On X-cesses
I apologize for having left an excess of time pass since my last post. My vague excuse is that I have been somewhat distracted by the move, but that is rather feeble. In truth, I have been slacking off.
On the last Saturday in Vancouver, Chris and I went to see Kristine and Company. This involved the semi-standard trip to the stable where their horse Cocoa is kept. I will gently call their having a horse an extravagance, if not an excess (only using the word to keep with this post's title).
| Me, Cocoa and Elisabeth |
On xenophobia
And so I returned to Montreal, ruled as it is by a government that is almost entirely foreign to it. Of the MNAs of the (currently) ruling party, I believe only two are from ridings on the Island of Montreal. That it is possible for a party to have a parliamentary majority in Quebec with such a lack only reinforces my suspicions that the distribution of seats is very suspect. The other factor that it reveals is that the CAQ's policies were not intended to be popular with the more cosmopolitan Montreal voters. Not to mention the voters whose rights were targeted with the xenophobic "secularism" promoted by the CAQ. It is one thing to be in favor of secularism. It is quite another to do so while explicitly excluding a flag from secularism when it chosen by someone who was antithesis of secularism. Maurice Duplessis selected a flag that was loaded with not only Christian but Catholic symbolism. The cross is a common Christian symbol, but the inclusion of the fleur-de-lys and the use of blue and white are distinct references to the Virgin Mary which is a very Catholic thing to do. So in effect, the CAQ is saying "You can't show your religious symbols, but you have let us show our religious symbol."
Speaking of flags, by the tenets of the CAQ's pseudo-secularism, it follows you would not be allowed to show flags with religious symbols on them. This would include six provincial flags and about a third of the flags of other countries.

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