
Jarrett Hasson
60 posts





REPORT: More than a tenth of first time homebuyers nationwide now rely on parents to co-sign mortgages, according to @bankofcanada. Rate of parental co-signs has nearly tripled since 2004. blacklocks.ca/11-need-parent… @CMHC_ca @HICC_ca @GnrationSqueeze @gregorrobertson #cdnpoli

The US has a shortage of at least 10 million single-family homes, according to a new report from White House economists — a higher figure than some previous estimates from the government and the private sector bloomberg.com/news/articles/…

REPORT: More than a tenth of first time homebuyers nationwide now rely on parents to co-sign mortgages, according to @bankofcanada. Rate of parental co-signs has nearly tripled since 2004. blacklocks.ca/11-need-parent… @CMHC_ca @HICC_ca @GnrationSqueeze @gregorrobertson #cdnpoli

Our housing shortage estimate is 1 million, and it’s shrinking. This 10 million figure far exceeds all other estimates I’ve ever come across over the years.





Income inequality rises to highest level in a generation, according to @StatCan_eng. “The wealth gap grew throughout 2025 as continued strong financial market gains benefited the wealthiest…” Poorest Canadians were “negatively affected” blacklocks.ca/worst-income-g… @ESDC_GC @PrivyCouncilCA #cdnpoli

CANADA BUILDING PERMITS (MOM) (FEB) ACTUAL: -8.4% VS 4.8% PREVIOUS; EST -0.4%

Income inequality rises to highest level in a generation, according to @StatCan_eng. “The wealth gap grew throughout 2025 as continued strong financial market gains benefited the wealthiest…” Poorest Canadians were “negatively affected” blacklocks.ca/worst-income-g… @ESDC_GC @PrivyCouncilCA #cdnpoli


Income inequality rises to highest level in a generation, according to @StatCan_eng. “The wealth gap grew throughout 2025 as continued strong financial market gains benefited the wealthiest…” Poorest Canadians were “negatively affected” blacklocks.ca/worst-income-g… @ESDC_GC @PrivyCouncilCA #cdnpoli





A major constitutional showdown is now before the Supreme Court of Canada, and at its core is a simple question of who decides. Constitutional interpretation is not a straightforward exercise. Rights are stated at a high level of generality, as they must be, and don’t contain detailed instructions for their application. They must be interpreted and operationalized in the real world, and balanced in relation to other rights and other public policy objectives. Courts are not uniquely equipped to perform this task, nor were they ever meant to monopolize it. In our parliamentary democracy, legislatures have an essential role to play in that process, and that is what section 33 is for - a necessary condition of patriation and part of the constitutional design where coordinate interpretation can occur in a back and forth between courts and legislatures. The federal government has intervened in these cases to argue contrary to the clear textual basis of the Constitution that repeated invocation of the clause “irreparably impairs” a rights. Though the clause clearly prohibits the policing of its use beyond correctness of application, they argue courts should in fact be able to assess whether legislatures have used it too much. Ottawa has also argued that courts should be able to issue declarations that laws are unconstitutional even where section 33 prevents them from being struck down. A constitutional press release, if you will. Formally toothless, but plainly political in purpose and effect. And given the Court’s decision in Power, which contemplates retroactive damages for laws later found to be unconstitutional, this sort of declaratory power could become a backdoor route to financial liability as well. Given all the innovations the courts have been prone to, one would not put this past them.

PM Carney: "Many of our former strengths, which rested on our close ties with the United States, have become our weaknesses now ... And while we have overcome the initial shock of the betrayal, we must never forget the lessons it has taught us. We must take care of ourselves."


Human rights went from "firing pregnant women is bad" to "you can't disagree with us on gender ideology" in a couple of short decades. Once intended for good, these tribunals have become a threat to free expression. My feature: nationalpost.com/opinion/the-tr…



She hosted fundraisers for Justin Trudeau with CCP agents. Her daughter and her daughter’s gangster boyfriend are convicted killers. She was sanctioned by the law society in 2025. She paid a million dollars when her kid broke bail. And Carney’s invited her to events… twice? Credit originals: @AKAfeng37 and @VTmxk


She hosted fundraisers for Justin Trudeau with CCP agents. Her daughter and her daughter’s gangster boyfriend are convicted killers. She was sanctioned by the law society in 2025. She paid a million dollars when her kid broke bail. And Carney’s invited her to events… twice? Credit originals: @AKAfeng37 and @VTmxk


She hosted fundraisers for Justin Trudeau with CCP agents. Her daughter and her daughter’s gangster boyfriend are convicted killers. She was sanctioned by the law society in 2025. She paid a million dollars when her kid broke bail. And Carney’s invited her to events… twice? Credit originals: @AKAfeng37 and @VTmxk

The Liberal party has Patrick Pichette a former Senior VP of Google on stage who lives in Europe by the way, say that if Canadians want to leave Canada to work in the US they need to pay an exit tax of half a million dollars. The guy did the very thing to get a Microsoft job decades ago and paid 30 bucks. Now he wants young Canadians to be trapped here. The Liberals are nuts.




