disgraced former advisor Gerald Butts has had a tantrum on Twitter, accusing The Post Millennial of spreading lies about his conduct.
St. Paul Police are trying to disperse large groups of people causing damage to properties along University Avenue.
Canada's top cybersecurity agency has found over 1,000 “malicious imitation” websites trying to scam people or misinform them.
An RCMP officer physically removed a Rebel News journalist who was trying to attend one of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's press conferences.
The US intends to cancel the visas of thousands of Chinese graduate students thought by President Donald Trump's administration to be linked with China's military.
Murder hornets have been spotted in Canada after provincial apiculturist Paul Van Westendorp confirmed it via photograph by a beekeeper from BC.
An Australian kayaker's body washed up on shore after he went live on Facebook, showing how he had been pulled off the coast of New South Wales during a fishing trip.
It is quite odd that the official website for Menstrual Health Day specifically names women and girls, but Mayor Tory's proclamation does not.
The Chinese media has become enraged with Canada after the BC Supreme Court ruled that charges faced by Meng Wanzhou in the U.S. could also be a crime in Canada.