The art of the shameless, indisputable political lieTrump’s fibs are so normal, they barely incite outrage anymore. Canadian politicians’ untruths get less notice, but they’re no less common
5 times Prince Philip offended a lot of peoplePrince Philip, Queen Elizabeth II’s husband, is retiring from royal engagements. Over the course of seven decades, he managed to offend many unsuspecting crowds around the world.
Can this warlord save Afghanistan?Gulbuddin Hekmatyar has a blood-soaked past. But he might be the only person who can blunt the Taliban’s alarming recent success.
How the alt-right weaponized free speechThe fight for free speech is a worthy one. But the alt-right’s co-opting of the movement exposes their unsavoury motives
Maclean’s Explains: Why are Canadian troops going to Latvia?Canada is gearing up to lead a NATO mission in Latvia. Why are troops there?
Garry Kasparov on Russia, chess, and the great gambit of AIAs a chess legend, Garry Kasparov always looks several moves ahead—and his new book envisions what the future will hold
Can Tim Hortons thrive without its Canadian crutch?Tim Hortons is about to enter the coffee-saturated United Kingdom. Will Timbits and leaky lids win over the Brits?
Seeing a Syrian refugee’s journey, through a child’s eyesNorwegian filmmaker Egil Håskjold Larsen on ’69 Minutes Of 86 Days’, a refugee documentary focussed on humanity, not horror
100 days of Trump in under four minutesFrom his controversial executive orders to his awkward handshakes, here’s a look back at Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office.
’Do you know what a mugwump is?’The U.K.’s quote machine of a foreign minister is at it again, and his latest dig may have him headed for a fresh disaster