An only-in-Canada story: "Canadian pizzerias in a bind as cheese-import loophole closes"

I've been making homemade pizzas relatively frequently the last few months, and am a bit annoyed about how the Canadian government policy has penalized me for NOT eating premade pizza which generally comes with more artificial crap inside. There's a backstory here that a lot of people don't realize as discussed in a Globe and Mail article a while back. The biggy is that frozen pizza makers can dodge Canadian cheese prices entirely:

Restaurants have long chafed at special Canadian rules that allow McCain Foods Ltd. and other frozen pizza makers to buy mozzarella at the much lower world price.

Pizza joints were able to get around for this a while as while through US cheese purchases as part of a kit though, as the article notes, this loophole has now closed. A separate loophole for restaurants was also created last year:

The Canadian Milk Supply Management Committee (CMSMC), created under the National Milk Marketing Plan, has established a milk classification (milk class 3(d)) for Mozzarella cheese used in pizza prepared and cooked on site for the benefit of restaurants. The purpose of this class is to provide restaurants access to cheese at a reduced price for pizza prepared and cooked on site.

As a result, the frozen and restaurant pizzas that are more likely to be laden with all sorts of additives and preservatives get an artificial subsidy over fresh, home cooking. And don't get me started on ice cream makers importing milk-product concentrates to reduce dairy costs or a shift to using imported palm or coconut oil in place of butterfat in the "frozen dessert" category while is slowly taking over from "ice cream" in the Canadian diet.

More random links

Study finds B.C. should extend foster care after age 19
Can't say the conclusion that this would likely reduce homelessness is particularly shocking. You'd almost think that humans are social creatures.
Federal caps on wireless roaming rates don't solve problem, Wind Mobile says
Wind's CEO on proposed cost caps for domestic cell phone roaming: "The rate that we were successful in getting from this U.S. carrier, to whom we mean nothing, is 3.5 times less than what these legislated caps will provide" It makes sense to charge for roaming, but the wholesale cost charged for domestic roaming is significantly more than the companies charge at the retail level which seems kind of anti-competitive.
US Bike Ridership Surges With Protected Bike Lanes, Study Finds
Now if only the local planning folks could be convinced to spend more money protecting cyclists from cars than protecting pedestrians from cyclists.
The Upper Class and Wealth Inequality in Sweden
"Sweden is viewed as an egalitarian utopia by outsiders, but reality is complex. In some ways Sweden has less social equality than the United States. While the American upper class is largely meritocratic, the upper class in Sweden are still mostly defined by birth."

Random links

Eating More Fruits and Vegetables Won't Stop Obesity
"'Conventional wisdom is an awful guide for policy,' Sturm told me. 'The consumption of fruits and vegetables has increased during the obesity epidemic.' ... Today, people eat about 30 more pounds of vegetables and 25 more pounds of fruit per year than they did in 1970, according to Sturm’s calculations. Unfortunately, they’re eating more of everything else, too. "
e-books and profitability– What we’ve always said and publishers have always denied
Something to think about re: Amazon / Hachette's conflict: "Look at Harper’s own numbers: $27.99 hardcover generates $5.67 profit to publisher and $4.20 royalty to author; $14.99 agency priced e-book generates $7.87 profit to publisher and $2.62 royalty to author."
Happiest countries have highest suicide rates
Something to think about also in regards to economic inequality: "The researchers believe the key explanation that may explain this counterintuitive link between happiness and suicide rates draws on ideas about the way that human beings rely on relative comparisons between each other. ... This result is consistent with other research that shows that people judge their well-being in comparison to others around them"
It’s Time to Abolish the Week
"At one point, the Basques evidently employed a three-day week. For centuries, China, Japan, and Korea employed a 10-day week. Other societies have employed four-, five-, six-, eight-, and nine-day weeks."

Ross Douthat on "The Left and Masculinity"

He's had a few interesting critiques on the responses to these shootings. See his column Prisoners of Sex, the piece The Right and Misogyny, and now his response to calls for the end of "traditional masculinity" in The Left and Masculinity:

... in our culture — Western, English-speaking, American — the traditional iconography of masculine heroism doesn’t really resemble this “Grand Theft Auto”/”Scarface” description at all. I mean, yes, if the “tradition” you have in mind is Pashtun honor killings, then I agree, traditional masculinity would be better off extinct. But where American society is concerned, when I look at the sewers of misogyny or the back alleys of “bro” culture, I mostly see men in revolt against both feminism and our culture’s older images of masculine strength and self-possession, not men struggling to inhabit the latter tradition, or live up to its impossible/immoral demands.

... watch some famous Westerns from the pre-Peckinpah era: Do you regularly see characters bedding a steady stream of willing women while shooting their way to fame and fortune? Surely not as often as you see men, in the style of the lead characters in “High Noon” and “Shane,” reluctantly shouldering a burden of violence and paying a heavy moral price; not as often as you see men (including Wayne in several of his most iconic roles) who don’t get the girl, don’t get sexual fulfillment (not a major theme of the genre, to put it mildly) or the life of domesticity they want, precisely because of their identity as gunslingers and the obligations and/or sins that accompany that way of life.

... for today’s toxic, self-deluded bachelors, it’s worth asking which image of masculinity is more likely to be leading them astray — a doomed attempt to “think their way” into some traditional, pre-sexual revolution masculine ideal, with its stress on self-mastery, self-containment, and self-possession, or the hapless pursuit of an ideal that I called “Hefnerian” in my Sunday column, with its vision of the world as primarily a field for sexual conquest, and traditional morality as the prison that needs to be escaped?

... the left’s writers ... look at the state of sex and gender, masculinity and femininity, and see an uncomplicatedly progressive social revolution that just hasn’t fully succeeded yet — that hasn’t brought men, especially, into the sunlit uplands of egalitarian enlightenment — because far too many “traditional” concepts and constraints still perdure. I see a social revolution that has brought good and bad, intermixed, and whose supporters could profit from the realization that some of the human goods they seek are actually more clearly visible behind us, somewhere back in a cultural past they still insist they’re fighting to overthrow, whose actual details the darkness of forgetting has almost swallowed up.

I'd suggest reading through all the above columns in full.

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