July, 2015 | The Walrus
Newsletters
Subscribe
Donate
Sections
Latest Stories Business Environment Society Politics Arts & Culture
Explore
Newsletters Events Podcasts Magazine The Walrus Lab
Support
Donate Subscribe Annual Report The Walrus Gala
Follow
Twitter LinkedIn YouTube TikTok Facebook Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • My Account
  • Manage Subscriptions
POPULAR   →
The Rise of AI
Health
Retail Madness
Housing
The Walrus Talks Media Right Now
Skip to content

The Walrus

Fact-based journalism that sparks the Canadian conversation

[hmenu id=2]
  • home
  • Articles
    • Business
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Arts & Culture
    • Society
  • Special Series
    • Hope You’re Well
    • For the Love of the Game
    • Living Rooms
    • In Other Worlds: A Space Exploration
    • Terra Cognita
    • More special series >
  • Events
    • The Walrus Talks
    • The Walrus Video Room
    • The Walrus Leadership Roundtables
    • The Walrus Leadership Forums
    • Article Club
  • Subscribe
    • Renew your subscription
    • Change your address
    • Magazine Issues
    • Newsletters
    • Podcasts
  • The Walrus Lab
    • Hire The Walrus Lab
    • Amazon First Novel Award
  • Shop
  • Donate

Month: July 2015

Photograph by Gage Skidmore
Politics

A Land without Trump

July 28, 2015August 4, 2021 - by Jonathan Kay

Why hardcore blowhards never make it in Canadian politics

Read More
Image by Arturo Espinosa
Books

E. L. Doctorow, 1931–2015

July 27, 2015April 10, 2020 - by Barbara Kay

The fox in the tree leaves

Read More
Illustration of a comic by Teva Harrison
Uncategorized

On a Platter

July 27, 2015April 10, 2020 - by Teva Harrison

Twenty-second in a series of comics about living with metastatic cancer

Read More
July/August 2015 / Poetry

i am graffiti

July 24, 2015July 24, 2020 - by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson

Mistakes were made

Read More
Photograph by Jason Pier
Society

Hung Jury

July 24, 2015April 10, 2020 - by Tony Fong

How we police hateful opinions?

Read More
Image courtesy of Never Forgotten National Memorial Foundation
Politics

Mommy Dearest

July 23, 2015April 10, 2020 - by Drew Nelles

Mother Canada may be hideous and humiliating, but she’s who we are

Read More
Photograph by Birthe Piontek
July/August 2015

Title Fight

July 22, 2015January 21, 2020 - by Arno Kopecky

The Tsilhqot’in Nation got its land back. Canada will never be the same

Read More
Illustration by Graham Roumieu
July/August 2015

Coming Out

July 21, 2015April 10, 2020 - by Michael Coren

A gay-marriage opponent changes his mind

Read More
Illustration of a comic by Teva Harrison
Uncategorized

Baby Did a Bad Thing

July 21, 2015April 10, 2020 - by Teva Harrison

Twenty-first in a series of comics about living with metastatic cancer

Read More
Photograph by Fujoshi Bijou
Technology

Blown Covers

July 20, 2015September 13, 2020 - by Simon Lewsen

The breach of Ashley Madison goes against everything hactivism stands for

Read More

Posts navigation

1 2 3 Next

Our Latest Issue

The cover for the December 2023 issue of The Walrus, featuring an illustration of an elderly woman walking on a floating, crumbling path towards a doorway to a beach. Cover lines: The End of Retirement: Why no one can afford to stop working; How Canada–India relations crumbled. 2023 Dec Issue
The end of retirement, how Canada-India relations crumbled, why the opioid and housing crises are linked, and more!

Part of The Trust Project

Read more about The Trust Project and how this article fits in it

Part of The Trust Project

The Trust Project is a collaboration among news organizations around the world. Its goal is to create strategies that fulfill journalism’s basic pledge: to serve society with a truthful, intelligent and comprehensive account of ideas and events.

Learn more.
Behind The Story

The Walrus newsletter
Don’t let news disappear from your feed. Sign up for The Walrus newsletter and get trusted Canadian journalism straight in your inbox.
View all newsletters >>

Walrus logo with tusks and Canada's Conversation

​​The Walrus sparks conversations about Canada and its place in the world through our award-winning independent journalism, fact checking, events, podcasts, and content solutions. The Walrus is a registered charity with an educational mandate.
Read more on our About Us page.

About The Walrus

  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact
  • Submissions
  • Careers & Fellowships
  • Advertise with us
The Walrus

About The Walrus

About Us Our Staff Contact Us Careers & Fellowships Submissions Advertise with Us

Events

Get Tickets The Walrus Talks The Walrus Gala Get in Touch

Subscribe

Customer Care Purchase a Subscription Renew Your Subscription Newsletters Shop The Walrus Store

Podcasts

Articles The Conversation Piece The Walrus Podcasts

The Walrus Lab

Amazon Canada First Novel Award Content Services Podcast Services Our Clients Get in Touch

Follow Us

Twitter LinkedIn YouTube TikTok Facebook Instagram

Support independent Canadian reporting and storytelling

The Walrus
Accessibility Help Privacy Policy Cookie Policy

The Walrus is located within the bounds of Treaty 13 signed with the Mississaugas of the Credit. This land is also the traditional territory of the Anishnabeg, the Haudenosaunee, and the Wendat peoples.
Learn more >>

© 2023 The Walrus. All Rights Reserved.
Charitable Registration Number: No. 861851624-RR0001

© 2023 The Walrus. All Rights Reserved. Charitable Registration Number: No. 861851624-RR0001
Accessibility Help Privacy Policy Cookie Policy

Subscribe

  • Magazine Subscription
  • Weekly Newsletter
  • Events Newsletter
  • The Walrus Lab Newsletter
  • The Conversation Piece Podcast

More

  • The Walrus Talks @Home
  • The Walrus Books
  • The Walrus Podcasts
  • Magazine Archives
  • Policies and Standards
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2023 The Walrus. All Rights Reserved.
Charitable Registration Number: No. 861851624-RR0001

​​The Walrus is located within the bounds of Treaty 13 signed with the Mississaugas of the Credit. This land is also the traditional territory of the Anishnabeg, the Haudenosaunee, and the Wendat peoples.

The Walrus uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Learn more or change your cookie preferences.

×

Hey, thank you for reading!
I hope you enjoyed this story.
Or make a one-time donation

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online.

When you donate to The Walrus, you’re helping writers, editors, and artists produce stories like the ones you’ve just read. Every story is meticulously researched, written, and edited, before undergoing a rigorous fact-checking process. These stories take time, but they’re worth the effort, because you leave our site better informed about Canada and its people.

If you’d like to ensure we continue creating stories that matter to you, with a level of accuracy you can trust, please consider becoming a supporter of The Walrus. I know it’s tough out there with inflation and rising costs, but good journalism affects us as well, so I don’t ask this lightly.

Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Claire Cooper
Managing Editor, The Walrus


Hey, thank you for reading!
We hope you enjoyed this story.

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online. Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Or make a one-time donation

×

Hey, thank you for reading!
I hope you enjoyed this story.
Or make a one-time donation

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online.

When you donate to The Walrus, you’re helping writers, editors, and artists produce stories like the ones you’ve just read. Every story is meticulously researched, written, and edited, before undergoing a rigorous fact-checking process. These stories take time, but they’re worth the effort, because you leave our site better informed about Canada and its people.

If you’d like to ensure we continue creating stories that matter to you, with a level of accuracy you can trust, please consider becoming a supporter of The Walrus. I know it’s tough out there with inflation and rising costs, but good journalism affects us as well, so I don’t ask this lightly.

Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Claire Cooper
Managing Editor, The Walrus


Hey, thank you for reading!
We hope you enjoyed this story.

Before you go, did you know that The Walrus is a registered charity? We rely on donations and support from readers like you to keep our journalism independent and freely available online. Will you join us in keeping independent journalism free and available to all?

Or make a one-time donation

×