![](https://webarchiveweb.wayback.bac-lac.canada.ca/web/20180727155351im_/https://postmediamontrealgazette2.files.wordpress.com/2014/10/aislinoportrait2.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=120&h=90&crop=1)
Gallery: Aislin and other editorial cartoonists — July 2018
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Gallery: Aislin and other editorial cartoonists — June 2018
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Gallery: Aislin and other editorial cartoonists — May 2018
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Gallery: Aislin and other editorial cartoonists — April 2018
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Gallery: Aislin and other editorial cartoonists — March 2018
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Gallery: Aislin and other editorial cartoonists — February 2018
This Week's Flyers
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Opinion JFL review: Amy Schumer delivers sharp surprise show from rough notes
Even while fumbling with her notes and trying to make out her own handwriting, she was able to bring the house down with hysterical shtick. -
Opinion Glavin: Spare some compassion for Toronto shooter's parents
"As events have proved, the family was going to need help, precisely because they happened to be Muslims." -
Yonah Martin: Hope on horizon as world marks 65th anniversary of Korean War armistice
"After 65 years of division and the more recent threat of nuclear war, it seems as if the road to peace between the two sides is now at a crucial turning point." -
Opinion Laurie Edmiston: Nine countries will eliminate hep C by 2030. Why not Canada?
Almost half of Canadians with hepatitis C won’t benefit from new treatments because they don’t know they have been infected. -
Opinion Fuller: Why did skepticism become our greatest virtue?
Maybe there really is more to the story than a random act of hate. Maybe it’s better not to buy into it until more is known. In that case, why say anything? -
Opinion Christie Blatchford: Who is Faisal Hussain, the man behind the Toronto mass shooting? It's complicated
If the truth is out there, and it may not be, it probably lies as it often does in the murky middle. -
Columnists Cohen: Celebrating the rhythms of a Canadian summer
For days, the fires of Temagami flared. On the evening we arrived, under a slanting, molten sun, the place was otherworldly. -
Opinion Blatchford: Mass killings not new, but violence-drenched society's response is
The blood on the Danforth sidewalks was barely dry before the authorities published numbers for the traumatized to call, and leaders were offering 'thoughts and prayers'
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Arts Brownstein: 'Lived many lives', Montreal filmmaker Harry Gulkin has died
Best known for Lies My Father Told Me and Jacob Two-Two, Gulkin was also revealed to be Sarah Polley's father in 2012 doc -
Columnists Lise Ravary: Belmont Park, Pierre Lalonde and '60s summers in the city
Vacation time meant riding my mauve Raleigh to Parc Lalancette, picnics at the Botanical Gardens and the hit C’est le temps des vacances. -
Opinion Opinion: 13 Reasons Why puts spotlight on sexual violence against males
Controversial episode in Season 2 of popular Netflix series may shock people, but it's a valuable start to an important conversation. -
Opinion Opinion: Is championing a Holocaust denier really the best the Ontario Civil Liberties Association can ...
Shimon Koffler Fogel: European courts and human rights bodies have ruled that Holocaust denial laws are legitimate and compatible with the Covenant and similar rights codes. -
Opinion Chris Selley: Lament for a smashed iPhone — my life is better for having known ...
I charged it for a while, and it actually rang when I called it. But it never sent out another GPS signal. Perhaps it knew I was taking it home to die -
Columnists Jay Hill: The case for western independence
Many here in Canada’s heartland of the Prairies have voiced their belief that a strong case can be made that Confederation is no longer working in the best interests of the West. -
Columnists Opinion: Latimer pardon request stirs up nightmare for disabled
What Latimer and his lawyers appear to be overlooking is that Medical Aid in Dying still isn’t legal for minors in Canada. -
Columnists Marc Richardson: Has information overload made us callous?
We are so bombarded with news and notifications that we risk tuning out and, ironically, becoming less informed. -
Columnists Allison Hanes: 'Get out of the way and let kids play'
Day camps are enriching and fun, but there is also value in letting children goof off — what is technically known as engaging in free play. -
Columnists Andrew Coyne: Provincial carbon tax revolt could be a blessing in disguise for federal Liberals
"Leaving carbon pricing to the provinces never made much sense as policy. Its attraction was purely political — to get them to take the heat for a federal initiative."