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McGill, News, The Tribune Explains

Tribune Explains: The Legal Information Clinic at McGill

The Legal Information Clinic at McGill (LICM) aims to help students with anything from accusations of plagiarism to navigating disputes with landlords. The McGill Tribune looked into this campus resource and all the legal issues the LICM’s volunteer staffers can help students address. 

What is the Legal Information Clinic at McGill? 

The LICM is a bilingual, free legal information service. Located on the main floor of the Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) University Centre building, the LICM provides legal information to McGill students and the Montreal community. It also helps with student advocacy, such as representing students in disputes with McGill, and community services, such as hosting public legal education pop-up booths. The LICM’s team consists of approximately 90 caseworkers and student advocates and six directors who manage the clinic. Though staffed by McGill law students, the LICM is an independent organization.

What types of legal issues can the LICM help with? 

The LICM can provide legal information on a broad range of issues, including housing, employment, immigration, municipal law and by-laws, and more. Providing legal information is different from advising. LICM caseworkers can explain and cite laws, but are not allowed to recommend any course of action to students. This is because the volunteer caseworkers are law students and are prohibited from providing legal advice as per section 128 of the Act Respecting the Barreau du Québec.  

The LICM does not take on cases that deal with criminal, tax, or construction law. In an email to the Tribune, the LICM clarified that issues in these legal areas are complex and are difficult to answer competently without obtaining specific information and giving advice. However, students can turn to the LICM’s Community Resources webpage that lists relevant resources to address those matters. 

What type of advocacy can the LICM do for students? 

The student advocacy branch assists students with formal and informal dispute resolutions related to McGill. This means everything from helping students navigate McGill’s internal policies, such as the Policy against Sexual Violence (PSV) or the Code of Student Conduct and Disciplinary Procedures (CSCDP), to facilitating negotiations between students and McGill or students and student associations. Student advocacy officers can also represent students in hearings with McGill by helping students prepare evidence and supporting documents before proceedings.  

The LICM student advocacy branch can also help navigate issues with academic supervisors, grievances against the university, and disciplinary matters. The LICM has also participated in the revision of McGill policies. For example, they helped improve the McGill PSV by commenting on it from a student-centric position in 2016 and were also consulted during its recent revisions in 2022. 

What can the LICM do for student groups?  

Through their Just Info program, the LICM can provide student groups and McGill community organizations with free legal information in the form of presentations. These presentations may be given in English or French and can range from 30 minutes to three hours. Possible topics include most areas of Quebec law, except for criminal law, tax law, and construction. While the presentations are tailored to the needs of the group, caseworkers can only offer basic legal information. 

How can students access the LICM’s services? 

Students can sign up for legal information by filling out the LICM’s form on their website. Student advocacy services can be accessed by setting up an appointment through email or by phone. 

In January, June, and September, the LICM also sets up pop-up legal information clinics on campus as part of their ‘Know Your Rights’ campaign. Members of the McGill community can walk up to the booth and ask specific legal questions to LICM volunteers, which they will then try to respond to immediately. The specific dates, times, and locations of pop-up booths are posted on the LICM’s social media accounts. 

The Legal Information Clinic at McGill can be reached at 514-398-6792 or at [email protected].

Emerging Trends, Student Life

A sticker is worth a thousand words: Laptop stickers, explained

As we reach the peak of midterm season, campus libraries are jam-packed with students scrambling to get all their work done. Although everyone is essentially there for the same reason, let’s face it: Some students simply look cooler than others. Could this be the result of their carefully curated fall outfits? Their brand-new $800 AirPod Maxes? Or is it their aesthetically decorated laptops? I would argue that it’s the latter. 

I had the chance to chat with some students about the increasingly popular phenomenon that is covering your laptop with stickers. Being fairly new to the trend myself, I learned a lot about the thought process behind it and how it varies from student to student. 

Maximalist or minimalist?

Students love to show off the cool stickers they pick up at trendy brand stores, cute cafés, or clubs to promote their extracurricular activities and showcase their personalities. But how does one select which stickers make the cut?  This is a widely debated topic amongst sticker fanatics. Some attempt to fill up every inch of their laptop cover, whereas others prefer a smaller, more meaningful set of stickers. Those who favour a more minimalist approach, like Alex Toca, U1 Management, prefer to have about 50 per cent of their cover coated. 

“Less is more,” Toca said. “Many stickers make a laptop cover look too crowded.” 

Others disagree with this: A laptop cover is meant to be as decorative as possible. After all, why waste space? Having more stickers makes a laptop cover much more captivating to the eye.  

What’s the motivation behind laptop stickers?

I received multiple answers to this question, but one in particular frequently came up: Laptop stickers are an excellent way of exhibiting one’s various interests, as well as giving people a taste of their personalities. In general, students seem to select stickers that hold some meaning for them. 

Anastasia Van Ryswyk, U1 Arts, shared the significance behind her laptop stickers in an interview with The McGill Tribune. 

“Some of them are school logos from universities of my state of residence, which reminds me of home,” Van Ryswyk said.

Better to showcase a smaller or larger number of interests?

Luca Lexham Cianciaruso, U2 Management, explained the importance of sticker diversity.

“Just like computers are used for a variety of purposes, stickers are meant to showcase a variety of interests,” Lexham Cianciaruso said. 

This is pretty much a consensus among students: It’s better to display various topics of interest as opposed to one. The way students approach this, however, differs. Some will go out of their way to buy stickers and make their laptop cover as diverse as possible to ensure they display every aspect of their overwhelmingly interesting personalities. As such, they’ll pay extra attention to ensure a variety of topics are represented amongst the stickers they choose. 

When “many” becomes “too many”…

Although the sticker decorating process may seem fun, it can get quite crowded with multiple stickers. Moreover, attempting to remove stickers is a tricky process, as it can easily result in a sticky, dirty-looking laptop if not executed with steady hands and laser focus so it’s important to be meticulous when removing them. The best trick, apparently, is to use nail polish remover. This sounds dubious, I know, but students swear by it: Once the remover makes it soft enough, they say you can use a credit card to scratch the remaining residue off to make your laptop cover as good as new. 

Others, like myself, however, cannot simply rely on word of mouth and turn to Google for a lesson on the art of laptop sticker removal. To my dismay, it turns out that the first suggestion that pops up when you Google “How to properly remove sticker residue from your laptop” isn’t entirely reliable. Don’t use vinegar to remove sticker residue and if you don’t believe me, I’ll gladly show you the current state of my laptop.

Features

The radical act of leaning on others

I hit a slump. By Thanksgiving break of 2021, I could barely get out of bed, make breakfast, or even sum up the strength to scroll on TikTok. Just a couple of weeks earlier, I was planning out every hour of my day, executing all my tasks with flying colours, peaking in productivity and socialization. I did not understand what had happened. It took a lot of rest, extensions on assignments, and breakdowns to recover, and even then, I still feel the threat of it happening again almost every day.

This “slump,” as I called it then, was actually autistic burnout. Autistic burnout is in many ways similar to a depressive episode: You experience a lack of motivation, an excess of hopelessness, and a lack of energy. But what makes autistic burnout tricky to identify and overcome is that all the tools that typically help depressed people, like going outside, seeing friends, and engaging in hobbies, can make the burnout worse. So basically, you are stuck in your stuckness. 

I had experienced this type of burnout before. Just a few months earlier, in the winter of 2020,  I was so unwell I could not read, think clearly, or physically take care of myself. I ended up moving back home and taking a leave of absence from school. During those months, the thought of doing schoolwork was enough to induce a panic attack. Emails to advisors were excruciating. Although simple, the process to request a leave of absence left me drained for days.

Looking back on these two experiences, what I had thought were depressive episodes were really symptomatic of something entirely different. I fell into a deep spiral of trying to figure out what exactly was “wrong” with me. As soon as I could, I sought out a psychiatrist at home and was diagnosed with ADHD. I had done my research and knew the diagnosis was likely: I experience unpredictable bursts of motivation, have intense dedication to hyperspecific interests, and struggle with task initiation. ADHD. And yet, as my psychiatrist talked me through my diagnosis and medication—hi Ritalin—it became obvious that she was missing something. According to her, my ADHD induced social anxiety as well as the sensory sensitivities I expressed I had. Nonetheless, I decided to give the medication a try and see what would happen. I was like an overly caffeinated toddler for a few weeks, not sleeping or eating, but I was finally getting my schoolwork done. I guess it was working. 

In my follow-up psychiatry sessions, I tried bringing up the aspects of my mental health that were getting worse. I struggled being in public around a lot of people; trips to the grocery store took me down for an entire day, a disruption in my routine felt catastrophic, and if I became overwhelmed, I stopped speaking entirely until I calmed down. My psychiatrist did everything to explain how this was social anxiety and handed me a booklet with instructions for social situations: How to make proper eye contact in a conversation. How to engage in small talk.

I felt mocked. I knew how to do these things—it was just not worth the physical exhaustion of performing them. I suspected a more accurate diagnosis for me was Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). I took all the tests, memorized the DSM-5—the American Psychiatric Association’s diagnostic manual of mental disorders—and painstakingly combed through my childhood memories. At every turn, I found myself discovering a new aspect of my life—of my brain—that I had ignored. Or been forced to ignore. This process was painful. I was peeling back layers upon layers of trauma and masking, realizing no one around me truly knew who I was. 

My girlfriend is autistic as well, and so I knew enough from their experience that a medical diagnosis was neither easy to come by nor a holy grail. Most medical professionals do not understand autism through the experiences of neurodivergent people, and most diagnostic tests are based on stereotypes of genius little white autistic boys lining up trains. They therefore fail to accurately assess anyone who is not a little white boy. I also experienced firsthand people’s reluctance to accept self-diagnosis as valid. At an earlier time in my life, I would have agreed that doctors are the best people to provide accurate diagnoses. But eventually I realized that this was a matter of who I was. After seeing psychologists, psychiatrists, and counsellors since the age of six years old who never even thought to assess me for anxiety, I learned that I am the person who knows myself the best. 

Despite understanding the importance of self-diagnosis and the inadequacy of the mental health care system, I was still desperate for validation. I waited for someone to tell me that I was autistic, that I had not made it up, and that I was allowed to be in pain. I was seeking this validation from psychiatrists and my parents, but I quickly understood that I was looking in vain. 

After speaking to other late-diagnosed and self-discovered autistic people, I learned that I was not alone in my experience. Kate Ellis (BA ‘22), explained that before seeking out a professional diagnosis, they were looking for affirmation from the people around them. 

“I mostly just wanted people in my life to like, believe me,” Kate told me. “I wanted the validation of having the words for my experience and wanting people to know me in the way that I now know myself.” 

These words struck me, and I was overcome by a deep sense of grief for what my life could have looked like if I had received that validation as a child. This need for acceptance, however, ran deeper. I needed to validate myself first, and to accept the possibility that my health was more complicated than I thought. When I talked to Ana Dumitrache (BA ‘22), they echoed this sentiment. 

“I think I had a lot of inner bias,” Ana said. “And I had to work on myself [through] a lot of self hate, like, not wanting to be different or be perceived as someone less competent.” 

Talking to other autistic people led me to a realization I was not expecting. Beyond diagnoses, what is key to our survival in an ableist world is community. When I decided to write this feature, I knew I wanted to ask other people who are disabled, autistic, or neurodivergent how they navigated school, the medical system, and relationships. I was excited to conduct interviews, but I did not realize just how transformative these conversations would be. They went beyond the idealized journalistic dynamic of the “objective” interviewer asking questions to a “subjective” individual. I could not easily detach myself from the questions I was asking because they were so deeply linked to my own experience. 

At first this frightened me: What if I was breaking some sacred journalistic code of honour? Or what if I ended up submitting a glorified rant session? But as my interviews progressed, it became apparent that being part of the story I was telling was only strengthening my piece—I write what I know and ask about what I don’t. 

What all the people I interviewed and I know is that the institutions and systems that we navigate daily, like the university and the health care system, are inadequate and actively harm neurodivergent people. Alex*, a U4 Science student has experienced barriers to accessing McGill’s resources. They have ADHD, but have not been able to get an official diagnosis because of the exorbitant amount of money they would have to pay upfront just to get an assessment. “If you don’t have a diagnosis, there is no solution for you,” Alex said. 

Kate had a similar experience. They chose not to pursue a path of accommodations with Student Accessibility and Achievement, formerly known as the Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD), because the process was not accessible to them. Even after Kate submitted an autism diagnostic report, the school required more documentation to grant them accommodations. 

“I didn’t feel comfortable going to the psychologist that diagnosed me to fill out an OSD form,” Kate said. “And I don’t have [a] family doctor, I didn’t have a therapist at the time. And McGill, at least at this time, did not accept just my diagnosis report. It would have had to be the particular form. And so that was a big barrier to me.”

Without the official avenues easily available, disabled and neurodivergent students are left to hope professors will be understanding and give them the accommodations they need. Luckily, for Kate, Ana, Alex, and myself, our experiences with professors have been mostly positive. This, however, does not undermine the fact that we have to disclose personal information and risk being invalidated every time we reach out to a professor for accommodations. For the university to truly be accessible, it needs to build in flexibility into its courses, rather than put the burden of disclosure on students. On the other hand, Alex highlighted one university measure that proved very helpful to them when they were depressed. Being able to defer exams their first time without official documentation allowed them to continue their education while also taking care of their mental health. 

“It gave me the room to actually go through my mental health issues and not have to drop out of college because I had one bad month or one bad semester,” Alex said.

Beyond the university, Quebec’s health care system has severe shortcomings when it comes to providing care for neurodivergent and disabled people. When Kate was undergoing their assessment, they were constantly misgendered even after reminding the medical professionals they were non-binary. In addition, they were tested for their IQ and eventually given an Asperger’s diagnosis. Kate expressed their discomfort, knowing that IQ tests are deeply ableist, racist, and inaccurate measuring tools for intelligence. Similarily harmful, Asperger’s Syndrome no longer makes up part of the DSM-5, failing to accurately represent the autism spectrum and taking its name from a Nazi doctor

“I emailed saying I was seeking an autism diagnosis and the whole time he was talking about it as an Asperger’s diagnosis. Which is not language that is recommended anymore and doesn’t align with the language of a lot of autism self advocates.” 

Oftentimes, autistic people are forced to compromise parts of their identity and even their values to receive some form of medical care, of quality or not. The implications of this are even greater for autistic and disabled people of colour, who are often not granted the right of medical care in the first place and are policed and surveilled instead.

Many racialized disabled educators on social media, however, have spoken out about this omission in the conversation, stressing the need for community-based and anti-racist approaches to mental health. After hearing from these educators, like Imani Barbarin (@Crutches and Spice), I started to think about the need for and meaning of community. Barbarin created the hashtag #MyDisabledLifeMatters to highlight how quickly the U.S. government forgot about disabled people in their COVID-19 response. This hashtag is an example of resisting through community, but also a bleak reminder that disabled people, particularly Black people and Indigenous peoples, have to fight for their lives to be seen as worthy. When the institutions that are supposed to care for you consistently fail you, community avenues of care become indispensable. 

The capitalist and toxic culture of productivity we live in can be deadly for disabled people. But understanding community care solely as a response to capitalism reflects my positionality in the world as a white person in North America. For many marginalized people, community is not an alternative to the system. It is the system. It is important to remember that white people too often take credit for movements they did not initiate, such as the #MeToo movement started by Tarana Burke or the Stonewall uprising led by Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera. This awareness paves the way for us to reclaim concepts co-opted by white and capitalist cultures that harm disabled people and how they interact with the world. Definitions of relationship dynamics like codependency, for instance, have been demonized in favor of self-reliance and independence. These “autonomous” ways of living, however, are often impossible for disabled people. Being codependent can also mean survival and community. 

“To neurotypical people, that would be seen as codependent behaviour,” Kate said about their relationship with their girlfriend. “But to us, it’s interdependent—we’re meeting each other’s needs and helping each other thrive.” 

Allowing ourselves to depend on each other and have others depend on us while also maintaining boundaries is a beautiful act of love and care. But care can also look like accommodating ourselves. Alex explained to me that so much of how they cope in difficult periods is simply listening to themselves and catering to their own needs. Sometimes, this looks like wearing headphones in a loud environment or sunglasses inside when it is too bright. Other times, it looks like isolating themselves and cancelling engagements. Ultimately, a significant part of living as a neurodivergent person comes down to finding ways to survive

I focused much of my interviews around the difficulties of being disabled, neurodivergent, and/or autistic. Although it is important to highlight the social and institutional barriers that plague our lives, it is just as important to highlight disabled joy. I ended my interviews with Ana and Kate by asking them about what brings them happiness. 

For Kate, finding joy is allowing themselves the time to engage in their special interests (currently the Descendants movies and the comedians Dan and Phil), taking a step back from school, calling their girlfriend, and playing video games with their dad. 

Ana feels joy when exploring their hyperfixations and kayaking in the summer.

I find joy when I spend time with my girlfriend—mostly when we let ourselves be and we see how amazing our autistic brains truly are. 

I am the most caring towards myself when I feel cared for by other people. Having autistic people around me is about survival, but also about being able to share the bliss I experience in the world. For disabled joy to exist, community is indispensable. So how do you find joy? How do you take care of yourself?

For more resources, my girlfriend, Lou Secher created this document filled with autism and self-assessment resources. For more autistic-written information, I recommend the Embrace Autism website

*Alex’s name was changed to preserve their anonymity. 

Research Briefs, Science & Technology

Alert: Parasitic invasion in your intestines

If you have ever watched the television series Monsters Inside Me, you may be familiar with parasitic worms. Each episode features a dramatization of an infectious disease case, with an accompanying explanation of its cause. Cases dealing with parasitic worms range from a teenager infected with the parasitic worm, Trichinella spiralis, after eating uncooked meat, to a man with worms feeding in his brain. A common question that always arose in my mind was the following: “How do these worms manage to survive?”

A recent study published by a group of McGill researchers in the Journal of Experimental Medicine aimed to answer that very question. Irah King, an associate professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, led the study along with his lab at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC). 

Parasitic worms, also called parasitic helminths, are known to evade the immune system of the individuals they infect. Many of these helminths begin their attack in the gut epithelium—a layer of cells that line the intestines—before progressing to other areas. The epithelium is made up of many cells, including intestinal stem cells (ISCs). These cells are “fetal-like” in that they have the capability to develop into various cell types, compared to the other more rigid, stuck-in-their-ways, “adult-like” cells in the intestine. 

The gut epithelium also has some innate defence and repair mechanisms in response to foreign invaders. The primary defence mechanism is the type 2 immune response in which goblet cells, a cell important for nutrient digestion in the intestines, produce mucus to trap the invader. This type 2 immune response is activated by cytokines, molecules that increase the body’s immune responses, such as IL-4 and IL-13. During the injury process, the epithelium may undergo severe damage, which mostly leads to a severe decrease in ISCs. The epithelium repairs itself by reprogramming the “‘adult cells” into “fetal cells” so that more cells can be generated. 

But while these repair and defence mechanisms are well-studied, it is not known how they are affected during a helminth infection. 

 To study this, King and his team infected mice with a roundworm called Heligmosomoides polygyrus bakeri (Hpb). They removed the intestine cells from the animal models and grew them in Petri dishes until they formed organoids—three-dimensional cell cultures derived from animal or human tissues. They then looked at the gene expression within the organoids and found that the gut cells of the infected mice had more helminths than non-infected mice and expressed fetal-related genes. 

Their finding shows that helminths trigger the repair process in the intestine by activating fetal genes. However, researchers also found that helminths suppressed the type 2 immune response. Mice that were genetically engineered to have lowered type 2 response had increased fetal gene expression in their organoids after Hpb infection. Those with a normal type 2 response did not show any fetal gene expression.

The results reveal two interesting ways those pesky helminths manage to evade immune responses: The worms first evade immune response by decreasing type 2 immunity in the body of their host. They also reprogram the intestine, so it goes into a repair state, while allowing the helminths to persist within the intestine. 

 “This study establishes the fact that helminths are able to directly regulate their host epithelium. Since the epithelium is at the forefront of host-parasite interactions, this suggests that manipulating these interactions can result in the discovery of new anthelmintic drugs,” Danielle  Karo-Atar, a postdoctoral fellow at the King lab and first author of the study, wrote in an email to The McGill Tribune

However, Karo-Atar notes that more progress is needed before these new pathways can inform any kind of treatment.

 “Future directions for this study will be to identify the molecular mechanisms responsible for this worm-induced fetal-like reversion of the epithelium,” Karo-Atar wrote. “In addition, we would like to understand if and how worms are enhancing intestinal resilience and identify the pathways responsible.”

McGill, Montreal, News

McGill student and professor host discussion with Peter-McGill Community Council director

A discussion featuring Stéphane Febbrari, the director of the Peter-McGill Community Council, and co-hosted by Megan Uderian, U3 Nursing, and Mary Anne Poutanen, a Concordia affiliate professor who teaches interdisciplinary courses on Quebec and Canada at McGill, took place on Oct. 25 over Zoom. The event was part of the “Montréal as seen by…” series put on by the Quebec Studies Program (QSP), the Quebec Studies Students Association (QSSA), the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Montreal (CIRM), and the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada (MISC). 

The Peter-McGill Community Council is a bilingual non-profit organization that aims to assess and fulfill community needs through outreach, consultation, planning, and advocacy. Founded in December 2002, the Council represents a swath of downtown Montreal, including the Golden Square Mile, where McGill is located. Uderian asked Febbrari to explain the Council’s mandate at the beginning of the talk. Febbrari explained that the Council aims to bring people together, listen to the community, and pool resources to effect positive change. 

“Our main role is really to be a voice with no filters,” Febbrari said. “We are an independent group, we have different sorts of funding. So, when we listen to our residents, we try to channel their voice in advocacy to the city and health services or ministers.”

According to its website, the Council currently has committees dedicated to the needs of families, food security, immigration, urban development, neighbourhood life, seniors, and youth action. While the Community Council began as an organization primarily representing older residents and business owners in the neighbourhood, Febbrari said that it has since worked to include a more diverse range of voices. 

Febbrari stated that over 40 per cent of the neighbourhood’s residents are living below the government-set poverty line—although he noted that this number is somewhat skewed by international students, who often have unregistered sources of income. He explained that the Community Council has a number of initiatives and partnerships with local shelters and community organizations to help alleviate the burden families and individuals frequently face while trying to make ends meet. Febbrari also saw the problem worsen during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We have a monthly market with […] products for the families for free, and […] food also,” Febbrari said. “Those markets started to really boom [during] COVID, and now we keep on developing around [them] because we were seeing a need.” 

In addition to food insecurity and the housing crisis, Febbrari touched on immigration, a lack of green space, and the climate crisis in his answers to Uderian’s questions. He also explained that the Community Council is part of a larger coalition that aims to facilitate communication between the different boroughs of the city. 

The “Montréal as seen by…” series hosts five to six events a year, all co-run by a McGill student, and aims to connect McGill students with the greater Montreal community. Poutanen, who has integrated the lecture series into her courses, finds the talks to be an important educational tool that exposes students to a variety of non-McGill perspectives from around the city.

“[The series] is offering an opportunity for students to meet people who look at Montreal and look at Quebec from different perspectives, as well,” Poutanen said during an interview with The McGill Tribune. “It can be somebody who teaches, who has a basketball program, it can be somebody who runs a virtual museum. It’s quite a diverse group of people who have a stake in the city and a stake in Quebec.”

Stéphan Gervais, scientific coordinator for the Quebec Studies Department, stated that the series is centred around practices of experiential and transformative learning.

“It […] goes back to learning about oneself really, learning about being an individual, being a citizen, being a Montrealer,” Gervais said. “We, in a very modest way, we try to make it easy for students, we try to offer them a possibility to get engaged.”

Commentary, Opinion

A price freeze won’t fix inflation

On Oct. 17,  Loblaw Companies Ltd., Canada’s largest grocery retailer that owns and operates Loblaws, No Frills, Provigo, Maxi, Pharmaprix, among others, announced that it would be freezing prices on all its No Name branded products for the next three months. This means that approximately 1,500 No Name grocery items are now fixed at a set rate. After months of intense grocery price increases, Loblaw’s decision to freeze the prices of only one of its many brands is largely symbolic and won’t help those suffering from rising grocery prices. The No Name price freeze proves that Canada’s major grocery chains operate as an oligopoly, are dishonest about their profiteering, and are completely apathetic to the hardships of working-class Canadians. Especially in a time of unprecedented inflation, the Canadian government, as outlined by their antitrust statutes, should use the New Democratic Party’s (NDP) motion to investigate the grocery giants to regulate grocery prices for all products. Additionally, universities like McGill should remove mandatory meal plans, reduce prices at on-campus eateries, and provide resources for finding affordable and nutritious food around campus. 

Loblaw’s platform choice in announcing the price freeze is certainly bizarre. Loblaw chairman and Weston Family Corp heir, Galen Weston, sent an out-of-touch email pushing the blame for skyrocketing prices away from his own company. The email did not address Loblaw’s soaring profit margins this past year, with corporate profits hitting an all-time high of nearly 20 per cent in the second quarter of the year. The email and symbolic price freeze make a mockery of the suffering that working-class people have faced this past year, and demonstrate Loblaw’s complete disregard for the Canadians they claim to serve. The price freeze at this point in the year does not help Canadians when the grocery prices have already gone through the roof, not to mention that the timing lines up with a standard-practice annual freeze anyway. The price freeze is clearly a marketing strategy, and not a charitable relief measure. With the top Canadian retailers holding 80 per cent of the market share, market concentration of this kind leads to higher prices. The NDP recently submitted a unanimous motion in Parliament to investigate price-gouging and to lower food prices in the House of Commons. In addition to an investigation into the grocery chain’s profits, the motion could strengthen competition laws and draw attention to how corporate greed is a significant contributor to inflation. . 

Students in Canada are particularly affected by rising costs of living and tuition increases. Many students have suffocating amounts of student debt that remain a burden well beyond their university years. Furthermore, at McGill, where students face a rigorous course load, those who must work often do so at minimum-wage jobs, where they are not typically bringing in enough money to compensate for the price increases. 

Further, No Name does not sell fresh produce, an essential part of a balanced diet. Despite Loblaw’s attempt to paint themselves as “generous overlords”, the price freeze is an insufficient measure to address unaffordable costs of living. McGill also has an unaffordable mandatory meal plan, with such high prices in campus eateries that students are unable to have three full meals per day. McGill must provide better support for students by reducing food prices. Additionally, McGill must actively work against the stigma associated with using food banks and other charitable organizations during difficult times, so that university students feel comfortable using these services instead of going hungry. Creating databases with lists of the lowest grocery food prices in areas such as the Milton-Parc or Plateau neighbourhoods could provide students with peace of mind and full pantries.   


The negligible relief offered through price freezing simply cannot compensate for the staggering toll inflation has taken on Canadian consumers this past financial year. The Canadian government should use the current investigation into grocery giants to regulate prices and universities like McGill should offer students additional support during a time of record-breaking inflation.

Laughing Matters, Opinion

How to deal with noisy library-goers

r/McGill: 

u/deskaquatic: “You can’t make this up” 

u/lolakitty: “If it’s been said once, it’s been said a thousand times?” 

u/ragingpoeti: “STFU on the quiet floors of McLennan” 

Let’s set the scene. 

It’s midterm season. Your four professors convened and decided that the best course of action would be to assign six assessments due next week. You’re struggling to get them finished, so you decide to take advantage of the recently established 24/7 hours at the McLennan-Redpath library complex. 

You’ve been avoiding the sun, having been in the library all day, every day, for the past week. You can barely remember what it feels like to sit on a comfortable chair, and have lost count of how many coffees you’ve chugged today. But it’s okay, because all your friends are in the same boat. You band together to motivate each other and create perfect cramming conditions. 

Except, wherever you settle, there’s a group of students who can’t possibly know where they are: The library. They’re catching everyone, and you do mean everyone, up on the latest gossip. Can you believe Chad was practically on his knees begging for another chance this weekend, but he hasn’t texted Brittany since…. What about Stephanie, you should’ve asked me to crash somewhere else and you could’ve had the place to yourself, I bet she would have….SHHHHHH. Here comes Brandon and his band of brothers comparing notes from their various escapades. You might need to brush up on your anatomy, but do it quietly, buddy. Really, this isn’t a laughing matter! 

It’s been 10 minutes and you can hear them through the lo-fi mix coming through on your AirPods. They’re ruining all the concentration-enhancing abilities of lo-fi girl! You regret not splurging for the noise cancelling ones. 

“We’re working on a group project,” they sneer at your plea.

You can’t take it.  

“Well, your boyfriend’s a jerk and the rest of us think you should get a room. Literally! Reserve a room and be as loud as you want in there.”

Can’t they just let the rest of us be bitter and boring, surrounded by the comforting brutalist walls of McLennan?

But put yourself in their shoes. Why does the library need so many talking floors? It’s the perfect gathering spot—if people need quiet, they can go to a different spot anyways! There’s never any space on the floors where talking is allowed. 

Empathy doesn’t work: You’re furious. You see the security guards patrolling the floor and not saying a word. The same security guards who last year yelled at you if your water bottle wasn’t touching your mouth for the entirety of the time your mask was down. You want to scream. Tell him to use his expansive powers for good and kick them out! At least escort them to one of the talking floors. You’re seeing red and imagine the security guard eating them. Was it in Percy Jackson when the teacher became a raging, flying Fury? We should hire them for McLennan. Maybe the talkers would listen to ominous “offenders will be eaten” signs. 

You hear the library announcement reminding people to keep it down, but all you really hear is details about so-and-so’s frustrating professor and so-and-so’s disgusting roommate. It’s hell. 

Finally, after you sigh, stare, grumble, and even point in their direction, they’re packing their things up to leave. Making their way to the door, talking about how they just have to be at Gerts tonight. Are they actually leaving? It can’t be, right? But, they’ve picked up their bags, so….

Wait, don’t leave! What will anyone post about on Reddit? You’re sorry; you didn’t mean it. Your studies aren’t that important. Please! 

They’re gone. What were you working on again? Math or an essay? You’ll have to actually do it now. Go on now, good luck. Be at peace, in the quiet, with your own thoughts. 

Arts & Entertainment, Music

Artist Spotlight: Silverstein and emo rock revival

Picture the summer of 2007: Posters of Linkin Park and Green Day plaster teenagers’ rooms, hair gel is used excessively to style straightened comb-overs, and MP3 players still exist. The emo wave rocked an entire generation and defined the scalps of Skrillex, early-career Cristiano Ronaldo, and so many more. Even EDM was going through its emo phase—the Tecktonik. It was the best of times, it was the saddest of times.

In February 2000, a group of Canadian high school students decided to ride the early wave of emo rock music and officially formed the band Silverstein. By May 2003, they had released multiple EPs and a full-length album, all filled with distorted guitar parts alongside thick bass riffs and screaming vocals. Silverstein’s emotional music was tapping into the heavy hearts of millions of Canadians. Later hits from 2005 like “My Heroine” and “Smile in Your Sleep” feature memorable melodies and became anthems of emo rock. With half a million records sold following these successes, Silverstein had a global reach and peaked in popularity.

But at the turn of the decade, with the recession in full force, people were growing tired of feeling sad. Emo faced backlash, and musical acts rebranded. Although emo music fell increasingly out of the billboard charts, Silverstein remained faithful to their roots. Their sound matured throughout album releases, featuring more synthesizers and sequencers which created a more modern repertoire. Lead singer Shane Told recalls this progression with fondness.

“We were just kids, and everyone was the same,” Told said in an interview with The McGill Tribune. “Then you realize that people are into different things. It’s important to try new things [….] We wanted to relinquish all that electronic music. We asked ourselves, ‘Who cares?’ Next thing you know, there’s a whole other world out there and another sound palate to the band.”

In 2020, when the band was about to tour for the release of their album A Beautiful Place to Drown, countries were shuttering their borders because of the COVID-19 pandemic. With a cancelled tour and a lot of downtime, Silverstein was back on the writing board.

“Songs were written entirely during quarantine in 2020 and 2021,” Told said. “We weren’t getting together, we just sent files and hearts back and forth. It was a dark time.” 

Those songs became the basis for their recent album Misery Made Me, recorded in 2021 and released in time for their comeback tour in 2022. The album is an exciting blend of their emo and electronic sounds. Layered vocals and reverb permeate the record with effects, immersing listeners in a unique acoustic experience. Told remembers less “misery” and more of the joy of being back with the band when they recorded the album.

“When we got together in the studio, it felt uplifting,” Told said. “We played golf, drank wine, and recorded the album. We had a cohesive idea about the whole record.” 

Nu-metal motifs are scattered throughout the track “Slow Motion.” “Don’t Wait Up” is a tight-sounding blast from Silverstein’s past sound. “The Altar/Mary” has listeners swimming in the sonic space brought by decaying keyboards and vocals until fast-paced and distorted instrumentals suddenly take over. The album is immaculately mixed and produced, emphasizing the breadth of the various musical dimensions Silverstein explores.

I was able to watch Silverstein perform on Oct. 1 at Theatre l’Olympia alongside Amity Affliction, Unity-TX, and Holding Absence. The crowd’s average age was between 30 and 40, a generation that grew up listening to this music more than 15 years ago. The mid-2000s emo aesthetic was in full swing, and the crowd’s energy resembled that of the attendees’ raucous and angsty teenage selves. The opening acts were expressive, guitars were distorted, and everyone was chanting out familiar lyrics. When Silverstein came up, the crowd roared with acclamation. 

“It’s so fucking good to be back,” yelled an ecstatic Shane to the Olympia crowd. 

I would have never imagined myself enjoying emo music, yet there I was, dancing and jumping to their hits. After a two-year hiatus, the stage lights shone brightly on Silverstein once again, reigniting a spark in emo music extinguished long ago. Whatever fire was lit that cold Saturday night, be it on St. Laurent or at the concert, it rekindled within me a sudden desire to mosh like it’s 2007.

Commentary, Opinion

Accessibility on campus is shameful

Nobody enjoys trekking from New Residence Hall to McMed in subzero temperatures to make it to an 8:30 a.m. lecture. Most people take their ability to walk into class or a library building for granted. Montreal’s winters are particularly brutal, and the city is infamous for its never-ending construction. For able-bodied people, however, these are just inconvenient factors to consider before stepping out the door. For disabled students, staff, and faculty members, the lack of physical accessibility at McGill and in Montreal is a constant reminder of the painful reality of an ableist world. If McGill wants to become the inclusive institution it claims to be, it must prioritize an accessible campus for all of their students. 

McGill’s campus is an accessibility nightmare. From steep hills, incessant construction work and cracked curbs, getting around quickly and easily is a privilege reserved for able-bodied people. Even if disabled folks manage to navigate the hellish campus layout, the barriers do not end there. Although the Accessible Canada Act strives to remove accessibility barriers across the country, it only applies to buildings under federal jurisdiction. As such, universities like McGill are not legally bound by the act. This makes for a poorly-planned campus that actively prevents disabled students from accessing education. Although ramps and automatic doors make McGill buildings more accessible, they need to be functional and well-maintained. Steep and narrow ramps like those leading up to Stewart Biology North are hazards, especially during the winter when they are often covered in snow and ice, rendering them completely useless. Automatic doors do not always work and are often blocked by newsstands, mask dispensers, and idling students.  

Although McGill has measures meant to increase accessibility, such as the Adapted Mobility Bus, these initiatives fail to include all of the students who need mobility assistance but may not meet the required standards set by the school. The process requires users to be registered with the Student Accessibility and Achievement office and to have a formal diagnosis or a letter from a health professional. These requirements assume that students have access to quality medical care and essentially push them to prove that they are disabled enough to receive accommodations. Furthermore, the bus services are insufficient as the singular vehicle only runs Mondays to Fridays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. This essentially leaves any student whose classes end after 4:01 p.m. unable to move around campus.

Driving is an option for disabled students, but many do not have access to their own cars. Even if they did, proximity parking permits are reserved for faculty and staff members, who still have to go through a lengthy application process. 

Institutional barriers are not the only things making campus inaccessible. Individuals can contribute to the problems, and people often see disability signage as optional. This can range from parking in front of ramps or on curb cuts to leaving bikes on sidewalks and using their feet to open doors and push buttons. When an institution is already actively excluding disabled students, it is discouraging to see our peers contribute to endless inaccessibility issues. 


True anti-ableist change must combine institutional efforts as well as social ones. This starts with knowledge and awareness of mobility issues and disability rights. A great way to start is to unlearn ableist biases of what disability looks like in the first place. Not every person with mobility issues is a wheelchair user or visibly disabled. On the other hand, people should critically assess their environments and question why visibly disabled people may not interact with spaces in the same way. Inaccessibility is not a coincidence, and a lack of accessible public spaces marginalizes disabled people and keeps them from accessing their rights to education, medical care, and ultimately, a barrier-free life. McGill owes it to their students to reconsider their accessibility efforts and allocate enough resources to push for transformative change.

Album Reviews, Arts & Entertainment

‘The Loneliest Time’ offers up a mixed bag of delights and let-downs

As a long-time Carly Rae Jepsen lover, I have been eagerly awaiting new music since her last project, 2019’s Dedicated and the accompanying Dedicated Side B (2020). While Jepsen’s sixth studio album, The Loneliest Time, certainly doesn’t disappoint, it doesn’t quite knock your socks off either. Released on Oct. 21, the album sees this self-professed ambassador of love expand into slightly more reflective territory. Over 13 songs, she scratches the surface of cynicism, insecurity, and loneliness without ever fully abandoning her starry-eyed perspective. 

Sonically, The Loneliest Time straddles a similar divide. A handful of songs flirt with a more mellow, vocals-focused sound, but the lion’s share of the tracklist keeps a tight hold on her signature 80s synth-pop melodies. The result? A fun, albeit fairly incohesive, album that will keep you moving and grooving without too much contemplation of its overall message. Despite its title purporting to be about loneliness, most of the tunes only dive into darker themes for a line or two before resurfacing to take on more light-hearted fare. 

The album’s more laid-back tracks benefit greatly from the skillful production of former Vampire Weekend band member Rostam Batmanglij. The lead single “Western Wind” is as breezy and laidback as its title suggests, and the ballad “Go Find Yourself or Whatever” uses soft, moody strings to underscore Jepsen’s resentful but ever-hopeful lyrics. 

In terms of its pure pop songs, The Loneliest Time is at its best when Jepsen revisits the shimmering synths that made 2015’s E●MO●TION a critical darling and fan favourite. Opening track “Surrender My Heart” and single “Talking to Myself” are pristine pop songs that feel like they have an instant place amongst her catalogue of dance-worthy beats. “Shooting Star,” on the other hand, presents a grating disco-pop track with lyrics as forgettable as its melody. 

Altogether, The Loneliest Time makes for a fun listen with some delightful highlights, but don’t expect much in terms of surprises—most of the themes tackled are nothing new for Jepsen. Indeed, the Canadian pop star has made a career out of creating soundtracks for her and her audiences’ lovestruck fantasies and blissful first kisses. Amidst her discography of hopeless romantic bubblegum pop, The Loneliest Time fits in perfectly.   

Rating: 3.5/5 stars

The Loneliest Time is available now on all streaming platforms. Carly Rae Jepsen is continuing the North American leg of her ‘So Nice Tour’ until November 2022.

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