Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift

NEW - New Fiction Book: The Peacekeeper Who Couldn't Keep His Own Peace

19 min · 3 jun 2026
aflevering NEW - New Fiction Book: The Peacekeeper Who Couldn't Keep His Own Peace artwork

Beschrijving

A Canadian peacekeeper deploys to Croatia in 1993 to separate armies that want nothing to do with peace. He comes home carrying wounds nobody can see. Decades later, a daughter he never knew existed makes her way across the country to find him. The Peace Thieves is Brent Van Staalduinen's sixth novel, built around a question the title refuses to let go of: who is stealing the peace, and can it ever truly be kept? An anti-war novel that openly celebrates the people sent into harm's way, and asks what a country owes them when they return. Topics: Canadian peacekeeping novel, military fiction Canada, PTSD veterans fiction, Croatia 1993, father-daughter estrangement GUEST: Brent Van Staalduinen | http://brentvans.com [http://brentvans.com] Originally aired on 2026-06-02

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Alle afleveringen

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aflevering Shiftheads: Alberta's Wins That Separatists Forgot They Had artwork

Shiftheads: Alberta's Wins That Separatists Forgot They Had

Alberta separatists have a long memory for grievances and a short one for results. Matt Gurney, editor at Read the Line, brings a new piece arguing that Alberta conservatives have been one of the most effective political forces in Canadian history, and that the case for separatism ignores twenty years of real, documented wins. Then the conversation turns to something harder to measure: what happens when the information we consume rewires what we believe is true? Gurney makes the case that outrage isn't a feature of the modern world, it's a choice, and most of us are making it without realising it. If you've ever wondered whether the country is actually broken or whether you've just been told it is, this one lands. Topics: Alberta separatism, Canadian conservatism, Read the Line, political history, social media and perception GUEST: Matt Gurney | http://readtheline.ca [http://readtheline.ca] Originally aired on 2026-06-09

10 jun 20269 min
aflevering Canada's Prisons Are Testing AI. Experts Aren't Sold. artwork

Canada's Prisons Are Testing AI. Experts Aren't Sold.

AI in Canadian prisons is no longer hypothetical. Correctional Service Canada has handed $123,000 to Accenture to pilot the use of artificial intelligence in writing criminal profile reports, the foundational documents that shape how inmates are managed, what programs they access, and how parole decisions get made. Technology analyst Carmi Levy breaks down what that actually means and why the experts raising red flags deserve to be heard. The problem isn't that AI is being used. It's that the oversight required to catch its errors costs more time and resources than skipping the AI entirely. Levy draws a line from hallucinating courtroom case citations to correctional reports, and the logic is hard to argue with. If the answer is only as good as the question, someone needs to ask a better one before this goes any further. Topics: AI in Canadian prisons, Correctional Service Canada, criminal profile reports, AI hallucination, Accenture pilot GUEST: Carmi Levy Originally aired on 2026-06-09

10 jun 20269 min
aflevering Canada's Comfortable Bubble Nobody Wants to Question artwork

Canada's Comfortable Bubble Nobody Wants to Question

Canadian consumer choices rarely get challenged from the inside, and that is exactly the problem. This conversation starts with recycling bags in Merrickville and ends up somewhere much bigger: why do Canadians keep accepting the options they are handed instead of asking for better ones?   From the cars that keep getting larger while European streets fill with variety, to recycling pickup that changes completely depending on which province you happen to live in, to dental hygiene access that works entirely differently depending on where your benefits apply, the gaps are real and the questions are not being asked loudly enough.   Ryan O'Donnell also shares what happened when he finally made it to a tropical beach for the first time, and why the airport on the way there was a completely different story.   Topics: Canadian consumer choices, car selection Canada, recycling Canada, dental care provinces, asking better questions Originally aired on 2026-06-08

Gisteren9 min
aflevering NEW - DIY Fixed for your Hot Water Tank and an Apple Siri Fix too? artwork

NEW - DIY Fixed for your Hot Water Tank and an Apple Siri Fix too?

Home maintenance tips don't get more overlooked than this one: draining your hot water tank once or twice a year could add years to its life, and almost nobody does it. Andy Baryer from HandyAndyMedia.com learned this the hard way when his tank failed a year past its six-year warranty, and his plumber confirmed the mineral buildup was the cause.   Baryer also makes the case for holding onto your silica gel packs. The little moisture-absorbing pouches that come in shoe boxes turn out to be genuinely useful in toolboxes, storage containers, and seasonal closet switchovers, and they cost nothing to keep.   Then the conversation shifts to Apple's worldwide developer conference, where the company announced a new AI-powered Siri built on Google's Gemini model. Baryer calls it a good move. Ryan has been using Siri exclusively for timers and has opinions about that.   Topics: hot water tank maintenance, silica gel uses, Apple Siri update, Gemini AI Apple, home maintenance tips   GUEST: Andy Baryer | handyandymedia.com Originally aired on 2026-06-08

Gisteren19 min
aflevering Ryan Hated Beach Vacations… Then He Actually Went on One artwork

Ryan Hated Beach Vacations… Then He Actually Went on One

First time travel to a tropical destination has a way of dismantling opinions held for years, and Ryan O'Donnell arrived in Cabo San Lucas with a full set of them. He wanted experiences, not a beach chair. He wanted castles and roller coasters and history, not chips and a pool. He was wrong, and he knows it.   The conversation lands on what actually shifted: tasting salt water for the first time, falling asleep at ten-thirty every night without trying, lying on a beach under a full moon listening to the Pacific. Ryan plays the recording he made from the shore. It sounds like bliss.   There is also the airport, where a foot long at Subway ran thirty dollars Canadian and the hat he bought at the resort for thirty dollars was going for sixty-five at the departure gate.   Topics: first time Mexico travel, all-inclusive resort Canada, Cabo San Lucas, travel perspective, beach vacation Originally aired on 2026-06-08

Gisteren9 min