Morning Update: Lessons of hope from a Canadian whale scientist | Page 894 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Erin Anderssen
Publication Date: March 27, 2026 - 06:26

Stay informed

Morning Update: Lessons of hope from a Canadian whale scientist

March 27, 2026

Good morning. Out at sea, a Canadian whale scientist witnessed something close to a miracle – more on that below, along with Ontario budget takeaways and the Toronto Blue Jays. But first:



Unpublished Newswire

 
Canada’s sovereignty call-to-arms has largely been expressed through what we buy. Shoppers fiercely scrutinize labels and corporate ownership to determine whether a product is truly “Canadian.” But while we’re paying closer attention to the origin and composition of the products we’re purchasing, we’re not really thinking about how we pay for them. That needs to change. Key points In 2025, American-owned Visa and Mastercard controlled 96 percent of Canada’s credit card market These networks can be weaponized, shutting countries out of global commerce Canada must build its own digital...
April 7, 2026 - 06:30 | Vass Bednar | Walrus
Son of Nobody—Yann Martel’s fifth book of fiction—features Harlow Donne, a classicist who leaves his daughter, Helen, in Canada and travels to Oxford, disappearing into the Bodleian Library, where he stumbles upon something scholars have long dreamed of: a lost Trojan epic. As the poem’s sole translator, Donne comes to see in its unnamed hero a mirror of his own longing, ambition, and love for his daughter. In the following excerpt, taken from the opening, he describes his discovery of the obscure papyrus fragments. ONCE THERE WAS a clay pot and it fell and broke. Once there was a man...
April 7, 2026 - 06:29 | Yann Martel | Walrus