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Selnes: Game postponement should have been considered

Selnes: Game postponement should have been considered

15 players on the Saskatchewan Roughriders聽were sick at the Sept. 10 game against Winnipeg. Postponement should have been considered, writes columnist Bill Selnes.
Opinion: The rumoured version of the Great Reset isn鈥檛 coming

Opinion: The rumoured version of the Great Reset isn鈥檛 coming

Could it be that the WEF isn鈥檛 out to get anybody?
Selnes: Life can have terrible ways of keeping sports in perspective

Selnes: Life can have terrible ways of keeping sports in perspective

Sunday's game was an exciting game with many good plays, said Riders columnist Bill Selnes, but it was marred by the events at James Smith Cree Nation and the village of Weldon.
Opinion: Trust in government is taking a beating

Opinion: Trust in government is taking a beating

Trust is especially scarce among producers in provinces that fought the carbon pricing protocol in court and lost.
Canadian brewers having a hard time staying afloat

Canadian brewers having a hard time staying afloat

This has not been a good year for the beer industry and, thanks to the federal government, beer could get even more expensive in 2023.
More or Less: Someone's Son

More or Less: Someone's Son

International Overdose Awareness Day is the world鈥檚 largest annual campaign to end overdose.
Selnes: The game that went right for the Sask. Roughriders

Selnes: The game that went right for the Sask. Roughriders

In the second showdown in two weeks against the B.C. Lions on Aug. 19, the Saskatchewan Roughriders won 23-16.
Sask. snapshots: Social media musings

Sask. snapshots: Social media musings

It鈥檚 rather interesting, entertaining, and sometimes unnerving what Saskatchewanians are saying online
Opinion: World鈥檚 largest tree? You might be surprised

Opinion: World鈥檚 largest tree? You might be surprised

Prairies are home to a wide range of natural wonders.
Opinion: Political polarization remains less pervasive in Canada than in the U.S.

Opinion: Political polarization remains less pervasive in Canada than in the U.S.

A new survey measured attitudes toward government among Canadians and Americans and found immense differences.
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