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  1. Prohibition-era liquor policies continue in Ontario and B.C.

    Appeared in the Ottawa Citizen If Canadians ever needed proof that narrow politicking interferes with sensible consumer choice, they need look no further than the byzantine “reforms” on the sale of beer, wine and spirits proposed by Ontario, and one ...

  2. Ontario consumers handicapped by beer and wine sale myths

    Appeared in the Waterloo Region Record Much of Canada’s current approach to liquor retailing has its roots in Prohibition-era attitudes towards wine, beer and spirits. But anyone who thinks that era ended should consider the anti-competition rhetoric that ...

  3. Ontario's beer cartel paints Alberta liquor privatization as the bogeyman

    Appeared in the Calgary Herald It’s been two decades since the Alberta government exited the business of selling beer, wine and spirits to consumers. The privatization of all government liquor stores (completed in 1994) led to a dramatic expansion in the ...

  4. Success of Alberta's liquor store privatization a lesson for other provinces

    Appeared in the Vancouver Province and Calgary Herald Twenty years ago the Alberta government swiftly and boldly threw open Alberta's markets in beer, wine and spirits. The result has been a success story of intense competition, added convenience and ...

  5. Why Ontario should privatize its liquor stores

    Appeared in the Winnipeg Free Press When Ontario opposition leader Tim Hudak recently released a position paper that mused about reforming how Ontarians buy their beer, wine and spirits, the usual nonsensical non sequiturs were quickly offered up by those ...

  6. Why do most provinces still run Soviet-style liquor stores?

    Appeared in the Calgary Herald and Vancouver Sun Anyone who recently visited Alberta for the 100th anniversary of the Calgary Stampede might have noticed something unusual about the province: not a single government liquor store. Alberta does have a ...