EdWort said:I find it amazing. I had to to work in Hull, Quebec a few times, but I always stayed overnight on the Ontario side where they are more friendly to English speakers.
Anyway, I start my class the first day with a WTF or "What's up with this" question.
I made the observation that while staying on the Ontario side of the river, I noticed all sorts of signs in English AND French. All the street signs were bi-lingual. The problem is, on the Kebecky side, all the signs are in FRENCH ONLY. So I ask What's up with that?
Man, you could hear a pin drop in the class room, then crickets for 20 seconds before some dude in the back says "You don't want to go there man". Then another student says "Don't get me started".
I took the English speakers out for beers that night on the right side of the river. We had a blast. Canucks are great hosts!
mrfocus said:Maybe you don't understand how exceptional it is that French is still spoken in North America today, despite being surrounded by 50 times our population of solely English speakers (and a few Spanish ones in the south USA).
Please tell me you don't actually believe that.mrfocus said:Most English Canadians are frustrated with the existence of the Bloc simply because it means they don't have local representation at the federal level as Quebecois do.
Fingers said:We're not really talking culture here, we're talking language. I think there is a greater disparity of culture between Newfoundland and Saskatchewan than between Quebec and Ontario for example.
mr x said:Please tell me you don't actually believe that.
eriktlupus said:maybe ya all should kick their ass out and let them eat their french culture instead of sucking the life from the rest of canada
0.58% of about 5 million: 0.58/100*5000000 = 29000, you can see how allowing tens of thousands immigrants who would vote against separation would help.
Well here you're comparing Quebec against the entire rest of the country. As I said, I think there is a greater cultural disparity between right and left coasts and the prairies. If you averaged them out you get what you see. I imagine that if you made the same comparison chart between Newfoundland and Saskatchewan specifically you'd see a huge difference too. Compare the rest of Canada, including Quebec, against any other province alone and you'd likely see that trend.mrfocus said:I really don't think so. Actually, here is an image from a textbook for my Marketing class:
Didn't Quebec get recognized as a distinct society by the feds recently? That was a pretty major step in giving Quebec unique standing among all the rest of the provinces and I think that's what ticks off most of us. I tend to think of us all as Canadians and equal with one another. It doesn't appear as if Quebec wants equality, they want something the rest of us don't have. Why be recognized as a distinct society? I can only think of one reason. Special treatment. If Quebec wants something special, why should the rest of us kick in our money to pay for it? Go ahead and be special, just like the rest of us.mrfocus said:So basically, when we show any sign of independence, the federal government wants us, and in between the referendums on the separation, they just don't care. It's quite the love-hate relationship.
Fingers said:Didn't Quebec get recognized as a distinct society by the feds recently?
Fingers said:It would be difficult for it to leave with its borders intact because of treaties drawn up with native populations that originally drew those borders.
david_42 said:Some times, he'll ask people to speak English so he can understand them.
That wasn't my comment. I expect all elected leaders to represent their electorate. The thought that somehow the PQ does this for Quebec and others do not in their respective provinces is ridiculous.mrfocus said:Please tell me that you WOULDN'T vote for a federal party that promised to defend New Brunswick, let's say by asking more money to widen your economy which mainly relies on ONE ressource, the Ocean, and which is going through some of the hardest times ever.
FlyGuy said:So we just used all our oil money to buy a federal party and the government so we could get our way. Sooooooo much simpler than Quebec's tactic.
I'm quite neutral on most topics in this thread, but this is the one comment that strikes me. While signs relating to public safety (like street signs) should probably be standardized, shouldn't privately owned signs and advertisements be ungoverned? In particular, advertising should be fairly free in terms of language. In a capitalist society, advertising will take care of itself. If you advertise a product in Swahili in a region where no one speaks that language, your advertisement will be ineffective. Likewise, if you advertise in English where a majority of the population has a vested interest in keeping their French roots intact, your product isn't likely to sell as well as if you had advertised in French, or at least with a bilingual message.mrfocus said:Although I agree with the law that signs and such that publicize either your company or the direct products it sells (e.g. menus or white boards) should be in French
Dude -- I was just joking man. This thread is in desperate need of some levity.mrfocus said:Yeah, that's why I can see a day in the far future where Québec will separate. Once all your oil is gone, tough luck (not trying to be mean). We have developed industries (Hydro-electricity, Pharmaceutical engineering, computer games, movie production) that will continue to prosper in the long run.
You're dancing around my question. Do you believe that the rest of Canada is jealous of the Bloc because they are doing a job that the rest of Canadian politicians do not?mrfocus said:So you really that that the elected leader for the NPD really protects and seeks to have your rights defended in the house of commons, as someone from Halifax?
mr x said:You're dancing around my question. Do you believe that the rest of Canada is jealous of the Bloc because they are doing a job that the rest of Canadian politicians do not?
Fingers said:I'm far less interested in provincial politics than federal politics. What's good for the nation is good for me.
Yuri_Rage said:I'm quite neutral on most topics in this thread, but this is the one comment that strikes me. While signs relating to public safety (like street signs) should probably be standardized, shouldn't privately owned signs and advertisements be ungoverned? In particular, advertising should be fairly free in terms of language. In a capitalist society, advertising will take care of itself. If you advertise a product in Swahili in a region where no one speaks that language, your advertisement will be ineffective. Likewise, if you advertise in English where a majority of the population has a vested interest in keeping their French roots intact, your product isn't likely to sell as well as if you had advertised in French, or at least with a bilingual message.
Why is that bad? Society is adapting. Let it happen.mrfocus said:Even today, will all the efforts, in Downtown Montréal, even when the business sign is in French, there are places where no one at all speaks French.
Yuri_Rage said:Why is that bad? Society is adapting. Let it happen.
It's a yes or no question. Either you believe what you say or you don't.mrfocus said:Not as directly.
If people need a xenophopic French speaking place to hang out, I'm pretty sure there are planes leaving for France on daily basis.mrfocus said:Wouldn't you find it weird if you entered a store in Texas and no one spoke English, only Spanish.
mr x said:It's a yes or no question. Either you believe what you say or you don't.