The Daily Show (and the Colbert Report) didn't report on Canada's election, but The Daily Show did talk about a dark, unpopular element of the Canadian economy.
Aasif Mandvi reported from a small Quebec town just north and east of Montréal and its struggles to continue to export a product synonymous with the name of the town: Asbestos.
The town wants to expand an underground mine to extract more asbestos. Now in the United States, you might be asking why there would be a market for asbestos. The workers at Ground Zero after 9/11 were subject to asbestos exposure. Asbestos is strongly linked to mesothelioma and lung cancer.
Mandvi, who was born in India, gets to the "punch line": India is buying that asbestos. The show also played a clip from a CBC documentary Asbestos: Canada's Ugly Secret showing Indian workers wearing bandannas over their noses and mouths while working with asbestos.
There isn't a whole lot of humor in the story: asbestos is a difficult subject to find humor. The story made a strong connection between First World countries exporting dangerous materials to other parts of the world. This isn't just about asbestos and Canada. The United States exports a lot of cigarettes to the rest of the world.
The Quebec economy is not in great shape, but this doesn't give them the right to deal in this substance. Yet, as long as places such as India think it's okay, Quebec's argument is that some place will produce the asbestos, and why not Quebec.
I'm interested in such offer,The sound quality in these podcasts is really poor. I feel bad about complaining about something that is free, but I think it is important.
Posted by: Belstaff Jack | December 24, 2011 at 05:45 AM