Your World Tonight - Remembrance Day, cuts to veterans benefits, baseball betting, and more
Episode Date: November 11, 2025Ceremonies of remembrance mark the sacrifices of Canadian soldiers.And: Some veterans say budget changes mean they’ll get less money in their disability pensions.Also: Major League Baseball has been... thrown a curveball. Two Cleveland Guardians pitchers face a host of federal charges. They are accused of taking bribes from sports betters for rigging their stats.Plus: Technology’s effect on the symbolism of the Unknown Soldier, power outages after early winter snow wallop, effects from Typhoon Fung- Wong, and more.
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For more than 100 years around the world,
people have paused at 11 in the morning
to remember the horrors of war,
the veterans who have survived
those horrors and those who have not.
To see them all laying on the ground sewn up in a blanket, it was devastating.
Welcome to Your World Tonight. I'm Susan Bonner. It is Tuesday, November the 11th,
just before 6 p.m. Eastern, also on the podcast. Winter weather affected some of today's
ceremonies, canceling the parade in St. John's grounding vintern.
Plains in Ottawa, even knocking out power in parts of Quebec.
The only thing you can do with that kind of snow is waiting for it to come down and then repair the damages.
You can't prevent it from falling, of course.
Still, veterans as old as 100 years or more came out to bear witness to the statement,
lest we forget.
Powerful words that some veterans say the federal government isn't backing up with actions.
They worry changes laid out in the budget will mean less money for them,
and their families. But we begin with the day of remembrance.
The war to end all wars didn't. And while current conflicts rage on in the world
across this country in communities big and small, Canadians came together to honor those who
have served and sacrificed. Marina von Stackelberg was at the ceremony in the nation's capital.
Nearly 30,000 people watched in silence as wreaths were laid one by one at the snow-covered war memorial.
It's been 80 years since the end of the Second World War.
Veterans Affairs estimates less than 3,700 Canadian veterans from that war are still alive.
You know, it was just something special.
Sit here and think that I'm still around.
One of them is 103-year-old Elmer Friesen.
This is my first time here, and it's been so different from watching it on TV, to just be here.
And I was thinking of the guys that I came for.
Friesen shook the hand of Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Just one of many Canadians shaking Friesen's hand.
We've been all over the city.
People have been thanking him for his service.
He just feels so proud to be here.
His son can.
Yeah, it makes me emotional, just seeing him and how much it means to him.
When you ask him questions, he's got all kinds of stories.
Lynn Silvest's dad, Lucien, served in Belgium and the Netherlands.
While she and her sister bundled up to attend the Ottawa ceremony,
their 101-year-old father laid his own wreath at his Winnipeg retirement home.
Many veterans from the Second World War are now too frail to attend formal ceremonies.
But as he aged, it was more difficult for him to get out, so he hasn't been in quite a few years.
Canada is gradually losing its living memory of the Second World War.
Veterans like Bob Dunlop say it's as important as ever to remember the costs of conflict.
His dad came back alive from that war, but several of his uncles didn't.
So I'm really glad to see how many people are other people.
here to honor our veterans, but for them to also realize that, you know, we're living
in dangerous times now and it's really important that we all pull together as a nation.
It's one of the reasons why Ottawa University student Lillianna Wagg staff and her friends
came to watch the ceremony for the first time.
War should never have been like our first resort, especially since like we're talking
about that more and more. I think it's important to just remember the cost that it came
with and remember the impact that it had.
It's a message Elmer Friesen hopes the next generation won't forget.
I just want them to know that war is something you don't want to get involved in.
It's something we try and treat our children.
Make them aware of what war is all about.
Marina von Stackleberg, CBC News, Ottawa.
Some veterans say there was a different kind of message being sent by the federal government.
Last week's budget includes changes to how disability pensions are calculated.
As David Thurton reports, the veterans worry the changes could mean less money.
I think it's a really nasty little remembrance day gift that's been hidden in the budget.
Sean Brouier is a former intelligence officer in the Canadian Air Force.
The retired captain served during the Persian Gulf War.
Remembrance Day, he says he's upset about proposed changes to disability benefits.
The veterans will definitely get less over the long term, and we're talking about the most
vulnerable of the veterans, the ones that are highly dependent upon these benefits to recognize
their pain and suffering.
The changes were announced quietly in the federal budget.
In it, a couple of lines signaled auto as intention to modify the formula for how
disability pensions are calculated for current members of the military, veterans, and serving
a retired RCMP. The rate used now is based on an amount equal to the after-tax income of
certain federal public service workers or the average change in the Consumer Price Index,
whichever is greater. The Veterans Affairs Minister, Jill McKnight, confirmed the modification.
Increases will be based on the Consumer Price Index alone.
So what we're doing is making an adjustment to bring it in.
line with many other services and benefits that are offered and bringing it in line across
government for consistency.
But we'll be beginning less money.
My understanding is that we are going to be having everything in alignment across government
now.
The minister did not answer the question, but Brie is convinced vets will lose out.
And as time goes on, that discrepancy between the two calculations could result, for instance,
in the past 20 years.
in as much as $5,000 or more dollars less per year for a veteran on 100% disability.
But the potential impacts go beyond just the wallet.
Most of my PTSD is not from fighting for my country, but fighting my country.
Bruce Monkir is a vet and the founder of valor in the presence of an enemy.
The nonprofit aims to recognize the bravery of Canadian soldiers.
It's called the Triple D policy. Delayed, deny, die.
And eventually if they delay you long enough and deny you enough times that eventually you just die and dead veterans cost no money.
He says veterans like him are tired of fighting.
The change if past wouldn't go into effect until January 2027.
But Monkir says those who serve already feeling defeated and are losing hope and may not have the energy to fight back.
David Thornton, CBC News, Ottawa.
Prime Minister Mark Carney will include at least two critical mineral projects in his next announcement on nation building.
CBC News has learned some details of the projects that will be on the list.
They include mines in New Brunswick and Ontario, as well as a liquefied natural gas project in BC and a hydro project in Icaloite.
The government's stated goal is to spur private investment and cut red tape to get projects built faster.
Kearney will make the announcement on Thursday in Prince Rupert, British Columbia.
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is hosting her G7 counterparts in southern Ontario.
On the agenda, the situations in Ukraine and the Middle East,
but shifting economic alliances will also be top of mind as U.S. tariffs take effect around the world.
One of Anand's first meetings is with a country that isn't a member of the G7 but is invited as a guest, India.
The CBC's Rafi Bujicanian is in Niagara on the lake.
Rafi, Canada and other countries are turning more attention to India as the world tries to realign itself economically.
What are Canada's goals here?
Susan, the government seems very intent on resetting its relationship with India.
This is a continuation of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Alberta during the G7
and Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand's own trip to India earlier this fall.
We've seen the two countries reappoint high commissioners to each other's jurisdictions.
But, of course, this recent flaw is coming after a dramatic two years between Ottawa and New Delhi.
After former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused agents of the Indian government of being involved in the assassination of a Canadian Sikh separatist, Hardeeb Singh Nijer, on Canadian soil.
An accusation India denied, but Anand insists it is now openly cooperating on the investigation.
are ensuring that in the bilateral engagement with India, that these rule of law concerns,
that these public safety concerns are foremost in the advancement of the relationship.
So we're seeing these baby steps on the relationship advancing, both on the economic and
security front. Now, tomorrow, the minister meets with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rupert.
That country, of course, is a source of much of the economic tension we're seeing playing out.
What can these two ministers accomplish, Rafi, when the two national leaders are still not talking?
You know that time-honored tradition of G7 countries just not talking about things they can't agree on?
Well, these are not the main two representatives on trade issues.
So you can expect them to sort of carefully avoid that file while speaking about international conflict resolution.
particularly focusing on Ukraine and the tenuous Gaza ceasefire.
Though here, too, Canada and the U.S. have not seen completely eye-to-eye.
Canada and Europe are pushing for resettlement in the Russia-Ukraine war,
where Ukraine is not forced into any concessions it does not want,
while the Trump administration has been more fickle on the matter.
And, of course, on the Middle East front, Canada recently recognized the Palestinian state,
while the U.S. has not.
Still, the Canadian government has publicly supported
the Trump administration's proposed peace initiatives on both fronts,
something that's unlikely to change as Canada tries to revive those trade talks in other forums, Susan.
Thank you, Rafi.
You're welcome.
CBC's Rafi Bougicani and Niagara on the Lake, Ontario.
Coming right up, the gales of November came a bit early for much of eastern Canada,
leaving parts of Quebec without power and digging out from wet, heavy,
snow. A deadly super typhoon slams the Philippines, the second powerful storm in just a few
days. Also trying to pull a fast one with a fast ball. A cheating scandal in baseball has
baseball fans baffled. Later, we'll have this story. I'm Murray Brewster in Ottawa, where
Canadians mark the 25th anniversary of the establishment of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, a victim
of the Great War whose identity is deliberately kept a mystery in the age of DNA and
scientific certainty. Will he be the last of his kind? There aren't going to be any more unknowns
in future wars. I'll have the story of how on this remembrance day, science is colliding with
sacred symbolism. That's later on Your World Tonight.
In pictures, the blanket of snow covering trees across eastern Canada looks lovely. But on the
ground, that early winter storm has created some ugly moments, knocking out power to hundreds of
thousands of households and businesses in Quebec, prompting school closures and causing chaos
on the roads. Colin Butler reports. In a Montreal auto shop, mechanics hustle from car to car
swapping summer tires for winter ones. Cesar René is one of the owners. That's it. Everybody wants
their appointment yesterday. You know, that's the problem.
Because outside, winter isn't coming, it's here, earlier than usual.
We were caught off guard by the amount of snow in Montreal.
Environment Canada forecaster, Julien Pellerin, says the night brought far more than anyone
expected. Forecasts called for five centimeters, maybe 15, but Montreal woke up under 20.
It's always difficult to forecast that kind of event. Many people still haven't installed their
winter tire yet, and I don't blame.
them because like I said, climatologically, it's really early in the season.
In Ontario, the storm broke records in Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, and Kitchener. Hydro, Quebec,
says snow collected on leaves, weighing down branches that snapped and pulled down power lines,
closing schools, and leaving hundreds of thousands without electricity. It also snarled traffic,
leaving roads slushy, slippery, and all during a public transit strike in Montreal,
making the commute a slog. It's really hard for us, for students.
for workers, it's hard.
With the snow, it's hard to go with a bike.
Montreal threw all its plows into action,
scrambling to keep up.
More snow is expected, likely leaving Montreal
with a new round of problems.
We know for sure.
In the coming hours, coming days,
the temperature will warm up,
and then we will have to deal with the melting of the snow.
Philippe Sabarin speaks for the city of Montreal.
all. We're trying to make sure the entrance for the sewer will be cleared in order to canalize the water
coming from the melting of that snow. As Quebec digs out, Newfoundland is next, trading snow for
more than 100 millimeters of rain and strong winds. It's the season's first storm, and this year
winter didn't knock. It just blew the door wide open. Colin Butler, CBC News, London, Ontario.
Juan is bracing for typhoon Fung Wong, evacuating communities and canceling flights.
They know what's coming.
The storm left a path of devastation in the Philippines,
killing at least 25 people and forcing more than a million from their homes.
As Yasmin Renéa tells us, Canadians are quickly mobilizing to help from here.
Super Typhoon Fung Wong is the biggest storm to hit the Philippines so far
this year, knocking out power to entire provinces and sweeping away homes.
Seeing your place get destroyed, your memory is just literally getting washed away.
Ali Gonzalo is watching the devastation all the way from Winnipeg.
He left the Philippines in 2016 and is worried about his friends and family forced to evacuate
their homes.
Most of the uncertainty is really like, how can people go to work for public transportation?
The schools are going to be shut down.
There's not going to be any power.
Gonzalo is one of the nearly one million people of Filipino descent living in Canada
and across the country, many are now mobilizing.
The Filipino Catholic community is incredible.
Neil McCarthy, Director of Communications for the Archdiocese of Toronto,
says donations have been pouring in and being sent to Catholic partners in the Philippines.
They're on the ground, they can assess what's needed in the area.
He says financial donations are the quickest way people can help
to avoid costly transport fees associated with food, clothing, or other items.
The need is urgent.
Christina Corpin Moser is the executive director of Filipino B.C., a non-profit organization that has partnered with the Red Cross to collect donations.
She says Typhoon Feng Wong is worsening an already dire humanitarian situation.
The damage to infrastructure to agriculture, the way that these sorts of disasters make already vulnerable people like children, like the elderly, more vulnerable.
You know, the time to give is now.
Fung Wong ripped through the Philippines just days after typhoon Kalmagi struck the country,
dumping a month's worth of rain in a single day and killing more than 200 people.
Lord, please send some help, Lord.
Weeks earlier, a 6.9 magnitude earthquake shook the country, killing more than 70 people.
We're very, very resilient.
Michelle Sartachakis owns a Filipino dessert cafe in Ottawa.
She lived through a typhoon in the Philippines in 2012
and is heartened to see the diaspora lending a hand now.
No matter what is happening, everything could be falling apart, we always stick together.
She and others living in Canada hope their donations can make a difference for victims of the typhoons
before catastrophe strikes again.
Yasmil Ranea, CBC News, Vancouver.
A suicide bomber in Islamabad has killed 12 people and injured 27.
The explosion happened near a police car outside a district courthouse.
It was the first attack in Pakistan's capital in years.
No group has claimed responsibility.
The attack happens as tensions continue to rise on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan,
with recent peace talks at an impasse.
This is Your World Tonight from CBC News.
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Major League Baseball is being rocked by a major scandal.
Two Cleveland pitchers are facing a host of federal charges for gambling on the game.
They are accused of taking bribes from sports betters and rigging their stats.
It's the latest strike against pro sports and its links to a booming betting industry.
Cameron McIntosh reports.
Luis Ortiz, a hard-throwing right-hander on the mound for the Guardian.
June 27th, Cleveland Guardians versus St. Louis Cardinals.
Guardians, Luis Ortiz, the starting pitcher.
His first pitch of the third, a ball.
A seemingly benign development that prosecutors say paid out $37,000 U.S. in sports bets.
Ortiz.
Shuffling by reporters leaving court a hoodie over his head is accused of being in on it,
along with teammate Emmanuel Class A, also accused of tanking pitches.
Including this game in June 20th, 3.
Class A coming into the game in the 9th to protect a three-referred.
run lead. Prosecutors say he deliberately threw a ball into the ground. One of several rigged
pitches over time that authorities say netted co-conspirators over $400,000. With Class A and Ortiz,
both alleged to have gone in kickbacks between $5,000 and $7,000 for each rigged pitch. Both deny the
charges, which include conspiracy, fraud, and bribery. They face up to 65 years in prison. It's truly
baffling. Hannah Van Bieber is editor of sports gambling for the athletic.
These players are getting millions of dollars and then seem to have done something very illegal for
not that much money. Both cases revolve around prop bets, which allow fans to bet on a specific
event within a game, like a pitch or how many points a player may score. Things that can be
discreetly manipulated and may not affect the final outcome of the game. Michael McCann is a professor
of sports law at Harvard. There's going to be a lot of pressure to
to ban prop bets, but there will also be significant pushback
because a lot of people like prop bets.
Prop bets are also central to a betting scandal last month in the NBA.
This is the insider trading saga for the NBA.
FBI director Cash Patel announcing charges against Miami heat guard Terry Rozier
and against former player Damon Jones for allegedly conspiring with betters.
As legalized gambling grows,
sports leagues are becoming increasingly dependent on its revenues.
Sportsbooks are to flag suspicious bets.
They see everything.
Joe Maloney is with the American Gaming Association.
Leagues, regulators, and integrity monitors
have visibility into all of the volume of betting that's happening.
Major League Baseball and major sports books are now adjusting their rules,
capping bets on pitches at just $200.
As pro sports, built on stats,
struggle to balance the trust of fans
with the revenues of betting and the temptations that come with it.
Cameron McIntosh, CBC News, Winnipeg.
We return now to Remembrance Day.
At the foot of the National War Memorial in Ottawa
is the tomb of the unknown soldier,
a somber reminder of every service member killed in battle
who can't be identified.
But as advances in technology help unearth the past,
some experts question whether these powerful symbols
will hold a place in future commemorations.
Murray Brewster has that.
Every remembrance day,
the tomb of the unknown soldier in Ottawa
is reburied under the gentleweight of poppies.
A spontaneous outpouring for a soldier
who died more than a century ago
and whose duty to the country is never ending.
A soldier whose identity is unknown
and kept deliberately so.
There aren't going to be any more unknowns in future wars.
Stephen Trout is a history professor,
at the University of Alabama,
an expert in the phenomenon of unknown soldier tombs.
He says advances in DNA technology
and family pressure in the late 1990s
led to the identification of the Vietnam era
unknown soldier in the United States.
I don't think that anyone who was involved
in the creation of the tomb of the unknown soldier
in the United States ever imagined a moment
when this sort of technology would exist.
It would have been incomprehensible
to the people who really
launched that project after World War I.
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission, which administers allied war cemeteries,
forbids attempts to identify remains given up for unknown soldier tombs.
While there's powerful symbolism in not knowing, the practice is at odds with the scientific
certainty of today.
It is the complete opposite of what my job is.
Dr. Sarah Lockyer is the forensic anthropologist at Canada's Defense Department's
Casualty Identification Team.
She respects the symbolism of the unknown soul.
and is not suggesting we violate the sanctity.
But in essence, her job is to make sure no one remains unknown.
It is the complete opposites of one of the major points of forensic anthropology
of being able to identify unknown individuals and return their names and their faces to them.
Admittedly, I still struggle with having had to do the exact opposites of what my field
sort of requires and what my job typically requires.
Lockyer's team has identified the human remains of 36 soldiers and confirmed the identities of 12 unknown graves since its creation in 2007, all of them from wars before 1970.
It is gratifying to see that we are doing things to identify them.
Phil Ralph is a retired Canadian military captain and padre. He acknowledges the sensibilities of people today are different.
Ralph doesn't believe the unknown soldier will lose any of its symbolic power, even though future casual.
will not share his anonymity.
It's such a powerful symbol.
But on the other hand, you know, I'm a dad.
And if it was my child, I would want to know.
It is often said, no one is truly dead as long as you remember them and speak their name.
It is more complicated, but nonetheless true for the unknown soldier.
Marie Brewster, CBC News, Ottawa.
Finally tonight, you may have noticed a difference in some of the poppies during this year's
Remembrance Day ceremonies. For the first time ever, all members of the armed forces were allowed
to wear indigenous crafted poppies on their uniforms. Floyd Powder is an indigenous veteran who has
worked for more representation in the armed forces. Whether it's beaded, seal skin, or a porcupine,
as long as it keeps the dimensions and the red color for the flower part and the black center,
that's an outstanding gesture for, you know, in part for reconciliation.
Powder was on hand when the policy was announced in Ottawa just a couple of weeks ago
and even gifted a poppy to the commander of the Canadian Army,
one made by his sister, Gwen Pishinger, a member of the Fort Smith-Metie Council.
You know, having a northern made poppy made by a Métis artisan,
and with him proudly wearing that, that makes me extremely proud.
And I know the history on that.
It's just not somebody manufactured by someone else.
is, you know, a Métis artist in.
Jerry Sharp is an indigenous artist in Yellowknife.
She says the policy has already led to more demand.
A friend of mine who works for the military actually sent me a message.
She wanted to know if I could make her some puppies.
And I said, well, normally I don't make them.
I will custom make some.
But then she sent me the guidelines.
And I kind of went, oh, wow, this is awesome.
And at that moment, I thought, yeah, I could probably make 10 or 15 of them to have available.
And that turned into like 35.
The Armed Forces says the poppies can be sourced from anywhere.
Powder says anyone who gets one should still make a donation to their local legion.
Wearing the poppy is important.
And what was really disappointing, even when I was at the airport,
there's only three or four of us that were wearing poppies.
And those veterans that are still around and are dealing with issues,
and the poppy, the funds raised during the poppy campaign,
will benefit them.
Thank you for joining us
on your world tonight
for Remembrance Day, November the 11th.
I'm Susan Bonner. Talk to you again.
