On the Trail with Isaac Peltz

The Liberals (V.2.0) hit one year old

41 min · 29 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio The Liberals (V.2.0) hit one year old

Descripción

I accidentally uploaded the French version of the podcast yesterday. Here is the English one. Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. This week was an eventful one, but most importantly, we celebrate one year of Carney. Happy Carneyversary everyone! On the first anniversary of his 2025 election victory, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the creation of a $25 billion sovereign wealth fund. The new Crown corporation aims to fund major infrastructure projects through partnerships with Indigenous peoples and organized labor. Carney stated the fund would avoid the historical displacement associated with projects like the Canadian Pacific Railway. Specific financial details remain vague, with the Prime Minister stating that the upcoming economic update will clarify how the initial $25 billion investment will be sourced. A consultation period will take place over the coming months to finalize the fund's investment strategy. In Quebec provincial politics, Minister Gilles Bélanger resigned from the CAQ after Premier Fréchette appointed Bernard Drainville as Minister of Energy and Finance. Bélanger had been one of Fréchette’s earliest supporters. Simultaneously, Fréchette announced a $400 million investment for preparatory infrastructure work in eastern Montreal, specifically targeting water, sewage, and power networks for the expansion of the Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital. This pivot toward public reinvestment has led to a slight recovery for the CAQ in polls, though the Parti Québécois (PQ) remains positioned to win the next election. A poll indicated the PQ could win a supermajority if they dropped their referendum proposal, but leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon rejected the idea as dishonest. A shooting occurred at the White House Correspondents' Dinner. A gunman is in custody, but the lack of footage from the media event has fueled online conspiracy theories claiming the event was staged. These rumors follow similar unverified claims regarding a previous shooting incident in Butler, Pennsylvania. Other News A Canadian woman was killed and 13 others injured in a shooting at the Teotihuacán pyramids in Mexico. Mexican officials report that a lone gunman opened fire at the tourist site, striking eight individuals, including another Canadian and citizens from the United States, Colombia, Russia, Brazil, and the Netherlands. Two minors, aged six and 13, were among the wounded. The woman’s identity has not been officially released. The Prime Minister’s Office has vehemently rejected a report from The Globe and Mail claiming Ottawa is considering an oil pipeline from Alberta to Southern British Columbia. While the article cited anonymous sources, the government corrected the claim the following day. Alberta continues to favor a northern route for the pipeline. The British Columbia NDP government has canceled planned amendments to UNDRIP laws for the spring session following significant public backlash. The controversy has negatively impacted the party's standing in recent polls. In the West Bank, Israeli settlers murdered two Palestinians, including a 14-year-old, amid a surge in settler violence. Instagram is testing premium, paid features, further transitioning the application toward a model where specific functionalities are locked behind a paywall. Manitoba has introduced legislation to increase electricity rates for data centers and cryptocurrency mining operations to prevent industrial entities from being subsidized by the public. Quebec is set to implement a similar measure in June 2026. Additionally, Manitoba has introduced a ban on social media and AI for children. While intended to protect minors, the bill requires users to submit identification to technology companies, raising privacy concerns. This first-of-its-kind legislation in Canada has sparked intense debate across the political spectrum regarding government overreach and digital safety. A British Columbia MLA faced widespread condemnation after using the Nazi slogan "blood and soil" in parliament. The MLA used the phrase while referencing the BC NDP’s policies regarding Indigenous peoples.

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61 episodios

episode We got Honourable Mention at the Digital Publishing Awards artwork

We got Honourable Mention at the Digital Publishing Awards

Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. That’s a fancy way to say that we lost. To Front Burner! But we still got the honourable mention, which is something that will be going in our bios and whatnot. Still, we did well with a $2000 budget against Front Burner’s millions, and the other podcasts we were up against. We’re super happy with how things are going. Meanwhile, we haven’t moved very far since last week. Isaac had to fly home to go to their sister’s wedding, and was gone for a period of about 30 hours (with no sleep). Now the trip is radically freed up as the two of us charge across the country with nothing on our backs weighing us down! Ontario, here we come. We also talk about the weird experience of talking about separation on social media, and people expecting us to be activists as opposed to journalists, something which confuses people. We explain the details of what it means to be openly on the left, but non partisan, and Agnes, the dog, barks at us in the background.  All this and more this week!

8 de jun de 202622 min
episode Making profit at a saloon and reviewing Alberta artwork

Making profit at a saloon and reviewing Alberta

Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. This week the two of us recount our vast journey through Alberta and the experience that we had in Calgary. In the past week we have talked to dozens and dozens of people and interviewed people from across Alberta about separatism! We stood outside on the street and conducted interviews with people who were interested in speaking with us, getting yelled at, told off, and even getting threatened here and there. Get off my lawn, kids! Still, from hearing about Ottawa taking taxes to people getting rowdy about wanting to stay in Canada, we have seen it all. We escaped the province feeling spirited, and with a fair few stories to tell. As we crossed over the border into Saskatchewan, the roads changed, as did the culture. We love— no like, we *love* Saskatchewan. This might be the forever home. If Jay and I stay, you’ll know why. But only if you listen to this here episode of the Paper Trail podcast! Then, after settling into Sask, we review Alberta. How many dinosaurs will it receive? Why does Isaac declare war on Calgary? And where is Jay even from? All this and more in this week’s episode!

1 de jun de 202645 min
episode Review of British Columbia artwork

Review of British Columbia

Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. This is the last 24 hours you have to sign up for the Paper Rag— this is a physical only version of the articles we’ve been publishing, with extra articles, poetry, and a ton of photo journalism. If you don’t sign up by the end of May 25th, you will never get the magazine. This magazine is a once in a lifetime, limited edition copy of our work and this trip, and a form of gonzo journalism that will never be seen again. https://patreon.com/paperrag Today we break down how we got to Alberta, and we do the first of many reviews of the provinces. First we break down the long laborious journey through Rogers’ Pass, and how we were destroyed by constant brutal weather changes, and then eventually we get to our confusing, but epic scale of how we would rank British Columbia. Trust me, this is an objective scale. We rank our personal experiences devoid of any cultural or political context that would actually inform any type of deep thoughts around the subject. We hope you enjoy the greatest, and most objective, review of BC!

25 de may de 202650 min
episode Insane conversations and broken tires artwork

Insane conversations and broken tires

Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. Here we are, another week in. Many disasters have taken place. Many great conversations. Jay and Isaac break down week two of the trip across the country. We have encountered up to 50 people in our conversations, had interviews with the most strange (sometimes offensive) people whom you could have imagined. Above all, we’re getting tossed out of Lytton and destroyed by the wind. Here is the full story behind the stories. Right now we’re at the end of BC, about to enter Alberta. We took the scenic route, adding four hundred extra kilometers. There’s much to say about the country— not all of it positive. BC has been an amazing place to bike through. The people have been incredibly considerate and we’ve seen the goodness of the people here. We’ve also met Quebecers on the road, and seen the greatest bike race we’ve ever imagined. All covered this week on the trail!

19 de may de 202631 min
episode The Journey Begins - The Paper Trail artwork

The Journey Begins - The Paper Trail

Sign up for the newsletter, and support our work at https://onthetrail.info ! This is entirely reader funded, and we don't accept corporate payouts. Support the hardest hitting journalism in Quebec. Welcome to the Paper Trail Podcast, where we update you on our whereabouts and the hell we’ve been through so far. This week we began the journey across Canada. We’ve interacted with dozens of people, and had long drawn out conversations with tons of strangers. The country is more diverse than we think. The two of us also consider the challenges of explaining how the nature affects this trip. How do we explain the beauty and importance of nature in uniting Canada? Is it a major factor in keeping us together?  After that we dive into our predictions for the coming weeks, and hope to god that this trip won’t lead to our deaths. Expect this once a week until the journey is over, because it’ll be the secret, behind-the-scenes of what we’re up to.

12 de may de 202624 min