But what happens when those machines learn to beat us at our own games? When, for the first time in our history, humans have competitors that rival or surpass us in applied or, possibly even general, ...
How closely have you been reading our online stories this week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every ...
Ottawa’s reluctance to fix the prime minister’s crumbling residence betrays a country afraid to invest in itself ...
Canada’s immigration enforcement agency is ramping up deportations and is hoping to sustain an annual target of 20,000 over the next couple of years. The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) deported ...
Publishing Can’t Quit Its Obsession with Buzzy Stories One of the things I want us to do at The Walrus is very much leave a ...
Alberta separatism poses both immediate and structural threats to Canadian unity, even if outright independence remains unlikely. The most significant immediate threat is political and economic ...
W hen I venture outside, which is rare considering the bitterness of the winter, I plod the sidewalks with a cane, my eyes ...
Alberta separatists rely on rhetoric which scapegoats immigrants as a source of social problems Arguments about immigrant-caused systemic strain are not supported by data The myth of rural Alberta is ...
O VER THE HOLIDAYS, around the same time that Elise Moser was starting to feel unwell, I was making my annual vow to spend ...
F rom the beginning of the Iran conflict, United States president Donald Trump has presented an array of reasons and objectives for attacking Iran. Many of them are contradictory: ...
R ecently, an Egyptian journalist colleague living in exile in Europe told me that security forces back home had forcibly disappeared his brother. He said he didn’t want to go public with the case ...
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