Updates from March, 2019 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 09:56 on 2019-03-30 Permalink | Reply  

    CBC has a piece here on making nightlife safer by having security enforce polite behaviour on dance floors in clubs.

    Really? When you go out, you’re putting yourself out there. You’re taking chances. A dance club is not a daycare. This reminds me of the thing about Osheaga and the woman who blamed security because someone may have put something in her drink. How could security have watched over every detail of adult human behaviour, to the extent of intervening when someone left a drink untended?

    If you go out and take chances to meet people in a sexually charged setting, you need to accept responsibility for yourself. You’re a grown-up now, you can’t expect the grown-ups to step in whenever anything upsetting happens. But some people do seem to think this is normal and desirable.

     
    • steph 14:08 on 2019-03-30 Permalink

      Training security to recognize predatory behavior is a great initiative.

    • Blork 15:46 on 2019-03-30 Permalink

      @steph, that is a great initiative, but it doesn’t mean you just hand over all responsibility for your safety to the security people when you go out.

      The problem is (in my opinion) that so many young people were brought up in hyper-secure environments with helicopter parents hovering so closely for so long that the children never learned how to take responsibility for themselves, or even how to take risks. This sounds like the ranting of an old fart but it’s well documented.

    • qatzelok 17:53 on 2019-03-30 Permalink

      I agree with you here, Kate. This is dumb.

      Nightlife is supposed to be dionysian – dark and mysterious.

      If you want safe and controlled, go dancing at 2 in the afternoon to a brightly-lit space with lots of security cameras.

    • Hamza 13:40 on 2019-03-31 Permalink

      if you’re a normal , boundary-respecting person then this shouldn’t really affect you, and in fact, may come in handy one night. for a lot of other folks, it can make an otherwise uncomfortable or unsafe experience that much safer. on the other hand, for a nightclub owner, nobody wants to have their business get a reputation for being ‘that sketchy place where i got sexually assaulted.’

    • jeather 18:03 on 2019-03-31 Permalink

      By “enforce polite behaviour” I think you mean “stop people from harassing and assaulting others”.

    • Meezly 12:16 on 2019-04-01 Permalink

      Back in my day, young women used to frequent gay night clubs because the men there would leave anything female the f*ck alone. I wonder why that was such a popular thing to do….? It may come as a shocker, but sometimes girls just wanna go to a night club to enjoy themselves and not have some slimeball grind up against them. The liberty to dance in a nightclub with your friends unharassed can be a rare and wonderful thing for a young woman. Take back the dance floors, I say!

    • Bill Binns 13:38 on 2019-04-01 Permalink

      I don’t know. I agree on the Osheaga case completely but I think clubs are different. I remember an Ex girlfriend explaining to me why she stopped going to clubs even though she loved dancing. She said you could have 300/500 people in a club and one or two assholes that didn’t understand the word “no” or took “no” as a highly offensive personal insult would ruin it for everyone.

      Getting rid of these types of guys is just good business. Douchebags will cause the girls to leave and when the girls leave the guys will leave as well.

  • Kate 08:58 on 2019-03-30 Permalink | Reply  

    I’ve been told (not for the first time) to stick to Montreal news and stop posting about Quebec, but when the mayor is the target of violent hate messages over her measured response to Bill 21, it shows that the CAQ’s secularity bill is Montreal news.

    I’ve seen dozens of pieces on the subject of the bill, and hope to get around to a survey sometime this weekend, but the best analysis I’ve read has been this brief piece in Le Droit, a source I don’t often get to. Patrick Duquette puts his finger on a fact about Quebec that needs more analysis: that the new law stems from bad memories of the grande noirceur when Quebec was totally the creature of the Roman Catholic church, and a resulting fear of a return to the social dominance of religion.

    That a bare 3% of the population here are Muslim doesn’t seem to matter; that they chose to leave predominantly Muslim countries and that only roughly half of them (by reports I’ve seen) are religiously observant doesn’t seem to matter. None of them want to impose sharia law here, nobody’s knocking on doors trying to convert anybody.

    It used to feel like we were still fighting the Hundred Years War here between England and France, but do we have to re-enact the Crusades as well?

     
    • Jack 13:09 on 2019-03-30 Permalink

      With Kate and I will repeat it again, if you want to see where this “fear” comes from pick up a Journal de Montreal. Listen to ” La Joute”, watch LCN and TVA. Go to Quebec city, turn on your radio. Islamophobia is omnipresent and packaged to sell…….stuff.
      Something good happened this afternoon, Quebec Solidaires members just told their parliamentary delegation that the membership is decisional. They have decided that they will be the only party in the National Assembly not to target minorities for electoral gains in places where their are not any. Thank You.

    • qatzelok 17:50 on 2019-03-30 Permalink

      When the rich and powerful want to control a people, they divide them with fear of one another. As a media creator, it’s important not to take part in fear mongering either way. Otherwise, you’re not a neutral observer, but a participant.

      A lot of media participate in this game of dividing people over trivial things.

  • Kate 08:40 on 2019-03-30 Permalink | Reply  

    The judge in the pitbull case has refused to block the order to euthanize the dangerous dog that attacked six people last summer.

     
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