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Here's your Weekend Posted. We hope you've survived the transition into daylight saving time. Somehow it gets rougher every year.
If not, hopefully you're getting a chance to sleep in.
Tyler Dawson, weekend Posted correspondent
CHINA AND CANADA
Associated Press and Reuters file photos
What does China hope to achieve by meddling in Canadian affairs? It's a good question, and one the National Post's Tom Blackwell
has set out to answer. In recent months, a number of media reports have suggested that China interfered in the federal elections
of 2019 and 2021 in favour of the Liberal Party of Canada. Of course, China denies this accusation entirely. But experts disagree.
They say that Beijing has clear goals in mind when it interferes in Canadian affairs. These goals include trying to keep Canada
quiet about China's human rights abuses, disrupting Canada's relationships with its intelligence partners and finding ways to
steal technology and trade secrets. Canada's relationship with China, which really floundered when Canada arrested Meng Wanzhou, a
Huawei executive, and China, in turn, detained two Canadians on suspicion of spying, wasn't always this way. In fact, former
ambassador John McCallum had touted a "great new era" in relations between the two countries. Well, it doesn't seem to have
lasted.
YOUR REAL AGE
Getty Images
Do those grey hairs and disconcerting wrinkles actually show how old you are? Are they a true representation of how old you are at
a cellular level? As the National Post's Sharon Kirkey reports, a growing number of startups are setting out to test a person's
biological age. It's actually sort of simple. A swab of the cheek or a blood sample will be tested and run through a series of
algorithms to determine one's biological age, which may or may not equate with their on-paper age. One such biological clock is
called TallyAge, created by Tally Health, which was co-founded by Harvard Medical School molecular biologist David Sinclair. The
method is based in something called epigenetics. Basically, this works by analyzing the way epigenomes — which control gene
expression — are working to take an estimate of internal, biological health. The promise — or at least the dream — of this is that
these epigenomes might be compelled to work properly, turning back some of the telltale signs of aging. But until that happens,
there are other ways you can stay young, biologically: Eat well, exercise regularly and maintain social connection.
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NATIONAL POST NEWS QUIZ
Ready to test your mettle against the news of the week? We bring you another edition of the National Post news quiz. A hint: Know
your special rapporteur!
ET CETERA
* Disorder in the court! Supreme Court Justice Russell Brown is on a leave of absence related to an alleged altercation in
Scottsdale, Ariz. He's under investigation by the Canadian Judicial Council, which has the duty to investigate the conduct of
federally appointed judges. This explainer has everything you need to know about the affair, how the council does its work and
what it means for the court, as it looks to hear an important federalism case.
* After all of the Liberal filibustering, it could come down to a House of Commons vote on Monday whether Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau’s chief of staff Katie Telford will be forced to testify in front of parliamentarians about China's alleged
interference in past elections. As for opposition objections to the prime minister's choice of David Johnston as special
rapporteur, Trudeau labeled the criticism "horrific partisan attacks."
* Ryan Reynolds, who we've always assumed hasn't been hurting for cash, has found himself acquiring a cool $300 million in cash
and stocks. As a 25 per cent shareholder in Mint Mobile, Reynolds stands to make bank on the sale of the company to T-Mobile in
a deal worth as much as $1.35 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal.
* Whoopi Goldberg, who's on the TV show The View, has apologized for using a slur on air. “You know, when you’re a certain age,
you use words that you know from, you know, when you were a kid, or you remember saying," Goldberg said. This isn't her first
apology, either: In December, she apologized for saying the Holocaust has nothing to do with race.
* The federal privacy commissioner is now investigating after the National Post reported that CBC staff had discovered their
private responses to a diversity survey were accessible on their human resources files. Details included religion and sexual
orientation.
DEAR DIARY
In the weekly satirical feature Dear Diary, the National Post re-imagines a week in the life of a newsmaker. This week, Tristin
Hopper takes a guess at the inside thoughts of David Johnston, the former governor general tasked with investigating allegations
of electoral interference.
SNAPSHOT
Loic Venance/AFP
No nation quite protests like the French. In this photo, a member of the General Confederation of Labour union holds a flag as
they block access to an oil terminal at a refinery in Donges, in western France. A proposed reform to the French pension system
has sparked massive protests and strikes in France. It would raise the retirement age to 64 years of age.
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