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On the show
From 28 epsHost
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Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1658 - Is Canada Coming Apart? Alberta, Quebec & the Future of National Unity withDaniel Beland
Jun 23, 2026
55m 40s
Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1657 - Ukraine Front Lines & Father’s Day Reflections: Who Shapes Us? with Christian Thwaites
Jun 22, 2026
58m 16s
Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1656 - The Day of Epiphany: The Duplessis Orphans, Quebec’s Quiet Revolution, and the Echoes of History
Jun 19, 2026
50m 02s
Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1655 - Ukraine’s Turning Point? Aurel Braun on Putin, NATO & Canada’s Security
Jun 18, 2026
49m 16s
Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1654 - Stories, Ebola in Congo & AI: What It Means to Be Human
Jun 17, 2026
53m 14s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/23/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1658 - Is Canada Coming Apart? Alberta, Quebec & the Future of National Unity withDaniel Beland | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie is joined by McGill University professor Daniel Béland, one of Canada’s leading experts on federalism and public policy, for a timely discussion on the state of Canadian unity. The conversation examines growing political tension in Alberta and Quebec, including renewed talk of sovereignty and separatism, and asks whether these movements reflect a genuine rise in independence sentiment or are largely amplified by political discourse and media attention. Crombie and Béland explore how Canada’s highly decentralized federal system shapes provincial–federal relationships, and whether current debates signal structural strain or normal political friction within Confederation. The discussion also considers how provincial strategies compare with other global autonomy movements, and what lessons can be drawn from international examples. Beyond politics, the episode reflects on how Canada can strengthen national unity through greater understanding between regions, increased mobility, and breaking down long-standing stereotypes. Béland emphasizes the importance of Canadians seeing themselves as partners in a shared national project rather than as divided regional blocs. The episode closes with a broader question: in an era of global instability and economic uncertainty, can Canada maintain cohesion and build toward shared national goals—or will regional divisions limit its future potential? | 55m 40s | ||||||
| 6/22/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1657 - Ukraine Front Lines & Father’s Day Reflections: Who Shapes Us? with Christian Thwaites | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie presents two deeply personal and contrasting conversations—one focused on the realities of war in Ukraine, and the other on the people and relationships that shape a life. In the first segment, Crombie speaks with Christian Thwaites, a retired investment executive who is now volunteering in Dnipro, Ukraine with ARTESANS ResQ. Operating near the front lines, Thwaites transports critically ill and wounded patients to specialized hospitals while navigating the ongoing dangers of missile and drone attacks. He shares firsthand insights into daily life in a war zone, Ukraine’s evolving military capabilities, the resilience of civilians, and the increasing strain on Russian forces. The conversation provides a rare ground-level perspective on the conflict and why Ukraine may be gaining momentum militarily, even as the path to peace remains complex and uncertain. In his Father’s Day closing commentary, Crombie reflects on the question: “Who shapes us?” Drawing on personal memories and family moments, he explores the lasting influence of mentors, teachers, coaches, and figures such as Jim Pattison, whose lessons continue to resonate decades later. The reflection highlights the often-unseen impact of relationships that form identity and character, and considers how legacy is less about individual achievement and more about the people we help shape along the way. | 58m 16s | ||||||
| 6/19/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1656 - The Day of Epiphany: The Duplessis Orphans, Quebec’s Quiet Revolution, and the Echoes of History | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian speaks with award-winning French-Canadian author, actor, and educator Jerome Bourgault about his powerful historical novel, The Day of Epiphany. Set in 1950s Quebec during the era of Maurice Duplessis, the novel explores the tragic true story of the Duplessis Orphans—children who were reclassified from orphanages into psychiatric institutions through political and bureaucratic manipulation, leading to decades of abuse, neglect, and lifelong trauma. Brian and Jerome discuss the social and political realities of pre–Quiet Revolution Quebec, the dangerous concentration of power between church and state institutions, and the role of historical fiction in bringing difficult chapters of history to life. The conversation also examines how authoritarian tendencies can emerge gradually through conformity, bureaucracy, fear, and the erosion of accountability. In his closing commentary, Brian reflects on the lessons of the Quiet Revolution, the importance of critical thinking and empathy, and why democratic societies depend on citizens who remain willing to question power rather than surrender their judgment to institutions or political movements. A compelling discussion about history, literature, democracy, and the enduring warnings that the past may still be offering us today. | 50m 02s | ||||||
| 6/18/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1655 - Ukraine’s Turning Point? Aurel Braun on Putin, NATO & Canada’s Security | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie is joined by Aurel Braun, Professor of International Relations and Political Science at the University of Toronto and Associate at Harvard University's Davis Center, for a wide-ranging discussion on the war in Ukraine and its global implications. More than three years after Russia's full-scale invasion, Ukraine continues to defy expectations through military innovation, a rapidly expanding domestic defense industry, and the strategic use of drone warfare. Braun examines whether Ukraine may be approaching a genuine turning point in the conflict and what that could mean for the future of Europe. The conversation also explores the growing pressures facing Vladimir Putin, including economic strain, labour shortages, military recruitment challenges, and the historical vulnerabilities of authoritarian regimes. Braun discusses whether Russia may be entering a period of increasing instability and what that could mean for the Kremlin's future. The discussion then turns to the role of Donald Trump, the future of NATO, Europe's expanding security responsibilities, and the broader contest between democratic and authoritarian systems. Finally, Braun offers a candid assessment of Canada's military readiness, Arctic security, defense procurement challenges, and the country's obligations to allies in an increasingly unstable world. This timely conversation examines leadership, strategy, international security, and why the outcome of the war in Ukraine could shape global politics for decades to come. | 49m 16s | ||||||
| 6/17/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1654 - Stories, Ebola in Congo & AI: What It Means to Be Human | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie opens with a reflection on storytelling and why, in a world saturated with information, the most meaningful truths often come from simply listening to others. Drawing inspiration from author Michael Lewis, he explores the idea that everyone carries a story worth hearing — beyond resumes, headlines, or public achievements. In the second segment, Crombie is joined by Jim Bright to discuss a developing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Bright provides a firsthand account from a small hospital operating in the region, highlighting the challenges facing medical workers, including limited resources, high risk, and growing humanitarian needs. The episode closes with a commentary on artificial intelligence and its broader implications for humanity. Crombie reflects on how AI is evolving into not just a technological force, but an economic, geopolitical, psychological, and human one. He raises concerns about whether increasing reliance on AI systems could reshape how people think, connect, and understand themselves. At the centre of the discussion is a larger question: as AI becomes more powerful and embedded in daily life, will humanity remain at its core — or gradually drift away from it? | 53m 14s | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1653 - AI, Power & Sovereignty: Rafal Rohozinski on Canada’s Digital Future | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie is joined by global cyber risk and digital security expert Rafal Rohozinski for a deep dive into artificial intelligence, digital sovereignty, and the shifting global balance of power. The conversation explores how AI is rapidly evolving into a geopolitical force, reshaping international competition and national security. Rohozinski outlines how the United States and China are developing competing AI ecosystems, and why control of digital infrastructure is becoming as strategically important as energy once was. The discussion turns to Canada’s vulnerability, highlighting its dependence on foreign-controlled digital infrastructure and limited share of global AI investment despite a strong research talent base. Crombie and Rohozinski examine what digital sovereignty could look like for Canada and whether national AI champions or targeted innovation strategies are needed to remain competitive. The episode also addresses the growing role of AI in warfare, including autonomous systems, drone technology, and the ethical challenges of removing humans from lethal decision-making. Despite these risks, Rohozinski argues Canada still has opportunities to build strength in specialized AI sectors such as healthcare, defense, and industrial applications. The conversation concludes with a central question: whether Canada will become a leading participant in the AI era — or remain a dependent user of foreign systems. | 50m 33s | ||||||
| 6/15/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1652 - Finding Grace: Rocco Rossi on Healing, Pilgrimage & the Camino de Santiago | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie is joined by author, entrepreneur, advisor, and former CEO of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce Rocco Rossi to discuss his new novel Finding Grace, released June 15. The conversation explores Rossi’s extraordinary journey along the Camino de Santiago, which he has completed in 23 variations over more than 14,000 kilometres — the equivalent of 332 marathons. But beyond the physical feat, the discussion focuses on the deeper meaning behind the pilgrimage. Rossi and Crombie discuss themes of grief, healing, authenticity, fatherhood, spirituality, and the importance of silence and reflection in a modern world filled with distraction. Rossi also shares why he chose fiction over memoir to tell this story of transformation and human connection. The episode highlights the tradition of walking the Camino on behalf of others and how carrying the hopes and struggles of others can become part of one’s own healing journey. | 45m 18s | ||||||
| 6/12/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1651 - Mississauga Municipality | Tonight’s episode concludes with a focused on municipal politics and its direct impact on everyday life. The discussion highlights how local governments shape key areas such as housing affordability, transit systems, public safety, parks, roads, and the overall vitality of cities and communities. While municipal leadership often concentrates on managing existing challenges, the commentary raises the importance of longer-term vision, investment, and forward-looking planning to build stronger cities for the future. It also emphasizes the need for engaged citizens who take part in shaping their communities, especially as cities face increasing pressure from population growth, infrastructure demands, and housing shortages. The central question posed is whether cities are simply maintaining the status quo—or actively building for future generations. | 50m 46s | ||||||
| 6/11/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1650 - Toronto’s Future: Darrell Brown on Housing, Transit & City Building | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, host Brian Crombie is joined by Toronto mayoral candidate Darrell Brown for a wide-ranging discussion on the future of Canada’s largest city. The conversation explores Toronto’s most pressing challenges, including housing affordability, homelessness, congestion, transit funding, planning delays, and ongoing fiscal pressures. Brown also addresses the limitations of property tax–based revenues and the need for new approaches to municipal governance and development. With experience in international economic and legal reform, pension systems, development projects, and nearly a decade as CEO of the Canadian National Exhibition, Brown offers a distinct perspective on how cities function and evolve. The episode also features Brian Crombie’s closing commentary on the idea that cities require more than management — they require builders, ambition, and renewed civic engagement to move forward. | 57m 58s | ||||||
| 6/10/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1649 - The Beginning of the Next Stretch: Aging, Purpose, Connection, and the Meaning of Life✨ | agingpurpose+4 | — | — | — | agingpurpose+5 | — | 38m 10s | |
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| 6/9/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1648 - Canada’s Housing Crisis: Too Expensive to Buy, Too Hard to Build✨ | housing crisisreal estate+4 | David Graham | Atlantic DevelopmentsGlobe and Mail | Canada | Canadahousing crisis+5 | — | 49m 37s | |
| 6/8/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1647 - Empathy, AI, and the Modern Crisis of Human Connection✨ | empathyAI+5 | Dr. Ashok Bhattacharya | Empathy Clinic | — | empathyAI+7 | — | 49m 44s | |
| 6/6/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1646 - Forgiveness, Addiction Recovery, and the Meaning of Authentic Strength✨ | forgivenessaddiction recovery+4 | Tabitha Rose | Life to Paper PublishingWhen We Forgive | — | forgivenessaddiction+5 | — | 49m 41s | |
| 6/4/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1645 - AI, Investing & the Bubble Risk: Correlation vs Causation with Sam Sivarajan✨ | AIinvesting+4 | Sam Sivarajan | AINEWSTALK Sauga 960 AM | — | AIinvesting+6 | — | 1h 02m 13s | |
| 6/3/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1644 - Saskatchewan’s Strategic Power and Canada’s Commodity Future✨ | Saskatchewan economyglobal commodity landscape+5 | Heather Exner-Pirot | Macdonald-Laurier Institute | SaskatchewanCanada+1 | Saskatchewancommodity supercycle+5 | — | 53m 37s | |
| 6/2/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1643 - Eurovision, Kindness & Connection: What Still Brings Us Together in a Divided World✨ | Eurovisionkindness+4 | Dean VuleticSheema Khan | EurovisionCanada | — | Eurovisionkindness+6 | — | 56m 11s | |
| 6/1/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1642 - Pope Leo XIV, Artificial Intelligence, and the Future of Humanity✨ | artificial intelligenceethics+5 | Dr. John Cappucci | Assumption UniversityMagnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence+1 | — | artificial intelligencePope Leo XIV+8 | — | 50m 01s | |
| 5/29/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1641 - The Performed Man: Responsibility, Identity, and the Hidden Cost of Holding It Together✨ | responsibilityidentity+4 | Mike Poliwoda | NEWSTALK Sauga 960 AMThe Performed Man: When Financial Responsibility Becomes Identity | — | emotional fatigueburnout+3 | — | 50m 06s | |
| 5/28/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1640 - Sports, Stadiums & the Power of Community with Aaron Clopton✨ | sports and communityidentity and belonging+5 | Aaron Clopton | NEWSTALK Sauga 960 AMBrian Crombie Radio Hour | — | sportscommunity+8 | — | 11m 52s | |
| 5/27/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1639 - Canada Has Everything — So Why Does It Feel Broken? | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian closes the show with a powerful commentary titled “Canada’s Problem.” Stepping back from the daily headlines, Brian examines a deeper national question: how can a country with so many advantages feel increasingly stuck? Canada possesses extraordinary strengths — vast natural resources, political stability, educated citizens, energy abundance, and strong global credibility. Yet despite those advantages, productivity is stagnating, housing affordability is collapsing, infrastructure projects face endless delays, and public trust in institutions continues to erode. Young Canadians are increasingly questioning whether hard work still leads to stability, home ownership, and upward mobility. Meanwhile, political frustration is growing across the country, including rising separatist sentiment in Alberta and widening regional divisions. In this commentary, Brian explores Canada’s productivity crisis, housing dysfunction, energy paralysis, wealth inequality, and declining confidence in leadership and execution. His conclusion is direct: Canada’s challenge is not a lack of opportunity or potential — it is a failure to execute. | 50m 32s | ||||||
| 5/26/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1638 - Canada’s Housing Affordability Crisis with Kari Norman | Brian Crombie is joined by Kari Norman of Desjardins to examine Canada’s housing affordability crisis. The discussion focuses on rising home prices in major cities such as Toronto and Vancouver, and the growing gap between established asset owners and younger Canadians struggling to enter the market. Topics include development charges, taxation, zoning and land constraints, immigration pressures, limited housing supply, and rising youth unemployment. The conversation highlights concerns that long-term affordability challenges could reshape Canada’s middle class and economic mobility. | 48m 07s | ||||||
| 5/25/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1637 - Stéphane Dion on Alberta Separatism & National Unity | Brian Crombie interviews Stéphane Dion for a wide-ranging conversation on Alberta separatism, national unity, and the future of Canada. Drawing on his experience as the architect of the Clarity Act, Dion explains why Quebec nationalism and Alberta separatism represent fundamentally different political movements, and why separation could carry significant economic, political, and investment risks for Canada. The discussion explores key national issues including pipelines, climate policy, equalization, western alienation, Canada–U.S. relations, and trade diversification in an increasingly uncertain global environment. Dion argues that rising separatist rhetoric may deepen regional divisions and weaken national confidence at a time when Canada faces growing geopolitical and economic pressure. The conversation ultimately raises difficult questions about sovereignty, unity, and whether Canada can maintain cohesion amid rising regional frustration. | 49m 34s | ||||||
| 5/22/26 | ![]() Epi Brian Crombie Radio Hour - 1636 - The Art of Adventure & Emotional Sovereignty: Nature, Wonder, and Reclaiming the Self | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian Crombie explores two powerful conversations about freedom — one rooted in exploration and connection to nature, and the other in emotional self-respect and personal sovereignty. In Part 1, Brian is joined by filmmaker Alison Reid to discuss her acclaimed documentary The Art of Adventure, which tells the remarkable story of legendary wildlife artist Robert Bateman and biologist Bristol Foster. The film follows the lifelong friendship between Bateman and Foster, who first met as teenagers at the Royal Ontario Museum before embarking in their twenties on an 18-month expedition across 19 countries in a Land Rover known as the Grizzly Torque. Filmed using a Bolex camera, the journey became a rare archival portrait of a disappearing world and a meditation on curiosity, adventure, environmentalism, and wonder. The conversation also explores Bateman’s influence on wildlife art, the connection to Anne Innis Dagg and The Woman Who Loved Giraffes, and why reconnecting younger generations to nature may be more important than ever. In Part 2, Brian delivers a personal commentary on emotional sovereignty — the ability to remain connected to oneself inside relationships, conflict, and emotional pressure. He reflects on emotionally destructive dynamics, boundaries, accountability, self-erasure, and the slow process through which people reclaim trust in themselves after spending years trying to maintain peace at the expense of their own identity. The episode ultimately asks a deeper question: how do people remain connected to what is real — in nature, relationships, and culture — without losing themselves in the process? | 53m 19s | ||||||
| 5/21/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1635 - Immigration, Productivity & Canada’s Economic Future: Can Canada Grow Without Population Growth? | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian Crombie is joined by leading economists Don Drummond and Parisa Mahboubi for a major discussion about Canada’s slowing economy, falling immigration targets, and deepening productivity crisis. The episode begins with an examination of Canada’s post-pandemic immigration reset and why the federal government reduced immigration levels after years of rapid population growth. The panel discusses the pressures created by housing shortages, healthcare strain, infrastructure limits, and affordability challenges — while also exploring how slower immigration could reduce GDP and employment growth in the near term. The conversation also looks at Canada’s aging population, declining birth rates, and the growing consensus that immigration alone cannot solve the country’s long-term demographic and economic challenges. The discussion explores why immigration policy may need to be more closely aligned with housing capacity, labour market needs, healthcare systems, and productivity growth. In the second half of the program, the focus shifts to Canada’s long-standing productivity problem. Don Drummond explains why Canada has struggled for decades to close the productivity gap with the United States and why many Canadian companies fail to scale into globally competitive businesses. The panel examines weak investment in technology and innovation, regulatory barriers, interprovincial trade restrictions, tax policy concerns, and what some describe as an “ambition deficit” in the Canadian economy. One of the central discussions explores why many Canadian businesses plateau instead of pursuing aggressive long-term expansion. As population growth slows, the episode asks a defining economic question for the country’s future: Can Canada still build a high-growth economy based on productivity, innovation, investment, and competitiveness rather than simply adding more people? | 49m 40s | ||||||
| 5/20/26 | ![]() Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1634 - Alberta at a Crossroads: Separation, Western Alienation & Canada’s Growing Divide | On this episode of The Brian Crombie Radio Hour, Brian Crombie is joined by Jeanne Milne and Erin Waite for an in-depth discussion on the growing conversation around Alberta separatism and the broader political tensions reshaping Canada. The panel examines why increasing numbers of Albertans are expressing frustration with Ottawa, the role Premier Danielle Smith and the UCP government are playing in the debate, and how economic pressures, populism, and regional alienation are fueling calls for greater autonomy — or even separation. The conversation also explores the potential economic and constitutional consequences of Alberta leaving Canada, including concerns around pipelines, trade access, investor confidence, Indigenous treaty rights, and comparisons to Brexit and past Quebec sovereignty movements. As Alberta remains one of the country’s wealthiest provinces, the episode asks a critical question: Is separatism a serious political movement, or a reflection of deeper distrust and polarization spreading across Canada? | 53m 21s | ||||||
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