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Plus, Separatist crises in Quebec and Alberta
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This Week's Round-Up: February 11, 2026

What Stops ICE from Snatching People Off Canadian Streets? Very Little

The legal reality Canadians don’t want to face

BY CARMINE STARNINO, KENT ROACH

Image of two federal ICE agents wearing camouflage clothes and vests.

"It would be an invasion of Canadian sovereignty if they’re coming onto our soil and snatching people. The other thing I think Canadians should know is something I have called American extra-legalism. It’s what appears to have happened with Ryan Wedding, where they go and they snatch someone from a foreign country—arrest him and extradite him without any judicial process, extra judicially, as it were. The US Supreme Court said that’s perfectly legal under American law. The law authorizes extra-legal arrests and extradition, and a snatching victim cannot even sue. A Canadian or a British court would have a big problem exercising jurisdiction over that person; American courts don’t, and that was long before President Donald Trump stacked the US Supreme Court."


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Photo of an army solider standing in front of an army vehicle.

How a US Invasion of Canada Would Really Unfold—And How We Fight Back

American aggression is no longer theoretical

BY PETER JONES

Photo of a red satellite pointed to a starry sky.

Canada Is Building a Surveillance Network in Space

A reborn Cold War telescope is part of a broader effort to stop relying on US intelligence

BY WESLEY WARK

Photo of Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre smiling with his hands held together in front of him.

Poilievre Isn’t Pivoting. His Party Just Made That Very Clear

Conservatives want their guy to stay exactly the same

BY PAUL WELLS

Close-up image of a person wearing a blue baseball cap that reads "We're done. Alberta first."

Alberta’s Separatist Movement Is a National Security Threat

Meetings with Trump officials cast new scrutiny on the province’s bid for sovereignty

BY PATRICK LENNOX

Image of televisions displaying the provincial flag of Quebec.

The Next Separatist Crisis Isn’t in Alberta. It’s in Quebec

The risk of a referendum hasn’t been this high in decades, and Canada is nowhere near ready

BY ALEX COOL-FERGUS

Today's Quiz Question

Geostationary orbit represents some of the most valuable real estate in space, hosting critical infrastructure for weather monitoring, communications, and defence. Satellites in this orbital band maintain a fixed position relative to Earth’s surface, making them ideal for continuous coverage of specific regions. At what altitude do geostationary satellites orbit?

Yes, I Know the Answer
Photo of stocked warehouse shelves with a forklift in the foreground.

They Work Full-Time. They Have Degrees. They’re Still Going Hungry

Record food bank visits reveal demand is spreading beyond the poorest households

BY TOULA DRIMONIS

Photograph of the exterior of a single-story building in the snow.

Inside the North’s Only Line of Defence Against the Opioid Crisis

The Whitehorse facility has reversed hundreds of overdoses while navigating politics, burnout, and fragile funding

BY RHIANNON RUSSELL

Image of a young Black woman laughing against a dark background with blurry lights.

There Must Be Room for Black Joy in Public Spaces

Our survival has always hinged on navigating the world with caution. There are better ways to live

BY JAY PITTER

Illustration of a poodle's backside with a bandage on the hip and a missing, bandaged paw on a pink background.

How Many Poodle Rescues Have I Followed? Oodles

Ollie’s toe-less paw. Mozart’s long-lost father. I was hooked

BY CATHERINE BUSH

How Portraiture Gives Us Permission to Stare

The Kingston Prize makes a case for the beauty of real faces

BY CONNOR GAREL

A photo of poet Molly Peacock against a red background.

Two Poems

Orange and grey representatives of his choices / haunting with their cotton voices

BY MOLLY PEACOCK

Safe Arrival

As a second-generation immigrant, I think Mihika Agarwal’s “When Immigrants Oppose Immigration” missed an important nuance. I am by no means opposed to immigration, but I think many immigrants fall prey to predatory practices, whether at the hands of employers, immigration consultants, or shady educational institutions. I support immigration, but it needs to be focused on bettering immigrants’ lives—and, by extension, supporting their communities and Canadian society.

Asha Khaladkar
Regina, SK


Read More

With a specific focus on Ontario, on a topic that’s relevant across the country, The Walrus Talks Opioids brings together medical experts, frontline workers, policymakers, and individuals with lived experience with opioid use disorder to share evidence-based strategies for tackling the crisis, highlight proven policy solutions, and outline what we can do to end the opioid crisis.

Join Us

This week on What Happened Next, host Nathan Whitlock is joined by award-winning author, journalist, and filmmaker Michelle Shephard, who talks about the kinds of things she has witnessed while reporting in places like Guantánamo Bay, about how she handled co-writing a book with a former FBI agent, and about the journalist/novelist she looks to as a model as she contemplates trying her hand at a work of fiction.

Listen Now

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We’re not retreating, and you shouldn’t either. Donate today, or better yet, make a monthly commitment. It’s the best way to keep Canadian journalism growing.


Carmine Starnino

Editor-in-Chief, The Walrus

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