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The sickness of Canadian Anti-Americanism
Front Page Magazine ^ | 7 Mar 03 | Jamie Glazov

Posted on 10/28/2005 3:00:35 PM PDT by Fair Go

The Sickness of Canadian Anti-Americanism By Jamie Glazov FrontPageMagazine.com | March 7, 2003

Canadian anti-Americanism has always been a perfect reflection of the pathological nature of anti-Americanism as a whole. Indeed, in Canada, where I am a citizen and have grown up most of my life, anti-Americanism has literally defined the national identity and culture of this country – and in the most repulsive and embarrassing ways.

Today, Canadian anti-Americanism is preventing our present Liberal government from giving full-hearted support to the U.S. against Saddam Hussein. The Canadian leadership would rather exhibit its “independence” of the Americans than to confront a brutal dictator who equals Hitler, Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot in their monstrosity.

This reality explains why Mark Kingwell’s recent column “What distinguishes us from Americans,” in Canada’s national newspaper, the National Post, infuriated me as immensely as it did.

Kingwell defends the reality that much of Canadian identity has been built on Canada defining itself in opposition to the United States. He writes, “I have never understood why this is considered inadequate or feeble. If you were the only dissenter in a room holding a dozen people, standing up and saying `I’m not the same as you’ would be a clear mark of moral courage.”

Really?

Suppose this scenario occurs during the Second World War and the other eleven people want to stop Hitler in his tracks and to prevent the Nazification of the world and the mass genocide of Jews. Would exhibiting your “independence” for the sake of fulfilling your little-brother complex be a mark of “moral courage”?

Many Canadian nationalists think so.

The analogy I use above perfectly suits the embarrassing and immoral behaviour of Canadian nationalists throughout the Cold War, especially under the leadership of Pierre Trudeau, when anti-Americanism was seen as being more cutting-edge than confronting and fighting the genocidal Soviet regime.

This psychic illness is founded on Canada’s desperate desire to be “different” than the Americans -- a result of Canada being built on the “counter-revolution.” When the British colonies revolted against their masters in 1776, Canadians became the first anti-Americans. Canada is based on anti-Americanism. Without anti-Americanism -- as one author has quipped -- Canada would cease to exist.

While Kingwell conspicuously avoids the issue of how bearing the mark of “moral courage” translated into many Canadian nationalists engaging in Gulag denial during the Cold War, the historical record stands firmly in place: the Soviet regime was an expansionist and totalitarian regime that exterminated millions of its own people. Consequently, as the de-classified documents from the Soviet archives now prove, the Canadian nationalists who demonized the United States, and exonerated the Soviet Union, in the Cold War, for the sake of anti-Americanism, were completely wrong.

Yet no apologies are forthcoming.

But at least we now understand why Canadian “nationalist” writers and historians, such as John Warnock, Donald Creighton, and James Minifie, wrote interpretations and histories about the Cold War that demonized the U.S. and left names such as Joseph Stalin in the footnotes.

As a Russian émigré, I am not humoured by Kingwell’s assault on historical memory; I am not humoured by Gulag denial just as a Jewish person wouldn’t be humoured by Holocaust denial.

While I was engaged in my doctoral studies in history at York University in Toronto, I would confront many of my colleagues about this issue. Why, I asked them, were they reluctant to face the errors of Canadian nationalists vis-à-vis the Cold War? Were they not aware of how the documents from the former Soviet archives were discrediting almost everything Canadian nationalists had said about the Cold War? My colleagues’ favourite response was to shrug their shoulders and to dismiss my arguments as being too “hung up” on “the past.” The Cold War “was over,” they told me, and it was silly to chase down “old ghosts”. My “obsession” with the Soviet archives, they patiently explained to me, was analogous to “necrophilia.” And these were historians.

The only historical necrophilia they supported, it seems, was the variety that found more sins of American foreign policy and capitalism -- not of socialism.

Kingwell thinks it is a badge of “moral courage” to stand up to the Americans. How about during the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962, when Prime Minister John Diefenbaker refused to put Canadian forces on an increased level of alert (Defcon 3) in order to show that he wouldn’t be “pushed around” by President John Kennedy? Since Canada had a bilateral defence alliance with the United States for the defence of the North American continent, Diefenbaker’s inaction left an enormous gap in continental defence.

There is nothing “moral” about Canadian anti-Americanism. And nothing logical either. I have always found it humorous how Canadians look down at Americans for loving themselves “too much”, but how they simultaneously swell with a distorted form of patriotic pride at being unlike and better than Americans. Canadian nationalists also always pride themselves on their politically-correct tolerance and "multi-culturalism" while engaging in anti-Americanism -- a disposition, as sociologist Paul Hollander has demonstrated, that is directly related with racism, sexism, and anti-Semitism.

In Canada, of course, it has always been legitimate to be a bigot, as long as it involves hating Americans.

Kingwell refers to how little Americans know about us. He explains that “American ignorance is a staple of our richly ironic strain of humour.” Really? I never found anything slightly “rich” in this humour at all. Growing up in Canada, I was always greatly entertained by the endless and smug complaining about how "stupid" Americans are because of their ignorance about Canada. Let’s be serious: why would Americans in Los Angeles and New York City need to know anything about Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, or about anything else Canadian?

Kingwell ends his essay by saying that Canadians sometimes wish the U.S. “had a little more of what makes us great.” Uh, sorry, but a little bit more of what exactly? Perhaps, instead, it would be wiser for us to focus on giving up on clinging to the ingredients of our “moral courage”, which includes the joke of bilingualism – English Canada’s last pretence of possessing any unique characteristics whatsoever. Let’s admit it, without bilingualism, English Canadians would no longer be able to say, "We’re not like those Americans," without someone else rejoining: "Oh? And how is that?" And there will be no answer, because there will be nothing to say.

If we just manage to get over our little brother complex, then maybe we will also one day no longer have to victimize ourselves with those torturous and emotionally-excruciating conversations about Margaret Atwood and Pierre Berton, in which so many Canadians attempt to show their un-American stripes by discussing novels that no human being outside of Canada has ever heard of, nor would ever read under sane circumstances. And we would also be liberated from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, an entity that it takes masochism to tune into, and that wouldn’t survive five minutes if its life depended on the tastes and desires of Canadians themselves.

Indeed, if we purged ourselves of Kingwell’s mark of "moral courage", Canada’s celebration of mediocrity and, more importantly, its exoneration of evil regimes and mass murderers around the world, would finally come to its long-awaited conclusion.


TOPICS: Canada; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: antiamericanism; canada; glazov
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To: drtom
Consider the source.

Oh , We have. My only hope is that they contribute generously to FR for all the space they've wasted. What they don't understand is that Americans and Canadians have nothing to learn from them .

So what if Canadians like red coats, bearskin hats , the drone of the pipes and a waving Ensign. Seems to me Americans like the same things in their blue and gray , their marching bands and waving Stars and Stripes.

What they don't understand is that we've fought each other , found accommodation , stood together in the blackest of times , died together , married each other and when the economic shit hits the fan , both got shitty . Like it or not we're dependent on one another , stuck to each other and anyone who doesn't recognize that needs a lesson in economics and geography .

61 posted on 10/30/2005 12:35:09 PM PST by Snowyman
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To: NZerFromHK
I think Australia should send Sir Les Patterson to Canada as cultural ambassador. If they need someone more left wing Dame Edna could go instead.
It is indeed amazing that Canadians take themselves seriously and actually assume moral superiority, even although it makes them defacto supporters of Saddam Hussein and terrorism.
62 posted on 10/30/2005 1:20:15 PM PST by Fair Go
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To: NZerFromHK

LMAO.
I just cheked out that site " http://www.vivelecanada.ca" and on the home page it had an section for Canadians to donate to Amercan victims of the Katrina hurricane.
Man, you just can't get more anti-Amercan than that.
You shoulda stayed in Hong Kong with your boss pal Mao rather than come here to stir up trouble between 2 great neighbours.


63 posted on 10/30/2005 1:56:25 PM PST by CaptainCanada ("only 2 things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity" - Albert Einstein)
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To: CaptainCanada

Just about everybody offered the US assistance after Katrina. Canada was not alone.


64 posted on 10/30/2005 2:08:07 PM PST by Fair Go
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To: Fair Go

The website was being cited as an anti-American website.
Go to a real anti-American website -- umm say Al Qeada, or Hamas and see if they have a Katrina donation section.
We (north Americans) have REAL enemies who will slit the throats of you and me and our kids and they could give a rats-ass if we are conservative, liberal, christian, atheist, etc,.
We need to stick together else we will all lose the war against terrorists and islamists.
When you further the anti-Canadian or Anti-American rhetoric you are aiding and abetting the enemy..


65 posted on 10/30/2005 2:34:15 PM PST by CaptainCanada ("only 2 things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity" - Albert Einstein)
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To: Fair Go
yeah but captian canada likes to have it both ways... he goes after NZ here about stirring up trouble between two great neighbors but on another thread he talks smack about the American military.... he i would dare say ****GASP**** is confused and/or a liberal that is lost...
66 posted on 10/30/2005 3:02:05 PM PST by Americanwolf (Support the Minutemen Civil Defense Corp...Doing the Job our government won't !)
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To: Fair Go
Just about everybody offered the US assistance after Katrina. Canada was not alone.

How many other countries donated blood 24 hours after 9/11?
67 posted on 10/30/2005 3:31:43 PM PST by drtom
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To: drtom

I am sure plenty of others would have had they been as geographically close to the US as Canada.


68 posted on 10/30/2005 3:34:56 PM PST by Fair Go (Sir Less Patterson for Ambassador to Canada)
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To: Fair Go
Oh, geography has nothing to do with it. Blood transfusion, especially plasma and platelets can be easily packed and shipped around the globe (and they are).

How many other nations sent ships, rescue and relief teams, doctors, and even veterinaries down to NO after Katrina?

Nice try.
69 posted on 10/30/2005 3:46:37 PM PST by drtom
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To: drtom
You are flogging a dead horse. Other countries donated heaps. Some of these other countries also donated heaps during the tsunami disaster earlier in the year. Some even lost their lives trying to help the tsunami victims. I think if you do your homework there was no need for people in far away places to give blood after 9/11 as the US Red Cross was inundated with an oversupply of blood. How about Canadians stop wallowing in self-pity and start thinking about the innocent people who have died in terrorist attacks.
70 posted on 10/30/2005 3:57:38 PM PST by Fair Go (Sir Less Patterson for Ambassador to Canada)
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To: Fair Go
No offense to Glazov or any Canadian at that but don't we have to care for this to matter?

They don't like us, so what?

71 posted on 10/30/2005 3:57:46 PM PST by muir_redwoods (Free Sirhan Sirhan, after all, the bastard who killed Mary Jo Kopechne is walking around free)
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To: muir_redwoods

Very true.


72 posted on 10/30/2005 4:00:22 PM PST by Fair Go (Sir Less Patterson for Ambassador to Canada)
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To: Fair Go
There was also no need for the Canadians to give blood, yet they did. There was no need for Hydro Quebec personnel to travel thousands of miles down to Florida after the hurricanes to help reestablish the power lines, yet they did. There was no need for BC firefighters to help with the California blazes, yet they did. There was no needfor Bell Canada to move people to Washington State to bring phone lines back up after the storm, yet they did. And there was no need for Canadians to host us Gander people like kings for up to a week after 9/11, and yet they did.

So, hey, if it gives you pleasure down there on the other side of the globe, by all means have fun collecting anecdotal pieces and construing a warped reality. In the end it is the persistent social imaginary on both sides of the border that counts and this is something you can only experience, not read about it in some BS MSM poll.
73 posted on 10/30/2005 4:15:19 PM PST by drtom
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To: drtom

Grow up!


74 posted on 10/30/2005 4:22:52 PM PST by Fair Go (Sir Less Patterson for Ambassador to Canada)
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To: Fair Go; Snowyman; CaptainCanada

LOL. The weasel defense. Cute.


75 posted on 10/30/2005 4:30:01 PM PST by drtom
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To: drtom
"There was also no need for the Canadians to give blood, yet they did. There was no need for Hydro Quebec personnel to travel thousands of miles down to Florida after the hurricanes to help reestablish the power lines, yet they did. There was no need for BC firefighters to help with the California blazes, yet they did. There was no needfor Bell Canada to move people to Washington State to bring phone lines back up after the storm, yet they did. And there was no need for Canadians to host us Gander people like kings for up to a week after 9/11, and yet they did.". It doesn't appear to matter that we constantly try to be good friends and neighbours to our south. The thousands we sheltered in our homes in the days after 9/11 (as another example). Some here (with an agenda which puzzles me), appear far more interested in exploiting the stupid things one or a few Canadians say or do, but ignore the hundreds of positive things each country does for each other every day.
76 posted on 10/30/2005 4:55:26 PM PST by CaptainCanada (Don't pee in my boots and then tell me it's raining............)
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To: drtom

Don't worry Aussies have done nice things for Canadians. Like write their history essays for them so they don't bomb out of school.


77 posted on 10/30/2005 5:01:07 PM PST by Fair Go (Sir Less Patterson for Ambassador to Canada)
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To: CaptainCanada
Some here (with an agenda which puzzles me)

It is indeed fascinating, isn't it? Even more so, if it is a third party, 10,000 miles away, that never lived on either side of the border for an extended period of time.
I maintain my earlier suspicion that it merely constitutes post-pubertary behavior by dint of which they try to solicit recognition from the tough kid in class through kicking the meek. As an added bonus, they get to detract from their own shortfalls and impotence. Really, just a primitive schoolyard pattern.
78 posted on 10/30/2005 5:16:29 PM PST by drtom
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To: drtom

Do you need someone to help you with your replies?


79 posted on 10/30/2005 5:20:46 PM PST by Fair Go (Sir Less Patterson for Ambassador to Canada)
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To: Fair Go

When we stick our beaks in Aussie business and post a bunch of horseshit about it, I wonder how your sensitivities react cobber.


80 posted on 10/30/2005 7:51:34 PM PST by albertabound (It's good to beeeeee Albertabound)
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