Wednesday, May 9, 2012

P.E.I.'s Controversial Immigrant Program.. Cancer Deaths Drop

Wednesday, May 9, 2012
For some foreign nationals, P.E.I.'s immigrant nominee program became a way to purchase entry into Canada, by making "investments" they would never recoup, in companies they might not even know. A full investigation.
WATCH: Former Judge Accused Of Murder Had Mistress, Trial Hears
Cancer Deaths Dropped In Canada. Here's Why
Canada's Condos 'Ghost Towns' In The Making?
Our 'Perverse' Credit Card System
Wild Weather Devastates Ontario Crops
BLOG POSTS
Elizabeth May: Bill C-38: The Tories' Soiled Green
Bill C-38 is a bill awash with new laws, repeals of old laws, and complex text, all of which serve to muddy, and hide the intent of this very important piece of legislation which is attempting to be passed by the Conservative party in Parliament, and would bring huge changes to Canada's environmental policy. Nearly half of the budget implementation bill is directed at rewriting Canada's foundational environmental laws. Putting all this in a fast-track budget bill, with time allocation on debate, and heading to the Finance Committee, is a direct assault on the principles of parliamentary democracy.
GinaBeth Roberts: King's Investigative Series: How P.E.I. Cashed In on its Immigrants
Prince Edward Island's provincial immigrant nominee program has become something you don't talk about and you don't ask questions about. If you participated in it, you keep that quiet too. But, it wasn't supposed to be this way. And people will tell you that.
Sheryl Saperia: Canada's Vulnerability to Bombs Made of Bits and Bytes
China and Russia are seen as the worst offenders when it comes to cyber attacks, but Iran is close behind. How is it that a country such as Iran has a cyber-warfare unit with a staff of 2,400 and a budget of $76 million, and Ottawa has only allocated $95 million for our country's defence against this new form of attack?
Laura Armstrong: King's Investigative Series: Coming Through the Back Door
Our investigation looks at P.E.I's provincial nominee program through a different lens: how it stacked up as immigration policy. The verdict? Not so well. The evidence strongly suggests the P.E.I. program became a back door into Canada, putting one of the most valuable commodities in the world up for sale.
Pega Ren: Depression Has Many Faces
2012-05-08-mentalhealth1.jpg Why is it so difficult to treat depression? Part of the problem is in our definition of the term. In fact, there are two distinct depressions: situational and clinical. It would be so much easier if we called the two depressions by different names, for then we could explain better how we feel and know better what might help.

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