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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
How Safe is Canada
Sunday, November 28, 2004 7:16 AM
GEEZER
Keep the Shiny side up
Quote:Before You Flee to Canada, Can We Talk? By Nora Jacobson Sunday, November 28, 2004; Page B02 TORONTO I moved to Canada after the 2000 election. Although I did it mainly for career reasons -- I got a job whose description read as though it had been written precisely for my rather quirky background and interests -- at the time I found it gratifying to joke that I was leaving the United States because of George W. Bush. It felt fine to think of myself as someone who was actually going to make good on the standard election-year threat to leave the country. Also, I had spent years of my life feeling like I wasn't a typical American and wishing I could be Canadian. I wanted to live in a country that was not a superpower, a country I believe to have made the right choices about fairness, human rights and the social compact. So I could certainly identify with the disappointed John Kerry supporters who started fantasizing about moving to Canada after Nov. 2. But after nearly four years as an American in the Great White North, I've learned it's not all beer and doughnuts. If you're thinking about coming to Canada, let me give you some advice: Don't. Although I enjoy my work and have made good friends here, I've found life as an American expatriate in Canada difficult, frustrating and even painful in ways that have surprised me. As attractive as living here may be in theory, the reality's something else. For me, it's been one of almost daily confrontation with a powerful anti-Americanism that pervades many aspects of life. When I've mentioned this phenomenon to Canadian friends, they've furrowed their brows sympathetically and said, "Yes, Canadian anti-Americanism can be very subtle." My response is, there's nothing subtle about it. The anti-Americanism I experience generally takes this form: Canadians bring up "the States" or "Americans" to make comparisons or evaluations that mix a kind of smug contempt with a wariness that alternates between the paranoid and the absurd. Thus, Canadian media discussion of President Bush's upcoming official visit on Tuesday focuses on the snub implied by his not having visited earlier. It's reported that when he does come, he will not speak to a Parliament that's so hostile it can't be trusted to receive him politely. Coverage of a Canadian athlete caught doping devolves into complaints about how Americans always get away with cheating. The "Blame Canada" song from the "South Park" movie is taken as documentary evidence of Americans' real attitudes toward this country. The ongoing U.S. ban on importing Canadian cattle (after a case of mad cow disease was traced to Alberta) is interpreted as a form of political persecution. A six o'clock news show introduces a group of parents and children who are convinced that the reason Canadian textbooks give short shrift to America's failed attempts to invade the Canadian territories in the War of 1812 is to avoid antagonizing the Americans -- who are just waiting for an excuse to give it another try. My noisy neighbors revel in Canada's two hockey golds at the 2002 Olympics because "We beat the Americans in America!" The first gay couple to wed in Ontario tells the press, before they say anything else, that they are glad they don't live in the United States. A PR person at the hospital where I work, who has been eager to talk to me about a book I've published, puts down her pen when she learns that I'm American and that the book is nearly devoid of "Canadian content." More seriously, in the wake of 9/11, after the initial shock wore off, it was common to hear some Canadians voice the opinion that Americans had finally gotten what they deserved. The attacks were just deserts for years of interventionist U.S. foreign policy, the increasing inequality between the world's poorest nations and the wealthiest one on earth, and a generalized arrogance. I heard similar views expressed after Nov. 2, when Americans were perceived to have revealed their true selves and thus to "deserve" a second Bush term. Canadians often use three metaphors to portray their relationship with the United States. They describe Canada as "sleeping with an elephant." Even when the elephant is at rest, they worry that it may suddenly roll over and crush them. They refer to the U.S.-Canadian border as "the longest one-way mirror in the world" -- Canadians peer closely at Americans, trying to make sense of their every move, while the United States sees only its own reflection. Finally, they liken Canada to a gawky teenage girl with a hopeless crush on the handsome and popular boy next door. You know, the one who doesn't even know she exists. The self-image conveyed in these metaphors is timid and accommodating. Perhaps this is how Canadians see themselves (or would like to be seen), but my experience is that they are extremely aggressive (if somewhat passively so) when it comes to demonstrating their deep ambivalence toward Americans. Take the popular TV show "Talking to Americans," which simultaneously showcases Americans' ignorance about Canada and mocks Canadians' unhealthy preoccupation with what Americans really think of them. Of course, there's often something of the stalker in that gawky teenage girl, isn't there? Part of what's irksome about Canadian anti-Americanism and the obsession with the United States is that it seems so corrosive to Canada. Any country that defines itself through a negative ("Canada: We're not the United States") is doomed to an endless and repetitive cycle of hand-wringing and angst. For example, Canadians often point to their system of universal health care as the best example of what it means to be Canadian (because the United States doesn't provide it), but this means that any effort to adjust or reform that system (which is not perfect) precipitates a national identity crisis: To wit, instituting co-payments or private MRI clinics will make Canada too much like the United States. The rush to make comparisons sometimes prevents meaningful examination of the very real problems that Canada faces. (For me, it has become the punch line of a private joke that whenever anything bad happens here, the first response is a chagrined cry of "But we're Canadian!" -- the "not American" can be inferred.) As a Canadian social advocate once told me, when her compatriots look at their own societal problems, they are often satisfied once they can reassure themselves that they're better off than the United States. As long as there's still more homelessness, racism and income inequality to the south, Canadians can continue to rest easy in their moral superiority. Many Canadians have American relatives or travel frequently to the United States, but a large number are pretty naive about their neighbors to the south. A university student confidently told me that there had been "no dissent" in the United States during the run-up to the Iraq war. Toronto boosters argue that American cities lack the ethnic diversity found in Canada's largest metropolis. The author of a popular book on the differences between the Canadian and American characters (a topic of undying interest here) promotes the view that Americans are all authority-loving conformists. Ultimately, Canadian anti-Americanism says more about Canada than it does about the United States. Because some 80 to 90 percent of this country's trade is with the United States, the reality is that Canadians need Americans to sustain their economy and thus the quality of life they value. Such dependence breeds resentment. In "officially multicultural Canada," hostility toward Americans is the last socially acceptable expression of bigotry and xenophobia. It would be impossible to say the things about any other nationality that Canadians routinely say -- both publicly and privately -- about Americans. On a human level, it can be rude and hurtful. (As it was on the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001, when an acquaintance angrily told me that she would now have to curtail her travel plans because she was afraid she might be mistaken for an American.) And there's no way to argue against it. An American who attempts to correct a misconception or express even the mildest approval for the policies of U.S. institutions is likely to be dismissed as thin-skinned or offensive, and as demonstrating those scary nationalistic tendencies that threaten the world. I felt a strong tug toward America when the borders shut for several hours on the afternoon of 9/11, and again after the election this month. Canadian friends were honestly shocked when I, a caricature of a bluestocking blue-stater (I've spent most of my life in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland and Wisconsin, with short stays in Washington state and the bluest part of Colorado), said that I would in many ways prefer to live in the United States, and not just because it's home. They assume that it's better, more comfortable, to be in a place seemingly more in tune with one's own political and philosophical leanings. Right after the election, many asked me if I would now apply for Canadian citizenship. I don't intend to do that, because experiencing the anti-Americanism I've described has been instructive: Living here and coping with it has forced me to confront my own feelings about America. And it's helped me discover what I do value about it: its contradictions, its eccentricities, its expansive spirit, all the intensity and opportunity of a deeply flawed, widely inconsistent, but always interesting country. Perhaps I am a typical American, after all. Author's e-mail: nora_jacobson@hotmail.com Nora Jacobson is an American medical sociologist living in Toronto.
Sunday, November 28, 2004 5:41 PM
GINOBIFFARONI
Sunday, November 28, 2004 6:17 PM
SIGMANUNKI
Sunday, November 28, 2004 6:26 PM
Monday, November 29, 2004 8:21 AM
PBI
Monday, November 29, 2004 8:58 AM
Monday, November 29, 2004 12:56 PM
Monday, November 29, 2004 4:23 PM
RUE
I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!
Monday, November 29, 2004 7:01 PM
UNICORN
Quote:Originally posted by Hardware: Quote:Originally posted by Jasonzzz: I should explain better. When I say bring some. The some are issues and topics for discussion. Dear Loser, This thread is about Canadians wondering if their country is safe given the increasing fascist bent of the US government. When the issue of how political dissenters are seeking asylum and how others are considering securing their children from a possible draft for an unpopular war was raised Hero jumped in obfuscating the truth about why a draft law was proposed and then proclaiming Ohio could take Canada, but it wouldn't be worth the effort. Xion47 jumped in and pointed out how free enterprise medicine Americans are going to evil socialized medicine Canada to secure influenza shots not available in the US and posted a handy link on how to cut through red tape for Americans looking to stay in Canada. Connorflynn had to jump in and laugh at the Canadian military and Sigmanuki took issue with that pointing out the fallacy of a US invasion of Canada. Hero goosestepped in and suggested taking away socialized health care to suppress rebellion in the newly conquered Canadian provinces. Then there was a pissing contest between Connorflynn and Ginobiffaroni with you chiming in and discussing root causes of conflict, blame and reward/punishment. Ginobiffaroni invited all Americans to stop dicking around with other countries and mind our own business and Barnstormer took offense and began putting on display behavior to impress lord knows who. Then when Ghoulman drew the inevitable line of comparison between the written words and threats of the American members of this thread to the Nazi brownshirts Barnstormer tried to turn it around and point it at the Canadians. At which time, thoroughly sick of it all, I said you three did not reflect the opinion of every American. Was this wrong? No. As a matter of fact since you three seem to be representing the flyover states of the inbred, misogynizing heartland I think you have validated the question asked in the beginning of this thread. How safe is Canada? Not very, if only judging by the knuckle-dragging, chest-thumping behavior of you neanderthals. You've proven the point admirably. You have to shout down every dissenting opinion, no matter how well based or supportable. So, using you three as a model, given that the US is on the road to fascism and dissenters are leaving for other, freedom-loving countries, it logically follows that the US, in an attempt to quash the dissent, just as you have tried to quash dissent by posting, long, rambling exposition, will try to do the same. Since those dissenters are in other sovereign states it follows that the US will go get them. And when you three haven't been able to bury the conversation in your screeching you have resorted to threats. I am confident the US will act accordingly. An invasion seems inevitable. Post here if you think Hero, Barnstormer and Jasonzzz have at any time admired Hitler or praised Nazi Germany's accomplishments.
Quote:Originally posted by Jasonzzz: I should explain better. When I say bring some. The some are issues and topics for discussion.
Monday, November 29, 2004 7:11 PM
Monday, November 29, 2004 7:34 PM
LEXIBLOCK
Quote:Originally posted by TauSetiPrime: An actor who wins an Academy Award is no more or less qualified to determine the nature of politics than any other average citizen.
Monday, November 29, 2004 8:00 PM
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 2:47 AM
Quote:Originally posted by TauSetiPrime: Quote:I also agree with GHOULMAN in that the idea of the U.S. invading Canada is laughable. Don't they have oil? Then it probably won't be so laughable in 15 years when there is very little left.
Quote:I also agree with GHOULMAN in that the idea of the U.S. invading Canada is laughable.
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 3:03 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Hero: Kerry was the draft guy. I don't understand why it got put on Bush.
Quote:Good thing I voted for Bush.
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 4:40 AM
CONNORFLYNN
Quote:Originally posted by LexiBlock Don't they have oil? Then it probably won't be so laughable in 15 years when there is very little left.
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 5:28 AM
HERO
Quote:Originally posted by LexiBlock: Quote:Originally posted by Hero: Kerry was the draft guy. I don't understand why it got put on Bush. Because political observers observe, not just rely on the latest propganda from Fox news.
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 7:09 AM
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 7:56 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Hero: Kerry was the draft guy. I don't understand why it got put on Bush. I watched the debates on NBC. Kerry said "inrease size of army by 40,000". And the Bill to reintroduce the draft was avaliable through numerous sources w/both the Congress and the media, so eliminating FOX propaganda we are left we a Democratic candidate who wants and bigger army and a Democratic Bill that would reintroduce the draft. Those are the basic facts. Starting with those two facts its easier to get to Kerry wanting a draft then to get to Bush wanting a draft. When it comes to the draft and Bush, they start with spin and end with lies and ignore the facts.
Quote: Bush Hater logic: ME HATE BUSH, ME HATE DRAFT. ME THINK BUSH MUST WANT DRAFT! also: BUSH HATE TERRORISTS, ME HATE BUSH. ME LOVE TERRORISTS! and: ME HATE BUSH, FRANCE HATE BUSH. ME LOVE FRANCE! oh, ME LOVE FIREFLY, ME HATE BUSH. BUSH MOVE MOVIE RELEASE DATE!
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 10:15 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Unicorn: No, you're right about half of that. Bush and Kerry BOTH claimed to be staunchly against the draft.
Quote: So, for the record and especially for all of those out there who continue to be mistaken on this point, we're not unAmerican just because we disagree with you!
Quote: And dude, there's nothing wrong with France
Quote: we're too lazy to learn a second language; most people in Europe speak several, you know? It wouldn't kill us to learn a bit if we're planning on travelling.
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 7:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Hero: So take your Kerry voting, wine tasting, Bush Hating, terror sympathizing, Canadian Bacon eating, Streisand listening, Heinze ketchup dipping, French licking, pansy political opinion and build us all a bridge to the Clinton library's adult section cause I gots me some crime to punish here in the big city and that means I gots to go.
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JAYNEZTOWN
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