Canada is running a large-scale Stanford Prison Experiment

How mask-enforcing became a legalized power trip

Joy Ride
5 min readApr 13, 2022
Montreal Museum of Fine Art

April, 2022. The Montreal Museum of fine arts was almost empty; it was a rainy Wednesday afternoon. I went to one of Montreal’s most famous museums to see the exhibition of Nicolas Party ( L’heure Mauve). Prior to arriving at the exhibition, I had a snack in a local cafe and was allowed to eat with my mask off, being close to other people. No one was hurt while I was finishing a rather big salad.

Large paintings of Nicolas Party were exhibited in spacious rooms with high ceilings. Rooms were mostly empty but populated by museum attendants — at least two per big room. One short middle-aged man was closely watching me move from one painting to another; he approached me, “Madame,” and demanded to put my mask higher and cover my entire nose. I am a law obeying, fully vaccinated, tax-paying citizen, I had my mask on, but it was not high enough to his liking. I wear glasses and have a round face; putting the mask too high fogs my glasses and makes it impossible to see. (Why am I justifying myself?) However, the museum guard had a real power trip. He rushed to the next room to alarm the guard in the next room about a moving mask-criminal (me). They needed to be on high alert and keep me on the radar. The group of them were having fun; they were…

--

--

Joy Ride
Joy Ride

Written by Joy Ride

Learner, writer, biotech investor, research translation, drug development, genetics. 4-lingual.

Responses (1)