Article content
She lived with a killer for a decade and yet never suspected a thing.
Ken Jessop still finds it hard to believe even after Heather Hoover recently broke her silence and spoke to
CBC News about her ex-husband Calvin Hoover.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or MANDEL: Did Christine Jessop s killer strike again? Back to video
After 36 painful years, Jessop finally learned in October that Hoover, a family friend, had been identified by Toronto Police as the man who abducted and murdered his little sister, Christine.
But he would never have to answer for his horrendous crime. He had taken his own life in 2015.
Behold, the Delivery revolution Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review. - photo by File photo
It’s been a terrible year for the American worker, with a notable bright spot courtesy of one of the tech firms in the crosshairs of regulators and lawmakers.
If someone had said early in 2020, “A company is going to hire hundreds of thousands of non-college- educated workers during the pandemic at well above the minimum wage,” you’d think there’d be huzzahs all around.
That’s what the online retailer Amazon has done, but it still gets brickbats for how it pays and treats its workers. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said the other day that Amazon jobs are a “scam.”
Bloomberg Reporters Ignored Evidence That Complicated Critical Amazon Angle, Economist Says yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Stuck in the Middle Without UBI: The Canadian political system’s barriers to creating change
January 8, 2021
Canadian politics have been weird lately. Always overshadowed by the circus to the south, Canadian politics tend to be tame, even boring. But 2020 had other plans for Canada, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suspending Parliament for more than five weeks amidst both an ethics investigation and a global pandemic. During that chaos, pandemic relief efforts have made many hopeful for many progressive policies such as a universal basic income (UBI). Some have even lauded the Canada Economic Recovery Benefit (CERB) as the world’s first national UBI program.