June 2009 | The Walrus - Part 2
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June 2009

Monte Paulsen details Canada’s failure to develop high-speed rail; Chris Turner considers geologist David Hughes’s argument that we are about to run out of fossil fuels; a photo essay by Balazs Gardi depicts life in wartime Afghanistan; Rick Salutin explores the Haida giving tradition of the potlatch; fiction by Lisa Moore…

Photograph by Balazs Gardi
June 2009

Waiting for a New Day

June 12, 2009August 4, 2016 - by Balazs Gardi

Scenes from Afghan life in wartime

Read More
Books / June 2009

Back In Palookaville

June 12, 2009December 9, 2019 - by Sean Rogers

Cartoonist and designer Seth emerges as comics’ premier historian

Read More
Books / June 2009

Canadian Primal

June 12, 2009April 15, 2020 - by Mark Dickinson

Five poet-thinkers redefine our relationship to nature

Read More
Still from Mark Lewis's Rear Projection: Molly Parker (2006)
June 2009

Man with a Movie Camera

June 12, 2009December 31, 2020 - by Daniel Baird

Canada’s Mark Lewis launches an ambitious (and expensive) project for the Venice Biennale

Read More
Photo by Jeremy Cowart/WireImage/Getty Images
June 2009 / Society

Consumed

June 12, 2009December 15, 2020 - by Jessica Johnson

New research gets at the root of our celebrity obsession

Read More

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June 2009
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​​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.

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How’s The Walrus?

As the executive director, I am frequently asked this question. These days, I reply: “The Walrus was made for this moment.” From on-again, off-again trade news and negotiations to a new prime minister, we are committed to Canada’s conversations. We launched six regional bureaus earlier this year to ensure comprehensive coverage across this great country of ours. But we can’t do this alone. As a non-profit newsroom, this work isn’t possible without our readers’ support. If you believe in Canada’s stories, support our paywall-free journalism with a donation today.

Our team is small, but our commitment is big; just like our country. Every story we publish is the result of writers, artists, and editors going the extra mile (well, kilometres) to bring Canada closer together through compelling, fact-checked, and regionally grounded reporting.

Thank you for your support.

Jennifer Hollett
Executive Director, The Walrus


How’s The Walrus?

As the executive director, I am frequently asked this question. These days, I reply: “The Walrus was made for this moment.” From on-again, off-again trade news and negotiations to a new prime minister, we are committed to Canada’s conversations. We launched six regional bureaus earlier this year to ensure comprehensive coverage across this great country of ours. But we can’t do this alone. As a non-profit newsroom, this work isn’t possible without our readers’ support. If you believe in Canada’s stories, support our paywall-free journalism with a donation today.

Our team is small, but our commitment is big; just like our country. Every story we publish is the result of writers, artists, and editors going the extra mile (well, kilometres) to bring Canada closer together through compelling, fact-checked, and regionally grounded reporting.

Thank you for your support.

Jennifer Hollett
Executive Director, The Walrus

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