Fact-based journalism that sparks the Canadian conversation
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Sanjay Khanna
Sanjay Khanna is a futurist, speaker, thought leader, and current futurist-in-residence with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. He studies how key megatrends impact mental health, productivity, and decision making among leaders and citizen-consumers. In 2009, Sanjay launched the world’s first conference on how climate change affects human psychology, society, and culture. He was among the twenty-one global experts interviewed for KPMGInternational’s report Future State 2030: The Global Megatrends Shaping Governments, and Corporate Knights magazine named him “an exemplar of social well-being.” Previously, Sanjay was a visiting scholar in strategic foresight and the inaugural resident futurist at the University of Toronto’s Massey College.
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Don’t turn your back on the facts. Fund our fact checking.
Those who hold power are turning their backs on the facts. Meta just announced the defunding of its fact-checking program, Canadian politicians are making calls to defund the CBC, and the incoming American president has embraced misinformation. This means finding facts is going to get a lot harder.
But getting facts should be a universal right, and The Walrus needs your help now more than ever to make that possible. At The Walrus, we check every single fact in our stories so that you can have paywall-free access to the most trustworthy, accurate reporting on our site, every single day. But facts aren’t free. That’s why we need your help. If you are able, support The Walrus with a donation to help ensure we can always bring you the facts.
Rose Danen
Annual Giving Officer, The Walrus
Don’t turn your back on the facts. Fund our fact checking.
Those who hold power are turning their backs on the facts. Meta just announced the defunding of its fact-checking program, Canadian politicians are making calls to defund the CBC, and the incoming American president has embraced misinformation. This means finding facts is going to get a lot harder.
But getting facts should be a universal right, and The Walrus needs your help now more than ever to make that possible. At The Walrus, we check every single fact in our stories so that you can have paywall-free access to the most trustworthy, accurate reporting on our site, every single day. But facts aren’t free. That’s why we need your help. If you are able, support The Walrus with a donation to help ensure we can always bring you the facts.