Updates from March, 2024 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 18:26 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  

    A “grande mobilisation” is planned for Saturday in support of Palestine. Two hundred organizations are said to be involved, but the time and location are not mentioned.

    In tangentially related news, La Presse withdrew an editorial cartoon by Serge Chapleau initially posted on Wednesday morning, showing Benjamin Netanyahu as a vampire, captioned Nosfenyahou. The paper has apologized.

     
    • Daisy 06:32 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      It’s at 2 p.m. at Dorchester Square.

    • steph 08:23 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Is it even possible to criticize Israel without having the anti-Semitism card pulled? Maybe if Netanyahu wasn’t such a gross disgusting monster.
      Doesn’t this action (removal of editorial cartoon) play into the trope of Jews controlling the media? I’m glad CBC is sharing the screengrab.

    • MarcG 08:56 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      It’s amazing to me that the comic made it all the way to print. Nobody said “Hey, uh, that’s kind of a very well-known historical racist image you’ve got there?” The reason Legault can claim that racism isn’t systemic in Quebec and not get laughed off the stage is because of ignorance.

    • qatzelok 09:13 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Related to that Chapleau cartoon:

      “Your vampire ball is over” – Putin to Western elites

      https://www.rt.com/russia/594197-putin-vampire-ball-west/

    • jeather 09:20 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      I absolutely believe that — even if Chapleau didn’t consciously remember this trope, which seems probable, because IME it’s not in common current use — the history influenced the drawing.

      There’s lots of ways to criticize Israel in general and Netanyahu in particular, and calling it the “anti-semitism card” implies that it’s always fake or false or just pulled unfairly, and that’s not true. Yes, some people will call everything antisemitism, just like other people will argue that even the most obvious things are not at all based in it. But that’s true for everything, not just criticism of Israel.

    • walkerp 09:56 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Agreed. It’s unconscious racial bias. There are so many ways you could portray Netanyahu as a monster without an image that emphasizes stereotypical Jewish features that have been used for millennia in hate propaganda. That it didn’t get flagged by the french media is further evidence that that kind of antisemitism is still quite deep and unexamined here. I do believe Chapleau when he said that he didn’t intend it to be a racist caricature. He probably was all happy about the clever wordplay with Nosferatu that he thought he had discovered.

      Although counterpoint just Google Nosferatu and anti-semitism and you will discover many scholarly arguments that the movie itself was channeling anti-semitism in its themes and imagery.

      The Israeli government does exploit the shit out of the anti-semitism argument to defend its own horrific practices, indeed, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t there and you don’t have to lay it out on a platter like this.

    • Kate 10:05 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      I wonder. Chapleau’s clearly got social-aesthetic chops, going by the references he’s made in the past. I doubt he could’ve created that image without some sense of its historical referents.

    • Joey 10:21 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Montreal has a strong Jewish community that is active and engaged in civic life beyond its own institutions – it’s also a community that is generally beloved throughout the city (bagels! Mordecai Richler and Leonard Cohen! Phyllis Lambert! Et cetera.). So it’s easy to forget that, outside the city (but also somewhat within it), the sort of default/latent xenophobia that is deeply integrated into the social order here applies to us Jews as well. I suppose that’s another way of saying that it’s likely that Chapleau + his editors simply didn’t think playing footsie with anti-semitic imagery was such a big deal – certainly more likely than the notion that they had no idea that the cartoon had anti-semitic connotations.

    • Blork 11:59 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Let’s maybe step back a bit. Netanyahu can clearly be seen as a bad guy at the moment, and from some points of view could be seen as evil or some kind of angel of death or whatever. The cartoon is really just playing up on the similarity in the names “Netanyahu” and “Nosferatu,” in the context of Netanyahu’s aggression in Gaza.

      As for the trope, let’s remember that the film wasn’t (or likely wasn’t) intended to be specifically antisemitic, although it was somewhat xenophobic (it was playing on the “fear of the other”). The screenplay was written by Henrik Galeen, himself a Jew, and the claims of antisemitism are based almost entirely on the shape of Count Orlok’s nose, which is pretty scant evidence if you ask me.

      When the film came out in 1922 the Nazi party barely existed. It was picked up by them a decade later and used as propaganda. The idea that Count Orlok was necessarily supposed to be Jewish (or at least represented Jews) was played up then by the Nazi propagandists and later reinforced by the anti-Nazis as some kind of “proof” that the film was antisemitic.

      And as tropes tend to go, the issue evolved from “here is a bit of evidence that there might have been some antisemetic sentiments in the portrayal of Count Orlok” to “it is undoubtedly true that Count Orkok was meant to be antisemitic!” the same way it goes when you play that game where you whisper something to the person next to you, then they whisper it to the person next to them, etc. By the time it comes around to you again all nuance is gone from the story, and in fact it can be a completely different story.

      All that said, it was a mistake to publish the cartoon. Not because Nosferatu was intended to be antisemitic, but because we have come to believe that Nosferatu was intended to be antisemitic.

    • walkerp 12:04 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      I appreciate the detailed background on the movie, Blork. That is good stuff. But you added the “intended to be anti-semitic” to your argument which nobody here said. These tropes go back to Roman times and whether or not it was intended, the connection is there today.

    • walkerp 12:05 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Also, LOL @ “Count Orkok” typo.
      Sorry! 🙂

    • Blork 14:03 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      @walkerp, fair enough. But surely intention counts for something. What irks me is that in our social-media-reductionism-driven society, the conversation about Nosferatu has gone from “there is some imagery there that could be considered antisemitic” to the received truth that “Nosferatu is antisemitic,” which is a trope in itself.

      Scary movies often play up on the public’s fears; whatever the fear-of-the-month is, so to speak. These days it tends to be environmental apocalypse. In 1921 Germany, with the country having just been defeated in a world war and with the German Empire collapsed, one of the fears was of outsiders, or “the others” who would come and conquer. That was a normal fear at the time. (Bear in mind that WWII had not yet happened, the Holocaust had not yet happened, there were no refugee crises the way we have them today aside from European refugees from places torn up in the first world war, so “fear of other” had different connotations then.)

      So they set out to make a scary movie, and they want to play up that “fear of others” because it will make the scariness more effective and therefore help the movie be successful. Bring in the costume department, which was lead by Albin Grau, an occultist who was later persecuted by the Nazis and who escaped to Switzerland before the war to avoid being sent to a camp. Grau was also the production designer for the film, so he determined the entire aesthetic.

      I don’t know what conversations took place during the set and costume design meetings for the film, but the people who fall into the trope of accusing everything “Nosferatu” of being antisemitic will probably think every conversation started with “let’s make a movie to drive out the Jews!” I highly doubt it was anything like that. Rather, they wanted Count Orlok to look creepy and weird and foreign, and the nose was just part of that, along with the bald head, the creepy hands, the fanged teeth, and the weird clothing.

      If the whole thing hinged on the nose that would be one thing. But the nose was just part of a overall creepy aesthetic, and I find it curious that 100 years later we are still placing so much emphasis on that one thing, and making noises as if that one thing defines the entire character/movie.

    • Kate 17:14 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Daisy, I forgot to thank you for posting place and time.

    • Joey 20:53 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      No Blork – the problem isn’t that *Nosferatu* has been retconned into being some anti-semitic trope, it’s that portraying a prominent Jewish politician as a *vampire* is anti-semitic propaganda. Drawing Jews as big, powerful, frightening vampires is dealing in anti-semitic imagery regardless of what the intention behind the Nosferatu character is. And, yes, you could argue that OK this cartoon doesn’t cross the line per se (or maybe not too much), but tolerating this kind of thing just enables something worse to follow it.

    • Blork 09:14 on 2024-03-22 Permalink

      OK, fair comment. There are two tropes at work here though; the trope of representing Jews as vampires, and the trope of pointing at Nosferatu as an example of antisemitism. My concern in this tangent is really about the second one.

    • Ian 09:18 on 2024-03-22 Permalink

      To add to Joey’s comment, portraying Jews as “bloodsuckers” is often a not particularly subtle dogwhistle for blood libel.

    • Kevin 13:27 on 2024-03-22 Permalink

      The David Frum thread on the entwined history of Nosferatu and anti-semitism is worth reading
      https://x.com/davidfrum/status/1770434389299605686?s=20

  • Kate 18:20 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  

    La Presse’s Vincent Brousseau-Pouliot writes that Quebec chose to exclude a solution for the Olympic stadium that would be far less expensive than the $870‑million contract that was signed recently for a new stadium roof.

    The solution, proposed in 2012, would’ve removed the roof entirely and winterized the interior, although it would mean accepting that no events could be held in the stadium during the winter.

     
    • Nicholas 19:10 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      To be fair, it says the Olympic Park, in 2012, required a roof, but the government will not say if they considered this option. (Also, a mean culpa, it appears that due to using prestressed concrete it would cost a lot to demolish the bowl (leaving the tower), so this seems unlikely to happen.)

      I do wonder how many events they expect. The article seems to say it’d be 2-4 concerts a year, and then some conventions and trade shows. Presumably some of those would not work if it rained, but other than the concerts, a lot of those can happen at the convention centre, and there are other places for smaller conventions. Also people like having conventions downtown, not near the end of a metro line. But it seems that the incremental number of events possible is very low, and this option should at least have been thoroughly considered.

    • Em 19:22 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      It’s not 100 per cent clear, but the article suggests this winterizing would mean that there wouldn’t be any activities held in the stadium bowl at all, not just in winter.

      « L’hivernisation, ce n’est pas la fin du Stade. On fermerait seulement le bol. La Tour resterait opérationnelle à 100 %, ses locaux continueraient d’être loués (par exemple, par Desjardins), les touristes et les Montréalais pourront continuer à profiter de la vue au sommet. On a d’ailleurs investi 375 millions de fonds publics depuis une dizaine d’années dans la Tour. À l’extérieur, l’Esplanade du Parc serait aussi ouverte du printemps à l’automne.«

    • Kevin 01:51 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Winterizing happened every year before the roof was installed, so it would allow events in warmer months.

      The stadium will still need significant upgrades to attract any event even with a roof, no matter what the CAQ and the OIB are smoking.

      And the only source for a demolition price tag is a study commissioned by the Olympic Board more than a decade ago that pegged it at roughly $400 million. The two billion figure floating around has no basis in reality.

  • Kate 14:29 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  


    A familiar but dilapidated graystone building on Sherbrooke near Park is on fire Wednesday, causing difficulties getting around that part of town. I had to be downtown at midday, the bus routes were all detouring in unexpected ways – and then I saw this.

     
    • James 14:36 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

    • walkerp 14:57 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      Oh that’s so sad. That was a cute little strip. I wonder how much of the abandonment and the subsequent fire are the responsibility of the landlord?

    • Uatu 17:19 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      I remember a sales sign saying that it was supposed to be demolished for condos. I guess it wasn’t

    • Ian 19:53 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      Great shot!
      I was heading down Park to drop off a carpool and saw Sherbrooke was closed off – I thought it might have to do with the Mulroney funeral or soemthing.

      I remember those places were little shady restos for years, I imagine not well-kept. Too bad becasue they did have a nice frontage.

    • CE 21:28 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      I was standing kitty-corner to that strip waiting for the 80 a couple weeks ago and wondered how long it would be until that strip caught fire.

    • Joey 10:23 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      This + the closure of the access to Parc via Pine/Penfield probably explains the weird traffic jam I got stuck on on Cote-Des-Neiges yesterday.

    • Kate 13:56 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      I bet it was. Closing off that section of Park and Sherbrooke had a domino effect all over that part of town.

    • Tee Owe 14:58 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Agree with Ian – great shot!

    • kb 16:10 on 2024-03-21 Permalink

      Aw, I had a boyfriend for a year who lived in a 1st-floor apartment in that strip in the 2000s. Always was reminded of him every time I went past, sad to see it go.

  • Kate 09:40 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  

    This turned up on top of a news search Wednesday: a piece by MBC sneering at plans for urban densification and saying it’s only needed because of immigration “depuis plus de 20 ans. Au moins, devrais-je ajouter.”

    (MBC would probably consider me an immigrant, since my ancestors only got here in 1847.)

    MBC also says it’s “un autre exemple de l’incompétence politique grave des élites” but what is MBC but a member of the right‑wing intellectual elite, a man who pops over to pontificate in France? Because you believe in white replacement theory it doesn’t make you a man of the people.

     
    • Ian 19:56 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      Multiculturalism is a plot, didn’t you know?

      The irony is that MBC’s favourite ethnicity has had its baby numbers plummeting for generations and it’s only by letting in us filthy foreigners that the existing population numbers can even be maintained. Funny how after the quiet revolution women didn’t particularly feel compelled to have a good catholic family of 10 amymore.

    • P 20:59 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

      MBC is a full-time loser. A man whose paycheck depends on his ability to write spicy blurbs that pretend to be rooted in some kind of intellectual mystique that can never be defined. But I don’t think he believes a single word that he says. He’s just addicted to his lifestyle and probably gets a kick out of the fact that he gets paid to do… whatever the hell it is that he does.

  • Kate 09:22 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  

    A man was stabbed Tuesday evening near the old Forum and is in critical condition.

     
    • Kate 09:20 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  

      Public transit commissions from Canada’s three largest cities are putting pressure on Ottawa for more money. The federal budget is expected in mid‑April.

      In other transit news, the STM is attempting to cope with used syringes in the metro.

       
      • Chris 10:20 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

        Hopefully they’ll get the money, and can spend some of it on pressure washers. I took the metro for the first time in months (I generally bike everywhere). I used three different stations. One entrance stank of piss, another of vomit, and the third of I don’t know what, something reminiscent of body-odour. Is that typical these days?! 🙁 At least the metro cars themselves were ok.

      • bob 11:02 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

        There has been a big increase in homeless men sleeping it off in the metro of late. I assume it is due to some kind of policy change. Slow downs and stoppages due to medical and police interventions (and the occasional person on the tracks or in a tunnel) seem to be more frequent as well. I’ve seen three or four instances of homeless people being removed by police and/or EMTs in the last few months.

      • Josh 11:51 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

        This — what is referenced in the comments — is definitely the case in the transit systems of the bigger cities out west as of late.

      • JaneyB 15:04 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

        Verdun’s metro stations are much worse than before the pandemic, including now several tents outside the vestibules. The cops and EMT are around fairly frequently. Saw a guy sprawled out on a landing with a syringe and belongs strewn around. Nearly had to step over him to get to the escalator. The drug crisis is a disaster.

      • CE 21:33 on 2024-03-20 Permalink

        @bob, I don’t think it’s a policy change, there are just many more homeless people now and the Metro is a convenient place to get out of the cold and rain.

      • Ian 08:02 on 2024-03-22 Permalink

        Since fentanyl then xylazine the addiction problem has become much worse in part because they are so much less expensive to produce than heroin or even crack, and are more addictive with worse withdrawal. It’s not as bad here as Vancouver or Philadelphia, but it’s worse than it’s ever been.

    • Kate 09:17 on 2024-03-20 Permalink | Reply  

      The shelter for the homeless at the old Hôtel‑Dieu is criticized in a recent report as not providing sufficient support for people with certain health conditions. It does, however, give 186 people food and shelter. But it seems academic now, because it’s closing for good in July.

       
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