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submitted 2 years ago by dirkgentle@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 5 hours ago by engene@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

I truly hope the perpetrator(s) is caught and arrested

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submitted 2 days ago by Sunshine@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 3 days ago by dwazou@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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Tonight's Toronto Critical Mass, "organized by the community, for the community", will see hundreds of cyclists take the streets in protest against this attempt to rip out our bike lanes. Meet-up is at Bloor St. and Spadina Ave. at 6:00 pm.

Cycle Toronto https://www.cycleto.ca/

Visit the Facebook group for more:

https://www.cycleto.ca/r?u=o6hy3ltLwo-dflPNfvaWKiW6yyaPhPtz2eTJUsob5PoiI7K4sdqtuCdpPZCea1fPjXCWz3iIUKR5qedlB5XtNQ&e=afd8d3f0606f8534b04fd6f600d0758f&n=2

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submitted 5 days ago by Grappling7155@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 6 days ago by uymai@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 1 week ago by brianpeiris@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

Basel Adra has been documenting the expulsion and decimation of his community in the small mountain village of Masafer Yatta in the southern West Bank since childhood. Adra’s early memories as a child are plagued with images of Israeli soldiers raiding his home, witnessing his father Nasser, a Palestinian activist, being arrested, and the ongoing Israeli military occupation and settler aggression. By picking up his camera, Adra continually speaks truth to power as he tirelessly documents his reality: impending forced removals, bulldozers destroying homes, and the violence that inevitably follows. The film takes place prior to October 7, 2023, when attention to the region was in shorter supply.
During Adra’s fight to preserve his mountain village community, he forms an unexpected friendship and alliance with Israeli journalist Yuval Abraham, who joins his resistance efforts. It is clear this bond is not one grounded in equity, with Adra living under occupation and Abraham’s freedom of movement. Yet the relationship that develops between the two — showing deep care, humanity, and above all how solidarity can break down barriers, even during occupation — is at the heart of this piece.
Made under extreme duress and unimaginable production hardships, this film comes from a Palestinian-Israeli activist collective formed of Adra, Abraham, Rachel Szor, and Hamdan Ballal. For its world premiere at the Berlin Film Festival, No Other Land earned the top documentary jury and audience prizes in the prestigious Panorama section. This film would stand out in any year, but now it feels even more urgent.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by brianpeiris@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

Imagine Cinemas' Carlton location is a small theatre that usually screens movies that are offbeat, indie, classics, anime, and documentaries, in addition to the latest releases. The company is local to Ontario and family-owned. They have $5 deals on movies regularly, especially when they're showing classics.

I'm a regular there and at their Market Square location too. This week I watched "Lucy: The Stolen Lives of Elephants", an excellent documentary about the plight of elephants in zoos, and a hope for their future in sanctuaries. The Canadian filmmakers are hosting Q&A's at all the 6:50PM showings this week (another thing that Carlton often does).

To be clear, I'm not affiliated with them. I'm just a movie lover :)

https://imaginecinemas.com/cinema/carlton/

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submitted 1 week ago by Sunshine@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by toaster@slrpnk.net to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

📍 Location: Nathan Phillips Square, Toronto 📅 Date: Saturday, March 22, 2025 ⏰ Time: 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DHMGxEMvUKY/

About the Event: After an incredible turnout in Ottawa, Elbows Up, Canada! is coming to Toronto. This grassroots movement is about standing together as Canadians—proud, strong, and unwavering. We are gathering to celebrate unity, resilience, and the values that make Canada special.

Join us at Nathan Phillips Square for an afternoon of inspiring speakers, live music, and community engagement. This is a peaceful, non-partisan, and family-friendly event—a space where people from all backgrounds can come together and make their voices heard.

What to Expect:
✅ Live Music – Featuring performances by The Get Alongs (house band), and more to be determined!
✅ Inspiring Speakers – Including Shaun Majumder, Arlene Dickinson, and other Canadian leaders.
✅ Community Connection – Engage in conversations, meet your neighbours, and be part of a growing movement.
✅ A Positive & Uplifting Atmosphere – We’re about unity, not division.

Why This Matters:
In a time of uncertainty, it’s more important than ever to come together. Elbows Up, Canada! is about protecting what we value as Canadians—our democracy, our communities, and our shared future.

Come be part of something bigger. Let’s stand together. Let’s raise our elbows and stand strong for Canada. 🇨🇦.

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submitted 2 weeks ago by Sunshine@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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Ontario Corps Volunteer (www.ontario.ca)

Another person posted this in c/ontario

From the site:

Volunteers can be trained to perform a variety of duties, including sandbagging, debris removal, serving meals and more. Volunteers are contacted when needed to support emergency response efforts and will be assigned duties based on their skill level, interest and availability.

...

To go with, a good read from the Tyee about Civil Defense Corps

[A] second Trump presidency is emphatically not like the first. In foreign policy, as in business, Trump does not deal with weaker counterparts — he dominates them. When engaging with countries that lack the leverage to push back, he is not transactional; he is predatory. His negotiations are not about mutual benefit but about extracting maximum advantage, imposing terms that serve his interests alone.

The shift from ally to adversary could happen overnight, as a protectionist United States looks at Canada’s vast energy reserves, fresh water and strategic Arctic position and sees weakness. Canadians must recognize that the luxury of assuming our security is someone else’s responsibility is over.

We must be strong enough to push back, resilient enough to survive cyberwarfare and economic coercion — including Tuesday's arbitrary imposition of illegal tariffs. We must be prepared to defend our sovereignty — not just with military spending, but with a population that is engaged, trained and ready.

Pause for a moment and imagine the skills or time you could bring — whether it’s first aid, co-ordination and logistics, communications, engineering, IT support, counselling and caregiving or any other expertise — to contribute to our collective security and resilience if called upon.

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submitted 2 weeks ago by AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 3 weeks ago by brianpeiris@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 3 weeks ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

Stopped in on a whim while killing time as a tourist. Worth every penny!

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submitted 3 weeks ago by CircaV@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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New to Lemmy, but looking to assist in community building in the west end of Toronto. I have a variety of useful organisational and technical skills that I would like to contribute to helping those in my community.

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submitted 3 weeks ago by AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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submitted 3 weeks ago by AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/40228347

The Supreme Court of Canada has struck down a Ford government law that restricted political advertising by third parties, such as unions, in the year ahead of a scheduled election campaign.

The top court ruled in a 5-4 decision that the law allowed for political parties’ ads to “drown out” those of third-party groups, infringing on citizens' right to meaningfully participate in the democratic process.

“The information available to voters in Ontario in the year before an election must include the interests, voices and views of different citizens and parties,” reads the majority decision written by Justice Andromache Karakatsanis.

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https://archive.ph/F26VK

Mayor Olivia Chow says she plans to ban U.S. companies from bidding on contracts with the City of Toronto.

At a press conference Thursday morning to talk about the procurement of new TTC streetcars, Chow provided an update on her administration’s response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs on Canadian goods.

She confirmed that the city will award all contracts valued at less than $353,000 to Canadian companies exclusively. She also promised to present a motion to her executive committee “barring any U.S. companies from future Toronto contracts.”

alternate CTV news link here

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submitted 3 weeks ago by AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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Thought I'd leave some links for new gardeners, or people itching for spring who just want to come check out seeds etc.

This weekend, Saturday and Sunday at Brickworks from 9-2 (free bus just north of Broadview station) - https://www.evergreen.ca/evergreen-brick-work/events/seedy-weekend-2025

March 22, Scadding Court from 10-2 (west end of the city) - https://torontourbangrowers.org/events/scadding-court-seedy-saturday-2025

...

Other good resources for beginners:

General Planting almanac

North American Native Plant Society

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submitted 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) by otter@lemmy.ca to c/toronto@lemmy.ca
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