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Lépine's actions have been variously ascribed from a psychiatry perspective with diagnoses such as personality disorder, psychosis, or attachment disorder, noting societal factors such as poverty, isolation, powerlessness, and violence in the media. The massacre is regarded by criminologists as an example of a hate crime against women, and by feminists and government officials as a misogynist attack and an example of the larger issue of violence against women. December 6 is now observed in Canada as a National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matty-matt/support
Arguably the greatest Magic player of all time, Kai Budde, joins the show this week. We touch on a bunch of stuff, the most important being exactly how long it took him to dismantle Mark LePine in the finals of Worlds '99.
I take a break this week and Mark LePine fills in, talking with the creator of the High Tide deck from PT Rome, Jason Opalka.
Uncle Ben Farkas and Mark LePine join me for what has to be the worst 3 hours in podcast history.
Magic Hall of Famer Alan Comer comes on the show to talk about Jihad, Atog (he brought it up, not me!), Flying Carpet, and Kormus Bell. Mark LePine is also back for color commentary.
Mark LePine comes back on the show to shoot the shit with me during our ride home from Sped Weekend.
Mark LePine comes back on the show to defend his Broken Draft from last week plus the usual nonsense.
Uncle Ben comes back on the show to destroy, er I mean dissect, one of Mark Lepine's recent Broken Drafts.
Mono nonsense as Lepine, Jamie, and I record our travels to and fro EW.
90's era Pro Tour superstar Mark Lepine comes on the show this week to chat about the role Magic has played in his life.
Author, Activist and Former California State Senator Tom Hayden talks in depth with the author of No Logo and The Shock Doctrine, Naomi Klein, about the state of the fourth branch of government: journalists. Both Hayden and Klein became serious journalists in college, and it was during that time that both experienced their defining moment. When Tom Hayden interviewed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr at the 1960 DNC in Los Angeles, he asked questions while imagining the headline, "Tom Hayden Interviews MLK," but by the time he wrote the article he knew there were more important things in the world than personal glory. Naomi Klein rebelled from her liberal, feminist mother until Mark Lepine gunned down fourteen women in what became known as the Montreal Massacre. It was then she realized people were dying for the beliefs her mother fought for, and that realization awakened the activist within her. After both events, Hayden and Klein dedicated their lives to telling the truth about the world, and doing everything in their power to not use subjects like "they," but use "we" instead. It is that distinction that defines their journalism to this day.