Postmedia Network Inc.
Media Company
Postmedia Network Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Postmedia Network Canada Corp. (TSX:PNC.A, PNC.B), is a Canadian newsmedia company representing more than 140 brands across multiple print, online, and mobile platforms. Award-winning journalists and innovative product development teams bring engaging content to millions of people every week whenever and wherever they want it. This exceptional content, reach and scope offers advertisers and marketers compelling solutions to effectively reach target audiences. Source
Actions
Media Outlet details
| Scope | National |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Country | Canada |
|
Similarweb UVM |
Request pricing |
|
Comscore UVM |
Request pricing |
| Frequency | Weekly |
| Days Published | N/A |
Recent Articles
Search Articles
By Jesse Kline Of all the lies and misinformation being spread about Israel and the Jewish people, one of the most pernicious is the idea that Jews are colonizers in the Land of Israel. This is a lie that is now taken as gospel in academia, where objective truths are shunted aside in favour of a preferred ideological narrative. Yet the evidence of the Jewish people's deep roots in the area is readily available for anyone to see.
By Jesse Kline The ceasefire in Gaza has held for nearly a month, but that has not stopped activists from trying to inject the Israel-Hamas war into municipal politics, or politicians from attempting to harness widespread anti-Israel sentiment to their electoral advantage. On Tuesday, the vehemently anti-Israel, ardent socialist Zohran Mamdani was elected to be New York City's next mayor, following one of the most divisive campaigns in recent memory.
View this email in your browser Curated by the National Post's own Tristin Hopper, First Reading is a Canadian politics newsletter published Monday to Thursday at 6:30 p.m. ET and noon on Saturdays. Sign up your friends here, and your enemies here. There was about two weeks in the spring where Canadians seemed united behind the idea of building an export oil pipeline in order to spite the United States.
By Jesse Kline One of the more insidious aspects of The CIJA Report, discussed in last week's Channel Israel newsletter, is how it attempts to separate the Jewish people from their homeland and paint Zionism — the belief that Jews have the right to self-determination in their ancestral lands — as inherently racist.
First Reading writer Tristin Hopper is taking a weeklong break from his usual newsletter duties to work on a second season of Postmedia’s history podcast Canada Did What?! Thus, all this week First Reading will be revisiting the much-acclaimed first season of Canada Did What?!, in which we revisited five moments in Canadian history that you thought you knew, but probably didn’t.
View this email in your browser Welcome to your Thursday WUWA. As you've probably noticed, we're big fans of digging into the archives for some little history lessons on what's happened in Alberta in the past, especially when the same thing's happening again. Today's exhibit: new licence plates. Curated by the National Post's Tyler Dawson, What's up with Alberta? is a subscriber-exclusive email published at 5 p.m. Mountain Time on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Sign up your friends here.
TOP STORY This week, a convicted killer in Manitoba was given a jail sentence of just seven years on the grounds that, as an Indigenous man, he wasn’t as guilty as a non-Indigenous offender might have been. “The offender’s history of victimization, trauma, and cultural disenfranchisement is intricately linked to our country’s shameful legacy of colonialism and attempts at cultural genocide,” wrote provincial court Judge Geoffrey H. Bayly.
TOP STORY For months now, a consistent sentiment has emerged in Canadian opinion polls on immigration: The country has too much of it and it’s causing active harm to the economy. Canadians are even beginning to tell pollsters that they are increasingly distrustful of newcomers. The country’s turn against immigration comes in the wake of one of the most dramatic reorderings of the immigration system in our history.
By Jesse Kline When Prime Minister Mark Carney recognized a nonexistent Palestinian state at the United Nations last week, he offered Canada's "partnership in building the promise of a peaceful future," and its support for "the development of a credible peace plan, democratic governance and clear security arrangements for Palestine." A week later, like magic, the United States unveiled a plan, which was immediately accepted by Israel, to do exactly that.
View this email in your browser Curated by the National Post's own Tristin Hopper, First Reading is a Canadian politics newsletter published Monday to Thursday at 6:30 p.m. ET and noon on Saturdays. Sign up your friends here, and your enemies here. Some news from the King of Canada. According to The Telegraph, King Charles III was instrumental in convincing U.S. President Donald Trump to adopt a dramatic about-turn on the Russia-Ukraine War.