Afleveringen
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U.S. President Donald Trump and his vice-president J.D. Vance publicly berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the Oval Office on Friday in an exchange that shocked the world. We look at how global alliances are shifting under Trump, and what it all means for Ukraineâs fight against Russiaâs invasion.
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Measles is making a comeback in Canada and the U.S., despite the disease being declared eradicated in both countries more than 20 years ago. We discuss whatâs behind this resurgence, and ask who might need a booster.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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No Other Land won the Oscar for best documentary feature on Sunday. It tells the story of a Palestinian community displaced by Israel, to make way for a military firing range in the West Bank. Two of its directors, Palestinian Basel Adra and Israeli Yuval Abraham, spoke to Matt Galloway in December about their struggle to tell this story in Israel and beyond.
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Students who miss a lot of class sometimes tell teachers that theyâre not showing up because theyâre afraid of how far theyâve already fallen behind. Other times, they say their mom signed them out so they can get an Iced Capp. Matt Galloway asks educators what theyâre doing to help kids overcome chronic absenteeism â and at what age students have to take responsibility for themselves.
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Donald Trump has handed broad powers to unelected billionaire Elon Musk, tried to intimidate political opponents and attempted to suppress critical media coverage â all in his first month as president. One academic says this all adds up to âcompetitive authoritarianism,â a massive abuse of democracy.
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Alberta plans to build two involuntary drug addiction treatment centres, for people who won't or can't seek treatment themselves. Matt Galloway asks Alberta's Minister of Mental Health and Addiction Dan Williams why his government believes this is the right approach â and what evidence there is to show that forced treatment helps.
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Manitoban snowbird Laurie Fischer is selling his condo in Florida, in part because of U.S. President Donald Trumpâs threats of tariffs and annexation against Canada. Matt Galloway talks to Fischer, as well as Florida motel owner Richard Clavet, who thinks that the pushback from Canadians is an overreaction.
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Wildlife photographer Donna Feledichuk trailed a family of foxes for weeks trying to get the perfect shot. The picture she captured won bronze in the mammal behaviour category at the 2025 World Nature Photography Awards. She tells Galloway about what sheâs learned from watching the animals she photographs.
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Critical minerals are essential in making everything from car batteries to cell phones â and Canada has plenty of them in the North. We look at what that might mean for this countryâs economy in the increasing global scramble to secure these resources.
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Montreal writer Haley Mlotekâs mother was a divorce mediator, and her grandmother got divorced twice. But when Mlotek went through her own divorce, it challenged everything she thought she understood about leaving a partner. She writes about the history of divorce â and why some people believe it's still too easy to get â in her new book No Fault, A Memoir of Romance and Divorce.
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Kailynn Bursic-Panchuk was just 16 when she got distracted by her phone while driving, and ended up in a fatal collision with a train. Her mother Sandra LaRose is warning of the dangers of distracted driving, which police say ranges from people quickly checking their phones to streaming a live soccer game as theyâre hurtling down the highway.
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New Brunswicker Peter Cote says heâs scared to death of opening his next power bill. People in the province have been getting shockingly high bills during a very cold winter â in some cases hundreds of dollars more than expected â prompting the provincial government to order an independent audit.
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The four Liberals hoping to replace Justin Trudeau as party leader and prime minister faced off in English and French debates this week. Our politics panel unpacks just how polite the debates stayed between Chrystia Freeland, Mark Carney, Karina Gould, and Frank Baylis â and why whoever wins shouldnât expect the same from Conservative Leader Pierre Poillievre.
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Colleges across Canada are slashing programs and staff due to a steep drop in the number of international students coming to Canada. We look at how government funding cuts led colleges to rely on these students as a revenue stream in the first place, and how these program cuts might affect domestic students' education in the long run.
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has pledged $5 billion in aid for Ukraine, funded by Russian assets seized by Canada. Long-time Kremlin critic Bill Browder discusses what this promise means for Ukraineâs future â and what he makes of U.S. President Donald Trump seeming to side with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
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Parenting comes with a lot of emotions: love, joy, anxiety â and even regret. We talk to two parents who are sharing their regrets about what having kids meant for their lives. They say they want prospective parents to have a more complete story about whatâs often called the âbest job in the world.â
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Ryan Kirby and Mark Lane have poured about $1.1 million of their own money into setting up a new addiction treatment centre in Newfoundland, even putting their homes up as collateral. They talk to Matt Galloway about how the impact of addiction on their own lives and communities made them want to make a difference.
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As a child, Alex Kurzem faced a choice: be killed or join the killers.
In the midst of the Second World War, he was separated from his family and taken in by a group of soldiers as one of their own. He was made a member of Hitlerâs army â a toy soldier with his own rifle and miniature SS uniform.
But what the soldiers didnât know and what no one would know for decades: he was a Jewish boy masquerading as a Nazi to save his life.
Alex lives with this false identity for so long, he no longer remembers who he was before â forgetting his parentsâ faces, his birthday, his own name. But before he dies, Alex is determined to find the identity and family stolen from him during the Holocaust.
This is the story Alex would tell the world decades later, but doubts quickly took hold and wouldnât let go. Could a story so unbelievable be true? Or is this a con to profit from the Holocaust? Eighty years on, is it possible to uncover who Alex really is? Host Dan Goldberg unravels the true story.
Get lost in someone elseâs life. From a mysterious childhood spent on the run, to a courageous escape from domestic violence, each season of Personally invites you to explore the human experience in all its complexity, one story â or season â at a time.
More episodes of Personally: Toy Soldier are available at: https://link.mgln.ai/QAh2Nz
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The man who stabbed author Salman Rushdie on a New York stage in 2022 has been convicted of attempted murder and assault. In a conversation from last year, Rushdie tells Matt Galloway about writing to move past the attack and what he intends to do with his âsecond chanceâ at life.
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Automaker Stellantis has paused plans to build its new electric Jeep Compass in Brampton, Ont. Matt Galloway talks to Mayor of Brampton Patrick Brown and president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturersâ Association Flavio Volpe about what this means for the plantâs thousands of workers, amid the looming threat of U.S. President Donald Trumpâs tariffs.
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