Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Geoff Olynyk's avatar

Left unspoken here (and I know Andrew Potter is well aware of this) is the idea, dominant in the quasi-revolutionary years of 2015-2021, that “doing what we’ve been trying to do for the past 157 years — making Canadians, out of those who are already here along with the hundreds of thousands of newcomers who are arriving every year” is actively a bad thing. That industrial modernity is a bad thing, that tribalism and mysticism (“knowledges”) are to be lauded. Culminating in the low point of Canada Day 2020-21 where there was a lot of serious social pressure to not do any Canada Day celebrations, at least in the big non-Alberta cities.

The focus wasn’t on repairing, it was on tearing down. To be replaced by … something? Post-Canada, or pre-Canada?

American writer Noah Smith wrote something good this weekend: the very success of our industrial modernity has led us to forget how close we always skate to being reduced to the state of wild animals and starvation. Our institutions need to be celebrated and built up, constantly.

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/the-elemental-foe

Happy Canada Day everyone.

Expand full comment
Allan Stratton's avatar

Canada's greatest strength is that its inception was based on the accommodation of demographic differences. In the 19th century, the biggest divides were between the English and the French and between the Protestants against the Catholics. We built a country that accommodated those differences and provided us with both English Protestant and French Catholic prime ministers within our first 27 years.

That's why live-and-let-live multiculturalism has come more easily to us than other nations, despite occasional racial, ethnic, and religious flareups. We are a country that works hard to be comfortable with difference and to benefit from sharing our experiences. It also accounts for why we have led the way, legislatively, on human rights, especially relative to our neighbour to the south.

The brokenness people talk about isn't about the country. It's about the state into which our current government has let our institutions fall, thanks to its regressive intersectional politics that divide us into eternal oppressor/oppressed categories based on race, gender and other 'identities'. See also its performative nation-bashing, exemplified by its immediate hysteria and five-month global flag lowering over still unsubstantiated rumours of "unmarked graves". This government, despite calling itself "Liberal", has led a performative frontal assault on our core strength: a commitment to open the liberal values of live-and-let-live accommodation.

Expand full comment
44 more comments...

No posts