Brian Giesbrecht: Canada’s National Hysteria in the 21st Century

Brian Giesbrecht: Canada’s National Hysteria in the 21st Century
The Canadian flag flies at half-mast on the West Block of Parliament Hill in Ottawa on June 2, 2021. The Canadian Press/Sean Kilpatrick
Brian Giesbrecht
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Commentary

Mass hysteria is the spontaneous manifestation of a particular behaviour by many people. There are numerous historical examples: Middle Age nuns at a convent in France spontaneously began to meow like cats; at another convent, nuns began biting one another. In 13th-century Germany, spontaneous dancing broke out and entire city populations danced until exhausted. But perhaps the best-known mass hysteria was the Salem Witch Trials, where people, seized by visions, accused others of bewitching them. Many were executed.

Brian Giesbrecht
Brian Giesbrecht
Author
Brian Giesbrecht is a retired judge and a senior fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
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