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Canada's Airlines Again Boarding Trump-Banned Passengers On U.S. Flights

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Canada’s major airlines have all confirmed they are once again boarding passengers from the seven countries President Donald Trump banned onto flights to the U.S.

Air Canada, Westjet and Porter Airlines confirmed to media and through travel advisories that passengers holding Iranian, Iraqi, Libyan, Somali, Sudanese, Syrian or Yemenese passports will be able to fly to the U.S., after a federal judge temporarily blocked Trump’s executive order on Friday.

The Department of Homeland Security said on Saturday it is no longer enforcing any part of Trump’s executive order that suspended refugee intake and banned travelers from the seven targeted countries.

air canada pearson airport
Air Canada airplanes sporting two different styles of livery at Toronto's Pearson Airport, with the Mississauga skyline in the background, Wednesday July 20, 2016. (Photo: Getty Images)

That move reportedly launched a race by travellers from the affected countries to get into the United States before the temporary block expires or is overturned.

Trump blasted “so-called” U.S. District Court Judge James Robart on Twitter over the weekend for the judge’s decision to block the executive order.




As a number of news articles pointed out, Judge Robart is an appointee of President George W. Bush, and has a reputation for fairness and concern for children.

The Trump administration took Robart’s ruling directly to an appeals court, which early on Sunday declined to overturn Robart’s order.

However, airlines are keeping in mind the possibility that Trump’s travel ban could be back in force.

Porter Airlines is advising passengers to check for the latest details on the travel ban “immediately prior to their flight.” Westjet says it will continue to offer refunds or flight re-bookings for affected passengers, should the ban resume.

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Melissa McCarthy Couldn't Be Funnier As Sean Spicer On 'Saturday Night Live'

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After gifting the world with Alec Baldwin's portrayal of U.S. President Donald Trump, "Saturday Night Live" has managed to outdo itself.

This week, Melissa McCarthy left audiences in stitches as White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.



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Rolls Royce Phantom VII's Starry Sky Is The Trippiest Car Feature Ever

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The last of the Rolls Royce Phantom VIIs rolled off the assembly line in January, but before it goes, we thought you'd enjoy seeing what you missed out on all these years by not being insanely rich.

Turns out, you missed out on a really trippy ride.

rolls royce phantom

Here's the interior of a 2016 Phantom, complete with custom-designed fibre-optic lights that make it feel like you're travelling through the stars.

Each car's light pattern is unique and arranged by hand.

rolls royce phantom

"The Starlight Headliner’s unique effect is achieved by fitting delicate fibre optic strands at varying depths and at different angles – to cause light to escape in multiple directions and at different intensities," Rolls-Royce says.

"The brightness of each ‘star’ can be adjusted to suit your mood: bright enough to relax and read under, or dim enough to create a subtle and relaxing glow."

rolls royce phantom

Each starry night has between 800 and 1,600 stars, and takes two Rolls Royce craftspeople nine to 17 hours to complete, the company says.

Given the car's US$400,000-plus sticker price, that sort of attention to detail isn't really too much to ask, is it?

rolls royce phantom

Apparently Rolls owners have been driving around with this feature for a while now. Who knew? The super-rich sure can keep a secret.

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Canadian Kids Explain Why They Protest

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TORONTO — A recent vigil in Toronto to honour victims of the Quebec mosque shooting included the standard rallying cries for unity and impassioned speeches denouncing hate.

It also featured a toddler wailing at the back of the room, a trio of grade-schoolers scooting through the crowd in search of a clear spot to sit side-by-side, and several droopy-eyed youngsters battling sleep on their parents' laps as bed-time came and went.

Kids seem to have become a regular fixture at the current wave of marches, demonstrations and political protests across the continent — and many parents pledge to make political action an ongoing part of their lives.

"If this isn't an appropriate place for kids, what is? This is what we're going to have to deal with in our lives,'' 12-year-old Matthew Zoric-Jacobs said following the vigil at a local mosque, where hundreds of neighbours gathered on a Tuesday evening to decry Islamophobia.

families protest toronto
Joe Jacobs, left, stands with his wife Sarah Latha, right, and their children Sumayya Iman Malik, Matthew Zoric-Jacobs, and Yaseen Malik after a vigil in support of the Quebec City mosque shooting victims at the Islamic Information and Dawah Centre International in Toronto on Jan. 31, 2017.

"I have homework, I know it's 9:20 at night, but I know I have to be here. It's important.''

His step-sister Sumayya Iman Malik said she, too, felt compelled to do her part.

"I'm in this community and if this is how I'm feeling I want to stand up for my rights,'' said the 12-year-old.

It's easy to get down by watching the news, added Malik, a Muslim girl who said anti-Islamic rhetoric has made her "feel really sad.'' But participating in these events "makes me feel like I'm part of a change,'' she added.


"I have homework, I know it's 9:20 at night, but I know I have to be here. It's important.''


And there seems to be no shortage of events to take part in, especially in the United States where an order banning travellers from seven majority-Muslim countries has stoked even more anger against President Donald Trump.

In Toronto, hundreds of protesters chanted outside the shuttered U.S. Consulate to protest Trump's executive order on immigration last month, while thousands turned up for the Women's March the weekend before.




Countless more demonstrations have been popping up across the country, in the unlikeliest of places featuring the unlikeliest of participants. Case in point: a 15-person Women's March in the tiny fishing village of Sandy Cove, N.S., population: 65.

Lesley Wood, an expert in social movements at York University, said this surge in spontaneous political action is partly spurred by online media, which offers the double whammy of both promoting and creating social pressure to take part in big protests.

"When you get that sort of level of mobilization, you're going to get people who are less the regular suspects. So it feels safer, it feels urgent, it feels like it's more normalized,'' said Wood, adding that the speed at which protests can be organized also leaves little time to arrange child care.

"You're going to be more likely to see people who don't normally protest, including people bringing their children.''

A greater proportion of the population now goes to a protest every once in a while compared to in the 1960s, when radical activism was actually driven by "a very small proportion of the population,'' she added.

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Demonstrators protesting U.S. President Donald Trump's executive order on immigration march in front of the U.S. consulate in Toronto on Saturday.

In Toronto, that includes 54-year-old Phil Rees, who said he attended his first political demonstration, about climate change, a few years ago but is unsure whether the tactic actually had an impact. He turned up at last week's vigil and the Women's March before that with his 12-year-old daughter, mostly drawn by the hope such events will offer her a sense of empowerment.

"I hemmed and hawed for a long time about the value of demonstrations and marches and things like that and I thought it really was time for me to try it out personally,'' said Rees, who runs a small spray foam insulation business.

"What I'm learning so far is that it seems to be a good thing to be out and about with other people who feel similarly and want to express that. So I think it's a good thing for my daughter to be in involved in group activities like that.''

womens march toronto
A girl is shown at a protest in Toronto on Saturday.

Wood, a sociology professor, said family participation does send a big message to politicians: average Canadians are outraged, not just the radical fringe. And that, in turn, can draw even more families to join in protest.

"On some level it means that you care. And if you care, you protest,'' she said.

Whether children are able to grasp the issue at hand depends on various things, including the age and interest of the child, added Wood, who started bringing her 12-year-old to protests when he was just eight weeks old.


"If you care, you protest.''


If your child is bored and clearly not interested, it's time to leave the gathering, she advised.

After an hour of speeches at the Toronto vigil, nine-year-old Yaseen Malik said he understood the issues — but nevertheless failed to recount what was said.

Still, his mother Sarah Latha said she wouldn't think of attending a protest without Matthew, Sumayya and Yaseen.

"Being politically involved is a part of who I am. It's a part of who the children are too, through me,'' said the 38-year-old, whose South African-born mother introduced her to the anti-apartheid struggle as a child.

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People attend a vigil for the victims of a mosque shooting in Quebec City on Jan. 30. 2017 in Montreal. (Photo: Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

"I know that sometimes people are critical of adults and parents who expose their children to politics but in our home it has been a part of instilling in them a sense of empowerment and hope. That they don't need to feel helpless.''

She said social media has made this more of an imperative.

"They're exposed to stuff before I am even exposed to it so I don't have a choice anymore. And I think for me it's been about equipping them to navigate just how complex the world is.''

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Audi's Super Bowl Ad Calls Out The Gender Pay Gap

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Audi is using its Super Bowl LI ad about a soapbox derby racer as a literal soapbox to sound off on gender pay equality.

The car manufacturer's 60-second spot, titled "Daughter," shows a father watching his daughter crush her male competitors in a cart race.

"What do I tell my daughter?" the dad muses. "Do I tell her that her grandpa is worth more than her grandma? ... That despite her education, her drive, her skills, her intelligence, she will automatically be valued as less than every man she ever meets?"



It's a heart wrenching feminist message, just two weeks after millions of people around the world marched in support of women's rights.

At the end of the ad, Audi writes that it is committed to "equal pay for equal work."




The ad's message has riled up some on social media, who seem confused over whether or not the gender pay gap is real (spoiler: it is).

A 2016 report by the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee found that on average, women in the U.S. earn 21 per cent less than men. That gap is even worse for women of colour. Black women earn 60 cents on the dollar compared to their male counterparts, and for Latina women that number drops to 55 cents.

The committee also found that as much as 40 per cent of that gap can be attributed to outright discrimination. The rest comes from factors like women taking maternity leave, or choosing lower-paying jobs due to varying economic and social forces. The gap was also found to widen — not narrow — as women get older.

Audi hired a female director, Aoife McArdle, for the televised spot, which is set to air during the third quarter. But Audi itself might be lacking when it comes to representation — out of Audi's top 14 executives, only two are women.

"Daughter" isn't the only political Super Bowl commercial this year. Other companies, including Budweiser and 84 Lumber, are using their spot to focus on immigration.

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Experts Weigh If The Trump 'Fluke' Could Happen In Canada

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OTTAWA — Kevin O'Leary is a businessman, reality TV star, photography buff and self-professed airplane geek.

He is not, however, an Ottawa politician.

And he's banking on that to get him elected as leader of the federal Conservative party and then, prime minister of Canada.

"I think the body politic in Canada is like the rest of the world. They're tired of the B.S., they're tired of the politicians B.S.-ing them and spinning them and they want an operator,'' O'Leary said in a recent interview with The Canadian Press.

Do we?

kevin oleary
Kevin O'Leary makes his debut at the Conservative leadership candidates' debate, in Halifax on Saturday.

A claim of being an outsider, an operator, was partly what propelled Donald Trump to victory in the U.S. presidential election. Ever since, Canadians have been consumed with the question of whether what happened there could happen here.

Over the coming weeks The Canadian Press will dive into that question in stories that seek to explore the extent to which conditions exist in Canada for what happened in the U.S., and how Canada's political system is evolving as a result.

The starting point is figuring out exactly what happened.


"I think the body politic in Canada is like the rest of the world. They're tired of the B.S.”
— Kevin O'Leary


"We tend to have this desire to be able to express it in this grand way, that something shifted,'' said Clark Banack, a political science professor at Brock University who has extensively researched populist movements.

"But I resist the temptation to define it in any one way.''

The word most commonly applied to Trump's victory is "populist'' — a political term for people rising up for change when an elite class is seen to be oppressing the majority.

"People who have fallen behind badly, who see no prospects for a better future, so they are fearful and angry and resentful; and that triggers and engages receptivity to certain types of political approaches that normally wouldn't be that resonant,'' is how Canadian pollster Frank Graves described what happened in both Trump's victory and the stunning upset in a British referendum last summer to leave the European Union.

trump
U.S. President Donald Trump holds a meeting with small business leaders at the White House in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 30, 2017. (Photo: Carlos Barria/Reuters)

What people are receptive to, Graves said, is a leader who proposes a decisive set of answers to the questions plaguing them.

For people who feel left out by globalization, it's a promise to end free trade. For people concerned about illegal immigration, it's thicker borders.

What happened in the U.S., argues Banack, is that Trump was able to speak to many different constituencies at the same time and rally them enough that they were willing to overlook the elements of his personality, his politics and his policy they may have found offensive.

"It is unusual for all of these constituencies to come together,'' he said.

"It's almost a fluke in my estimation.''

Whether the fear and anger can be harnessed into change also depends on the political system. In England, it was a referendum on staying or leaving the European Union that allowed for those frustrated with the status quo to let off steam.

Political system is an important factor

In the U.S., what clinched the presidency for Trump was the system as well. He failed to win the popular vote, but succeeded in winning the majority of the electoral college vote and that's what is needed to win the presidency.




So if fear plus anger plus the political system create the conditions for populist-driven change, where are things in Canada?

Broadly, the consensus among political scientists and economists seems to be that factors underlying fear and anger do exist in Canada — but nowhere near U.S. levels.

Take intergenerational income mobility, the extent to which differences in income are transmitted from one generation to the next.

A study by the Conference Board of Canada found this country's record is far better than the U.S.: if a family here earns $10,000 less income than the average, the children, when they become adults, will earn $1,900 less than average. But in the U.S., children would earn $4,700 less.

"America, if it stays on its current trajectory, you're going to have social mobility equivalent to that of Victorian England,'' said Craig Alexander, chief economist at the Conference Board.

"Whereas in Canada, we have pretty good social mobility and that's one of the reasons I think we're at less risk of the sort of backlash that you've seen in the United States.''




What about fear?

In the U.S., Trump harnessed fears about border security and terrorism to capture votes.

"In exit polls, people who rated the economy the most important issue broke for (Hillary) Clinton, not for Trump. Trump won among those more concerned about immigration and terrorism,'' the D.C.-based Brookings Institution wrote in its post-election analysis.

A July 2016 poll by the Associated Press found that 53 per cent of Americans thought the U.S. should allow fewer Syrian refugees to enter the country, at a time when the level was set at 10,000.

In Canada, a January 2016 poll by the federal Immigration Department found 53 per cent of Canadians agreed with the Liberal government resettling 25,000 Syrian refugees.

Immigration fears may be growing in Canada

But there is a strong undercurrent of opposition to immigration, some of which has boiled up since Trump's win.

The week of the U.S. election, for instance, a local newspaper in Vancouver published a letter to the editor from someone bemoaning the effect of immigration on their neighbourhood.

"The community of the West End and the gay community are gone, replaced by people from third world countries and refugees who refuse to learn the language and become a part of our mosaic community. I go into stores, and no one speaks English,'' read the letter in the Westender.

"Don't get me wrong, but it's pretty sad when you are a minority in the place of your birth.''

O'Leary must win party leadership

Then there's the Canadian political system.

Any leader seeking to upend the status quo would first have to secure leadership of a party. Currently, two parties are on the hunt for new masters, the Conservatives and NDP.

Leadership races are hard for outsiders to penetrate because only card-carrying members can vote, argues Tom Flanagan, the Calgary-based political scientist who was involved in the earliest days of the last federal political movement in Canada that could be considered populism: the Reform party.

A new party would be the only way a populism movement in Canada could gain traction, he argues.

Reform sprung up in response to fear about the breakup of the country due to a rise in Quebec sovereignty and the failed Meech Lake accord. The new party drew from anger over the National Energy Program and federal deficits, combined with the belief existing political parties weren't speaking for the West's needs.


"If you have that direct relationship with your base, you can ask them to do extraordinary things for you.”
— Kevin O'Leary


But today, while the deficit is concerning to some, it's nowhere near the levels of the early 1980s and 1990s. And Canadians aren't afraid of things like illegal immigration or terrorism to the same extent as their U.S. neighbours. Nor is there some existential national threat like the unity crises, Flanagan said.

"I just don't see the conditions.''

Still, a global poll this past January by Ipsos found 56 per cent of Canadians surveyed felt traditional parties and politicians don't care about people "like me.''

O'Leary says harnessing that kind of sentiment is central to his campaign.

He reads 100 comments or so a day posted to his social media accounts, he says, and feels as though he is drawing support from a wide swath of previously disconnected and disaffected voters. In doing so, he's growing the base of the Conservative Party, he said.

"If you have that direct relationship with your base, you can ask them to do extraordinary things for you,'' he said.

"And that's how this journey is going to go.''

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84 Lumber's Super Bowl Ad Had Ending Deemed 'Too Controversial' To Air

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A Pennsylvania-based construction company is using its 90-second Super Bowl spot to send a powerful message about immigration.

84 Lumber is set to air an edited version of its commercial just before half-time during Sunday's game. The original version showed a Mexican mother and daughter's migration journey before coming face-to-face with a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico.

It was censored for being "too controversial," according to The New York Times.

The new ad, titled "A Journey Begins," will show the beginning of the pair's journey, and will prompt viewers to visit the company's website to see how the story ends.




Fox's online advertising guidelines state time cannot be sold for "viewpoint or advocacy of controversial issues."

“We really believe in the message behind the spot so strongly, and we didn’t want to leave it on the editing room floor,” Amy Smiley, 84 Lumber's marketing director, told Pittsburgh Business Times.

The company plans to release the full original ad on its website at half-time.

The version TV viewers will see “does not have the ending we originally wanted, but the message has not changed,”Rob Shapiro, chief client officer at ad agency Brunner, said in an interview with The Washington Post. “Our message is that America is the land of opportunity and 84 Lumber is the company of opportunity.”

Some viewers have accused the ad of advocating for illegal immigration, but the company says that's not the case.



Filmmaker Cole Webley, who directed the spot, said in a video that he wanted to work with a company willing to speak out for the right thing, even if the message may be uncomfortable.

"In our industry, it's really rare to have a client put their name associated with such a bold statement," Webley said, in a video posted to 84 Lumber's Facebook page.

The statement was an expensive one.

According to Ad Week, 30-second Super Bowl commercial slots went for US$5 million this year, meaning 84 Lumber may have paid $15 million for a single video after spending just $736,000 on marketing for the entirety of 2015.

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'Hamilton' Singers Add 'Sisterhood' To 'America The Beautiful' Lyrics During Super Bowl 2017

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It may be Super Bowl Sunday, but the Schuyler sisters from "Hamilton" want you to know they're here for the sisterhood.

The three original performers from the hit Broadway musical took the field in Houston to sing "America The Beautiful" before the official kickoff. And Jasmine Cephas Jones, Renée Elise Goldsberry and Phillipa Soo took a stance for feminism while they were at it, by adding a little something extra to the historical song.

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"And crown thy good with brotherhood ... and sisterhood," the trio belted out.

The added lyrics were met with cheers and applauds from crowds both in the stadium and fans watching at home.

Twitter users praised the performers and called the women "heroes."
















A few commenters said the change hit a sour note:




But their updated version did win rave reviews from "Hamilton" creator, Lin Manuel-Miranda:




And seemed much better received than that time the 'Lone Wolf' tenor, Remigio Pereira, altered the lyrics of 'O Canada' to include the controversial phrase 'All lives matter.'




Watch a clip of the performance below.






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Internet Tax Widely Opposed By Canadians, But GST On Netflix Not So Bad

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Canadians are opposed to the federal Liberals instituting a new tax on Internet and mobile services to pay for Canadian content, but a plurality would be okay with paying sales tax on their Netflix service, a new poll finds.

The poll from IRG, carried out for consumer advocacy group OpenMedia, found 70 per cent of respondents were opposed to a new tax on internet and cellphone bills, with 51 per cent strongly opposed. Only 14 per cent backed it.

melanie joly
Heritage Minister Melanie Joly held consultations last fall on the future of Canadian media in a digital world. (Photo: The Canadian Press)

During consultations last fall, Heritage Minister Melanie Joly heard from media industry representatives who argued for a tax on the Internet to cover the cost of funding Canadian content. Revenue for CanCon is drying up in an era when traditional Canadian media is competing in a global Internet.

A majority of Canadians back the idea that the federal government should create a new source of revenue to pay for CanCon, the IRG poll found. Fifty-three per cent agreed, with 20 per cent opposed.

Canadians are more responsive to the idea of extending GST/PST or HST sales taxes to streaming services such as Netflix. Forty-seven per cent say they would agree to this, with 29 per cent opposed.

internet tax netflix tax poll
Chart: Innovative Research Group

Foreign-based streaming services are technically subject to sales tax on their Canadian sales, but no system has ever been established to collect the tax.

A briefing prepared for Heritage Minister Melanie Joly last month suggested expanding the sales tax to cover Netflix. It argued that not charging a sales tax on foreign content services like U.S.-based Netflix is unfair because it places domestic competitors at a disadvantage.

It also “represents a significant loss of potential tax revenue for government,” the briefing stated.

bill morneau
Finance Minister Bill Morneau's department has been adamant it is not planning to implement taxes on the Internet. (Photo: Chris Helgren/Reuters)

Joly held consultations last fall where she heard from media industry representatives who argued, among other things, for an Internet tax or at least a sales tax on streaming.

But the Department of Finance has been adamant that no such taxes are in the works. A spokesperson for Finance Minister Bill Morneau told HuffPost Canada last month that expanding the GST to Netflix “is not part of our plan.”

Speaking before the Canadian Media Producers Association last week, Joly said she heard from Canadians that they want all media providers to be treated equally, but they don’t want to see their Internet bills go up.

"We have to bear in mind that Canadians are anxious about their cost of living," Joly said, as quoted by the CBC.

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NFL Turns Adorable Babies Into Football Legends For Super Bowl Commercial

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Super Bowl? More like, Super Cute.

For their Super Bowl commercial this year, the National Football League recruited some of America's cutest baby boys to portray past Super Bowl legends.





To the sweet tune of "You’re the Inspiration" by Chicago, the ad celebrates coaches like Vince Lombardi, who led the Green Bay Packers to victory in the first two Super Bowls, and three-time Super Bowl champ Mike Ditka, who won the game as a player, an assistant coach and a head coach.

Iconic players like Marshawn Lynch, who won in 2014 with the Seattle Seahawks, and oh-so-stylish Von Miller, the MVP of Super Bowl 50, are also featured.





"Born from greatness," the commercial states. "Who's next?"

And even cuter than the ad itself? The behind the scenes footage.



Last year, the NFL released a similar ad showing "Super Bowl Babies": babies born nine months after the Super Bowl was won in their city (so yes, babies conceived on the night the Vince Lombardi trophy was won by their parents' favourite team).

Cheeky, NFL!

Watch the 2017 NFL Super Bowl commercial in the video above!

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New York Subway Commuters Scrub Swastikas Away Using Hand Sanitizer And Tissue

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A group of New York City subway commuters joined forces over the weekend to scrub a subway car clean of anti-Semitic graffiti.

Gregory Locke was one of the passengers on the train Saturday evening, and described his disbelief at finding swastikas and other hateful language scrawled on "every advertisement and every window" of the car.

In a Facebook post, Locke said he noticed the graffiti after he boarded the train.

"The train was silent as everyone stared at each other, uncomfortable and unsure what to do," he wrote.

"Nazi symbolism. On a public train. In New York City. In 2017."




Finally, one man stood up and announced that they could probably erase the markings with the right supplies.

A number of people began rifling through their bags, searching for hand sanitizer and tissues, and "within about two minutes, all the Nazi symbolism was gone."

gregory locke
A commuter gets to work with hand sanitizer and tissue. (Photo: Gregory Locke/Facebook)


The New York Police Department told Reuters it is investigating a possible hate crime after the subway graffiti was reported on Sunday.

Former first daughter Chelsea Clinton was among thousands online who applauded the quick-thinking commuters.

"We will not let hate win," she tweeted early Sunday, with a screengrab of Locke's Facebook post. "And, another reason to carry hand sanitizer."




New York Governor Andrew Cuomo also condemned the markings, and shared a photo of a graffiti swastika that someone had drawn over to form a box with the letters L-O-V-E.

"This is what New Yorkers do - we turn hate into love. And we wont back down - not now, not ever," he tweeted.




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Nicki Minaj Calls Shoe Deisgner Giuseppe Zanotti Racist During Twitter Feud

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Nicki Minaj isn't holding anything back.

In a one-sided Twitter feud with shoe designer Giuseppe Zanotti, the "Super Bass" rapper called him racist and disrespectful.

In a series of tweets, the 34-year-old called out Zanotti for naming a sneaker after her (this happened back in 2011), but not wanting to further collaborate with her on other projects.

"This is wonderful. #GiuseppeZanotti seems to think it's ok to name his sneakers after me but his PR says they won't take our call. Lol," she wrote on Twitter last week.




nicki minaj

The "Anaconda" artist added she met the designer years ago, and wore the shoes on the cover of Cosmo magazine.

(However, after some digging, it appears she actually wore them for a shoot in Glamour magazine in 2011).

She also gave the designer a shoutout in a verse ("monster Giuseppe heel/that’s the monster shoe") in Kanye West's "Monster" in 2010.






The rapper said Zanotti recently worked with other artists on capsule collections, but when her team reached out to the designer, they were told "they're not taking our call."











"Lil black girl can inspire u but ain't worth a collection," she tweeted.




"#RunMeMyCHECK #GiuseppeWhatsGood I got time today. barbz trend this cuz he gon learn today. The racism & disrespect won't b tolerated," she continued.

"Don't care about the money. It's just the disrespect. You're not taking MY call? Lol. Give some money to charity in my name or smthn."






giuseppe zanotti
Giuseppe Zanotti and Portia Freeman attend the Giuseppe Zanotti London flagship store launch on October 26, 2016 in London, England.

As of press time, Zanotti has not made a statement, but Teen Vogue notes the designer has worked with other stars of colour including Jennifer Lopez, Beyoncé, G-Dragon, Rihanna, and Zayn Malik.

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Liberal Government's Economic Council Recommends Raising Retirement Age

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OTTAWA — The Trudeau government's economic advisory council is recommending Ottawa raise the age of retirement eligibility and explore a national child-care program as ways to deliver a much-needed participation boost for the country's workforce.

The proposals were among a collection of new suggestions released Monday by the government's hand-picked growth council.

The ideas fall under five themes and are widely expected to help the government frame parts of the upcoming federal budget.

The advisers zeroed in on what they called a need to increase labour-force participation from under-represented groups such as indigenous people, lower-income earners, women with kids and older workers.


"We are for more able-bodied Canadians to work longer in the system."


To encourage older Canadians to work longer, the council recommended the ages of eligibility for old age security and the Canada Pension Plan be "recalibrated and increased" to address the impacts of the country's aging society and longer life expectancies.

The idea contrasts with the Liberal government's move to reverse a controversial decision taken by the former Conservative government and return old age security eligibility to 65 from 67.

Raising the eligibility age so that it closes the gap between Canada and industrialized countries with the highest labour participation rate among workers 55 and over could add $56 billion to the gross domestic product, the council's report said.

The document also suggested Ottawa allow old age security and the CPP deferrals beyond age 70 and make deferrals past 65 more attractive.

The council's chair stressed Monday that any policy changes should consider the ability of some older Canadians to continue working, particularly those in physically demanding jobs.

bill morneau
The 14 members of the growth panel were selected by Finance Minister Bill Morneau to help advise Ottawa on how to boost long-term economic growth. (Photo: The Canadian Press)

"We are for more able-bodied Canadians to work longer in the system," said Dominic Barton, who is the managing director of global consulting giant McKinsey & Co.

"For those who can, we do think we should look at incentives to try and encourage them to be able to work."

The report also proposed boosting the economy by raising labour-force participation for women with children through the possible creation of a subsidized national child-care program similar to the Quebec model.

The other proposals released Monday ranged from turning Canada into a trade hub, to unlocking more potential from key industries such as the agricultural sector, to boosting innovation as a way to lift productivity.

Another idea aims to help workers upgrade their skills to better match the rapidly changing needs of the labour market with help from a new, arm's-length national organization. The report warned that nearly half of Canadian jobs are at high risk of being affected by future technological change, such as automation.

The report recommended Ottawa invest $100 million in each of the next five years to establish a "FutureSkills Lab" that would develop new approaches to skills training.

Feds expected to include proposals in budget

The suggestions also include steps to make Canada more innovative as a way to drive productivity — by improving access to capital for promising firms and ensuring procurement policies help support fast-growing businesses.

The council laid out a strategy to make the most of what it sees as vast untapped potential in several key Canadian sectors by identifying and removing obstacles such as regulatory hurdles.

It recommended a pilot project for the agriculture and food industry, which it said could produce material economic gains for Canada.

The report also urged expanding trade by forging closer ties with the United States, Mexico, China, Japan and India, as well as through greater investments in trade-related infrastructure, such as ports and highways.

"Much like 'tools in a tool kit,' these recommendations can be used in concert and with strategic intent to dramatically accelerate growth," the group said in its report.

"Realizing such an ambitious aspiration, amid rapid economic and societal change, will require focused, persistent and concerted action."

The experts reaffirmed their long-term objective to "jolt" the economy. They also have a goal to help add $15,000 to the annual pre-tax incomes of Canadian households, above their current projections, by 2030.

justin trudeau attentat quebec
The Trudeau government is widely expected to implement at least some of the council's suggestions in its spring budget. (Photo: Reuters)

The 14 members of the growth panel, who have backgrounds in business and academia, were selected by Finance Minister Bill Morneau to help advise Ottawa on how to boost long-term economic growth.

The Trudeau government is widely expected to implement at least some — and perhaps many — of the council's suggestions in its spring budget, which will be tabled in the coming weeks.

The prescriptions come as the economy struggles to crawl out of a prolonged slow-growth rut.

Over the last two years, Canada has absorbed significant economic blows from the steep decline in commodity prices and a global downturn.

The Liberal government is now drawing up its second budget under added pressure of highly uncertain economic conditions following the election of President Donald Trump.

Last fall, the council provided prescriptions for Ottawa on attracting more talent through immigration, increasing infrastructure investments and luring more foreign investment.

Ottawa appeared to agree with many of the group's suggestions. About two weeks later, Morneau tabled a fall economic statement that contained new policy directions featuring many elements of the council's proposals.

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Andrew Scheer Asks Supporters If 'Decline Of Traditional Values' Is Most Pressing Issue

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A Conservative leadership hopeful is asking supporters if they think the most pressing issue in Canada is the “decline of traditional values” or “out of control political correctness.”

andrew scheer
Andrew Scheer speaks at a Conservative Party of Canada leadership forum in Winnipeg on Jan. 19, 2017. (Photo: John Woods/CP)

The campaign team of Andrew Scheer sent out a survey Sunday to test opinions on different topics — from whether a carbon tax can really help fight climate change to the Saskatchewan MP’s push to see property rights added to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.





Perhaps the most intriguing question asks supporters to choose what they see as the “most important issue facing Canada today.”

Ten other issues are listed in addition to the ones dealing with “traditional values” and “political correctness,” including:

  • Immigration

  • Environment and climate change

  • Terrorism

  • Health care funding

  • Carbon taxes

  • "Weak economy”

  • Crime and safety

  • The notion that taxes are too high

  • "Lack of leadership"

  • Trade


andrew scheer
Screengrab from the Scheer campaign survey.

Later, the survey asks if supporters consider “social issues” as more significant or equally as important as those dealing with the economy or foreign affairs.

The Huffington Post Canada reached out to Scheer’s campaign to explain what it means by the “decline of traditional values” and “out of control political correctness.”

Nancy Bishay, a spokesperson for Scheer's campaign, says the topics came from conversations the MP has been having with Canadians.

"We just chose the top few and put them out there for others to give their opinions," Bishay told HuffPost in an email.

andrew scheer

Scheer, 37, is known as a social conservative and has won the support of many like-minded MPs. Yet he pledged at the start of his bid that he will not reopen debates on abortion or same-sex marriage if he becomes prime minister.

Scheer told AM980 in December that, under his leadership, social conservatives will be permitted to vote their conscience on moral issues but should not expect to get “every policy wish that they’d like.”

“I have always voted pro-life, and that is a core conviction that I have,” Scheer said. “Our policy also says that a Conservative government will not introduce legislation on that issue, so I respect that.”

Though Scheer voted against gay marriage, he did not vote on a contentious motion in 2012 asking to study when life begins — largely seen as an attempt to revive the abortion debate — because he was serving as House Speaker at the time.

Voted against transgender rights bill

Scheer voted against the Liberal government’s doctor-assisted dying legislation last year, as did leadership rivals Lisa Raitt, Maxime Bernier, Steven Blaney, Erin O’Toole and Brad Trost.

But Scheer and Trost were the only two Tory leadership candidates to vote against the Liberals’ transgender rights bill last October, which seeks to make it illegal under the Canadian Human Rights Act to discriminate on the basis of gender identity or expression.

Chong, Bernier, Raitt, Blaney and Deepak Obhrai supported the legislation, which easily passed second reading by a vote of 248 to 40.

All 40 votes against came from the Tory bench. Thirteen of the MPs who voted against the transgender rights bill have already endorsed Scheer.

Conservatives will pick their next leader on May 27 using a ranked-ballot system.

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Halifax Police Won't March In Pride Parade Due To 'National Debate'

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HALIFAX — Moving to avoid a Toronto-style conflict, Halifax's police force says it will not participate in the city's Pride parade this year.

Halifax Regional Police said the decision was made after several months of discussions with Halifax Pride, and took into consideration the "national debate" about law enforcement involvement in such events.

Chief Jean-Michel Blais said the police service might have contributed to divisions in the Pride community had it participated in the parade.

"We recognize that as a result of what we've seen elsewhere in the country, specifically in Toronto, as well as what we've heard here locally, that there were some concerns about police presence in the parade," said Blais at a news conference Monday.

halifax pride parade 2016Revellers participate in the annual Halifax Pride parade in Halifax on Saturday, July 23, 2016. (Photo: Darren Calabrese/CP)

"In our view, stepping away temporarily from the parade will best support the LGBT2Q+ to help for allow for meaningful discussion of the issue."

Last month, Pride Toronto members voted to ostensibly ban official police floats from marches and parades, adopting a list of demands put forward by that city's chapter of Black Lives Matter.

The list of requests from the advocacy group has been the source of controversy and polarization within the community since the 2016 Pride parade, during which the group staged a half-hour sit-in to present their list of demands.

Halifax Pride executive director Adam Reid said he believes the Halifax force is the first in Canada to take such an approach.

halifax pride police
Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer Dave Thibeau, right, embraces his niece Angele Thibeau, who is gay, after the two saw each other at the 2016 Halifax Pride parade. (Photo: Darren Calabrese/CP)

"I think it demonstrates that (Halifax Regional Police) is a partner that understands community concerns," said Reid, although he would not elaborate on what those concerns are specifically.

"It's a debate that's going on locally and across the country ... and I think it's a really great opportunity for the community, no matter what they think of the decision, to take a look at what that debate is and examine everyone's point of view."

The force said it would be involved in other Pride activities, to be determined through consultation with the community, such as a barbecue or public lecture.

Uniformed officers have participated in the annual Pride parade for at least the last 10 years, said Blais.


"It's a debate that's going on locally and across the country..."


He said he will still be walking in this year's parade with other Halifax Regional Municipality officials in a T-shirt or golf shirt emblazoned with the force's logo. He added that other officers are welcome to participate in the parade in plain clothes.

The force's future participation in parades will be assessed on an ongoing basis, he said.

Last year's Toronto parade ground to a halt and only resumed when Pride Toronto's then-executive director Matthieu Chantelois signed the list of demands that included better representation for racialized communities during Pride events, and a ban on police floats in future parades.

He later told the media that he only did so in order to get the event moving again. Chantelois resigned about a month later amid allegations of racism and harassment in the workplace.

Pride Toronto issued an apology in September for what it described as a "history of anti-blackness" and "repeated marginalization of the marginalized," pledging at that time to honour the promises made to Black Lives Matter.

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Jess Herbst, New Hope, Texas Mayor, Reveals She's Transgender

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A Texas town’s name may now seem especially resonant after its mayor went public about a big personal change.

Jess Herbst leads the town of New Hope, a small town north of Dallas.

But up until recently, residents knew her as Jeff. In an open letter, she came out as transgender.

"As your mayor I must tell you about something that has been with me since my earliest memories," she said.

Two years ago, with her wife and children's support, she started hormone replacement therapy, she wrote on the town’s website.

jess herbst
Jess Herbst lived with her secret for many years, but when she was appointed mayor of New Hope, Texas, she realized she had to come out. (Photo: JessHerbst.com via WDAF)

“As far as I know, I am the first openly transgender mayor on record in the state of Texas; there could be others who never came out,” the 58-year-old told The New York Times on Wednesday.

The Texas Observer confirmed that not only is she the state's first openly transgender mayor, but the first elected official.

She wrote on New Hope’s website that she expects it will take some time for people to adjust to calling her Jess instead of Jeff, and isn’t particular about the pronoun they use.

After posting the statement Jan. 23, she attended her first town council meeting dressed as a woman, and everyone was supportive, she told the newspaper.

She's also started a blog to chronicle her journey.

Herbst has been involved in town politics for years, according to her statement, but planned to step down from her position as elected alderman when her transition became visible, she told Fortune.

jess herbst
Herbst attended her first town council meeting dressed as a woman at the end of January, and said no one made a fuss. (Photo: JessHerbst.com via WDAF)

But then the mayor died, and she was appointed as a replacement last May.

"At that point I realized I couldn’t be mayor of this town and have a secret," she told Fortune.

She said that even as a small child, she felt different from her peers. She would wear her mother’s clothes in a locked bedroom, not knowing exactly why.

Caitlyn Jenner, the Olympic gold medallist who came out on national TV in 2015, was part of her inspiration.

Jenner released a statement to Fortune in support of Herbst, saying she was "so happy" for her.


"I realized I couldn’t be mayor of this town and have a secret."


"Everyone's journey is unique and different,” Jenner said.

Texas still isn't the safest place to be openly transgender.

In most parts of the state, it’s legal to discriminate against people on the basis of gender identity and sexual orientation, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, and 90 per cent of transgender Texans say they’ve been mistreated at work.

But two-thirds of the state’s residents would support an anti-discrimination law, according to the Texas ACLU.

Governing Republicans also put forward a bill in January that would force transgender people to use bathrooms and change rooms in public schools and government buildings that correspond to the sex on their birth certificate.

jess herbst
She's received a lot of support online since coming out. (Photo: Jess Herbst/Facebook)

Herbst, for her part, has also received a lot of support from the public. She wrote on Facebook Saturday that she can’t respond to all the messages she’s received.

"Your comments have humbled me, your high praise is undeserved. I am just another human being, and not particularly unique," she wrote.

"I am doing what each and every one of us desires, to be ourselves."

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Canada Stands To ‘Benefit Most' If Trump Cuts Work Visas: Report

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Canada is far and away the most preferred destination for high-skilled workers in the U.S. looking for alternatives in the age of Trump, research from job search site Indeed suggests.

And that means Canada’s talent-starved tech industry could find a much-needed injection of new blood, if President Donald Trump goes ahead with a plan to limit the number of H1-B visas — or possibly even without the move.

welcome to canada
Sponsors, family, and Canadian residents offer their welcome to Syrian refugees arriving at Toronto's Pearson Airport, December 11, 2015. Canada's welcoming attitude to foreigners could be an economic benefit if the Trump administration restricts work visas. (Photo: Stacey Newman via Getty Images)

In the quarter before Trump became president, Indeed noted a 40-per-cent spike in the number of searches for jobs abroad linked to foreign worker visas — in other words, people in the U.S. looking for work abroad.

Of those searches, 42.7 per cent were directed at Canada. The next most popular destination was Australia, with 11.9 per cent of searches.

The data “confirms that Canada may benefit the most if the U.S. curbs its H-1B visa program,” Indeed said in a statement emailed to media.

top destinations us workers abroad

A report last year from the Information and Communications Technology Council (ICTC) estimated Canada will create at least 218,000 new high-tech jobs by 2020, but isn’t graduating enough skilled tech workers to fill them. Canada would need to increase the number of tech graduates by 50 per cent — or admit more foreign workers — to fill the gap.

But what could be a boost to Canada’s tech sector could do serious damage to the U.S.’s tech sector, which relies heavily on foreign talent. Two-thirds of the U.S.'s H1-B visas go to computer-related jobs, according to data from the Department of Homeland Security.

A 2016 study from the National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP) found that more than half of the U.S.’s tech “unicorns” — meaning startups that come to be worth more than US$1 billion — have at least one immigrant founder. Each, on average, created 760 jobs.

U.S. tech companies are reportedly already working on contingency plans to set up offices in Canada if they are unable to bring foreign workers into the U.S. under the H1-B visa.

donald trump
President Donald Trump announces his nomination of Neil Gorsuch to be an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court at the White House in Washington, D.C., January 31, 2017. The White House is reportedly preparing an executive order that would restrict certain work visas to the U.S. (Photo: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque)

A draft executive order obtained by several news sources last week indicates the Trump administration is planning to limit the number of new H1-B visas. The U.S. limits them to 85,000 per year, but also runs a lottery that hands out additional visas. The U.S. admitted 172,000 people on an H1-B visa in 2015, according to data from the State Department.

High-skilled Canadian workers come to the U.S. under a NAFTA visa, the TN-1, rather than the H1-B.

But Trump’s order would also limit the issuance of L-1, E-2 and B1 work visas. That could affect thousands of Canadians, including those in the U.S. under an intra-company transfer. U.S. State Department data shows more than 2,900 potentially affected work visas were issued to Canadians in 2015.

U.S. tech giants, already upset by having some of their employees stranded by Trump’s travel ban on refugees and citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries, are rallying against the new executive order.

The Trump administration, and many other critics, say the H1-B visa program is being abused. Outsourcing firms often grab large chunks of the available visas, then sell them off to tech companies, keeping a sizable cut of the salary, CNN reports.

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The 3 Absolute Worst Pieces Of Parenting Advice

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For any new parent, one thing you almost can't escape is unsolicited parenting advice.

In the video above, self-proclaimed "Wine Mom" Hannah Williams shares three of the worst parenting tips she's ever received. The first one? Sleep when your baby sleeps.

"I know so many moms get this piece of advice, and it just makes no sense," she says. "Should I do laundry when the baby is doing laundry?"

bad parenting advice

Instead, Williams says she likes to get shit done when the baby is sleeping,

"That's when I do everything I couldn't do with a baby in my arms."

And of course, while most parents will receive all kinds of advice until their child is an adult, we think it's always helpful to work with your partner or family members to create your own parenting style.

What else is on Williams' list? Watch the full video above.

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Nathan Starzynski Captures Stunning Northern Lights Show From Flight Over Canadian Praries

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This will make you think twice before booking an aisle seat the next time you fly.

Nathan Starzynski, a B.C. photographer and filmmaker, was travelling from Southern Alberta to Winnipeg last week when he captured what he's calling the "greatest in-flight entertainment I've ever seen."

"The day before leaving, I reserved a north-facing window seat at the rear of the plane," he wrote on Facebook of his Tuesday night Air Canada flight.

From that back row he captured an intense aurora borealis show most can only ever dream of witnessing.




In a Reddit post, Starzynski said the plane was flying at an altitude of 36,000 feet (10,973 meters) when he shot the footage.

He had been expecting some northern lights activity that night, he said, and booked his seat accordingly.

He had a whole row of seats to himself, and was able to use a tripod to capture the time lapse. He watched the show in real-time through another window, he said.

The footage is truly spectacular, with the green dancing arches overhead and the lights of Canadian towns below.

Starzynski is clearly no stranger when it comes to capturing Canada's stunning natural beauty. You can follow more of his work on Instagram.




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Andrea Giesbrecht Trial: Winnipeg Woman Guilty Of Disposing 6 Dead Infants In Storage Room

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WINNIPEG — A judge has found a woman guilty of disposing of the remains of six infants in a storage locker.

Andrea Giesbrecht was convicted on six counts of concealing the body of a dead child. Each count carries a maximum two years in jail.

The decision by provincial court Judge Murray Thompson on Monday was live-streamed from the Winnipeg courthouse by media outlets.

"All of her actions lead to one conclusion: that Giesbrecht was aware that these children were likely to have been born alive and she wished to conceal the fact of their birth," Thompson said.

winnipeg dead infants trial
Giesbrecht's lawyer Greg Brodsky speaks to media outside the Law Courts in Winnipeg on April 24, 2015. (Photo: Trevor Hagan/The Canadian Press)

"The evidence leaves no doubt that she concealed her pregnancies and the resulting delivery of each of the six children."

Giesbrecht was arrested in October 2014 after police found the remains in garbage bags and other containers inside a U-Haul storage locker.

Medical experts testified at her trial that DNA linked the infants to Giesbrecht and her husband. They said the babies were at or near full term and were probably born alive, but were so badly decomposed it was impossible to say for sure. They also couldn't determine how the babies died.

One child was put in a pail under concrete, while another was covered in a white powder that slowed decomposition but dried out the body and left it rock hard.


"The evidence leaves no doubt that she concealed her pregnancies and the resulting delivery of each of the six children."


A third infant was little more than a pile of bones wrapped in a towel.

Crown attorney Debbie Buors said in her closing arguments that cement and detergent were used in some of the containers "to mask the smell of these remains so that employees of U-Haul wouldn't become suspicious."

She said towels, blankets and other household items stored with the remains also showed that the infants were probably born at Giesbrecht's home before they were taken to the storage locker.

Giesbrecht concealed pregnancies: friend

The trial also heard that Giesbrecht, a mother of two, had 10 legal abortions between 1994 and 2011, as well as a miscarriage. A friend told court that Giesbrecht hid her pregnancies by wearing baggy clothes.

Her husband testified he was unaware of the six pregnancies connected to the charges. Jeremy Giesbrecht also said he thought his wife was hoarding furniture in the storage locker.

Defence lawyer Greg Brodsky didn't call any witnesses.

He argued that his client kept the bodies in the storage locker to save them, not dispose of them.

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