
A podcast for scientific, skeptical, secular, rational and humanistic inquiry.
You’ve got answers? We’ve got questions.
A podcast for scientific, skeptical, secular, rational and humanistic inquiry.
You’ve got answers? We’ve got questions.
Persistence, not patience, is required for progress: Feminism in 2026 with Linda Silver Dranoff
Linda Silver Dranoff is a precedent-setting lawyer, an empowering author about law, public policy and women’s rights, and a successful feminist activist for equality and family law reform. She is the author of Fairly Equal: Lawyering the Feminist Revolution. Linda has been honoured with the Order of Canada, Order of Ontario and Law Society Medal.
Her latest effort is Fairly Equal: Conversations Toward a Feminist Future – A new web series that looks at today’s threats to women’s equality rights and warns that we cannot take past advances for granted.
Linda begins the conversation by describing how women were viewed by the law well into the 20th century. Women were considered property – effectively owned by their husbands – under the law until the 1970s.
We talk about the many areas women’s rights have advanced in the intervening decades – including progress in bodily autonomy, family law, employment equity, and more. But equality between men and women is still a distant goal. Even though laws pay equity laws have been on the books for four decades with the infrastructure to enforce them, women’s wages have advanced from 64 cents for every dollar men earn to only 68 cents.
Linda concludes our conversation by providing some advice for those coming up in the world who want to continue working towards the goal of equality between the sexes.
Podcast for Inquiry is hosted by Leslie Rosenblood and brought to you by the Centre for Inquiry Canada. Join today! Produced by Zack Dumont, Martin Zielinski, and Leslie Rosenblood. Support Podcast for Inquiry on Patreon: https://patreon.com/PodcastforInquiry. Send your thoughts and feedback to podcast@centreforinquiry.ca.
Two Solitudes of Secularism: Is Quebec religious symbols law secular or anti-theist legislation?
No issue has split the secular community in Canada like Quebec’s Bill 21. Several secular organizations have come out strongly in favour of the legislation, with some saying its only flaw being that it doesn’t go far enough. Many other secular groups, including CFIC, have come out strongly against Bill 21. It was challenged in court immediately after its passage in June 2019, and the Supreme Court is in the midst of hearing from a record 38 interveners as this episode is released.
In January, the New Enlightenment Project organized an online conversation between Michel Virard, founder of the Association humaniste du Québec, and Leslie Rosenblood, Secular Chair of CFIC. The conversation was moderated by Robert Hamilton.
This was an informed discussion between committed secular activists with a similar worldview and many shared values, yet who vehemently but respectfully disagree about the merits of Quebec’s Bill 21. I hope you learn from and enjoy this conversation as much as I did.
Podcast for Inquiry is hosted by Leslie Rosenblood and brought to you by the Centre for Inquiry Canada. Join today! Produced by Zack Dumont, Martin Zielinski, and Leslie Rosenblood. Support Podcast for Inquiry on Patreon: https://patreon.com/PodcastforInquiry. Send your thoughts and feedback to podcast@centreforinquiry.ca.
Sahrawis Fight for Western Sahara Rights in an Overwhelmed World, with Najla Mohamed-Lamin
In 1975, Najla Mohamed-Lamin’s grandmother fled Moroccan troops entering Western Sahara. For 50 years, Najla’s family, and 200,000 of the Saharawi people, have lived in refugee camps in western Algeria.
Despite a clear legal case under international law for self-determination and a promise from Morocco to hold a referendum on the future of Western Sahara, the Saharawi people remain separated from their land, and are almost invisible to the international community.
In 2023 Najla was one of the BBC’s one hundred most influential women in the world, and she is today’s guest on Podcast for Inquiry.
Podcast for Inquiry is hosted by Leslie Rosenblood and brought to you by the Centre for Inquiry Canada. Join today! Produced by Zack Dumont, Martin Zielinski, and Leslie Rosenblood. Support Podcast for Inquiry on Patreon: https://patreon.com/PodcastforInquiry. Send your thoughts and feedback to podcast@centreforinquiry.ca.
Assistance in dying: Not what it’s MAiD out to be, with Jackie Nemni
Dr. Jackie Nemni is a physician specializing in respiratory medicine and spent decades looking after patients in the ICU. She retired from active practice in 2023 and has since been working part time as a MAiD assessor and provider. It is the most meaningful and rewarding thing she has ever done and wishes she had started sooner. Jackie is also an officiant with Humanist Canada and serves on its board of directors.
Today’s episode is about MAiD in Canada – that is, Medical Assistance in Dying. Jackie and I start by discussing two Supreme Court of Canada rulings twenty years apart, and how the latter one opened the door to MAiD. Since MAiD was legalized in 2016, the criteria have expanded so that more people are eligible. Jackie describes the difference between Track 1 and Track 2 MAiD, and the safeguards in place to prevent coercion and abuse. She also addresses several of the arguments employed against MAiD, and a current court case that might forbid health institutions from preventing its patients from accessing MAiD services.
Podcast for Inquiry is hosted by Leslie Rosenblood and brought to you by the Centre for Inquiry Canada. Join today! Produced by Zack Dumont, Martin Zielinski, and Leslie Rosenblood. Support Podcast for Inquiry on Patreon: https://patreon.com/PodcastforInquiry. Send your thoughts and feedback to podcast@centreforinquiry.ca.
Jesse Brown asks: Why are Canadian Jews targeted for hate crimes?
Jesse Brown is the founder and editor of Canadaland, Canada’s largest independent podcast network. We start our conversation talking about the state of journalism in Canada, four years after Podcast for Inquiry’s inaugural episode with Jonathan Kay on the same topic. The bulk of our conversation is focused on Jesse’s latest investigative reporting series, What Is Happening Here. Jews in Canada are the targets of hate crimes radically disproportionate to their numbers in Canada, which has been the case for many years but made worse since the start of the Hamas – Israel war. Jesse talks about why he created the series, analyzes some possible reasons why hatred against Jews is so much more pronounced in Canada than other countries, and suggests that open and honest conversations are a necessary step toward living together in peace and harmony.
Leslie also recommends Canadaland’s investigative series on WE Charity, called The White Saviors.
Podcast for Inquiry is hosted by Leslie Rosenblood and brought to you by the Centre for Inquiry Canada. Join today! Produced by Zack Dumont, Martin Zielinski, and Leslie Rosenblood. Support Podcast for Inquiry on Patreon: https://patreon.com/PodcastforInquiry. Send your thoughts and feedback to podcast@centreforinquiry.ca.
Could we communicate with aliens if we found them? Daniel Whiteson wants to know.
Daniel is a professor of physics at UC Irvine, researching particle physics at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. He is the co-host of the podcast ‘Daniel and Kelly’s Extraordinary Universe’ and the author of several books about physics for a general audience, including “Do Aliens Speak Physics?” And “We have no idea”.
In today’s episode, Daniel explores many questions, including:
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Would we recognize an alien message if we received one?
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If aliens landed in Central Park, would we be able to communicate?
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How can we catch a baseball if we ignore all the interactions at the quantum level?
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Why is even our best physics only an approximation?
Podcast for Inquiry is hosted by Leslie Rosenblood and brought to you by the Centre for Inquiry Canada. Join today! Produced by Zack Dumont, Martin Zielinski, and Leslie Rosenblood. Support Podcast for Inquiry on Patreon: https://patreon.com/PodcastforInquiry. Send your thoughts and feedback to podcast@centreforinquiry.ca.
