Horror Movies and Television Series to Watch on Halloween

With Halloween fast approaching, many students like to get into the spirit of the holiday with television and movies. Though horror movies are a popular genre year-round, this time of year is perfect for dimming the lights, making some popcorn, and getting a good scare from the screen.

Now that streaming services make up most of the content students watch, these services have begun creating their own shows and movies. Netflix, one of the biggest streaming services offered, has a wide selection of horror movies and television series to choose from. If you’re looking for a series about the supernatural, try The Haunting of Hill House, The Haunting of Bly Manor, or Midnight Mass. The three series were created by the same person and share many of the same actors. The Haunting of Hill House follows a family haunted by tragedy and trying to work through their past, all while being drawn to an old house where they once lived. The Haunting of Bly Manor follows a nanny as she takes on a new job. She tries to let go of her past and must get accommodated to her new residence, Bly Manor all the while taking care of two seemingly strange kids haunted by their own tragedies. Midnight Mass is about the residents of a small island and the religious fervor on the island. A new priest arrives in town and “miracles” begin to happen. However, the miracles quickly turn into nightmares as a mysterious presence disrupts the lives of the residents. All of Us Are Dead, a Korean horror series, is also of note. In this series, teenagers are trapped in their high school as a zombie apocalypse breaks out. How many will survive? Watch the series to find out!

In terms of movies, many new horror movies are released each year. Some movies are classics such as The Exorcist or Alien. The Insidious series is great for anyone looking for a spook from a spirit. However, some new movies from the past few years deserve recognition as well. Hush is a fantastic slasher film for those who prefer slashers over the supernatural. The movie follows a deaf woman as she tries to escape a killer inside her home. There are many other fantastic horror movies and series out there. There are a wide variety of options for scares this Halloween season.

Antigonish Just Has a Lot of Crows

Fall: the season of changing leaves, warm sweaters, and apple pie. Truly, the list is endless. However, I have also decided that fall in Antigonish has some of its own traits. Fall in Antigonish is the season of crows. As the warm, sunny days of summer draw to a close, the clouds that linger over campus call the crows back. If you do not know what I am talking about, listen closely and you’ll hear them.

I first noticed the high number of crows last year. Around the middle of October, each morning, I began waking up to a new alarm clock: the crows. This may sound like an over-exaggeration, but I know I, and many others, have also woken up to the sounds of…nature. By nature, I mean the sound of those black birds that flock to our campus each fall. Over the course of last year, I became accustomed to the 6 am wake-up calls and to the fact that Antigonish has a lot–and I mean a lot–of crows.

I had thought, perhaps, it was my location on campus or pure bad luck that attracted the hundreds of crows that sat outside my window. I was wrong. Last week, I woke up to the familiar sound of what was often my alarm clock last year. After being woken up, I opened my curtains and looked out to see the hundreds—or what felt like thousands— of crows sitting on the wire and swooping in circles above my house. That leads me to today, where I have realized that I either have really bad luck, or, most likely, Antigonish just has a lot of crows. Having explained my experience to many people, I’ve concluded that I am not the only one who thinks there is an absurd amount of crows. Every person I’ve told my story to has had a similar encounter.

Nonetheless, this shared experience means two things: firstly, I do not have bad luck and more importantly, Antigonish does have a lot of crows. I took the liberty of looking into Antigonish’s crow problem and discovered an article written in 2007 by Bruce Muschel, where he stated that, at the time, there were thousands of crows in Antigonish. In fact, the town used high-technology devices to drive the crows away. Last year, I even came across the crows on social media. Specifically, the Instagram account, @stfx_murders showcases the heavy presence that they have taken on campus. The account features sightings of crows on campus and yet again, proves that there are too many crows in Antigonish. From my research and surveying, I can conclude I am not going crazy. Like everyone else, I am, in fact, seeing a copious amount of crows swooping around StFX. Despite past efforts to remove them, I believe that if the crows ever left, they all came back.

Violence in Hockey

Since the beginning, violence has been an element of hockey. Throughout history, many players have been subjected to violent acts far more severe than those permitted in hockey. These cases of violence have been dealt with on an individual basis and rules have been established in relation to many incidents.

Now more than ever many individuals and organizations are advocating to put an end to fighting in hockey. I personally believe this is wrong. With the advancement of hockey equipment technology and the science which encompasses athletic performance, the game is becoming faster than ever. To maintain its traditional elements, hockey must remain a high-contact sport, despite the game's increasing speed and player skill.

To begin, I must address how fighting impacts the game. Hockey is such an emotional sport. The highs and lows of each game are what make sports interesting and keep fans engaged constantly. As mentioned before, hockey has become faster than ever. As a result, momentum plays a significant impact on the outcome of each game. Fighting in hockey is sometimes misunderstood to imply two of the toughest players going head-to-head. Of course, this occurs, but often the best players and leaders will step up on occasion and fight to re-energize their team.

Next, I’d like to address how fighting helps build teams. Fighting helps teams find their character, and as well creates rivalries. Nobody likes to see a teammate go down. When a teammate goes down, regardless of the opponents’ intentions, fighting allows players to defend their teammates and police others. As repetitive as it may sound, hockey has become so fast. I emphasize this point because things happen so quickly. Hits that happen half a second too late can result in injuries, this is where policing steps in. Players hold other players responsible for their actions. Nobody can argue the fact that teams that stick up for each other come together. Those are the teams that ride their highs and lows together. It builds confidence on the ice, comradery in the dressing rooms, and friendships outside the rink.

We cannot forget to mention that the NHL is a business. Fans are attracted to fighting. In my opinion, there are very few hockey fans, casual or die-hard, who don’t enjoy fighting. They may not understand why, but it provides entertainment. Casual hockey fans may not know the rules of hockey, but fighting may get them into a seat, which means more money. Thinking back to when I was a kid and frequented many QMJHL games. My sister was too young to understand what was happening but the excitement in her eyes when two players would drop the gloves would be enough to convince my parents to bring us to the next game. This is true for hockey at all levels where fighting is still permitted. Fans will continue to pay to watch games knowing there is a chance there may be a fight.

Throughout history, there has been violence in hockey. We’ve all heard the story of how the first hockey game ended in a brawl. Fighting is a traditional part of the sport. It always has and, in my opinion, it needs to stay.

In all honesty, I don’t know what most professional players have to say about fighting in hockey. But I’m sure most if not all players in the NHL grew up watching hockey fights. For them, it’s most likely always been a part of the game and they haven’t given much thought about it. In modern hockey, the fighting remains on the ice, players respect each other, and any altercations rarely continue after the game's end.

Many will argue that fighting must be removed due to emerging research on head injuries in hockey. I agree that head injuries are terrifying, and nobody wants to see another player get hurt. This risk has always been there. Players willingly step foot on the ice day in and day out knowing there’s a risk of injury. If you're reading this, you should express your thoughts on violence in hockey before it's too late.

Environmental Degredation

The year 2020 was recorded as the worst hurricane season on record. Our awareness of rising ocean temperatures leading to greater storms and the steady melting of the polar ice caps has reminded me again of the urgent need of humankind to address climate change. Environment plays an essential role on our planet by providing good climate, good water and good survival conditions for every living organism. Human beings and all life on the planet depend on the environment for survival through ecosystems that provide food, clean water and favourable conditions. The impact of environmental degradation on these ideal factors can be categorized into three types: land degradation, water degradation and air pollution.

Urbanization is one of the factors which has led to land degradation. I grew up in Africa and so much of my knowledge of and concern for the environment arises from my experiences there. The custom was often to simply set the land on fire with the aim to clear it and build homes. Trees were also cut down for easy construction, leaving the land bare. The consequence of this was that when the wind came, it blew away the top layer of soil, leading to soil erosion. As well, much wildlife habitat has been destroyed by these practices. ‘Clear cutting’ in Canadian forests today has much the same negative impact. Both in Africa and in Canada, selective tree planting is one positive way to enhance depleted ecosystems.

Farming can play a role in water degradation, when the use of inorganic fertilizers to boost crop production leads to water pollution. Toxic chemicals which are used during the planting of crops go deep into the soil. When the rain comes it carries away the soil, thereby mixing those chemicals with water and polluting the land.

In addition, some industrial waste materials which are disposed of in bodies of water contribute to the pollution of the water, leaving some water sources unsafe for drinking and also contributing to disease and serious chronic illnesses.

The emissions that go into the sky from different manufacturing companies affect air quality. When the emissions are released, they accumulate and contribute to the destruction of the ozone layer.

As a young person of Generation Z, I am just starting out on the great adventure of life. Like so many of my cohort, I have tremendous concern for the future of the planet we share. Global warming, floods, storms and environmental disease are all negative impacts of environmental degradation. Yet I believe that it is not too late to rescue the planet so long as we – as a global community – commit to best practices for the care and preservation of the earth and its finite resources.

It Goes Beyond Brendan Boucher

In the February 9th edition of the Xaverian Weekly, former Student Union Presidential Candidate Brendan Boucher released a statement relating to the controversy surrounding his campaign. This statement primarily addressed his anti- “Black Lives Matter” rhetoric which was exposed through a number ofsocial media posts within the StFX community. In all honesty, I would love to use my position on this platform to entertain Boucher’s statement to the fullest, but I will not squander the words I have in this article just to entertain a henchman when the real villain is the system that allows people like Boucher to have a voice. Nevertheless, here are my brief two cents on Boucher’s statement: he is obviously and categorically wrong about everything he suggests in his piece. Citing Frederick Douglass after attacking Black Lives Matter as “Marxist” is absurd and laughable. His inability to do basic research on what racism really is just indicates how much of a joke Boucher’s so-called “statement” is. No more words need to be spent on him—he is as irrelevant and unimportant as his attitudes are to any meaningful effort to create social justice. [Although, I suppose I must wish him, a jazz major, a very happy Black History Month.]

 

What is worth delving into is the context that allows for people like Boucher to thrive—to be given a platform and to be allowed to repeatedly harm other students. StFX is a community that confuses censorship with morality, or silence with equity. This community upholds whiteness as a norm, and consciously or unconsciously pushes those of us who are outside that norm into isolation. If we take the University at its word and assume that we attend a university that is “as it is meant to be,” there is no room for policies that allow blatant racism, misogyny and homophobia to slip through the cracks. What is “meant to be,” it appears, is a community where white men are able to attack Black students, women, and LGBTQ+ students, and be given an opportunity to broadcast those attacks as much as possible in pursuit of the highest student office. I suggest that this type of student, and what he stands for, is institutionally enabled through the University’s policies.

 

If all is not ‘as it is meant to be,’ what went wrong? A simple look at the candidate’s social media personality and stance would have alerted university student affairs staff about what this candidate stands for. We all know that they patrol students’ social media accounts. They push back against women who are fighting for the right to simply exist on campus without being assaulted. They will intervene if you criticize the university. They won’t intervene if you are tokenizing Black women on your Instagram page. I find it hard to believe, therefore, that they did not know that this outrage was coming. If they did, and failed to act, then his words were institutionally supported. That, in my book, is a form of institutional racism. 

 

So I ask you, readers, to evaluate this university from your own perspective. Is it racist or anti-racist? Your friends might share the same ideas as you, but look to the institution. How many of the administrators have you heard say Black Lives Matter? How many administrators did you see at Take Back the Night? Have you EVER seen an administrator at X take an anti-racist, anti-sexist, or anti-oppressive stance that wasn’t performative? Do any of those in power take an anti-racist stance?

 

If no, it’s easy to see why Brendan and those who espouse the same hateful ideas as him, feel emboldened. Don’t be shocked when a candidate like this puts their name forward again.

 

A Unique Remembrance Day

This year marks the 102nd anniversary of the end of the Great War and Canadians will be gathering in very different ways than past years.

A tradition in Canada, along with most of the worlds western nations is to gather on November 11th, the anniversary of the end of World War 1 to honour and remember those who died fighting for our freedom. This year however, COVID-19 has made this nearly impossible for communities across Canada.

In Antigonish, 2020 started off with a bright future for Legion Branch No. 59 as they moved the Antigonish cenotaph and First World War memorial from Chisholm Park to Columbus Field to accommodate the ever-growing crowds which gather in remembrance. The project was reported across Nova Scotia and represented to many how Canada still deeply cares and is thankful for all the veterans that call Canada home. Unfortunately, the Legion will not be able to host a public service at the cenotaph this year due to concerns over the coronavirus.

This year like many other events, Canadians are asked to stay home for Remembrance Day and use the day as a solum day of thanks and remembrance. The Royal Canadian Legion will continue this year like previous years to sell poppies at local businesses to raise money and give Canadians a chance to show their support for the Armed Forces without endangering public health.

As Canada goes further and further into the 21st century, there remains fewer and fewer veterans of Canada’s participation in the major conflicts of the 20th century. The last veteran of World War One passed away in 2010 at the age of 109, and World War 2 and Korean War veterans are now an average age of 88 and 95 respectively.

This ushers in a generational change that will see Canada lose its elderly veterans and be forced to focus on the veterans of the 21st century war on terror, while not forgetting those who served in peace keeping operations in the 80’s and 90’s. Canada’s approach to caring for her veterans has changed, with advances in medicine there are less people walking with physical battle scars like amputated legs or arms, and more with mental and emotional scars like Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

The wars in the Middle East have created a middle-aged veteran's group that will need all our support for many decades to come and ask us to remember those who’ve died in pursuit of installing freedom to every corner of the world. There are young children still without mothers and fathers, and parents who were forced to bury their children before they had the chance to breed families of their own.

Although some wars fade into the memory of Canadians, Canada must never forget the veterans who still live with those experiences every day and the loved ones of those who never came home. Surely there will be future world conflict that will see Canada send more of its young people to sacrifice their lives to protect their homes and their families. Students and young people must remember that they are only 1 day away from possibility being veterans themselves.

Part of the Community

I’ve recently been described as having “forgotten what it means to be part of the community,” because of some tweets about Mulroney Hall. To clear things up I want to tell you what it means to me to a member of this community.

To frame this discussion, it’s important to differentiate between StFX, and X. StFX is the institution; it is the structures and decisions put in place by administrators to run this organization. X is the community; it is the body of students that live together, learn together, and become friends during their time at this university.

Being a member of this community means holding the institution accountable and rejecting the decisions that hurt us. Students have a proud history of action. We have rallied against sexualized violence, we’ve marched for racial equality, we’ve fought for our rights in response to the waiver. This is the essence of X. We come together en masse when we need each other, and we aren’t afraid to question authority. When we act, we are capable of making change to this institution.

StFX on the other hand, puts up a veneer of caring. The performative emails and social media posts that exclaim commitments to equality and promises to change amount to nothing. Instead of funding increased supports for the most vulnerable members of our community, we build shrines to alumni. Instead of adequately funding student advisors, we rename a lounge and raise a flag. As students, we know that we have a choice to either fight or accept. Often, we accept, knowing that we’re unlikely to succeed.

To me, being a member of the community means the time I was invited to participate in a Smith House Colloquium on Free Speech. It means that when the senior admin were gathered in that living room trying to justify the idea of bringing Donald Trump to campus because “it would be huge for us,” I had to either speak up or maintain my relationship with the most powerful people at the university.

To me, being a member of the StFX community means the time when I sat in my office listening to a student cry for two hours because they had been made homeless by a residence suspension.

To me, being a member of the StFX community means when the university welcomes police to campus with open arms in the middle of the largest protests against police violence in history.

To me, being a member of the StFX community means the daily promises to change, and the daily failures to follow through.

StFX is not a community.

Being part of the X community means the time my neighbors in MSB all chipped in to buy care packages for each other during exams.

Being part of the X community means the creation of the Peer Support Program, solving a problem the university had failed to address.

Being part of the X community means the time that students organized the largest protest march in Antigonish history in support of Black Lives Matter.

Being part of the X community means the commitment to each other, and our willingness to change.

X is a community.

So, to the people who think I’ve rejected the StFX community, you’re right. I reject your Mulroney worship, your lies, and your failure to act. If you want us back in the fold, take a note from the students. Follow through on your promises, start treating us as partners in education, and listen when we tell you what’s wrong.

I go to StFX, but I belong to X.

Do Black lives matter even after Black Lives Matter? : How things have changed and stayed the same

In the last several months, I have had time to reflect in a way that I have not had since I started university nearly five years ago. It is true that time moves faster as you get older. My friend Annie once said that the days are long, but the months and years go by quickly. She was certainly right on that front. The global pandemic, abrupt conclusion of my time at StFX, and the largest movement protesting anti-Black racism in the world, pushed me into a spinning whirlpool. I felt helpless as I spun around and around getting just enough oxygen until finally, I was sucked to the bottom of the ocean. When I finally emerged, I felt like the survivor of a shipwreck like we see in the films, arduously emerging from the waves with my clothes tattered and my hair stringy, exhausted and dehydrated but grateful to at last be on land. The global pandemic and the Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests meant that there were millions upon millions of others that were trudging their way onto land, just like I was.

Since the time I first saw what racism looked like, at the tender age of six, I have been trying to do what I can to contribute to its abolishment, however small and insignificant these efforts may seem in the larger scheme of things. In university, I was often asked about why I was so involved and what motivated me. Before you ask, no I did not think I could end racism at StFX. However, I did think it was my responsibility to ensure that StFX was a better place for the Black students that came after me than it was for me. These ambitions motivated me to write about racism for the StFX Alumni Award essay competition, to help create Academic Success for All to assist student athletes, to join the Student Executive and later run for President. These actions, among others, were all taken with the hope that somehow in the end it would all mean something.

At StFX, whether it was my classmates or all the way up to the University President, the school was distinctly and characteristically White, like most universities. As a person who eventually made her way to the top of formal student leadership, I saw firsthand how the university operated. Hint: White folks are making all the decisions and there is a focus on mazuma. This is also how the government and most organizations and companies work. Upon understanding that these two elements had the greatest influence on decisions at the university, my team and I quietly studied the best ways to fulfil our objectives for students’ interests and then we presented them in a manner that best aligned with the goals of decision-makers. Take notes, I am giving free advice.

As Students’ Union President, I was often the only Black person in these “higher-up” spaces if not accompanied by my team. For Black people it is always a dance; speaking eloquently but not too forcefully, confirming you were born in the country but with a laugh so as to avoid awkwardness, not reacting angrily in the face of blatant racism but instead walking away or politely educating those who insulted you. But why? Why can’t I just curse out the dummy that said, “All Lives Matter” upon seeing my BLM pin? Or why does the Black soccer player who gets called the N-Word on the field, get reprimanded for reacting angrily? The answer is because we can only be Black in a way that is palatable for White people. This is called White fragility and at its core, it prioritizes the feelings of White people above the trauma and experiences of Black people. It is the art of silencing Black folks through defensiveness, indignation, or by withdrawing from the conversation. It is also presenting excuses for behaviour or having “hurt feelings,” and weaponizing tears whenever Black people talk about their experiences. I hate to break it to you, but you’re not the one who was harmed and now you’re just taking space away from those who had been willing to share their pain with you.

In a recent conversation with a girl I grew up with, I was shocked to hear about the incidents of racism that she endured during her time in school. The rest of our group had grown up in the immigrant communities of Calgary and been surrounded by students who looked like us. This was in stark contrast to my friend’s experiences of having grown up in a predominantly White area and attending White schools. She said that what started in elementary school as pencils and erasers being stuck in her hair (with the teacher’s approval) then evolved by high school into students making monkey noises in the hallways and referring to Black students by the N-Word as they walked past. This was a daily occurrence. And it seems that these racist high schoolers share tactics inter-provincially, because my cousin in Halifax described similar experiences and named her high school’s hockey team as particularly egregious perpetrators of racism. A quick temperature check at E.P. Scarlett and Halifax West respectively, revealed that the racism continues in similar forms to this day. Of course, there were and are no consequences for any of the students participating in these behaviours.

The first time I was called the N-Word, I was too young to remember but I doubt my parents will ever forget it. The first time I personally recall it happening was at StFX. I was running past Riley Hall when someone yelled, “RUN NI––ER, RUN!” This incident was in my first year and I will contrast it with a different incident from my third year. As background, at the end of October 2017, Frank Magazine published a racist cartoon of Halifax activist and poet laureate, El Jones.1 Her face was drawn to resemble a Blackface caricature reminiscent of the Jim Crow era. The condemnation of the image was widespread and almost immediate. A few weeks after this controversy, a Xaverian Weekly Senior Reporter wrote a piece called “Define before you assign” which is luckily still searchable on The Xaverian Weekly’s website. 2

In this piece, the writer discusses what is considered racism and who is considered a racist. The examples he provided included thinly veiled references to what happened to El Jones as well as discussions about culturally appropriative Halloween costumes. Before I begin my discussion, I would like to note that the writer was a White male. I am not averse to White males discussing racism, however seeing as they benefit from both male and White privilege, it is incumbent for their conversations to be grounded in fact, evidence, and data about people of colour. It is impossible for White males to form an opinion about racism based on how they have experienced it. Why? Because White males do not, cannot, and will never experience racism. I said what I said.

I would argue that the article the writer wrote was not based in evidence or facts, it was solely speculative. He was not willing to outright state that he did not believe that the caricature of El Jones was racist, perhaps for fear of repercussions. He skirted the topic, questioning if drawing exaggerated features on a person who may have already had some of those features, was racist. He argued that models get their skin lightened on covers of magazines all the time, but no one says anything about that. Then he went on to question why Black celebrities that wore Whiteface did not get backlash in the same way that a White celebrity wearing Blackface would receive and wondered aloud whether cultural regalia as a costume was truly culturally appropriative. Note that in each example, he questioned if any of these situations even had anything to do with race in the first place. He concluded by saying we should not call people racists easily, because it is a “powerful word.”3

Based on the arguments he presented, I imagine the writer also claims colour-blindness about race and questions why White people cannot use the N-Word. For brevity’s sake, I will only offer a short analysis. First thing to know, the Transatlantic Slave Trade happened. This slave trade reduced African and Indigenous peoples to chattel and irrevocably changed the power dynamics and path of development for our world. Therefore, the interactions between White and Black peoples will always show dynamics of power and privilege, meaning that even if you switch the roles of a White and a Black person in a situation, it will not have the same impact. There is a reason for that. Furthermore, skin lightening is not relegated to the cover of magazines, in fact it happens in real life. All over the world, dark-skinned people attempt to lighten their complexions with the use of harmful chemical products to try to get closer to European beauty standards and with the hope of being better accepted in their societies. What you are witnessing in both instances is colourism; maybe the writer could have looked that up? For the record, Blackface caricatures were used as an oppressive tool against Black peoples and their core intention was to remove Black people’s humanity and relegate them again to a lesser-than status. These caricatures were used popularly even within the last 50 years. The type of speculation that the writer used in his article, aims to gaslight Black people and erase their lived experiences by calling those experiences into question while simultaneously minimizing the harm committed against Black people in those instances.

If comparing these two incidents, from my first year then my third year, and having to choose between being called the N-Word from a window versus reading the Xaverian writer’s racist ‘lite’ article, I would prefer to be called the N-Word again. But why would I choose that? Because for me, there is a comfort in knowing who is unapologetically racist. Then I can hate them, avoid them, hold them accountable, educate them, rehabilitate them etc., whatever I choose to do. Part of what made the writer’s article so infuriating, is that he wrote in a way that tried to avoid responsibility for the opinions he offered. It was the illusion of objectivity and of not taking sides, similar to the tactic used by whomever runs the “stfx memes 1853” Instagram account, when they discussed what is happening in Nova Scotia surrounding the moderate livelihood fisheries built by the Mi’kmaq. Both individuals used questions and speculation with the aim of not being held to account for the racist and white supremacist ideas they were proffering. I personally prefer to simply know who is racist, so that I can respond accordingly.

When my cousin was talking about the racism she experienced at Halifax West, she made a very powerful argument. She said today she sees the same people who all their lives tormented Black students, now attending Black Lives Matter protests. They either do not mention their past actions or explain them away as ignorance or a lack of maturity. She asserted that these excuses were unacceptable because being racist is not merely a stage or a normal part of growing up and it also dismisses the irrevocable harm towards Black students who suffered these daily abuses. There are plenty of people, plenty of White people, who grew up without having been racist towards or saying racist things, to their classmates. These former high schooler’s actions, like the

Xaverian writer’s and the meme account owner’s, must be understood as deliberate and therefore need to be addressed and held accountable as such.

Unfortunately, the type of racism that the Xaverian writer and the meme account owner were demonstrating is the type of racism that most people suffer from. Most people do not go around in KKK hoods with nooses propped in the back of their car. Racism is mostly subtle and exists in the unquestioned biases and attitudes of the people who we interact with everyday. Do you have any Black people in your close circle? No? Have you ever wondered why? I am sure you can name the capital of England, but do you know the capital of Nigeria? Why not? And have you ever wondered why you know, what you know and why you don’t know, what you don’t know? Reni Eddo-Lodge, author of blog “Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People about Race” which later became a published book, discusses how structural racism is difficult to hold to account. She says racism is both structural and institutional, but also notes that it is built into spaces much broader than our traditional institutions.4

Eddo-Lodge describes institutional racism as dozens, hundreds, or thousands of people with the same biases coming together to make up an organization. The outcome is a White workplace culture set by these people and it exists through implicit biases, snap judgements, and assumptions about an outsider’s competence.5 If we return to examine our institutions through the lens of structural racism, what will we learn about our schools, universities, hospitals, government agencies, and police departments? If we know that White workplace culture exists in these places, it means that anyone outside of that culture learns to either conform or alternatively, face failure as an outcast.6The culture of these institutions also determines what we learn, what we know, and what is visible to us.

While I was at StFX, there were serious issues with how Black students were treated as well as many gaffes from the university that could have been easily avoided. To make visible these issues and these instances, I shall name a few. The “We Are StFX” video filmed without including any people of colour. The exclusion of Black students during social events. Without forewarning, watching the public humiliation of one of our mentors and not being asked if we were okay afterwards. The constant equity forums where students give their time, emotional labour, and expertise, just for nothing to come of it. The recruitment of Black students, but only for the athletics program. The concentrated focus on the student accounts of International students. The lack of institutional resources for Black students. The little to no representation of Black people among professors and senior administration. And more recently, a missive that was sent out by the university informing students of RCMP presence on campus for COVID spot checks framed as positive news. This last one was particularly stinging because it happened just two months after global protests calling out police brutality against Black people.

Eddo-Lodge says collective bias is what has real impact on people’s lives. She explains that people with biases hold positions of power, they teach, they prosecute, look at university applications, and hire staff.7 You may even have noticed how bias played a role in some of StFX’s decisions, outlined in the previous paragraph. We already know that people with Black or Asian sounding names are less likely to receive interview call backs.8 So I wonder to myself, is it the person that calls me the N-Word on the street that harms me most, or is it the person that prevents me from getting a job and contributing to my community? (This is not permission to use the N-Word).

When Dr. Adolph Reed Jr. came to StFX, he challenged me to think about racism, white supremacy, class, and inequality from perspectives I had not considered before. I would stay up late those nights, analyzing his arguments again and again, trying to see if they somehow fit into my knowledge of critical race theory. At times, I even changed my mind from previous ways of thinking (always an uncomfortable process). One of his arguments that resonated was that we should examine the contexts under which racism and white supremacy become more powerful to effectively address inequality, opposed to focusing on just labeling the forces that cause those inequalities.9 By using this line of thinking, I ask what conditions previously existed and currently exist at E.P. Scarlett, Halifax West, and StFX that allow for the unequal treatment of Black students? What context emboldens White students to make monkey noises in the hallways and hockey players to use the N-Word? What circumstances make it so that Black youth are primarily recruited for their athletic prowess instead of their academic success? What processes at StFX University make it so difficult to follow through on equity initiatives? How does White workplace culture influence each level of university decision-making? Once we can answer these questions, I dare say we can begin addressing the inequalities that Black students face everyday.

But what until then? I mean as Black students, we have our coping mechanisms. We code-switch, we hang out with other Black people, we used to complain to our beloved ADSA advisor and hang out in her office, and when the bland food got to be too much, we would call our friends over and cook a feast. While reading this essay, I am sure you felt uncomfortable at certain points. After all, the truth is never heard easily. But understand that Black students, in just one moment, feel what you are feeling now at maybe ten or twenty times the intensity, at multiple instances throughout each and every day. So, you can sit there, feeling guilty and uncomfortable, or perhaps you can make the decision to finally work on rectifying your internalized biases and racism. Yes, it will be a long process, but it is so important. The support for Black Lives Matter fell among White people, from 60% support in June, to 40% in September.x This is not just a statistic; this is real life. Do the work on yourself and at the very least, you will come out of it a better person. Only, of course, if that is your intention. Whatever you choose, Black people will keep on keeping on as we always do, but just don’t expect me to be polite the next time you ask me if my hair is real.


  1. Michael Tutton, “Frank Magazine to Alter 'Racist' Cartoon of Black Poet El Jones after Boycott Calls,” Toronto Sun (The Canadian Press, October 11, 2017), https://torontosun.com/2017/10/11/frank-magazine-to-alter-racist-cartoon-of-black-pet-el-jones-after-boycott-calls.

  2. Caleb Scargall, “Define before you assign,” The Xaverian Weekly (The Xaverian Weekly, November 14, 2017), https://www.xaverian.ca/articles/define-before-you-assign?rq=nose.

  3. Scargall, “Define before you assign,” 1-2.

  4. Reni Eddo-Lodge, “Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People about Race,” The Guardian (Guardian News and Media, May 30, 2017), https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/30/why-im-no-longer-talking-to-white-people-about-race.

  5. Reni Eddo-Lodge, “Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People about Race,” 2.

  6. Reni Eddo-Lodge, “Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People about Race,” 2-3.

  7. Reni Eddo-Lodge, “Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People about Race,” 4.

  8. Dina Gerdeman, “Minorities Who 'Whiten' Job Resumes Get More Interviews,” HBS Working Knowledge (Harvard Business School, May 17, 2017), https://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/minorities-who-whiten-job-resumes-get-more-interviews.

  9. Adolph Reed, Jr., “How Racial Disparity Does Not Help Make Sense of Patterns of Police Violence,” Nonsite.org, September 16, 2016, https://nonsite.org/how-racial-disparity-does-not-help-make-sense-of-patterns-of-police-violence/.

  10. Deja Thomas and Juliana Menasce Horowitz, “Support for Black Lives Matter Has Decreased since June but Remains Strong among Black Americans,” Pew Research Center (Pew Research Center, September 16, 2020), https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/09/16/support-for-black-lives-matter-has-decreased- since-june-but-remains-strong-among-black-americans/.

Infectious Until Proven Celibate… seriously?

The deliberately discriminatory draconian blood ban is how Canadian Blood Services (CBS) chooses to kill people every single day. Their present policy states that men who have sex with men (msm) must practice total abstinence of sexual contact for three months to be granted the privilege to donate. This also applies to trans women who have not had gender affirming surgery who have sex with men. The ban ignores advances in screening which are now able to detect cases as new infections within nine days of exposure.

    PrEP, short for pre-exposure prophylaxis, is a drug which according to the CDC reduces the risk of contracting HIV from sexual practices by 99% as opposed to those not on the drug. This drug is heavily marketed at msm and trans individuals and apps like Grindr encourage its use by adding "on PrEP" as an add on to your HIV status option, where you can also add your last date tested. While none of these boxes are mandatory to fill out, it does support the information from the Unifor website stating that msm (and presumably trans folks as well) are more likely to know when they're been exposed that their heterosexual counterparts. Despite this CBS still refuses to make their questions related to behaviour, preferring to run on assumptions; a monogamous gay couple is not allowed to donate but a woman can ride a new disposable douche daily, provided she has a vagina, and still donate.

    It's pretty sad that the Umbrella Academy did a better job of discriminating blood donation based on behaviour of a man who has sex with men. It was based on behaviour. Imagine. But no, we instead are given the Luther treatment of having our blood being basically inhuman.

It's pretty obvious that people are just plain homophobic. Read the CBS frequently asked questions and try sifting through their political paragraphs for an actual answer to the question that doesn't boil down to "gay blood is dirty, we ignore science that doesn't support this." Having the Student Union Building choose to support this was disrespectful to every person who saw it had to laugh it off. Hatred based discrimination has no place in a build that's supposed to be for ALL students. Take the hate home. Ninian's Cathedral is an on campus location that isn't part of the campus itself, it's part of the community of Antigonish. A community which is far less likely to walk into the heart of campus to donate than they are to come from the sidewalk to donate. More donors and the school engages in a positive way with the town. Everybody wins and the place not for the gays is the church once more. If we can't have human levels of respect you can at least let us have a laugh.

Nobody should have to walk past a reminder of ignorance reducing them from a who to a what.

RBG's Mixed Record

Following the death of US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Badger Ginsburg and the online praise she was receiving, I became aware of a number of articles suggesting that Ginsburg in fact did not have a favourable record when it came to issues of Indigenous rights. The proposed ‘champion for all’, though instrumental in the assertion of women’s rights in America, had what some would call a ‘mixed record’ when it came to more intersectional feminist views.

I felt that it was important to look into the cases that make Justice Ginsburg’s record on Indigenous cases less than the caliber of judicial excellence that much of the public remembers. A quick search yielded results that I had not previously thought to look into given the widely publicized image of Ginsburg as the ‘Notorious RBG,’ the fierce fighter of women’s rights.

During Ginsburg’s tenure as Supreme Court Justice the opinions she wrote for the court regarding what are referred to as “Indian Law” cases were comparatively less favourable towards groups of Indigenous people than had been written in previous years. Ginsburg’s record upholds the opinion that she was unreceptive to indigenous claims. In hindsight, it can be inferred that the Supreme Court itself has shown preferential treatment to those enforcing state rights, rather than Indigenous rights or what is referred to in Carole Goldberg’s analysis of past Indigenous cases involving Ginsburg as ‘tribal rights’.

Ginsburg’s record is particularly interesting as it is her opinions that are the bigger issue, not necessarily how she voted in these individual cases, where scholars take issue. One such opinion which she wrote in regard to the City of Sherill V. Oneida Indian Nation frequently pops up as one of the more problematic. The case itself dates back hundreds of years, to the American Revolution. The Oneida had broken ranks with the other Iroquois Nations to support the US, providing the army with corn that was considered a much-needed resource at the time. Following the Revolution, in acknowledgement of their efforts, the US signed a treaty with the Oneida to provide 300 000 acres of land in what is now New York. Later, in 1970, New York pressured the Oneida into signing all but 5000 acres of their land away. The US never intervened, despite a 1790 law stating land could not be allocated without express permission of the US. By 1838, after more pressure from the state, the Oneida only owned 32 of the original 300 000 acres.

By the nineteenth and twentieth centuries numerous attempts to reclaim Oneida land were made. When the Oneida finally managed to reclaim a small part of their ancestral land, however, another issue occurred. Though Oneida was understood to be a sovereign nation, as the treaties that were signed outline, the City of Sherill was still imposing a tax on their land. When brought to the Supreme Court, the decision was rendered in favor of the City of Sherill, which lower courts have suggested acts as an invitation to deny Indigenous claims in the future. In Ginsburg’s opinion to the court, she consistently references the Oneida’s dispossession of land as ‘ancient’ rather than recognizing that their rights were being dismissed in the present. The struggle that the Oneida were currently facing was disregarded. As a historian, I find fault in the lack of understanding about the depth to which these issues persist, and the past in which they are connected to.

In more recent years, Ginsburg’s voting had been more favorable towards the affirmation of Indigenous Sovereignty. In one of her last votes, Ginsburg voted 5-4 in McGirt V. Oklahoma. This ruling affirmed that the eastern half of Oklahoma was considered Native American Territory. If anything, these facts point to a need to grapple with dissenting stories opposing a common public storyline. Ginsburg’s opinions to the court also outline a distinct gap in the law more generally when it comes to the understanding of

Indigenous traditions, law, and ways of understanding the world. Nearly nobody is untouched by an ingrained history of colonialist views. Ginsburg, though the pinnacle of women’s independence, lacked the capacity to understand the Indigenous perspective for much of her law career.

The Waiver: an Article on Complicity

​Dear X, 

​I knew this day would come. My story, my unique StFX experience, that made national headlines would one day feel meaningful to tell. Though my name was hidden I was the student Dr. Robert Strang was talking about, the student CBC was talking about, and the student my campus was talking about. I was the kid that beat meningitis twice. My Xaverian journey begins in 2014. 

 ​Like many of my peers I moved to Antigonish as a first-year student from Ontario. I had never lived away from home before. I was now to fend for myself in this new grown-up world. I adjusted and found a new home in Antigonish. I moved into residence, befriended my roommate, expanded social circles, participated in my classes as well as frequented the intramural sport arena. I was becoming someone, something I was unable to do back in Ontario. I was at peace. The safety and security I felt in my new home was beyond description. Then one night my peace was shattered. I found myself unable to hold down any food, water, or cold medication. I could not sleep, for the pain exploding through my spine was horrific. I felt like I was made of glass. My head was spinning, my eyes so sore I could not see very well and yet that afternoon I was happily sitting in meal hall. The symptoms appeared so quickly that by the time my roommate awoke on November 10, 2014, I was already dying. Once admitted to the regional hospital I began to deteriorate. Spinal fluid, blood samples, and stool samples all returned congruent with a horrifying discovery. I had contracted Bacterial Meningitis Strain-y. Immediately I was rushed to the ICU and the garments of people around me began to change. I was suddenly too sick to touch and or even share the unfettered air. I remember wondering If I would die alone before I was 20 years old. Would anyone even know I was dead? Then I blacked out. I awoke and my mother was beside me in a hazmat suit holding my swollen speckled hands. IV’s dotted my arms pumping me full of heavy medication. I was alive, somehow. I spent the next weeks attached to heart monitors, slow drips, and oxygen masks. I felt like I was rotting. I felt like my life was over. The comfy new home I had grown accustomed to had been ripped away and replaced by something cold and metallic. My new university friends came to see me, my new friends have supported me, my new friends have constantly been their for me, my new friends are everything to me. My new friends turned into my best friends but my best friends could not wait on their Xaverian journey for me. I lost my first semester but I survived the unthinkable. 

​I made the decision to return to my studies in second semester. I felt well enough and though my parents were skeptical I was determined to return to StFX. I agreed to a reduced course load and a different way of life. I was the student that beat the deadly disease that swept through the province. The first time I ever really heard tell of an outbreak was when it was used to describe my illness. I was ostracized despite my friends best efforts to keep my self esteem in check. Any and all conversations resulted in my struggle with the disease. Jokes were made at my expense by strangers who had no understanding of what kind of illness I just defeated. Upon my return to StFX one would think I was present the entire fall. I was not approached by any StFX resource to aid in my transition back to classes. I was not offered any refunds for the class I missed, the meals I did not eat, nor the nights I did not sleep in residence. I was forced to negotiate the exemption of my winter examinations. I felt alone and isolated by the university that made me feel so welcome. The one thing that infuriated me was that the university did not look into the outbreak on my behalf nor did they complete any precautionary measures to ensure something like this wouldn’t happen again. I was expected to just pick up where I left off thinking I was at least protected by my institution. 

​On January 28, 2015, I contracted a different strain of Bacterial Meningitis from the one I had less than two months ago. I almost died at the same University, in the same residence, from the same deadly disease. This time I was the boy who cried wolf. Not a soul on campus believed my cries as I lay crippled in my residence. The residence staff were hesitant to call the ambulance so they didn’t. By the time those around me realized my situation was deteriorating again there was no time to wait. I was put in the back of a taxi cab and rushed to the hospital again. My grip on reality was slipping. My body was failing me again. I found myself in a very familiar position second semester of my first year.  I was alone in a hospital wondering if I was going to die, I watched the scrubs of the medical professionals around me change from colourful shirts to hazmat suits, I watched watching IV’s and needles force their way into my veins and spinal fluid once more. My grip on life slipping away from my swollen hands speckled again, pockmarked by liver failure. I awoke to my family beside me. I awoke to my name being in the mouths of my peers as they circulated campus. I awoke but this time I had lost my will to fight anymore. I medically withdrew from StFX. I was lucky to be alive. 

​Upon my medical withdrawal I was offered barely 1/4 of my tuition, even though I missed 3/4 of the school year. I was not informed of any tests done by the university to understand the causes of the outbreak despite StFX’s name spattered across CBC. There was no attempt at acknowledging any accountability. I was just a number but I didn’t find that out until the end of my second year. 

​My second year was a mistake. Since surviving meningitis I had contracted three new ailments. I was diagnosed with Depression, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and debilitating anxiety. I was not ready for anything close to the cognitive levels required to participate in scholastics. I descended into a chaotic spiral. Nearly one year to the day of my contraction of Meningitis I mentioned my desire to take my own life. I couldn’t cope, I couldn’t keep up with school, I thought I would never be able to operate like I once did. I was visited by my residence  Hall director but nothing was done to help me. I made up my mind and ran from the building towards the highway that ran behind our residence. One of my closest friends followed me to the bathroom and watched me try and run to the highway. He stopped me, hugged me, and told me it was going to be okay. My friends took it upon themselves to sleep on my floor and they are the reason I am here today. If you are reading this, thank you. I decided to move off campus to a safe environment where I was surrounded by close family friends. Despite my feeling of safety I could not cope. I failed most of my classes and failed out. StFX was going to let it happen, no questions asked. I got my doctors to weigh in and fight for me to avoid the hefty academic expulsion. I was reinstated. 

​I am 25 now. I started my Xaverian journey at the age of 19. I am set to graduate this year. I am finally able to call an X-ring mine. I can finally say its over. I have yielded to the whims of time. I am no stranger to highly contagious diseases. I am no stranger to the sharp needles of the regional hospital. I am no stranger to being locked up in an ICU containment room. I am no stranger to Dr. Robert Strang. I am no stranger to StFX. So please hear what I say. Making students sign a waiver is insulting. It is insulting to the wonderful staff at X who make up this university. You have metaphorically cut away the life boats and forced them to go down with the proverbial ship. I cannot emphasize this enough; having to deal with medical complications alone in first year University derailed my life for nearly five years. The completion  of my studies is a testament to the support systems that have surrounded me. I cannot believe StFX is acknowledging the dangers of a return to campus. Your waiver may absolve you from legal trouble but this is direct act of dangerous complicity. Complicit just like back on November 10, 2018, when you sent out an email in regard to another Meningitis outbreak on campus. In the very same residence I nearly died in twice. How dare you demand anyone to sign a waiver and usher a student into a potentially harmful environment? Your lack of awareness to the dangers of highly contagious diseases has nearly resulted in the deaths of two of your students. 

​If I should be able to receive my X-ring in person or it is delivered through the mail I will be hesitant to put it on. The message you are conveying is that student well being can be summed up in a legal document. The message you are conveying is the deficit that the university has incurred is more important than one students life. The message you are conveying is that I am just a number. When I receive my X-ring and Diploma this year I hope that I will be able to look back fondly on the instances where the Xaverian values have made me a better person. I just hope that you will reconsider opening campus if this waiver is your ticket to a fall semester. I worry about the first years who might wind up in an ICU. I worry you won’t have their backs like you didn’t have mine. I worry that this is just a numbers game. I worry I fell in love with a University that practices a different sermon than the one being preached. Hail and… saying Health in this situation would be a bit redundant no? Get better X. 

With warmest regards,

The Former Patient Zero

Signing the COVID-19 Waiver: Is it worth the risk?

 

Our true character is revealed in times of crisis. For universities,the COVID-19 pandemic is one of the largest crises they have faced in recent history. Not only does COVID-19 threaten the safety of students, staff, and faculty, it also impacts a university’s bottom-line. Small universities such as St. FX rely significantly on students who not only pay tuition but also residence costs and meal plan fees. In this regard, the prospect of going fully online would be financially catastrophic for these small institutions. It is not a surprise then, that Mount Allison, Acadia and St. FX have all decided to re-open in the Fall, each with varying degrees of online-course delivery.

With re-opening comes a variety of risks for universities. In a Cornell study on small universities, researchers created three simulations to model COVID-19 spread. Even when eliminating sporting events, large classes and shared residence rooms, the virus still had multiple pathways in which to proliferate. Indicating that if COVID-19 enters the campus, it is likely that it will be passed on. While much is not known about COVID-19 and this is simply one study, it is worth noting that St. FX, being a for-profit institution, likely understands the potential risks of re-opening and has evaluated those risks against the benefits(mostly financial) from opening in the fall. 

It is for this reason that they want students to sign the waiver emailed on July 10, 2020, in order to be allowed on campus. In signing the waiver, students release St. FX from all liability in the event that student(s) contract COVID-19 and are harmed. In a lot of cases, this kind of waiver is standard. If you go to an amusement park and break your leg after falling off a roller coaster, the amusement park is not responsible for that injury if you have signed a waiver releasing them of liability. In this case, you have acknowledged that you understand the risks, and your relationship with the amusement park is not significant enough to indicate that it should have protected you beyond a certain level.

The relationship between universities and students are fundamentally different than the relationship between a private citizen and an amusement park. Universities are institutions that operate under a high-level of trust on the part of their patrons, the students. In other words, they have a fiduciary duty to take reasonable measures to protect them. In some circumstances, if they haven’t taken reasonable measures to protect students, they can be found to have breached their duty of care or to have acted in a negligent manner in court and may be ordered to provide compensation. Under this waiver, they ask students to waive their right to sue the university for negligence or a breach in their duty of care, in exchange for students’ ability to go on campus.

So, what does this mean? Primarily, it means that St. FX expects to students to spend thousands of dollars in tuition and other costs but is unwilling to take responsibility in law to reasonably protect students from the risks of COVID-19. Students are asked to agree to the statement: “I understand that I may be infected by COVID-19 as the result of negligence on the part of the Releasee (St. FX).” Indicating that rather than take reasonable responsibility for the risks involved in reopening, and possibly purchase insurance, St. FX has decided to transfer the risk involved to the student body.

Further, students are asked to agree that in entering in the “Release Agreement” they are not relying on any “oral or written representations” made by St. FX with respect to the safety of participating in St. FX activities, or being at St. FX, other than what is set forth in this “Release Agreement”. Meaning that under the law, St. FX does not have to follow their own COVID-19 Pandemic Plan in order to mitigate risks, and that students need to indicate that they do not expect them to. In other words, the university has not put their money where their mouth is, in that any plan St. FX creates to respond to COVID-19 has no legal value.

What’s most significant is that St. FX has unbalanced bargaining power in this circumstance. For a lot of students, missing a year of school is not an option, leaving them vulnerable. Further, other than in the waiver itself, St. FX has not indicated the legal gravity of signing to students. Administrators, at the very least, should explain in plain language the rights students are giving up when signing.

It is important to stress that type of contract is not required. The university can create a waiver that obligates them to take reasonable steps to prevent harm to students, and in the event of circumstances they could not prevent, they can ask to be absolved of liability. This would be a fair contract with students and reflect the responsibility that administration needs to undertake in their decision to re-open, when other universities have not.

The COVID-19 waiver stands in direct contrast to the consistent messaging by the university administration on working together as a Xaverian community to ensure safety for everyone. If the university will not obligate itself to take reasonable measures to ensure safety for students, how can it expect students to do the same?

 Given this information, the question before students is if they should sign. It is unclear what the repercussions would be if not signing. St. FX indicates in their email to students on July 10, that they will not be allowed on campus. How will that be enforced? Will students not be able to attend class? It is also unclear if the university is legally allowed to prevent an individual from receiving higher education on the basis that they do not sign this waiver. 

 If you are a student who believes that the university should take reasonable steps to prevent the spread COVID-19, and that if they do not they should be held accountable in court, think twice before you sign.

Travel Advice and Lessons Learned from an Unqualified Teenage Travel Guide

Travel Advice and Lessons Learned from an Unqualified Teenage Travel Guide

From February 14 to 22, I travelled with my family on vacation to Europe. I will not pretend to be an expert in anything besides procrastination, so do not refer to me as you might Rick Steves—these are just some things I learned and enjoyed while on the trip!

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StFX Peer Support Program to Launch on January 6th

StFX Peer Support Program to Launch on January 6th

Starting Monday, January 6, StFX students will be able to access in-person active listening and resource navigation services offered by students, for students on Mondays and Fridays in Bloomfield 417.

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The DNA (Development of Natural Resources) of the St. Mary’s River Valley: Reflections of OOG (old old guide) & AWOC (a wise old crow)

The DNA (Development of Natural Resources) of the St. Mary’s River Valley: Reflections of OOG (old old guide) & AWOC (a wise old crow)

John Cameron is a member of the Class of '67, former Director of Development at 'X' and the Founding President of the St. Mary's River Association. This article was submitted in response to a letter from Sean Kirby that the Xaverian Weekly published on November 19, 2019. 

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