Canadian Identity Where is it?
#2
Posted 27 November 2004 - 11:40 AM
I think our social and gov't programs suck. However, the 'The Canadian Identity' is based on our valuing these institutions, flawed though they may be, and that we put the compassionate care of others high on the list, as opposed to other places where the right to individual greed is the 'summum bonum' of life.
#3
Posted 27 November 2004 - 06:28 PM
Cartman, on Nov 27 2004, 06:02 PM, said:
so then Canadian identity is full of holes and rotting. a bit like moldy swiss cheese?
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#4
Posted 27 November 2004 - 07:08 PM
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Like our Heritage Minister asking businesses to provide invoices for flags that never existed so she could say that she handed out one million of them (without actually doing it of course)?
#5
Posted 27 November 2004 - 09:41 PM
What indicates "anti-Canadianism" to you? Certainly, you do not accept everything as equally valuable for Canada do you?! Does harmonization with the US indicate anti-Canadian sentiment especially if our institutions are more efficient?
#6
Posted 27 November 2004 - 09:47 PM
Socially progressive in general
econnomically diversified depending on each provinces
culturally, 2 different culture, the canadian one and the quebec one, and both linked with the american one. and both enrich by multiple culture.
politically fucked up...
#7
Posted 27 November 2004 - 10:05 PM
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Is Canada only a health system?
As to employment insurance, it has become a weird transfer system from poor people to poor people. People pay into it but will never receive payments and the total contribution tops out at about $800. It's an extremely regressive tax.
The Quiet Revolution in Quebec in the 1960s confronted English Canada with a major dilemma. Canada has been grappling with the dilemma over the past 40 years or so.
Lester Pearson chose one option immediately (special status) but Pierre Trudeau quickly nixed that. Trudeau's solution has been top-down - make people fit into a model that he theorized. Canada is now the world centre for political correctness.
This story is far from finished. (The US Civil War was about 30 or 40 years in the making.)
What is Canada to me? Most Canadians are polite, boring, self-effacing, respectful and honest. We are not self-important. We are civilized.
#8
Posted 28 November 2004 - 11:07 AM
Trudeau's declaration that Canada is a bilingual country has done more to segregate our population based on language that it has brought us together. We waste untold billions on a failed attempt to socially engineer our population into believing that legislating bilingualism will magically entice people to run right out and learn a language (French) that in the big scheme of thing's is a dying language, and artificially inflating a need for it does not make it so. People have simply not bought into this pipe dream and are not about to. I just wonder how long before Ottawa finally admits that their attempt to turn Canada into a French nation has failed miserably. Think how much money will be saved each year when they finally do admit to this failure. Until that happens we will continue to throw good money after bad.
#9
Posted 28 November 2004 - 07:17 PM
Gene Cernan, the last man on the moon, December 1972.
#10
Posted 29 November 2004 - 07:56 AM
What do you take as the Canadian identity? The opinion of the majority? Does this mean that the minority is un-Canadian? We have all sorts of different viewpoints on this forum, so who is the real Canadian, and who is the imposter with the Canadian birth certificate and passport? Is it Maplesyrup or Stoker? Caesar or Argus? They hold radically different viewpoints on virtually everything, so one of them must be out-of-step with Canadian "identity."
The truth is that the idea of a nation-state is a fiction. The only aggregates one could truly be said to be a part of are those one joins voluntarily, and even then, you have to be aware of compromises in the mind of the individual. A lot of Liberal voters in the last election probably didn't agree with the Liberal platform, but compromised because they were afraid of the Conservatives.
I believe most of the evil in this world (the murders and genocides, the rapes, thefts, massacres, pillaging and so forth) can be put down to a tendency to see people as aggregates rather than individuals. You would think we could learn from this, but evidently some of us can't.
#11 Guest_eureka_*
Posted 29 November 2004 - 09:03 AM
It most certainly is part of our identity and the idea, itself, is well worth exploring. Understanding better where we came from and who we are does wonders for the psyche. The discussion will never get it right but, it could lead to a greater awareness of what Canada is and why it is.
Who knows, the American wannabees may even begin to appreciate their good fortune in being Canadian.
#12
Posted 29 November 2004 - 12:05 PM
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So, there is no such thing as patriotism towards the US or Canada? How can one be patriotic to something that supposedly does not exist? Just because there exists diversity, this does not mean that there is no unity.
#13
Posted 29 November 2004 - 12:22 PM
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And so ends the useless academic pursuit of the social sciences and economics. Social, cultural and political groups do not exist, there are only individuals. We return you to your regularly scheduled program of individualism in the 1790's.
#14
Posted 29 November 2004 - 12:36 PM
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How can one worship a god-king who is not a god? How can one faithfully believe in and give offerings to the Lightning Spirit? How can one set out to find a Northern Passage to the orient?
You're seriously telling me that believing in something makes it real, or can turn lies into truth? How many fingers do you see, Winston?
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Read my post again - carefully, this time.
#15
Posted 29 November 2004 - 10:18 PM
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Of course, individual effort can achieve more through collective means. But anonymous co-operation works best through markets with prices. Such markets do not always work. But other mechanisms are available. Family, corporations, government. Notice the mix of voluntary and involuntary association.
Hugo, would you admit that Finns might have a reason to form a club since they speak the same language and this avoids translation problems?
Or, what about Jews and the diamond trade. Why and how do people form clubs, Hugo? I gave the example of a Condominum management committee.
To me, Libertarians and Anarchists are like new Converts. They have discovered the Price Mechanism, and now are more Catholic than the Pope. Their belief is so simple. In fact, it's not.
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Getting back to Cartman's ingenious post, how do we understand the cumulative behaviour of many individuals?
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Let's think.

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