Bank of Canada bans image of Asian-looking woman from new $100 banknotes

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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I think there maybe a conspiracy. I did a search for the Asian pic. windoze froze. 8O ;)
 

EagleSmack

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Feb 16, 2005
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I read the article and the focus group said they wanted a more neutral looking person.

In other words they wanted someone white.

Anybody got any Mississippi or Alabama "slams" these days?
 

shadowshiv

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May 29, 2007
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The new $100 has been around for a few months now. What images were on them before(alas, I have none on me to check)?
 
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Chev

Electoral Member
Feb 10, 2009
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I read the article and the focus group said they wanted a more neutral looking person.

In other words they wanted someone white.

Anybody got any Mississippi or Alabama "slams" these days?

"a more neutral looking person", "they wanted someone white"?? The only way they could get a
'white' person is if they colour the bill itself white. If they picked green, they'd have a green person, would they not?
If this really is about 'colour', it's just disgusting
 

Chev

Electoral Member
Feb 10, 2009
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This a portion of the article in the Times Colonist,
“Bank ofCanada dropped image of Asian-looking woman from new $100 banknotes”
By Dean Beeby, The Canadian Press August 17, 2012

Caption under the picture:

“The backside of a Canadian $100banknote is seen in this undated handout image. The first version of Canada'snew $100 banknotes featured the image of an Asian woman but she was quicklyremoved after focus groups complained. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Bank of Canada – HO”

OTTAWA — The Bank of Canadapurged the image of an Asian-looking woman from its new $100 banknotes afterfocus groups raised questions about her ethnicity….
But eight focus groups consulted about the proposed images for the new $5, $10,$20, $50 and $100 banknote series were especially critical of the choice of anAsian for the largest denomination….


“Some have concerns that theresearcher appears to be Asian,” …

“Some believe that it presents astereotype of Asians excelling in technology and/or the sciences. Others feelthat an Asian should not be the only ethnicity represented on the banknotes.Other ethnicities should also be shown.”
A few even said the yellow-brown colour of the $100 banknote reinforced theperception the woman was Asian, and “racialized” the note….


Read more:
http://www.timescolonist.com/business/Bank+Canada+dropped+image+Asian+looking+woman+from+banknotes/7108124/story.html#ixzz23sQFsVhp





 

dumpthemonarchy

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Jan 18, 2005
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www.cynicsunlimited.com
If you have lived in Asia, you can tell the difference between Japanese, Chinese and Koreans. So it is accurate ot use the term Asian in Canada because it dilutes their ancestry and you can't tell with the generation born in Canada.

The public believes race is real, that's why the govt, and only the govt, keeps stats on the topic. So its not scientific, so what. Politics and culture are not about science. The 1% can't decide everything.

While we're on the subject, we should lower immigration levels from 300,000 a year to 100,000 a year.
 

Spade

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Nov 18, 2008
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The issue is not the final art. The issue is that in its selection, a previous portrait was rejected because visual minorities were not considered "Canadian" enough, not only by a focus group or two but by the decision makers who reviewed the groups' comments. The last thing our country needs is a significant proportion of the population feeling alienated from government and the exercise of power. Frankly stupid!
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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And now a few pimply words from our favorite c*nt at The Star, Miss Heather Mallick:

Bank of Canada ethnically cleanses new $100 bill: Mallick



The news that focus groups outside Toronto objected to the image of an Asian-looking woman scientist on the back of the redesigned $100 billed — the cowardly Bank of Canada hastily replaced her with a “neutral” woman, whatever that may be — is shocking.

My only opinion of $100 is that I’m happy to have it, whether it comes in dimes or this new plastic polymer creation the bank’s website says, for those who don’t understand the concept of currency, will help us “make those basic transactions of everyday life.” Other Canadians apparently disagree, in their usual provincial manner.

In 2009, eight such groups from across this multi-ethnic and multicultural country assembled for a report on the $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100, said some nasty things. It was stereotypical to show an Asian in the sciences, they suggested, or the yellow-brown note was “racialized,” or the woman looked, well, Asian.

One person in Fredericton commented, probably in green ink and all-caps: “The person on it appears to be of Asian descent which doesn’t rep(resent) Canada. It is fairly ugly.”

This is why focus groups have a bad reputation. Perhaps the bank should have done what the Libor bank rate committee in London did, which was toss out the extreme interest rate estimates and stick with the middle ground. This would have left them with Torontonians who like both ethnic diversity and big bills, and praised the inclusion of what appeared to be a non-white person on the rarest bill of all.

In the meantime, this woman stares silently into her microscope. We stare back at her. Who is she? Who is she meant to be? And why do we care, really, we focus-group types, the kind of people who have a day to spare eyeing money not our own and dreaming up stereotypes, like some kind of sadistic bartender?

She works on her large, old-fashioned-looking microscope behind a big bottle generically labelled “insulin.” This is puzzling since she is clearly no Frederick Banting. Perhaps she is diabetic. But she is not overweight, a happy argument against fattism, some would say. She is wearing a wrinkled blouse that she seems to have run up at home — no Made in China goods for this homegrown nonethnic Canadian — and no lab coat either, so why is she staring at slides? Has she wandered in from the street?

Science Lady is shown from behind. One thing is clear. She and her hairdresser, who appears to have been using a chisel, are not friends. Furthermore this particular one does not offer her clients — with their striped rather than highlighted hair — a quick rearview check before they leave the salon.

This may be why the Bank of Canada does not invite me to their focus groups but my quick assessment is no less useless than anything offered up by other underoccupied Canadians. Most money is badly designed, the Americans with every denomination in green having done the worst job of all. The euros, with their drawings of “Interesting Window Shapes of Europe,” tried to make everyone happy. And look at Europe now.

The new $50 banknote has a drawing of a research icebreaker, this in a country with a government that is actively hostile to science and where the temperature is rising to the point that the polar ice will be gone before the notes wear out.

The new $20 shows the National Vimy Memorial, a big boring sculpture that looks like the CN Tower with curly bits or the classic statue Gumby Goes to Heaven on Toronto’s University Avenue. Focus groups said it reminded them of the Twin Towers in New York. This was clearly a desperate response to the Rorschach-type question “Does this remind you of anything?” which makes me think that they were asked of the $100 bill, “Does anything here strike you as ethnic at all?”

So the focus groups were just doing their best, which is all that anyone can do, especially in Canada where no one can do better than anyone else. The theme of this redesign was “Frontiers,” the kind of woolly conceptualizing that has no fan base.

The next redesign will be “Furniture” with a set of coins based on regional coffee tables. As for this version of the $100 bill, I’ll take it, and so will you.


Love, Heather


Bank of Canada ethnically cleanses new $100 bill: Mallick - thestar.com
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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No, the politically correct thing to do would be to show any human being's face so long as it could be reasonably assumed that human being is a citizen of this country.

And in this day and age that could be pretty much anyone, unless it is clearly determined that party lives in another country... or.. galaxy.

SO why is the queen on our money?

Politically incorrect would be an Asian with a pick and a vial of nitro

Not really. There were thousands of Asians of various nationalities that worked in mines and built railroads.