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Land of the free (A positive article about Canada)
The Spectator ^ | ??/??/2003 | Paul Robinson

Posted on 06/04/2003 8:02:40 AM PDT by IvanT

You’ve probably heard that story about the Inuit having 50 words for snow? Well, the sign of a genuine Canadian is that he has 50 words for doughnut. When a glacial wind is howling through Moose Jaw and Medicine Hat and it has been dark for five months in Tuktoyaktuk, Canadians head for Tim Horton’s, Dunkin’ Donuts, Robin’s Donuts, Country Style, Coffee Time, Baker’s Dozen, and all the rest of them. When it comes to the perfect doughnut, Canada is the unquestioned world leader.

In the less important matters of world politics and military strategy, Canada is rarely seen as a leader. Indeed, Canada-bashing is now very much in vogue, especially in right-wing circles in Britain and America. Canadians themselves tend to be self-deprecating. But insist enough, and you will find that under the chuckles about not knowing the words to the national anthem there are fierce patriots who will tell you that Canada is the best country in the world, and mean it.

Indeed, Britons should look to Canada for an example of civilised 21st-century living. There they will find a state which is unafraid of preserving its sovereignty in the face of enormous pressure to integrate with its gigantic neighbour; a state which is prepared to fight when fighting is needed, but which also knows how to make peace when peace is called for; a society which combines prosperity and opportunity for the individual with socialised medicine, a successful system of public education, and far-sighted subsidies to the arts and cultural groups. Canada really is the best place in the world; a fact repeatedly endorsed by that bête noire of the American Right, the United Nations.

But this is far from the prevalent view in the Anglosphere. Canada represents all that the Mark Steyns of the world abhor: peace-loving, half-French, welfare statist — what Pat Buchanan so aptly calls ‘Canuckistan’. The latest outrage was Canada’s refusal to endorse the Anglo–American invasion of Iraq. Prime Minister Jean Chrétien has never been invited to the ranch in Texas and almost certainly never will be now, unlike his more subservient British and Australian counterparts. ‘Wimps!’ shouted the front cover of the US National Review, recommending that America bomb Canada at once. (They forget, of course, that the last time it came to a fight Canada burned down the White House.)

More seriously, there seems to be a widespread delusion that because Canadians are Nice, the sort of people who invent UN peacekeeping, promote multilateral institutions and gentle notions such as ‘human security’ and ‘soft power’, and advocate international disarmament and the rule of law, they are necessarily lacking in moral fibre.

The fact is that while others sat out the first few years of both world wars, the Canadians were in there with Britain from the word go. It was a Canadian unit that took the surrender of the Boers at Paardeburg, a Canadian corps that routed the Germans at Vimy Ridge and Amiens, Canadian warships which convoyed half of all maritime traffic across the Atlantic during the second world war, Canadian infantrymen who held the line at Kapyong in Korea, Canadian aeroplanes which dropped one third of all the Nato bombs on Yugoslavia in 1999, and Canadian soldiers who died in Afghanistan fighting the War on Terror last year.

When the going got tough at Srebrenica, the Dutch packed up and left. Not many miles away, when the Croatian army had moved in to massacre the population of the Medak pocket, the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry met them head-on. Outnumbered, outgunned, under intense and prolonged fire from machine-guns, mortars, and artillery, the PPCLI held their ground and forced back the murderers, saving the lives of hundreds of defenceless civilians.

Canadians have shown the same ruthless cool on their home ground. When Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau — the epitome of nattily dressed, French-speaking surrender monkeys — was asked how far he would go to defeat the terrorists of the Front de Libération du Quebec, he replied, ‘Just watch me!’ One day later, he declared martial law, deployed tanks in the streets of Montreal, arrested and detained hundreds without trial, and crushed the FLQ in short order. ‘There’s a lot of bleeding hearts around who just don’t like to see people with helmets and guns,’ he commented. ‘All I can say is, go bleed.’

Canadians know how to fight, and when it is needed they catch the torch and take up the quarrel with the foe. But they also have the common sense to know when fighting is not needed. According to the National Post newspaper, the Canadian government reviewed the so-called ‘dossiers’ on Iraq and dismissed the hype about weapons of mass destruction as unjustified by the facts. In retrospect, we can see that they were right, and that Canadian abstention from the invasion was based on the most sensible assessment of the actual threat.

Canada’s commitment to worldwide peace and disarmament is no less fervent than Tony Blair’s; merely more effective. Ottawa almost singlehandedly, in the face of massive international resistance and through the force of its moral influence alone, persuaded the rest of the world to ban those most deadly and indiscriminate of weapons, landmines. Everybody may remember the fashionplate princess and her Angolan photo-op, but the agreement was called the Ottawa Treaty long before she sailed up to pose with it.

Mirroring American claims that one is ‘either with us or against us’, a British government minister recently told me that Europeans must choose whether to be allies of or rivals to the United States. Canada’s example proves that it is possible to find a ‘third way’. The Canadians partner their colossal neighbour when it is right to do so, but stand up to it when they disagree with its plans. Imagine if Britain had a similarly independent foreign policy! Next time, instead of allowing the EU to destroy British livelihoods and resources through the Common Fisheries Policy, Mr Blair could follow the Canadian example: Ottawa seized a Spanish fishing vessel by force, then displayed its illegal nets in front of the United Nations building in New York. Equally, why should Britain feel so pressured to adopt the euro? Canada maintains a separate currency very happily, despite the huge American market right next door.

On a more emotional level as well, Canada offers many parallels for Britons. Canadians are far closer to us than their American cousins. Research shows that American and Canadian values have been diverging significantly in recent years. Thus, while 50 per cent of Americans attend church regularly, only 20 per cent of Canadians claim to. Like Britain, Canada has become a decidedly secular country. It is also a model of multicultural integration. The critics who complain that it is too European only in economic terms — high-tax, low-growth, and stifled by socialist regulation — are simply uninformed. True, there is great regional variety, but Alberta has almost the lowest taxes in North America, and no provincial sales tax whatsoever. Federal and provincial governments across the country have balanced their budgets for years, and in some cases have reduced their state debts to levels inconceivable in Europe or the debt-ridden United States.

Even Canadian culture is surreptitiously conquering the market. From Celine Dion, Shania Twain, Alanis Morissette, and Avril Lavigne to the endless collection of exported comedians who dominate the American television and movie market, from Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje and Robert Lepage to the Cirque du Soleil, from the delightfully un-PC humour of the late-lamented Mordecai Richler, now enjoying a booming posthumous success in Italy, to the grand old man of Canadian letters, Robertson Davies (who doubled as Master of the wonderful Massey College at the University of Toronto), Canada is surprisingly over-represented. Three of the four finalists for this year’s Booker Prize were Canadian.

Canada-bashing should be left to Mark Steyn and the denizens of South Park. A printable excerpt from the lyrics of the latter’s theme song runs: ‘Blame Canada,/Shame on Canada,/We must blame them and cause a fuss/Before someone thinks of blaming us.’ The real Canada stands on guard for North American modernity combined with European social enlightenment — and better doughnuts.

Paul Robinson is assistant director of the Centre for Security Studies at the University of Hull. He has also served as an intelligence officer in the British and Canadian armies.


TOPICS: Canada; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
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To: IvanT
Yeah, I suppose you're right. Damn, I want to watch some real maritime conflict, maybe we should get England to attack Argentina again. Those were the days when wars were still fun. I want to see ship to ship combat, and aerial dog fights, not anticlimactic conflicts amounting to 80 tanks rolling into Baghdad unhindered, pulling up to the 7-11 and ordering a slurpy.

Still, watching the major-leaguers pummel a minor-leaguer is still fun.

You gotta admit, Gulf War I and Gulf War II were kinda cool in a way. Lots of neat missile-telemetry video.

61 posted on 06/04/2003 11:32:16 AM PDT by Lazamataz (I've decided to cut back my tagline, one word at a)
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To: Lazamataz
Dammit man. They substituted my image. It was cool, too.
62 posted on 06/04/2003 11:34:08 AM PDT by Lazamataz (I've decided to cut back my tagline, one word at a)
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To: Lazamataz
Cheeky bugger.
63 posted on 06/04/2003 11:36:20 AM PDT by IvanT
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To: americanSoul
Thanks for remembering, the frogs have very short memory. I have lost many of my love ones in WWII.
64 posted on 06/04/2003 11:36:40 AM PDT by desertcry
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To: IvanT
This is happening in Toronto . A million dollar dinner with Harper. And they're not coming from the West to chow down at the Royal York. These are the dreaded Easterners. Those Eastern, cowardly, secret closet Liberals with money . The scum bags of Ontario that everyone likes to bash.

Or maybe just Ontario Conservatives putting their money where it counts.

A miracle or a sign of things to come ?

The Canadian Alliance will hold its largest fundraiser in almost three years at a dinner with party leader Stephen Harper on June 16.

All 900 tickets -- at $1,000 each with a few seats at $500 -- have been sold, said Linda Frum, co-chair for the dinner, to be held at the Royal York Hotel.
65 posted on 06/04/2003 11:36:52 AM PDT by Snowyman
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To: Lazamataz
I dunno, I'm kinda partial to Gulf War 1, it seemed a lot more interesting. Maybe it's because Canada was actually involved and flew 2700 sorties, I dunno, it just weren't fun not watching Canadian ordinance blow anything up real good.
66 posted on 06/04/2003 11:38:06 AM PDT by IvanT
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To: IvanT
Japan and Germany was not tough enough for you?
67 posted on 06/04/2003 11:38:55 AM PDT by desertcry
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To: Snowyman
That's good news. The right has woken up in Ontario man, at least the English/U.K. Tory voting North Toronto types have.

My friend AmericanSoul and I are regularly in the pub with all our Alliance supporting friends, drinking beer and pissing off the lefties.

That Friends of America rally in April was the beginning. Let's hope all the Ontario Tories that are pissed with Mackay jump to the Alliance as well. Also, as I believe I mentioned to you before, the area in Kitchener/Waterloo and Guelph has become Alliance territory. Last election, all you could see driving through various neighbourhoods were Alliance signs. There's hope for us yet - remember, we voted in Harris twice.
68 posted on 06/04/2003 11:42:04 AM PDT by IvanT
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To: desertcry
Japan and Germany was not tough enough for you?

A little before my time....

69 posted on 06/04/2003 11:42:37 AM PDT by IvanT
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To: IvanT
enormous pressure to integrate with its gigantic neighbour

              Bull puckey. Enormous pressure from whom?

a society which combines prosperity and opportunity for the individual with socialised medicine, a successful system of public education, and far-sighted subsidies to the arts and cultural groups.


             Socialism, public education, far-sighted subsidies...This article is
             bordering on damnation by faint praise.  So sad.

The fact is that while others sat out the first few years of both world wars...

              All the more reason to be dismayed at the Canada of today.

dismissed the hype about weapons of mass destruction as unjustified by the facts

             Well, no.  Chretien said Canada would go to war if the UNSC voted to do so.
              The author's  unintentional point, then, is that Canada doesn't have
               a sense of right or wrong, but what every one else is doing, she'll do.
70 posted on 06/04/2003 11:45:07 AM PDT by gcruse
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To: Alberta's Child
Alberta OUGHT to be it's own country. I worked up in Canada for 4 years from Calgary to New Brunswick and I found the people of Alberta to be completely different than the Canadians in the east. They're fiercely independent, fun, ethical and, except for buying into the socialized medicine, would all make good conservatives.
71 posted on 06/04/2003 11:49:49 AM PDT by McGavin999
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To: IvanT
a little before my time... Too bad, you would have enjoyed it. Not one brute, but 2 all at once, lost a few of my relatives though.
72 posted on 06/04/2003 11:52:28 AM PDT by desertcry
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To: desertcry
Yep, my family lived in London during the blitz, while my grandfather was fighting in the British Royal Engineers, fortunately my family were lucky enough not lose anyone.
73 posted on 06/04/2003 11:56:08 AM PDT by IvanT
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To: McGavin999
Yeah, unfortunately, with all the immigration flow into Toronto, we conservatives in the East are being outnumbered deliberately.

I still would lament the day that Alberta left Canada, I would rather see they get the representation they deserve and be given the status that they've earned within the country. I don't know whether voting for the Alliance will help them in that cause, it likely would, and it's one of the reasons they have my vote come the next election. Losing Alberta would be a serious blow.
74 posted on 06/04/2003 11:59:07 AM PDT by IvanT
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To: gcruse
You make good points. There is always pressure on Canada to 'integrate' which we have done to a great extent both culturally (we get alot of American products and television up here) and economically, hence the free trade agreement. Of course, the socialism BS I agree with you 100% on. Believe me, I am dismayed with Canada today, especially what the Libs have done to our military, and the behaviour they've exhibited towards America since GWB came to power. As for WMD, let's hope they dig something up, otherwise we'll never hear the end of it. That said, simply deposing Saddam is good enough reason for me, and I'm not quite sure why Bush and Blair felt the need to harp on the WMD issue so much.
75 posted on 06/04/2003 12:03:08 PM PDT by IvanT
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To: desertcry
My condolences. You bet I won't forget.

My post had a small error; my late mom was in the labor camp from 15-19. Prior to this, at 11 (1937) the flip side of the totalitarian coin took away her dad in the Ukraine. This was during Stalin's Great Terror. He perished in the Gulag.

So America wiped out the Axis powers in WWII, and Ronald Reagan gave a mortal blow to the Soviets - I say mortal, since the job is not finished yet. There needs to be a regime change there also, since the same old nomenclatura is still ruling there, e.g., Putin, a former KGB colonel.

I agree will Bill Gertz in viewing Russia and China as dangerous enemies.

76 posted on 06/04/2003 12:13:04 PM PDT by americanSoul
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Comment #77 Removed by Moderator

To: IvanT
I agree. It would be so good to find the WMDs. If there are none, one is at a complete loss to explain Hussein's behavior during the last ten years of inspections. Yes, I think GWB hyped WMDs and it may come back to destroy our credibility. Pre-emption will be next to impossible next time...which may or may not be a good thing. My biggest regret in all this is for Canadians alone. That they may be having to live under Liberal rule as far as the eye can see is dismaying.

The good thing, of course, is the nature of parliamentary government. Unlike the deadening effects in modern times of a forest of checks and balances, your form of government can turn on a dime, if enough people want it. The means are there if only the desire can be fostered.
78 posted on 06/04/2003 12:14:24 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
Unless they fill us too full of bloody immigrants - who will invariably vote for the Libs because they'll know nothing about what's going on in the country and will simply vote for whomever was in power upon entering the country. That's what scares me. A good sign? Our Jewish community in Ontario has turned en masse away from the Liberals. Our Italian community, who have also traditionally voted Lib, are starting to turn as well. These are two very important voting blocks lost for the Grits.
79 posted on 06/04/2003 12:25:06 PM PDT by IvanT
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To: IvanT
The Italians. The only time in I my life I ever had real Italian barbers was at the shopping center across from Applewood III in Mississauga. And they were every bit the stereotype. You coulda made a movie... LOL
80 posted on 06/04/2003 12:31:31 PM PDT by gcruse
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