Friday, May 14, 2021

What Does Model Minority Mean—And Why Does the Term Cause Harm? Here's What Experts Say

Claire Gillespie 

Psychiatrist Leela R. Magavi, MD, vividly remembers her third-grade teacher asking her to spell "Byzantine" in front of the class. "When I was walking outside to join my friends for recess, she pulled me aside and said, 'I knew you would be able to spell that word,'" Dr. Magavi, who is based in Southern California, tells Health. She also has childhood memories of a friend asking her if her neighbor was Asian, simply because she heard someone playing violin.

© Provided by Health.com Getty / AdobeStock / New York Times Archive / Photo Illustration by Jo Imperio for Health
'Model minority' was supposed to be a compliment when the word was coined.

These are first-hand examples of the model minority myth in action, something that Dr. Magavi says is ubiquitous due to perpetuated stereotypes, media, and familial influence.

What does model minority mean?


Sociologist William Pettersen is credited with popularizing the term "model minority" in a 1966 New York Times Magazine article. It refers to minority groups that have seemingly achieved great success in contemporary Western society, and is typically used to describe Asian Americans, who are perceived to have reached greater educational and financial success than other immigrant groups.

In his piece, titled Success Story, Japanese-American Style, Pettersen cemented an already well-established stereotype of Asians as being obedient and hard-working, versus African Americans, who were fighting against discrimination and inequality.

On the surface, the "model minority" label seems to be a compliment—appreciating and honoring Asian Americans for their achievements. It's also been used as a counterargument for anti-Asian racism. But classifying any racial group as a model minority is actually disguising anti-Asian racism, Xiaobei Chen, PhD, professor and associate chair of the department of sociology and anthropology at Carleton University in Ontario, tells Health. It's also a coverup for a number of other issues, including poverty and labor abuse, she adds.

"The model minority myth reduces Asians to a stereotypical image," Chen tells Health. "It doesn't see them as individuals and groups with cultural, class, and other differences. It also attributes so-called 'success' to culture, and implicitly blames those who are deemed as not successful for not trying hard enough."


The impact of the model minority myth on mental health

The negative effects of the model minority stereotype on mental health can be severe. "Model minority stereotypes can lead to debilitating anxiety and perfectionism," Dr. Magavi says. It can also exacerbate feelings of imposter syndrome, a psychological phenomenon where individuals doubt their skills and talents and persistently worry about being exposed.

Imposter syndrome can affect minority groups disproportionately, Dr. Magavi adds. In her practice, she evaluates many Asian Americans who tell her that they feel out of place or undeserving despite their commendable accomplishments, due to social media and distorted communication. "Many people perceive their own performance as subpar regardless of accolades or positive feedback," she explains, adding that model minority stereotypes can also cause demoralization and worsen mood and anxiety symptoms.

Dr. Magavi has evaluated minority children who she believes clearly have attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) but were not provided with any diagnosis or treatment by prior physicians. "The reasons are multifactorial," she says. "Many minority parents and children tend to minimize symptoms. Some minority parents attribute ADHD symptoms solely to laziness and lack of initiative, which tends to be a multi-generational, cultural trend." She adds that some physicians are unaware of their biases and consequently misdiagnose individuals.

RELATED: What Is Xenophobia—And How Does It Affect a Person's Health? Here's What Experts Say

Breaking free of the model minority myth


If you feel like you've been caught in the trap of the model minority stereotype, Dr. Magavi suggests trying to differentiate your own expectations from societal expectations—which often starts with putting pen to paper. "Journaling can simplify this often-difficult activity," she says. "Individuals can combat self-induced feelings of inadequacy and elements of imposter syndrome by routinely making lists of their accomplishments inclusive of small yet significant victories."

For instance, if you're regularly comparing yourself to a colleague, it might help to put together a list of various reasons you're just as qualified as your peer to land yourself a new role or opportunity. Positive affirmations and gratitude letters to yourself could also bolster self-compassion and confidence by helping you appreciate your victories and divert attention away from perceived failures.

"I encourage individuals to own their accomplishments rather than solely inferring that luck or others helped them," Dr. Magavi says. "Visualizing success and imagining victories could alleviate anticipatory anxiety and negate negative feelings. Therapy may help undo negative patterns of thinking and behavior, talking to peers in support groups could help normalize experiences and process feelings, and in some cases antidepressants are required to treat comorbid anxiety and depressive symptoms."

A huge amount of work still needs to be done at a societal level to dispel the model minority myth. For Chen, it's crucial that the model minority is recognized as a stereotype—and one that is harmful. "People need to understand that Asians are individuals," she says.

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Feeling the pressure, Brazil's Bolsonaro rallies his troops
AFP

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has seen happier days: his poll numbers have plunged, his nemesis Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is looming large and the Senate is investigating his chaotic handling of Covid-19.
© EVARISTO SA Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro waves to supporters as he rides a motorcycle leading a caravan of more than 1000 bikers May 9, 2021

What to do?

First: Hop on his trusty blue motorcycle and lead a huge rally of fellow far-right bikers, as he did last Sunday.

Second: Ride in on horseback to fire up a demo of conservative farmers, as he reportedly plans to do Saturday.

That rally's organizers have called for conservative "soldiers" to protest the "craziness" of pandemic stay-at-home measures and Brazil's Supreme Court, which allowed local authorities to impose such policies over Bolsonaro's objections.

© Sergio LIMA People take part in a demonstration to show their support for Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro amid the COVID-19 novel coronavirus disease pandemic, in Brasilia, on May 1, 2021

Third: So-called "Christian Family Freedom Marches" are also planned in some 100 cities this weekend, evoking a similar movement in support of a 1964 coup that installed a 21-year military dictatorship in Brazil -- for which Bolsonaro, a former army captain, is openly nostalgic

.
© Brendan Smialowski Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro (R) meets with US President Donald Trump during a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Osaka on June 28, 2019

Facing threats on multiple fronts, the man dubbed the "Tropical Trump" has whipped out a familiar script: energize his base with large, polarizing rallies that tend to offend critics as intensely as they rile up die-hard fans.

The question is whether that works as a political strategy, heading into a tough re-election campaign next year.

"He's going through a difficult time. So he's playing to his base," said Debora Messenberg, a sociologist at the University of Brasilia.

"Bolsonaro, like all far-right politicians, needs to keep his core supporters on a war footing. Far-right leaders live for war," she told AFP.

- Pandemic probe -

Bolsonaro looks particularly vulnerable on the pandemic.

The Senate opened an inquiry last month into the government's management of Covid-19, which has claimed 430,000 lives in Brazil, second only to the United States.

Bolsonaro blasted the inquiry Thursday as a "crime," with "good people being investigated by scoundrels."

Broadcast live, the hearings are shining a spotlight on the administration's pandemic policies, which include attacking lockdowns, touting the ineffective drug chloroquine and refusing offers of now badly needed vaccines.

"It's like a parade of people reminding Brazilians why the death toll is so high," said Brian Winter, vice president of the Americas Society/Council of the Americas.

"It hurts him for the 2022 race, because it will remind everybody of the disastrous management and denialism that he engaged in."

Then there is the return of ex-president Lula, who regained the right to run for office when the Supreme Court annulled his corruption convictions in March.

That has set up a potential election showdown in October 2022 between Bolsonaro, 66, and the still-popular 75-year-old leftist (2003-2010).

The latest poll, released Wednesday by respected firm Datafolha, gives Lula 55 percent of the vote to 32 percent for Bolsonaro in a hypothetical runoff.

Worse for the far-right incumbent: his approval rating, long thought to be unshakeable at 30 percent minimum, hit an all-time low of 24 percent.















- Following Trump's lead? -


That is all the more reason for Bolsonaro to rally his base, whose fervor appears to be ebbing somewhat.

"The base still supports him, but they're a bit upset and de-energized for a variety of reasons," said Winter.

Those include the recent firing of ultra-conservative foreign minister Ernesto Araujo and Bolsonaro's pragmatic new alliance with the "Centrao," a powerful group of pork-hungry parties hated by voters keen to "drain the swamp" in Brasilia.

But problematically for Bolsonaro, re-energizing his base also risks further alienating the middle class and business sector, which largely voted for him in 2018 but are increasingly disenchanted.

If all else fails, Bolsonaro appears prepared to take a page from the Donald Trump playbook.

Like the former US president, his political role-model, Bolsonaro has been criticizing the integrity of the upcoming election, attacking Brazil's electronic voting system without evidence.

"He's already made it clear he's going to contest the elections if he loses," said Andre Rehbein Sathler, of news site Congresso em Foco.

"He's clearly following Trump's script."

Bolsonaro is regularly accused of threatening Brazil's democratic institutions.

He often boasts of support from "his army," and hardline backers at every rally urge the military to stage an intervention to give him the power to rule by decree.

jhb/ca
Methane-capturing biogas projects in Canada reach 279, says association report

CALGARY — Thanks to a decade of rapid growth, there are 279 facilities across Canada creating biogas from methane emitted by agricultural waste, landfills, green bin programs and municipal wastewater treatment facilities.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

Those are the findings in a report from the Canadian Biogas Association, which notes that biogas is being used to generate a total of 196 megawatts of electricity and six million gigajoules of renewable natural gas.

The report estimates that Canada is using only 13 per cent of its easily accessible biogas potential, with the biggest untapped resources in the agricultural sector, followed by landfills.

It adds that demand for renewable natural gas is increasing rapidly thanks to climate and clean energy policies at national and provincial levels but that barriers to development include "weak or undefined policy" from various levels of government, along with high capital and operational costs.

The report notes that biofuel projects help fight climate change because they prevent the release of methane, which is 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas, while creating a new fuel source that can replace carbon intensive energy from conventional fossil fuels.

Various utility, energy handling and oil and gas companies have targeted investments in renewable natural gas as a potential way to offset their carbon emissions as carbon taxes rise and new clean fuel standards are rolled out to aid Canada's target of reaching net-zero emissions by 2050.

"Biogas can deliver reliable and clean energy while reducing Canada's greenhouse gas emissions and driving economic development in both urban and rural areas," said Jennifer Green, executive director of the association.

"Research says that Canada could efficiently tap more than eight times more energy from biogas and RNG; that is the goal that the CBA is dedicated to helping achieve."

According to Natural Resources Canada, hydroelectricity accounts for 59.3 per cent of Canada’s generation. Wind is the second largest renewable electricity provider with 3.5 per cent and biomass is the third largest renewable source of Canada’s electricity generation with 1.4 per cent.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 14, 2021.

The Canadian Press
CANADA
Business, labour groups clash at Senate committee over $15 federal minimum wage

OTTAWA — The head of the country's largest private-sector union says Parliament should raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour, and possibly put future increases into the hands of an independent commission.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Unifor president Jerry Dias says an independent commission could be comprised of key stakeholders to research the effects of minimum-wage policy in Canada and tone down the politics involved.


Dias made the comments this morning while appearing before a Senate committee reviewing the government's sweeping budget bill that includes a provision around the minimum wage in federally regulated industries.

If passed, C-30 would raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour, or to the provincial rate if it is higher, and peg annual increases to the rate of inflation.

While Dias argues the increase won't have a negative economic or employment impact, a business group appearing alongside him warns otherwise.

The Canadian Federation of Independent Business says small and medium-sized companies may be unable to cover increased payroll costs while revenues remain low, which could result in fewer entry-level hires for young workers, or fewer hours for existing staff.

 BULLSHIT ARGUMENT IN FACT WHY IS THIS SO, BECAUSE THESE BUSINESSES NEVER INCREASE THEIR WAGES ON AN ANNUAL BASIS, MINIMUM WAGE VERY RARELY INCREASES SIGNIFICANTLY WITHOUT GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 14, 2021.

The Canadian Press
THE POWER BEHIND QUEBEC INC.

Power Corp. Q1 profit nearly triples to $556 million on lift from insurance business

MONTREAL — Power Corp. says its first-quarter profit nearly tripled from the prior year as it realized big gains from its life insurance business.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Montreal-based holding company says it earned $556 million or 82 cents per share, up from $200 million or 36 cents per share a year earlier.


Adjusted profits for the three months ended March 31 increased to $786 million or $1.16 per share, compared with $345 million or 62 cents per share in the first quarter of 2020.

Power was expected to report 71 cents per share in adjusted profits, according to financial data firm Refinitiv.

Great-West Lifeco Inc. net earnings increased to $707 million from $342 million a year earlier.

The company says it has realized two-thirds of the $50 million of cost reductions planned over two years from its reorganization completed in February 2020 in which it acquired the minority interests of Power Financial.

Power holds full control of Power Financial and with that majority stakes in Great-West Lifeco, IGM Financial and Wealthsimple Financial Corp., as well as a minority stake in Pargesa Holding.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 13, 2021.

Companies in this story: (TSX:POW)

The Canadian Press

  1. Power Corporation of Canada - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Corporation_of_Canada

    Power Corporation of Canada (French: Power Corporation du Canada) is a management and holding company that focuses on financial services in North America, Europe and Asia. Its core holdings are insurance, retirement, wealth management and investment management, including a portfolio of alternative investment platforms.

    Wikipedia · Text under CC-BY-SA license
  2. Organization Chart | Power Corporation of Canada

    https://www.powercorporation.com/en/companies/organization-chart

    2020-12-31 · Parjointco has a 43.2% voting interest in Groupe Bruxelles Lambert (GBL). Refer to the “GBL” section of the

  3. The Power Corp. puzzle: Why a Canadian empire is treading ...

  4. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/power-corp...
  5. 2017-12-02 · The Desmarais family's Power Corp. empire has been treading water since the financial crisis. Now, as a third generation gets ready to take the reins, investors are losing patience. Can one of...

    • Estimated Reading Time: 7 mins
    •  Corporation's most recent MD&A for a list of GBL's investments. (5) Includes a controlling



  6. PURLAINE WHITE RACIST BERNIER
    Mandryk: Right wing politics is the reason Scott Moe is treating Maxime Bernier with kid gloves

    Murray Mandryk 
    REGINA LEADER POST
    13/5/2021

    © Provided by Leader Post A man carrying a Canadian Nationalist Party flag approaches the crowd gathered for a rally protesting COVID-19 public health orders. (Bryn Levy/Saskatoon StarPhoenix)

    How difficult could it be to unequivocally condemn an opposing politician wandering into your jurisdiction for the sole purpose of flouting your laws aimed at keeping your citizens healthy?

    Or perhaps the real question is: Why were Premier Scott Moe and his Saskatchewan Party government unwilling to condemn not only actions of People’s Party of Canada (PPC) leader Maxime Bernier who rallied against COVID-19 restrictions on the weekend, but also the actions of pretty much any right-wing politician or group?

    Let us begin with this Weekend at Bernier’s episode that was anything but funny.

    The vast majority of Saskatchewan people who have busted their humps to abide by COVID-19 restrictions deserve something better than a tepid response to law breakers.

    No one likes government fines , but the rest of us are actually sacrificing our freedoms for the greater good of keeping everyone healthy. Why the hell shouldn’t government severely fine those who won’t … or at least, incontrovertibly condemn them?

    The mealy-mouthed explanation from Justice Minister Gord Wyant that it was just too confusing as to which bill Sarauer wanted amended or that $10,000 fines wouldn’t discourage law breakers any more than $2,800 fines was an insult to everyone who has obeyed the law.

    Bernier literally wore his $2,800 ticket as a badge of honour.

    Normally, there is no room in the law-and-order Sask. Party government for those who flout the law … or, at least, this was the justification for going to court to kick teepee protesters off the legislative grounds for a simple bylaw infraction. This is the government that responded to the Colten Boushie killing with tougher trespassing laws 

    And in response to last summer’s Black Lives Matter protests, Moe couldn’t quite get through a very important message on racial inequality without noting a First World War memorial was vandalized with spray paint.


    Well, Bernier’s protest Sunday in Saskatoon was in front of the Vimy Ridge Memorial. “Demonstrators” were permitted to wave a Nationalist Party flag that’s come to represent White Supremacy. (To this, one of event’s organizers suggested an “Antifa” protester infiltrated the rally. This was the same organizer who suggested his hand-picked speaker at the November rally uttering racial slurs about chief medical health officer Dr. Saqib Shahab didn’t represent the crowd. Gee, some people just can’t get a break.)

    One gets that the right to free speech is always messy.


    And as long as it isn’t teepee protests, Moe and his government seem huge advocates of free speech. This was evident in the burning need Monday for Wyant to write to federal Justice Minister Steven Guilbeault about amending Bill C-10 when government here might have been otherwise reviewing its Public Health and Emergency Acts in order to ensure fines were effective.

    Well, when governing parties aren’t logical or consistent, it usually has something to with politics.

    That Moe found it more important Monday to tweet about C-10 and that neither he nor anyone in his government could so much as muster an unprompted comment, member’s statement or even a tweet condemning the Public Health Act violations over the weekend is very politically telling.

    The NDP was quick to chide Sask. Party members like Laura Ross for being a one-time Saskatchewan organizer for Bernier’s 2017 federal Conservative of Party Canada leadership but it’s slightly more complicated than that.


    It’s unlikely that Carr or any Conservative or Sask.Party supporters have many warm feelings for Bernier, but that they now must compete with his PPC and the Buffalo/Maverick Party for votes and political donations is far more problematic. (Remember that Moe’s first words after his October election win reached out to Buffalo Party supporters.)

    Rather than establish, protect and preserve their own conservative brand, both the Sask. Party and the federal Conservatives seem desperate to stop votes and dollars going elsewhere.

    And if that means Bernier et. al. gets to flout our laws, so be it.

    Mandryk is the political columnist for the Regina Leader-Post and the Saskatoon StarPhoenix.
    KENNEY'S WAR ROOM
    CP NewsAlert: Judge dismisses attempt to quash 'anti-Alberta' activities inquiry
    JUDGE IS BIASED, RELATED TO CONSERVATIVE POLITICOS
    DOUG HORNER AND STEPHAN HARPER***


    CALGARY — A judge has dismissed an attempt to quash the United Conservative government's inquiry into whether foreign groups have conspired against Alberta's oil industry.

    © Provided by The Canadian Press

    Court of Queen's Bench Justice Karen Horner says the environmental law firm Ecojustice failed to prove the inquiry was called to intimidate charities that have raised concerns about the industry.

    She also says there's no reason to believe that the political context around the inquiry suggests it's biased.


    The provincial government and some industry leaders have said Canadian environmental charities that accept U.S. funding are part of a plot against Alberta's energy industry.

    The province has said the plot aims to block pipelines and landlock Alberta's oil to benefit its American competitors.

    Legal scholars and non-profit groups say the inquiry is an attempt to bully and silence industry critics.

    The inquiry's final report, already delayed, is due May 31.

  7. ***Stephan Harper's & Doug Horner's cousin Justice Karen ...

    https://rhondasails.blogspot.com/2014/04/stephan-harpers-doug-horners...

    [72] At 11:43 a.mJustice Karen Horner continued to have Ms. Achtem carry out malicious cross-examination, over documents not adduced and NEVER produced into the action. For Ms Achtem's exhibits N to R could only have be adduced in if this was a Summary Trial, provided the documents were produced into the action.

    • Estimated Reading Time: 9 mins

    • Sherry L. Kachur, partner at WK Family Lawyers in Calgary, is appointed a justice of the Court of Queen's Bench. Justice Kachur replaces Justice Karen M. Horner (Calgary), who elected to become a supernumerary judge effective April 26, 2020.
    • Three judges appointed to Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench - The Lawyer's Daily (thelawyersdaily.ca)
    • Feds asking Canadians to take ‘leap of faith’ that Bill C-10 won’t hurt free speech: experts

      Rachel Gilmore 


      The government's new wording for Bill C-10 is aimed at clarifying social media regulations and ensuring Canadians' Instagram posts or YouTube videos won't be subject to CRTC regulations -- but until the CRTC drafts those rules, the impact of them won't be clear, experts say.
      © Getty The government says changes to Bill C-10 will ensure your selfies aren't regulated.

      VIDEO
      "O’Toole says new amendments to Bill C-10 ‘do not protect the freedom of expression’"


      The amendments come after both the NDP and the Conservatives have openly slammed the legislation which is intended to modernize the Broadcasting Act to reflect the fact that how Canadians consume things like news, music, and movies has changed.

      Read more: Bill C-10 doesn’t pose free speech concern despite social media impact, justice minister finds

      But now, experts say the proposed law is full of murky details that won't be ironed out until the CRTC drafts the specific regulations associated with the bill -- and that in the meantime, the government is asking Canadians to trust them that the rules won't go too far.

      "They're asking for a leap of faith that this will be sorted when it hits the CRTC," said Emily Laidlaw, Canada research chair in cybersecurity law at the University of Calgary.

      The government says the new amendments would restrict the CRTC’s power, allowing them to regulate social media in just three different ways:

      The CRTC will be able to ask a platform how much revenue they make.

      The CRTC will also be able to ask for a certain percentage of those revenues to be funneled into Canadian cultural production funds.

      Finally, it will be empowered to provide discoverability requirements for Canadian creators – meaning the CRTC can draft certain rules, like forcing a certain amount of Arkells, Celine Dion or other Canadian artists to pop up in your recommended vid

      VIDEO
      O’Toole calls Liberal government’s Bill C-10 a ‘direct attack on free speech’


      The exact shape that these new regulations take would be up to the CRTC, not the government -- and they have yet to be determined.

      More broadly, the bill aims to modernize the Broadcasting Act to reflect the fact that Canadians consume things like music and movies differently nowadays — often using streaming services or social media.

      And as Canadians' consumption habits move online, ad money follows suit. Google and Facebook alone accounted for 80 per cent of online advertising revenue in 2019, according to a report from the Canadian Media Concentration Research.

      By bringing platforms like YouTube and Facebook under the Act, these companies would have to fork over a chunk of their profits to the Canada Media Fund, which funds made-in-Canada programming. They would also be forced to make Canadian content more visible on their platforms.

      Read more: Feds plan change to Bill C-10 to make it ‘crystal clear’ social media uploads won’t be regulated

      The goal is to create an even playing field, where "foreign web giants can begin to contribute to Canadian culture, the same way Canadian broadcasters do," Canadian Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault said.

      But while the proposed law suggests regulations for social media, one former CRTC vice-chair noted that the bill doesn't ever define what "social media" is.

      "How can you say that this will protect social media when you haven't even defined what it is? And you're leaving it up to the regulator, the CRTC, operated by nine government appointed people, all of whom I'm sure are fine people but are nevertheless not accountable in the same way that parliament is," said Peter Menzies, a former CRTC vice-chair and past newspaper publisher.

      "It's mind boggling."

      Laidlaw said the broad nature of the bill could have unintended consequences. For example, while the government might require a social media algorithm to make Canadian content more discoverable, it could have the inadvertent impact of elevating harmful content -- provided it's made in Canada.

      "The reasons why this needs to be narrowly crafted is, a strict reading of this would be that any of that kind of hateful content would have to be discoverable," Laidlaw explained.

      V
      IDEO
      "Liberals propose new Canadian Broadcast Act rules for online streaming platforms"

      And while the recent amendments were aimed at clarifying the bill's effect on social media, Laidlaw said that effort "hasn't hit the mark at all."

      "It's still all user-generated content on these social media sites," she said.

      "It's still broad. It's still the main things that they wanted before. It's still discoverability rules. It is still imposing...financial contributions. So most of that is still there."

      Read more: New broadcasting bill could regulate all your Facebook, Instagram and YouTube posts, experts say

      Menzies echoed the sentiment, calling the amendments "disappointing"

      "The big thing that had been promised a week ago was that things would be made 'crystal clear' -- that user generated content, and therefore speech, would not be regulated. The amendments introduced following that simply confirmed that user generated content, which is speech, will be subject to regulation," Menzies said.

      "So we're right back where we started."

      He said that even with the changes, the bill still requires social media companies to comply with CRTC regulations. That means rather than leaving your content untouched, responsibility for regulating user-generated content -- your cat videos and Instagram reels -- will simply fall to the social media platforms.

      "They're saying we're not going to regulate you...but we're going to get somebody else to do it for us," Menzies said.

      Meanwhile, after a week of heated debate, the Canadian Heritage committee has sent Bill C-10 for a second charter review.

      In the time since the first charter review, the Liberals removed a section of the bill that had previously protected user-generated content and exempted it from regulation -- meaning your Facebook and Instagram posts wouldn't have been subject to CRTC rules.

      Section 2.1 originally exempted all social media platforms from CRTC regulation, despite the fact that they account for a significant portion of Canada's consumption habits today. That was the thinking behind the Liberals' decision to drop the section from the bill -- but the move also opened the door to CRTC regulation of user-generated content, like your YouTube videos.

      Opposition MPs have argued the most recent iteration of the proposed law could easily infringe on Canada's charter-affirmed free expression rights. The justice minister is now tasked with taking a second look at the amended version of the bill to ensure that its impact on free speech is demonstrably justifiable in a free and democratic society.

      Guilbeault has insisted the bill satisfies that test.

      "On top of the amendments, the Bill already explicitly exempts individuals from any contribution requirements. Bill C-10 isn’t about what Canadians do online, it’s about what web giants don’t do in Canada, which is support Canadian works, languages, stories and music," he said in a statement.

      VIDEO
      Facebook lifts news blockade after agreeing to Australian law


      He explained that while the social media platforms will be required to make some content more visible, they won't be required to take anything down.

      “What discoverability means is that among the platform’s many algorithmically generated suggestions of what you might want to listen to or watch, occasionally these suggestions would include Canadian music or Canadian television or film,” Guilbeault said.

      “It does not mean the CRTC would dictate, limit or prohibit a feed or what you can post, watch or listen to on social media. As the Internet is infinite, discoverability won’t limit the content you see on a feed – it will just add more.”

      Guilbeault's parliamentary secretary echoed his words in a Monday press conference, arguing that the amendments ensure "a restricted form of discoverability."

      "The discoverability piece is is actually a restricted form, for social media platforms, and it is just restricted to highlighting Canadian creators," Liberal MP Julie Dabrusin said.

      "But there is no requirement that there be a specific proportion of Canadian content."

      Video: Petition to create support fund for Canadian musicians

      The discoverability requirement won't hide content from your social media pages, Guilbeault explained, it will instead "add more” Canadian content to your algorithm.

      “Proposed amendments to the C-10 severely limit the powers of the CRTC to regulate social media platforms, and again clearly prevent individuals from regulation,” he said.

      Still, the opposition remains unconvinced. Speaking Friday, Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole said the proposed changes don't address his party's concerns.

      "These amendments that have been suggested do not protect the freedom of expression and the concerns that not only the Conservative Party has, but thousands of Canadians have," O'Toole said.

      Read more: Broadcasters, Netflix push politicians on separate visions for sweeping regulation changes

      He called on Guilbeault to "pull this bill and start fresh."

      Menzies agreed with O'Toole.

      "I don't think they can fix Bill C-10," he said.

      Laidlaw was more optimistic.

      "I don't think they need to go back to the drafting board with Bill C-10 at all," she said.

      "Part of me is just concerned that the whole thing will unravel on this point -- and they've got to get this one right. But...we need modernize broadcasting. This is needed. It just needs to be done the right way."
      Jaden Smith Will Open Restaurant To Feed The Homeless In Los Angeles
      Aynslee Darmon 

      Jaden Smith is expanding his philanthropic food truck business.

       Photo: Getty Images Jaden Smith

      According to Variety, the musician is set to open a restaurant, called I Love You, to help feed homeless people on Los Angeles’ Skid Row. Smith's I Love You food truck has been running and giving free food for two years.


      The outlet reports, to help offset costs, those who can pay will pay more to “pay for the person behind you.”

      “It’s for homeless people to get free food,” says Smith. “But if you’re not homeless, not only do you have to pay, but you have to pay for more than the food’s worth so that you can pay for the person behind you.”

      RELATED: Willow And Jaden Smith Felt ‘Shunned’ By African American Community Because They Were ‘Too Weird’

      Smith regularly works to provide food and water to underserved communities, in fact, his 501CTHREE.org’s Water Box project was recently featured in New Balance’s We Got Now video campaign. He also partnered with Lyft to provide free rides to people in Flint, Michigan.

      It is currently unclear when or where the I Love You restaurant will open.
      A VERY BAD GOOD IDEA, MICROCREDIT IS BETTER
      JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and several other banks plan to offer credit cards to people with no credit score, report says
      ONLY USE LOCAL BANKS/CREDIT UNION

      sbaker@businessinsider.com (Sinéad Baker) 


      © Getty/Chris Hondros The JPMorgan Chase logo. Getty/Chris Hondros

      Major banks plan to take part in a scheme to help people with no credit scores get credit cards.

      The Wall Street Journal reported the banks will look at data from customers' other accounts.

      It's part of a government-backed plan to help people access credit


      Several major banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, plan to join a scheme to offer credit cards to people with no credit score, The Wall Street Journal reported.

      The Journal reported that the scheme is part of a government-backed plan to expand access to credit. It is meant to benefit people who struggle to borrow but who can still be deemed financially responsible.

      The pilot scheme is expected to launch later this year, the Journal reported.

      It would work by giving the banks access to more customer data to make lending decisions, sources told the Journal.

      Lenders could see customers' checking or savings accounts at other banks to get a sense of how financially responsible they are, according to the Journal.