Morning Update: The perfect storm for weather anxiety | Unpublished
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Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Samantha Edwards
Publication Date: August 1, 2025 - 06:44

Morning Update: The perfect storm for weather anxiety

August 1, 2025

Good morning. The average person has access to more weather data than ever before, but when this flood of data consumes us, anxiety and misinformation tend to follow. More on that below, plus Canadian aid gets airdropped into Gaza, and new wildfire evacuations in B.C. But first:

Today’s headlines
  • President Donald Trump raises tariffs on some Canadian goods to 35%
  • Prime Minister Mark Carney’s policy shift on Palestinian statehood is met with cautious hope and criticism by Canadians
  • The Weston family sought to avoid an auction in bid to buy the Hudson’s Bay charter


Unpublished Newswire

 
At just twenty-three, second-generation immigrant Jessie was working in the federal government to save for law school—even though he felt deep “disdain” for “big government.” Jessie’s supervisor suggested that his current role could help him secure a job at the Department of Justice and receive law school funding. But he resisted. He didn’t want to become a lifelong bureaucrat. The young federal employee shared this story in an interview with Emine Fidan Elcioglu, an associate professor at the University of Toronto, who ran a study on why some racialized communities are turning to...
August 4, 2025 - 06:30 | Mihika Agarwal | Walrus
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s post-midnight response to Washington’s latest escalation of its tariff war was calm, measured, sensible and appropriate, everything the current regime in Washington is not. Canada, Carney said, will continue to negotiate in search of a reasonable agreement,...
August 4, 2025 - 06:00 | Kelly McParland | National Post
Quebec’s universal respiratory syncytial virus immunization program proved more than 85 per cent effective in reducing infant hospitalizations, emergency-room consultations and intensive-care admissions, according to a new study.The province was the first in Canada to announce a publicly funded nirsevimab program for the 2024-25 RSV season. Ontario, Nunavut, Yukon and the Northwest Territories later followed suit.
August 4, 2025 - 06:00 | Alanna Smith | The Globe and Mail