Local
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: The outbreak of war on empathy
4 minute read 5:36 PM CSTThe commencement by some Americans of a “war on empathy,” not coincidental with the second Donald Trump administration, is shock, but not awe.
While discussing immigration on “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast last year, Elon Musk declared that “the fundamental weakness of western civilization is empathy” which people “exploit.” Adding that “we’ve got civilizational suicidal empathy going on,” he conjured up horrors of white Christian nationalist great replacement theory. It served as a dutiful call to arms, and the American political and religious right mobilized on multiple fronts.
Sample recent publications include Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion (2024) by podcaster Allie Beth Stuckey, The Sin of Empathy: Compassion and Its Counterfeits (2025) by pastor Joe Rigney, and Suicidal Empathy: Dying to be Kind (2026) by professor Gad Saad. The image on the front cover of Suicidal Empathy is a sheep holding a protest sign demanding “Free the Wolves.”
Other commanders of this ongoing culture war blitzkrieg include pastor Josh McPherson on his “Stronger Man Nation” podcast: “Empathy almost needs to be struck from the Christian vocabulary… Empathy is dangerous. Empathy is toxic. Empathy will align you with hell.”
Advertisement
Weather
Steinbach MB
0°C, Cloudy
Fraud investigation leads to drug charges
2 minute read Preview 5:11 PM CSTMusical debut packs theatre
1 minute read Preview 4:35 PM CSTCOLUMN: Viewpoint – Unwrapping Pierre Poilievre’s rhetoric
3 minute read 4:32 PM CST“After 10 years of Liberal rule Canada is more costly, and crime-ridden, dangerous, and dependent, and divided than ever before.”
Pierre Poilievre made that claim in his speech at the recent Conservative convention. It’s a scathing critique of the Liberals and paints a bleak and scary picture of our country. Are Mr. Poilievre’s claims true? I decided to find out, and perhaps, garner some perspective on his assertions.
While Canada is a costly country to live in, we need to keep in mind that it ranks only 22nd in the world as the most expensive place to make your home. It is true that some 60 percent of Canadians are worried about the current cost of living. But interestingly, I found that in 2015, as 10 years of the Conservative Stephen Harper government ended, 60 percent of Canadians were also worried about the cost of living. Not much has changed, even though the political party running the country has.
I could find no proof that crime is worse than it has ever been. Although statistics aren’t in yet for 2025, crime was down by 5.67 percent for 2024 according to the Government of Canada website and the severity of crimes committed down by 4.1 percent. Homicides and violent crimes in Canada reached an all-time high in 1975 and have plummeted 40 percent since then.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Provencher MP wrong about Trump
2 minute read 4:28 PM CSTThere may be a more useless MP than Ted Falk but I couldn’t begin to guess who it might be. This week he’s apparently miffed that Donald Trump thinks that PM Mark Carney said some things ‘that weren’t very nice.’ Because the U.S. is ‘our closest ally.’ Now I’m pretty sure Falk doesn’t write his weekly missive - sometimes it contains some pretty big words - but by God, he should at least read it before he gives it the green light.
Falk thinks we shouldn’t offend Trump. And why would anyone want to offend a president who a) said, “Canada lives because of the U.S.” b) has an administration which has been actively meeting with separatists from Alberta; c) said he’d start invading Canada’s airspace if it doesn’t buy America F-35s; d) cancelled all trade negotiations with Canada because of a TV ad he didn’t like; e) has repeatedly called Canada the 51st state. I mean I could go on but you get the drift.
Falk also pines that Trump withdrew his invitation to his ‘Board of Peace.’ An organization that Trump says, “will work to resolve global conflict …” I guess in Falk’s world he and his CPC party would love to make Canada a member of a ‘board’ with a $1 billion entry fee where Trump is the undisputed leader with full command of the money and full veto power. With members like Israel (lead by a war criminal illegally occupying Palestine and currently committing genocide), Saudi Arabia (where being gay is punishable by death) and Turkey (whose dictator Erdogan has dismantled all democratic checks and balances while controlling the judiciary and media) who wouldn’t want to join? I’m reminded of the old Groucho Marx line? “I refuse to join any club that would have me as a member.”
Thankfully, the fact that Falk is completely feckless is irrelevant, because as long as ‘Axe the Tax’ Pierre Poilievre is the leader of the CPC (and keeps winning ‘elections’ where he’s the only candidate) his party has zero chance of forming any future government.
Piney Regional Chamber of Commerce celebrates 10 years
6 minute read Preview 4:16 PM CSTSoutheast back on measles exposure list
2 minute read 3:01 PM CSTThe Southeast is back on the measle exposure list, after a flurry of updates issued in the last two weeks from public health officials.
An update issued Feb. 9 cautioned people who were at Penfor Construction in Blumenort on Jan. 31 from 10 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. to monitor symptoms until Feb. 22.
Other locations on that list include the Oak Bluff Recreation Club, Greenvalley Equipment in the RM of Stanley, Caisse Financial Group in Notre Dame, and Brandon Regional Health Centre.
Anyone who was in those locations should check their immunization records and ensure they are up to date on the measles vaccine (MMR or MMRV).
PHOTO GALLERY: Ste Anne embraces festival with Tire Toi Une Buche
1 minute read Preview 2:59 PM CSTKindness event to be held in Steinbach to promote mental health
6 minute read Preview 2:54 PM CSTDANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: The calm before the playoff storm
3 minute read Preview 12:00 PM CSTCOLUMN: Village News – Neighbours: The Red River Métis
8 minute read Preview 11:24 AM CSTLa Broquerie’s PHOTO GALLERY – A Winter Family Fun Day sees bannock, Nun Farts, and marshmallows
1 minute read Preview 8:34 AM CSTProvincial advisor leaves post overseeing Hanover School Division board
5 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:23 PM CSTLooking Glass Theatre premieres The Bellefonataine Bridegroom
2 minute read Preview Yesterday at 9:48 PM CSTPerpall aiming for first banner as Pilots coach this weekend
5 minute read Preview Yesterday at 12:00 PM CSTCOLUMN: Grey Matters – Dark in the Dark, Light in the Dark, Light in the Light
5 minute read Yesterday at 8:22 AM CST“Since God chose you to be the holy people He loves, you must clothe yourselves with tender-hearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. Make allowance for each other’s faults.” Colossians 3:12,13a
Long before clocks ruled our days and electric light pushed back the night, human life moved in quiet partnership with the sky. Morning light called us awake, drawing us back to communal life, while evening shadows invited us home again - to fires, stories, prayers, and rest. Darkness was not something to fight but to live within. In the gentle turning of light to dark and dark to light, we learned that wholeness comes not from constant brightness and striving, but from moving wisely and faithfully between light and dark.
Light and darkness move continually through our days and seasons. Neither is constant and permanent, and yet there is this nagging expectation that we should also be living on the top of the mountain in full light. Changing light and darkness ask something different of us, and each reveals a different way of being human before God and others in this world.
Beginning today with an introduction is a four-part series on discerning how to live well in our modern electric-digital community. Anxiousness and stress seem higher than ever, and we somehow need to return to God-given rhythms of life. Our friends need us to know how to walk with them when they are in a dark time, sometimes they need us just to sit with them, sometimes a small light to warm themselves by and sometimes we (the helpers) need to also rekindle our lives to keep helping them. There is a time to be Dark in the Dark, a time to be Light in the Dark, and a time to be Light in the Light. Today I will introduce these three ways of being a helpful human in our world of ups and downs and then go deeper into each one the following three weeks.
LOAD MORE