There was also Primeval New World, a spinoff of the British series Primeval which was produced and set in Canada.
As a Canadian (who has taught Canadian history for decades), I’d like to let you know, politely, that my days of not taking you seriously have certainly come to a middle.
Et aussi, comme québécois, je peux t’assurer que ta compréhension de la complexité culturelle du Québec, ainsi que celui du Canada au complet, démontre un manque flagrant de nuance. À part ça, ton « analyse » est croche en tabarnak.
Now get yourself a poutine, wash it down with a double-double, and tell someone you’re sorry about something, like a real Canuck.
This makes no senseSo I don't understand quebec?, therefore I don't understand how quebec is different enough that it's literally more foreign than the US?
The part you're talking about decades of history is a relevant point. Canada started to degrade when tv was no longer our main unifier.
You don't see the debate because the debate is over. Quebec is a country within a country.Isn't the east/west, English/français debate getting stale? The two bigger divides that I see--at least from my perspective--is more along lines of younger/older and urban/rural.
BC is too strange to put into words. What amazes me is my inlaws have been there 30-60 years, and they are clueless about the people who live a mile down the road. Like my first time there, I'm imaging a bunch of BC bud lovin hippies, my inlaws are super duper tree huggers, but you pull out a joint and they act as if you have a crack pipe. Never met a group of literally 30-40 people where zero smoke, drink or like weed, while also being super left wing. My brain still can't process it. I'm use to family gatherings where you can't find a person who isn't doing 1 of the 3 aside from my mother.I live in Vancouver, I'm pretty sure anyone in my social circle here could tell you (in general) what's going on in Toronto, Montreal, Calgary...but places here in BC? Nanoose Bay? Fort St. John? Port McNeill? Is that the dark side of the moon or even this planet? Lol
It's already destroying the rest of the country. Nova Scotia was bought and sold over the last year. My brother's inlaws are all losing their minds over it. You can drive 3 hours from Toronto and you're basically paying what was just a few years ago an average price in Surrey.Age-wise, there seems to be a simmering seething amongst millennials towards baby boomers for their perceived 'wrecking' of the housing market. It feels like there's a slow-burning economic shift that's going to light right up in the next decade or so, and it will affect Canadians no matter where in the country you're in.
Yeah well and this is why I think Canada is in such immediate trouble. We have nothing bonding us together anymore. Like the internet liberated us from geography, and the housing market means we have zero attachment to local communities.To bring this back to canon, I can't think of any direct references that haven't already been said, except for one undeniable element of canon: old/young, anglo/franco, west/east, urban/rural, progressive/conservative, religious/spiritual/no thanks, rich/poor...we're all in the same in so far as having one lil' 1960s-era TV series to draw us all together.
Name one thing? Name one thing I'd miss if I went to the US? It's not an idle thing, we're on the verge of a rather massive brain drain. I ain't going anywhere, me and my wife are committing to fighting for staying, ensuring our kids speak french and all that.There's more that unites us than divides us, we have a common purpose, truth, humanity, etc. etc..
The federation has starfleet keeping it together.I think I just wrote a better draft of that Federation Charter speech from ENT These Are The Voyages...![]()
Canada was a relatively united country because we lived a shared experienced, went to the same schools, worked the same jobs, watched the same television/news etc. We also had real economic concerns like a common dollar etc. People were tuned into their local environment because they planned to live there etc.This makes no sense
I've long since given up on reading pretty much anything he says. It's all long winded gibberish designed to suck all the oxygen from the thread and leave it a cold, lifeless void.This makes no sense
Most stable industrialized countries in the world have their borders defined by significant geographical features, language, shared economic interest, if they don't they tend to be very small like belgium etc."an imaginary line" is exactly what a border is.
Tell me, when did Quebec first try to leave Canada?
No. You don’t. Your discussion of Quebec mirrors that of many outsiders who have no direct experience of living in it. I’ve spent nearly 40 years of my 56 living in Quebec. My parents are both from Quebec (somewhat ironically, I’ve lived here longer than they did, though they were born here and I wasn’t). My extended family is from Quebec on both sides (my dad’s side dates back to when de Maisonneuve founded Montréal). My wife and her family are multigenerational québécois. I’ve taught more Quebec and Canadian history than most people have had hot meals.So I don't understand quebec?
BC is too strange to put into words.
People move to get away from the people they dislike in the east and prairies, only problem is if everyone does the same thing, they basically have to pretend to not see each other and are very good at it. It's part of the irony of the "real Vancouver" never actually being on screen.
What Canada should NOT do is seek a simplistic, sloganeering mindset that looks to impose a singular set of values and exclude the rest. Quite enough of that going around.
And, to bring it back to Trek, Canada, at its best, is very much like the aspirational version of the Federation—a body that works together in the important moments while allowing each region to exercise its diversity of cultures, and a sufficiently flexible country to allow oppositional views a wide latitude of expression in ways that would tear apart other polities.
Now I’m off to enjoy a Jos. Louis and a glass of milk before bedtime. À la prochaine fois.
All I know is I've always enjoyed this meme about how Canadians see each other.
I thought that was strictly Toronto.Mostly accurate. Ontario should somehow be conveyed to be tbe center of the universe.
I thought that was strictly Toronto.![]()
So imagine an America where there's no flyover country. Just Boston/Seattle/LA/Dallas. There's no Phoenix/Vegas/Chicago/Atlanta, to moderate the societal differences. Nothing in-between to glue the country together. While a quarter of your population wants to speak french.
And, to bring it back to Trek, Canada, at its best, is very much like the aspirational version of the Federation—a body that works together in the important moments while allowing each region to exercise its diversity of cultures, and a sufficiently flexible country to allow oppositional views a wide latitude of expression in ways that would tear apart other polities.
No. You don’t. Your discussion of Quebec mirrors that of many outsiders who have no direct experience of living in it. I’ve spent nearly 40 years of my 56 living in Quebec. My parents are both from Quebec (somewhat ironically, I’ve lived here longer than they did, though they were born here and I wasn’t). My extended family is from Quebec on both sides (my dad’s side dates back to when de Maisonneuve founded Montréal). My wife and her family are multigenerational québécois. I’ve taught more Quebec and Canadian history than most people have had hot meals.
Your Maclean’s/Globe and Mail style commentary on Quebec politics reveals the superficiality of your understanding. Moreover, your observations conflate nation with country in so many ways it’s painful.
Multi linguistic states have always always been on politically shaky ground. I'm not arguing for a nation state, it's the keep the americans out part of it that holds no water.Canada has never been a monolithic, uni-cultural “nation”. Nor have most parts of the globe for most of recorded history. And. There’s. Nothing. Wrong. With. That.
That Canada has defied the corrosive Wilsonian concept of singular “nation-states” is a feature, not a bug, of the country.
Working for you, the housing market issues along with other issues related to that, are making millions look for an exist plan.Canada works, however imperfectly (as is true of all sovereign states), precisely because it has maintained a balance among multiple “nations” rather than simply subsume them all into one monolithic entity.
If you're only talking about the french-english tension sure. But I think you are disconnected from the real estate market etc.The tension between them can be tedious to observe, but it has kept the country from flying apart via violent ethnic conflict by finding creative, if unglamorous, compromises rather than adopting a “my way or the highway” attitude.
Never suggested they should.It’s not flashy, but it generally works (though there is certainly room for improvement, especially regarding relations with Indigenous peoples). What Canada should NOT do is seek a simplistic, sloganeering mindset that looks to impose a singular set of values and exclude the rest. Quite enough of that going around.
If your major issue is political, by Canadian standards the US is a very unified as a country.If you think the Midwest "moderates" social differences of the the United States or "glues it together," you are profoundly mistaken about how the basic cleavages of American society work.
It's a lot lot different in smaller countries. It's one thing to have fighting parents, it's another when your parents haven't lived in the same state for 15 years. They can claim to have a perfect marriage but when they don't interact with each other there's a problem.Anyway, you're not wrong that Canada is interesting in the way it encompasses major competing national identities in English Canadians, French Canadians, and First Nations peoples, but you're overstating your case. Canada is not unique by encompassing multiple national identities -- and there are multi-national are frankly a lot more dysfunctional and likely to break up as a result of tensions between competing national identities, including the United Kingdom and Belgium.
Okay, that’s enough of this.
Feel free to discuss Canadian politics and geography in Miscellaneous.
And SalyutBuran how about practicing some concision when you post? Half of what you write is tl;dr material.
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