Updates from May, 2023 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 18:52 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

    A woman was shot dead in her car Tuesday afternoon in Côte‑des‑Neiges. TVA says it was in a parking lot; La Presse has a brief item that says the car was moving but that it came to a stop when it ran into a building after the driver was hit.

    Update: The victim has been named as Claudia Iacono, daughter‑in‑law of Moreno Gallo, a Montreal mobster killed in Mexico ten years ago. She was killed in the parking lot of a beauty spa she owned. Wednesday, CTV has some pictures of Ms Iacono and a discussion of how the mob almost never attacks women.

     
    • Kate 14:22 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

      The city’s auditor-general is concerned that it hands out millions to nonprofits but doesn’t get much feedback on how they use it. The description here makes it sound like organizations are handed cash even without completing the paperwork or explaining what their plans are. This makes an odd contrast with stories we’ve seen, for example, about store owners having so much trouble filling out the forms and meeting the requirements for applying for city aid – such as when their street’s being dug up – that they give up on it.

      The item also mentions a few other auditor‑general notes: the city hasn’t got good oversight of sewage getting into the river, and hasn’t got a solid census of heritage buildings in its territory – even the heritage buildings it owns. The 500‑page document will probably not become the mayor’s favourite bedtime reading.

      Update: More on the heritage building angle.

       
      • Dominic 21:25 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

        Thats absolutely bonkers. If this was revealed in a private org, this would be corrected in a matter of weeks.

    • Kate 13:23 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

      Mayor Plante says that although she has confirmed that there was a moratorium on exit route inspections by the fire department in 2018, as revealed Monday in the Globe & Mail, she says it was lifted in 2021 and not in a hurry after the fatal Place Youville fire in March, as was alleged by the Toronto paper.

      What’s interesting is that the moratorium began because the DPCP (the Crown prosecutor’s office) asked the fire department to stop doing the inspections because they seldom resulted in enough evidence to lead to a conviction in court. I don’t think this is why most members of the public would want the fire department to make exit inspections. I don’t think we’d feel it was wasted time.

       
      • Blork 17:37 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

        “…the DPCP (the Crown prosecutor’s office) asked the fire department to stop doing the inspections because they seldom resulted in enough evidence to lead to a conviction in court.”

        As Kate infers, that should NOT be the reason for those inspections. If there are few convictions, that’s a sign of SUCCESS not failure! <- Seriously. What the actual f*ck are these people thinking?

        It's only a sign of failure if you're an idiot administrator who sees inspections as revenue generators instead of public safety measures. Think such people might exist? Sure seems like it!

      • Em 09:47 on 2023-05-17 Permalink

        The fire chief said yesterday that inspections did not stop. But what did stop was some of the legal actions to force compliance, especially prosecutions, when the case was complex and involved major structural change. His answers were really not clear but he seemed to say the inspectors didn’t know enough about the building code, or something.

        Not sure if that’s any better, because it suggests they knew these buildings were dangerous and didn’t take meaningful action to force landlords to fix it. But I don’t think it’s a huge surprise either.

    • Kate 13:09 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

      There’s now a glass observation tower in the Old Port. Item says it will be accessible to the public from May 27 and be free for two days. The Journal piece on the tower says it will cost $15 for adults after that.

       
      • thomas 13:31 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

        Isn’t it free to visit the lookout of the Tour de l’Horloge / Sailors’ Memorial Clock?

      • Blork 13:53 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

        The Tour de l’Horloge used to be free. Probably still is. But you can only fit a few people in there at a time, and it is slightly out of the way. This new one is large and located in a recently revitalized area, and looks like it could accommodate dozens, maybe hundreds, at a time. (99% of which will always be tourists.)

      • Blork 13:57 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

        …also, the new one is taller, and specifically designed to provide spectacular 360-degree views. The clock tower was designed to be a clock tower. It’s a while since I’ve been up there, but I seem to recall it was not easy to look outside. Great views of the clock mechanism and the inside of the clock faces though!

        Also: the new one is probably wheelchair accessible, whereas the clock tower involves climbing quite a few stairs in claustrophobic conditions.

    • Kate 10:57 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

      Anna Gainey, who’s been president of the federal Liberals among other roles, will be running in the NDG–Westmount byelection, which is pretty much a preordained Liberal win. Radio‑Canada gives a brief account of Ms Gainey’s background, but doesn’t mention she’s the daughter of Bob Gainey, who captained the Canadiens for most of the 1980s.

       
      • H. John 12:48 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

        And the Green Party is running their co-leader, Jonathan Pedneault:

        https://www.greenparty.ca/en/media-release/2023-05-15/jonathan-pedneault-run-green-party-ndg-westmount

        The best the Green Party has done was in 2019 when Robert Green won 10.73% of the vote.

        The NDG part of the riding has always tended to lean towards the NDP. As Russ Copeman pointed out his provincial LPQ voters were more likely to vote NDP federally.

        It will be interesting to see the effect of possible anglo dissatisfaction over Bill C-13 on turnout and Liberal support.

    • Kate 10:24 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

      Montreal stands out on a 100 Best Restaurants (in Canada) list, with the top establishment in the country being found on St‑Zotique in Little Italy. CTV puts the Quebec ones on a map. Full list.

      La Presse says it’s going to revisit some of the city’s oldest and best‑known restaurants, starting with a visit to L’Express.

       
      • Kate 10:19 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

        Montreal’s Quartier international is marking 20 years although La Presse is emphasizing that it’s already looking a little run down. Which of us isn’t, though?

         
        • qatzelok 13:57 on 2023-05-16 Permalink

          …« Les bancs sont brisés, les lampadaires sont pleins de collants, le pavé uni est brisé partout sur les trottoirs à cause de l’équipement utilisé par la Ville », regrette Richard Hylands…

          These are also design issues. The benches are too fragile, the street-lamps seem like they were designed for graffiti and stickers, and the sidewalks should have been designed to withstand the normal flow of equipment.

          It’s like Michel Dallaire designed the street furniture with built-in-obsolescence in mind.

      • Kate 08:58 on 2023-05-16 Permalink | Reply  

        Thirty vehicles were torched overnight in two locations in Lachine.

         
        • Kate 16:55 on 2023-05-15 Permalink | Reply  

          Blog reader jeather alerted me to a Globe and Mail article saying the Montreal fire department had stopped investigating exit routes from buildings in 2018. The piece also goes into some detail how this policy has been reversed since the Place Youville building burned in March. Bad stuff.

           
          • Ephraim 22:10 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

            And this is exactly why London has a law that at the end of every theatre showing and every cinema showing, you can exit from any and all doors, to prove you can evacuate quickly and it means that theatre and cinema operators have to ensure all doors work properly at all time

        • Kate 14:55 on 2023-05-15 Permalink | Reply  

          One household in five is not getting by because they can’t afford to pay their rent and also live, according to a recent report by Centraide.

           
          • Kate 14:46 on 2023-05-15 Permalink | Reply  

            Although the streets have been cleared of ice storm remnants, the city still has to tidy up the parks, which it says should take another four weeks.

             
            • Kate 14:20 on 2023-05-15 Permalink | Reply  

              Fady Dagher gave an accounting of his first hundred days as Montreal police chief on Monday and talked about his plans for exposing new recruits to a crash course in mental health, cultural communities, domestic violence and homelessness.

              As mentioned near the end of this piece, Dagher estimates only 10 to 15% of Montreal cops live in the city.

               
              • Kate 09:13 on 2023-05-15 Permalink | Reply  

                Professors are panicking over artificial intelligence rather than getting ahead of things and teaching students how to use AI tools in their work. It’s the ones who learn to mobilize that kind of technology who will be out ahead. These students will always have technological help within reach. What’s the point of making them memorize things like they’re sitting in a 19th‑century classroom with a slate to write on?

                 
                • Blork 09:50 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Kate, I don’t think that’s a very good reading of the immediate situation.

                  Imagine a history teacher. You know history. You teach history. It’s not your job to teach students how to use AI to write their history papers.

                  Similarly, you’re a psychology teacher. It’s not your job to teach students how to use AI to write their psychology research papers.

                  In the meantime, your students are not studying history and psychology; they’re just getting the bots to do the research and write the papers for them. What are you, as a history or psychology teacher supposed to do about that now? Today? This week? Knowing that many of your students are not doing the reading and research because they know they don’t have to?

                  What if you don’t even understand AI or don’t care about it? You’re a history/psychology teacher, not an AI-usage instructor.

                • Kate 10:08 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Then the colleges and universities have to get out ahead of it, because this genie is not going to be crammed back into the bottle.

                  AI text is useful. It also has to be recast and edited often, to get the information into the right order. I know, because I’ve done some of this when adding footnotes to a book about to be published. (I’ve never used it on the blog.)

                  I don’t see how you could write an extended essay using AI, not yet. But you can send it to get pieces of information that you need to support your subject. This isn’t something that profs should be trying to lock down, but the schools should instead be mobilizing their information studies people to help both teachers and students use the tools effectively.

                • jeather 10:26 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  I would love to see what AI would post on this blog, fwiw.

                  But I remember the concerns when online translations became available, and yet teachers have managed that. Wikipedia, same. Also, frankly, the teachers I have spoken to see two results: one, they edit the AI so much it’s honestly more work than doing it yourself; two, they leave the senences in about “I’m an AI and can’t write your homework”.

                • Spi 10:39 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  This is the same narrative that was advanced when search engines were a new thing. We don’t need to know everything just how to use Google, but much of education isn’t about simply using tools in order to achieve a result. There’s inherent value behind the process of learning/struggling and developing a deeper understanding of the subject matter rather than just a bunch of loosely associated facts. Most people understand that as it relates to basic/primary education, but it holds true for higher-ed.

                  Where as search engines are a more effective tool to access information for you to sort/ingest and make use of, AI on its current trajectory it entirely skips that and just outputs results. If you as a person/student don’t have the sufficient classical training/knowledge on a subject to correct/edit the AI and have just become a person asking it a question then what’s your value in the whole process?

                • Blork 10:40 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  AI is developing 10 times faster than anything colleges and universities can stay ahead of. That’s part of the problem; it’s rolling out so fast, with no checks or balances.

                  Colleges and universities are notoriously slow on things like this. It would probably take five years to put together a plan for dealing with AI and another two years to create any kind of training for students, and that training would probably not even be for all students.

                  Remember that the problem isn’t just the writing. College/university papers involve reading and research, and then the writing of a paper about that research. AI lets students skip the research and most of the writing. In other words, they skip 90% of the learning.

                • Kate 10:46 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  jeather, I hadn’t blogged this piece about a Montreal North bike demonstration on the weekend calling attention to the need for more bike paths in the area.

                  I asked Chat-GPT to “write a very brief summary of this article in English.” This is the result:

                  The article discusses the importance of active transportation infrastructure, particularly for cyclists, in promoting safety and encouraging more people to choose biking as a mode of transportation. It emphasizes the need for improved infrastructure, such as protected bike lanes and safer road designs, to create a conducive environment for active transportation and reduce accidents. The article highlights the benefits of investing in cycling infrastructure and calls for increased efforts to prioritize active transportation and enhance road safety measures.

                  You’ll notice Chat-GPT makes general statements about cycling and infrastructure but overlooks the elements most people here would lead with: where the ride happened and what political promises have been made. So it’s not up to blog standard, not yet.

                • Blork 10:49 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  One of the key differences (I think) between the resistance to AI and the resistance to other innovations in the past (the internet, Wikipedia, Google, etc.) is that in the past it was mostly people who didn’t know much about the new technologies who were complaining about it.

                  With AI it’s people who actually know and understand the technology and the sociological implications who are raising the concerns.

                  The people who resist the resistance tend to be (in my opinion) people who don’t think long-term; they’re just looking at the immediate benefits. Faster letter writing! Faster first drafts of documents! (Etc.)

                  What they’re not thinking about is the long-term effect of losing a generation of literacy and apprenticeship.

                  For example, one of the issues with the writer’s strike in the US is the use of AI to create early drafts of scripts, and pitch documents. That benefits the people paying the bills right now. But traditionally that work was done by junior writers as part of their apprenticeship. Junior writers would often work in a writers room for a couple of years before they even touched a script, but in the meantime they were learning from their more experienced colleagues.

                  But now, AI and other cost-saving changes to writers rooms mean no apprenticeships. What will the result of that be a generation from now if there are hardly any writers that have had the chance to develop their skills and talents by coming up through the system? Plenty of AI bots writing your scripts, but no actual talent there to make them good and original.

                • Joey 11:04 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Easy to say that teachers/schools need to ‘get ahead’ of technology that is developing in real-time. The only option I can realistically imagine is to make most/all graded assignments in-person written exams, perhaps using only pen and paper.

                  @jeather presumably your teacher friends are also considering the possibility that they are being submitted lots of AI-produced work that they can’t detect…

                • jeather 11:18 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  TBH I am talking to high school teachers, they have pretty good senses of how their students write. I assume this would differ in first year undergrad. But again, turning an AI essay into undetectable AI-ness does require a fair bit of active work (have you ever fixed something translated by a website? ugh).

                • Kevin 11:42 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  The CEGEP student in my household had classes this semester where they looked at AI text and essays, and they were pretty dismissive of it.
                  They said that, given the correct prompts, ChatGPT eventually turned out something equivalent to what a high school student would write if they just learned about the topic in the past week. It certainly wasn’t college-level writing and insight.

                • Ephraim 12:20 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Chat-GPT and the like also make up things when they don’t know. For example, when asked to write about the owners of a particular item, it just grabbed two random (CIS gendered) names as those of the owners and kept on referring to them.

                  We, as humans can do certain suppositions from standpoints that AI can’t. For example, we can argue an entire dystopian version of the world if France has won on the Plains of Abraham, whereupon Quebec remains a French colony. Then, would it have been sold by Napoleon as part of the Louisiana Purchase? Then, you need to argue it with citations, citations that you won’t be getting from Chat-GPT and arguments with no citations are just conjecture at University level.

                  But just to show how silly it can be. Here is some of what it said about “Craig Street” in Montreal. “Today, Craig Street is a vibrant and dynamic commercial district that is home to a variety of shops, restaurants, and businesses. From high-end fashion boutiques to cozy cafes and specialty food stores, Craig Street has something to offer for everyone. The street is also conveniently located near many of Montreal’s top tourist attractions, including the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, McGill University, and Mount Royal Park.”

                  Of course, the problem is that Craig street no longer exists and hasn’t since 1976.

                  How about this article about Mordechai Richler street in Mile-End?

                  “Mordechai Richler Street is a charming and eclectic street located in the heart of Montreal’s Mile-End neighborhood. Named after the famed Canadian author and Montreal native, Mordechai Richler, the street is a testament to the enduring legacy of this literary icon.”

                  Garbage in… Garbage out

                • Meezly 12:34 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Given how even the ‘godfather of AI’ had recently quit Google to warn humanity of the dangers of AI technology, it may not be so simple just getting ahead of things.

                • Kate 12:40 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Ephraim, I asked Chat-GPT about Mordecai Richler Street in the Mile End and it said “I apologize, but I couldn’t find any information regarding a specific “Mordecai Richler street” in the Mile End neighborhood of Montreal. It’s possible that the street you’re referring to may not exist or may have a different name.”

                  It went on with a couple of paragraphs about Richler.

                  However! When I asked about Craig Street: “Craig Street, or Rue Craig in French, is a notable street located in the downtown area of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It runs parallel to the west side of Crescent Street, one of Montreal’s renowned entertainment and dining districts. […] Craig Street is known for its vibrant atmosphere and its association with nightlife and entertainment. It is home to a variety of restaurants, bars, clubs, and shops, making it a popular destination for locals and visitors alike, especially during the evenings and weekends. The street offers a diverse range of cuisines, from international flavors to local specialties, catering to different tastes and preferences” – and several more paragraphs of nonsense.

                  OK, a final sample, I asked about a nonexistent street and a nonexistent church, and it said in both cases that they didn’t exist. Then I asked about Saint-Enfant-Jésus church, and it says:

                  The Church of Saint-Enfant-Jésus is a historic Catholic church located in the Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie borough of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is situated at 5039 Saint-Dominique Street, near the corner of Laurier Avenue.

                  The church is known for its architectural and historical significance. It was constructed in the Gothic Revival style and was designed by architect Joseph-Égilde-Césaire Daoust. The construction of the church began in 1906 and was completed in 1908.

                  The exterior of the Church of Saint-Enfant-Jésus features prominent pointed arches, intricate stone detailing, and a tall bell tower with a spire. The interior of the church is adorned with beautiful stained glass windows, elaborate woodwork, and decorative artwork, creating a serene and reverent atmosphere.

                  So you see, you do get some useful stuff, but you have to use your judgment.

                • thomas 13:07 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  @kate In case you are interested here are the results from Google Bard (released last week and I find superior to GPT-4 for summarization) using your prompt.

                  Here is a brief summary of the article:

                  Dozens of cyclists in Montreal-Nord protested on Saturday to demand new bike lanes. The Association for Safe Mobility in Montreal-Nord has been advocating for better cycling infrastructure in the borough for years. The city has promised to build two REVs (Réseau express vélo) and a major street bike path in Montreal-Nord by 2027, but cyclists are concerned that these projects will not materialize soon enough. Some elected officials attended the protest, but they were unable to provide any concrete timelines for the construction of new bike lanes. Cyclists are hopeful that their continued advocacy will eventually lead to the creation of safer and more accessible cycling infrastructure in Montreal-Nord.

                  Here are some additional details from the article:

                  The Association for Safe Mobility in Montreal-Nord has been holding a “protest ride” every year since 2021 to raise awareness about the need for better cycling infrastructure in the borough.
                  The group has also been meeting with elected officials and city planners to discuss their proposals for new bike lanes.
                  The city has said that it is committed to building new bike lanes in Montreal-Nord, but it has not provided any specific timelines for the projects.
                  Cyclists are concerned that the city is not doing enough to address the need for safer and more accessible cycling infrastructure in Montreal-Nord.

                  Note that Bard does not currently handle French so I provided it with a translation from GPT‑4.

                • Blork 14:01 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  What a lot of you are missing is that it’s not about the writing; it’s about the research and the learning.

                  If ChatGPT can write up a reasonable account of some event or thing, and then you spend a few minutes fixing the language so it doesn’t sound like AI, what you have NOT done is the research and reading on the original topic.

                  You have not LEARNED anything. You haven’t learned HOW to get information, how to SORT information, how to DISTILL information into an idea and a coherent message, and how to WRITE that message.

                  Before AI ever existed, those were the goals of assigning papers to students. It was not about just having an end product (the paper). It was about CREATING that end product and all the things you would learn in the process. That’s what’s at risk here.

                • Tee Owe 14:22 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Totally agree with Blork – the whole point of being a student is to learn, and to learn how to learn. AI is to learning what GPS is to geography – useful adjuncts maybe but in the absence of core knowledge, potentially dangerous.

                • Tim S. 15:16 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  The irony is that as technology advances, more students will be asked to work with pen and paper and oral exams might even make a comeback. I’ll just take a moment to pat myself on the back for using the lockdown to teach cursive writing to my eldest.

                  And as Ephraim and Blork are saying, garbage in garbage out. AI is great at digesting what humans have already created, but I don’t see how it will create new knowledge, except through massive output of the thousand monkeys variety.

                • Blork 15:58 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Garbage in, garbage out. If we don’t train people how to create non-garbage, we will become more and more reliant on the garbage producers. Result: a generation from now all we will have is garbage and nobody will be smart enough to know the difference between garbage and non-garbage.

                • Kate 16:16 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  thomas, Google Bard says it doesn’t work in Canada yet! (Yes, I know – use a VPN.)

                • thomas 16:22 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Google Bard doesn’t work in Canada because it is only in English, if you sign up with a VPN US server you can use it.

                • Ephraim 19:02 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  @Kate – Depends on how you ask ChatGPT… I emailed you a copy of the output for the non-existent street

                  The worry isn’t simply about universities, because with universities, you require citations and well, you have to do it yourself. But with discrimination and not understanding why AI makes certain choices. For example, if AI handles loan applications, we may not understand why it’s turning down an application and if that relates to discrimination. Does it relate to what time I filling in the application? Does it relate to the postal code, neighbourhood, housing, the birth date, their birth day of the week? We don’t know. AI might notice a pattern with people who fill in applications on Wednesday between 9:15AM and 9:30AM that we just don’t really see. But where someone lives might be considered and that might indicate something like the neighbourhood has a higher percentage of PoC. It’s one of the reasons that Europe is talking about a law that will require a way to explain such decisions, so they can be manually overridden if they are based on discrimination.

                • Ephraim 22:14 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  I also asked Chat GPT about my uncle, a well known holocaust survivor who has written a book about his experience. There are many articles on the web about him in different languages as well. The book is not available on the web, just to purchase, so Chat GPT couldn’t reference the book. But it also didn’t get the right person and mixed his history with someone else’s, mixing up where he met my aunt and said he had passed, when he is definitely still alive.

                  It also can’t really give good citations behind an argument of supposition, like what France would have done with Quebec if they hadn’t lost in the Seven-Year’s war.

              • Kate 08:54 on 2023-05-15 Permalink | Reply  

                Our media have tended to take the side of the “customer” in the ongoing labour dispute at Notre‑Dame‑des‑Neiges and indeed I just heard a CBC radio news clip featuring a woman weeping loudly about not having a grave to visit.

                CBC did, at least, talk to a union rep, who said his people want a resolution too, but why is heat not being brought on the ownership of the cemetery to make a fair offer to its workers, and hire a few more people, since under‑staffing is one of the issues?

                (In fact, why do we allow a big thing like the municipal cemetery to belong to a single religious order? We are obliged by law to dispose of the dead in certain ways – why does this remain so expensive and so shrouded in antique ritual?)

                Anyway, Monday morning most media have some kind of report on the state of things at NDN, leaning hard on the sad families angle.

                 
                • jeather 10:29 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Without judging the reality of the situation, I’m surprised by what the parish claims to be paying, it’s higher than I would have guessed.

                • Derek 11:19 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  As a person who lost two very close relatives during the pandemic and who were eventually buried in Notre-Dame-des-Neiges, I can say that the grief of losing your loved ones and then not having closure because you are awaiting burial can be difficult to manage. Kate has expressed some cynicism on this subject before but the mental health effect is real. Yes we want fair wages for the employees and maybe the cemetery’s administration is not forthcoming with their finances or not making fair offers (I make no judgment on that), but minimizing the effects on the families of late loved ones in cold storage is insensitive at best. Empathy is not a zero-sum game.

                • Ephraim 12:32 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Sorry, but I have a very low tolerance of the Sulpicians, be it for the cemetary, their land or Notre Dame. Have you seen how much they charge just to see Notre Dame? And how much of our tax money has gone in to fix it… and we are still asked to pay. It’s $14 plus a $1 (illegal under Quebec law) fee per person…. $15 to see Notre Dame! And how much of our tax money has gone into this building, that they now charge $15 for a visit. Heck, Disney+ is just $12 for a whole month.

                • SMD 13:45 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  Jean-François Nadeau proposes nationalizing Notre-Dame-des-Neiges in his Le Devoir column today. He traces the hubris of the Sulpiciens through Montreal history, both past and recent, and says we should consider running the cemetery as a collective good.

                  « Un cimetière n’a pas à reposer sur des dévots ni à leur profiter ainsi qu’à leurs pièges sociaux. 

              • Kate 19:37 on 2023-05-14 Permalink | Reply  

                Metro says reports of graffiti went up by 237% between 2019 and 2022, notably in Ville‑Marie and the Plateau. Journo rounds it out with the inevitable Ensemble pearl‑clutching about how dreadful everything is.

                I’m becoming curious how this works. Does Ensemble bombard all editors with demands that their view be heard? Are all journalism students so inculcated with the concept that their articles must include “balance” that they shove it in, even when the “balance” is content‑free and includes no insights or solutions?

                Also, I notice here something I’m making an effort to notice, which is that a lot of stories are now being written about various local conditions and situations while totally ignoring the massive fact that we’re gradually emerging from three years of a pandemic – a pandemic which is not over, even if the worldwide emergency has been declared done by the WHO. People are already forgetting the huge wave of social stresses we’ve just lived through, and that you can’t fairly analyze a lot of situations without taking it into account. Like, for example, how it might bear on people expressing themselves through graffiti.

                 
                • MarcG 08:19 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  To your first question I think that ‘content’ is the key word, not ‘balance’. They include it because it adds easily to the word count.

                  To the second point I think we’re looking at society-level PTSD denial.

                • Chris 09:49 on 2023-05-15 Permalink

                  “>…we’re gradually emerging from three years of a pandemic…

                  I notice you’re speaking in the present tense. Different people of course emerged at different rates, some long ago, some haven’t yet. Which means different people are at different points in the stages of grief. But the bulk of people, from what I see around me, have processed it already.

                  MarcG, in denial of what? I doubt anyone is in denial that pandemic curfews, unemployment, and idleness could result in more graffiti.

                  Perhaps the article didn’t speculate as to causes for the increase simply because there’s probably no hard evidence for any hypothesis, so they chose just to stick to the facts they could report (and opinions of politicians, idiotic or otherwise).

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