Bill 21 hurting minorities: study

Some response this morning to a study showing Bill 21, the secularism law, is having a devastating effect on religious minorities. I’m not sure what people think their commentary will achieve because the law is working exactly as intended. Of course people will feel bad – and so they should, some think – and of course some of them will leave.

Recently there was also a fuss because HEC ran an ad in Algeria showing a woman studying here – in hijab – and Lisée got into a snit, reducing hijab to a sign of female submission. The woman’s a real HEC student, not a model – Rima Elkouri spoke with her and found that the situation is not what Lisée claims to think.

Update, of a sort: I may have missed it, but I cannot find any mention of the study mentioned above, which was covered by CBC, CTV, Global and the Gazette, in any francophone media. It may yet turn up.

Another update: Toula Drimonis tweeted a link to a piece about the study on L’actualité.

Thursday morning: La Presse reports on the study.

CultMTL reports on the study. Toula Drimonis points out an important finding: A majority of 64.5% of Quebecers think it is important for the Supreme Court to rule on whether the law is discriminatory. If courts determine law violates the charters, support for it would drop by 18% to below the majority mark (from 63.7% to 47%).

But also: more than 30% of Quebecers equate opposition to the law with disloyalty as a Quebecer.