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  • Kate 18:29 on 2020-07-25 Permalink | Reply  

    Saturday’s anti-mask demonstration brought hundreds out to protest wearing masks and call Covid-19 bullshit. Quebec reported 171 new cases Saturday, one of the highest daily increases since early June.

    Aaron Derfel’s latest Twitter thread inquires into Quebec’s plans for schools.

     
    • Kevin 09:07 on 2020-07-26 Permalink

      This protest is from people who are mentally ill, tragically uninformed, or acting in bad faith.

      Wearing masks does very little to protect the wearer which is why health orgs did not recommend it at the start of this pandemic.

      But they offer some protection to the people around you, hence the order.

    • JaneyB 11:34 on 2020-07-26 Permalink

      I guess big fines for individuals who don’t wear masks inside are imminent. As they should be in this exceptional public health crisis. I wouldn’t cry if they had to wear mandatory tracking anklets.

      I wish there were a way for ER staff to be able to cough freely on these covidiots without the medics themselves getting infected.

      Taiwan’s measures and tally are pretty impressive. Clearly early masking was a huge part of that. SARS was a cruel teacher.

    • YUL514 13:44 on 2020-07-27 Permalink

      The guy in the WWG1WGA t-shirt says it all about this crowd. I just don’t get it.

    • Ephraim 14:29 on 2020-07-27 Permalink

      @YUL514 – It’s about our education system not living up to it’s potential. Where people think that their search skills are better than CIHR, NIH, CDC, & WHO. And a bigger idiot who leans into these people… which of course makes us question his education as well. Dunning-Kruger and all that. You know, 65% of Americans think that they have above average intelligence… 65%. I’m sure if you walked around and asked these people, they would all think they are above average as well.

      Idiots who know nothing about the UN who think that the UN could occupy something (they have trouble even standing as peace keepers.) It’s incredible, there are people who are now making a living off of deceiving people on vaccines, etc. It’s a mad world.

    • YUL514 14:45 on 2020-07-27 Permalink

      Ephraim, exactly these types are making a mint on Youtube and other platforms online who take advantage of a lot of misguided people. It is astonishing how many followers/views/subscribers etc that these accounts have. Don’t get me started with the anti science “anti vax” movement. I guess they thought polio was cool and hey why not bring it back.

    • Ephraim 16:50 on 2020-07-27 Permalink

      Most people don’t think about latency and if COVID might actually have latency. But there are entire industries/businesses built on serving the stupid… like Fox News, the Rebel and Sun Media (with TVA). We are (supposedly) the second most educated country in the world, but that doesn’t mean that we don’t have that Dunning-Kruger underclass.

    • EmilyG 17:46 on 2020-07-27 Permalink

      I don’t see what mental illness has to do with this.

  • Kate 10:19 on 2020-07-25 Permalink | Reply  

    A stinging open letter signed by fifty people of Haitian origin has been published by Le Devoir in response to last week’s Christian Rioux screed about how Haitians shouldn’t think of themselves as Black. The paper undermines itself by allowing Rioux a snotty rebuttal within the page itself, which is despicable.

     
    • Meezly 11:13 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      Agreed. And Rioux, who doesn’t have the decency and wisdom to make an apology. I had to read his original article. The caucacity and ignorance is astounding for a so-called intellectual. But sadly not surprising in a paper like le Devoir. Rioux is cocooned enough in his milieu where I doubt he would suffer any serious consequences. This crap would not fly in English media. I don’t know much about Fanon’s work but I suspect Rioux has taken many of his quotes out of context to suit his distorted and privileged perspective on how Haitians should align and identify themselves.

    • DeWolf 12:17 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      Wow, 50 people sign an open letter and Rioux still gets the privilege of having the final word. That’s so disrespectful of the Devoir’s editors. Not to mention the kind of snivelling, self-pitying tone that Rioux takes, which is familiar to anyone who has dealt with unafflicted white men who are shocked (shocked!) they aren’t automatically considered authorities on issues of gender, race, sexuality, etc.

    • mb 16:41 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      Le Devoir always gives Rioux the last word, whoever he insults. Why do they give him such a platform in the first place?

    • Myles 19:29 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      I really shouldn’t be surprised anymore by how arrogant and cringe-worthy his type of spoiled white columnist can be, but here I am. He’s outdone himself.

    • Blork 20:52 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      My initial reaction to Rioux’s article was to think “Hmmm, this is a fascinating hypothesis that upends conventional thinking, so maybe there’s something here that could use some further exploration” (I know, what a quaint, old-fashioned way of thinking), but no.

      The idea that Haitians, because of their country’s pioneering history are somehow “above” the identity of “black” is ridiculous. The one thing that Rioux gets right is that there is no black monolith; being black in the US or the Caribbean or Sweden or France or Nairobi are all very different experiences, and not every black person experiences their blackness the same way (yo, Ben Carson). They are, after all, first and foremost, humans, and are therefore subject to the vastness of the variability of human nature. But all of those various black people from all of those backgrounds do share some common experiences when they come to live in a place that is predominantly white (whether in numbers or in power dynamic).

      So a tiny kernel of an idea, based primarily in the writings of Franz Fanon, who died at age 36 in 1961, cannot find any sort of fit into the reality of 2020. Especially coming from a white person. The idea that Haitians are so noble because of their history that they rise above the US-centric identity of “black” is essentially a kick in the nuts to American blacks. The subtext (not so sub- really) is that black identity is fundamentally flawed and is something to be overcome, the way the Haitians did. FFS white dude, STFU!

    • Uatu 00:28 on 2020-07-26 Permalink

      Yes and that common experience is their unfair treatment from cops. The fact that these demos took place all over the world means it’s much more than trying to be ‘murican. I guess he also missed the “driving while black” demo that took place a couple of weeks ago which proves his thesis is full of shit. I sometimes think post graduate degrees only exist as a means of learning how to find “scholarly” research to support whatever whackadoo ideas anyone thinks up.

    • DavidH 16:39 on 2020-07-26 Permalink

      LeDevoir’s insistence on giving Rioux the last word reminds me of this kerfuffle on a much lighter subject: https://www.ledevoir.com/opinion/idees/574216/histoire-de-l-art-l-art-du-passe-nous-parle-souvent-des-enjeux-du-present

      Art history professor Itay Sapir had sent a letter to LeDevoir on his own about one of Rioux’s texts. The text itself was incredibly ill-informed but unless you work in the field of academia or art history, it was nothing infuriating. LeDevoir did not publish it then but Sapir posted it on Facebook and it became sort-of viral (viral in the Montreal Art History Academia world). LeDevoir then agreed to publish it as a collective text (if it’s going to circulate anyways, might as well be on your website, right?) followed by yet again a Rioux rebuttal.

      The bulk of Rioux’s response was that Sapir was a coward for not signing the text alone…. which he had actually done.

      I don’t know if Rioux knew the history of the letter before publication or not, but either ways, the editor certainly did. They allowed something entirely false and pejorative to go to print. All to defend a text that made no sense written by someone with no expertise. (Which brings up another question, the art critics at LeDevoir are actually very knowledgeable and even teach alongside Sapir. Why let Rioux stray into this field he clearly knows nothing about? If you do let him write, why not have him run his text by one of the paper’s contributors that actually does teach art history to enrich and support his text?).

      If they do this with a somewhat trivial subject, imagine what they do when they feel involved with the issues…

      The media ecosystem in Quebec has to few players not to support them but LeDevoir and QMI (TVA, Journal, etc) sometime seems to outdo themselves to determine who is the more ethically bankrupt. They make it very hard to root for them.

  • Kate 09:58 on 2020-07-25 Permalink | Reply  

    Laurent Duvernay-Tardif is the first NFL player to opt out of the football season and has decided to stay home and work in health care.

     
    • walkerp 11:34 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      This guy is very impressive. I don’t know how much media this will generate in the American sports world, I hope a lot. It sends a strong countervailing message to the current dominant culture around the pandemic in the US.

      If you aren’t a sports fan, you might not see what a big deal this is. He gave up 2 million dollars and a chance for an extended contract. He just won a super bowl on a team with a generational quarterback and a chance to begin a dynasty in the league. Nobody walks away from that. Yes, he is an offensive lineman and his position is not guaranteed (they drafted a younger guy who could compete for the role), but still.

      When people say there is no difference between Americans and Canadians, you can point to Laurent. His background is a huge reason he is making this choice.

    • Daniel 13:24 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      That’s very interesting, walkerp. Thank you for the perspective.

    • EmilyG 20:15 on 2020-07-25 Permalink

      I think he might be one of the few sensible people left in Quebec. Or at least, people in the sports world who want to be realistic about the risks of sports returning.

    • JaneyB 11:44 on 2020-07-26 Permalink

      I am not a football fan so this is news to me. A doctor and star football player?! Wow. How is that even possible? And this decision…amazing guy. His family and friends must be insanely proud of him. His story should be all over the US media. Let’s hope.

  • Kate 09:46 on 2020-07-25 Permalink | Reply  

    Shots were fired in Montreal North on Friday afternoon, but nobody got hit, and in the same area, in an unrelated incident, a man was nonfatally stabbed in a park during a brawl on Friday evening.

     
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