https://maisonneuve.org/post/2010/02/4/how/?fbclid=IwAR2ETGgayzKoeR9qANxO7AeBo1a1jxVKQQ8kp51HoPoxiel5boX1Cr8zk8M
Among the plethora of ethnic insults that traffic in food—Germans as “krauts,” say, or Irish people as “potato eaters”—“pepsi” deserves special mention. It’s the only slur I know that is based on a beverage. The lexicography team for the Canadian Oxford Dictionary tell me the epithet “pepsi” derives from the belief, first held by Quebec anglos in the late forties, that their French-speaking counterparts swilled Pepsi because they were too poor to afford Coke (which was marginally more expensive). While Pepsi’s early marketing did promote itself as the more economical alternative—“Twice as much for a nickel, too / Pepsi-Cola is the drink for you”—impecunious Québécois of yore were probably imbibing Kik, which was the cheapest postwar cola available.
27 April 2021
How a Soft Drink Became Quebec's Homegrown Insult
16 April 2021
Both sides declare a win after appeal ruling on Bill 99 and Quebec self-determination
MONTREAL -- A new final word has come down over Bill 99, the twenty-year-old law meant to enshrine Quebec’s right to self-determination and, potentially, separation.
But the appeal court ruling on Friday stepped away from allowing any present-day judge to give a final word at all, saying politics is too unpredictable.
In short, Quebec Court of Appeal judge Robert Mainville wrote that Bill 99 is just fine—unless it’s used in the future in some unforeseeable way, such as unilaterally separating from Canada, in which case the courts of the future will need to deal with that for themselves.
https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/both-sides-declare-a-win-after-appeal-ruling-on-bill-99-and-quebec-self-determination-1.5382223?fbclid=IwAR2J86XenVOOxAPA6JtsHjcJxRHJ1vLu_XuvEHLf6byPJ6SWqRSAtZW8yuE