
the Quebec separatist movement burnt me out i dont have the energy or interest in it anymore. Whether Quebec or Alberta. Go, stay, whateverI was 15. I was in Eastern Ontario.
I remember Canadian flags everywhere and the My Canada Includes Quebec movement. Big rallies to show our wish for them to stay.
I also remember we some anger towards separatists in Quebec. But not like I am seeing towards separatists in Alberta. And I remember the anger being more... I don't know the term... Educated, or informed maybe. There was was validity to the grievance.
What I see towards the movement in Alberta seems to be more based on pre-existing on political biases and beliefs and a rooted in central Canadian discard and disdain for issues and grievances from outside Ont and Quebec.
Here's a broad question.
If 84% of the electorate participated and 92% of voters approved independence in a referendum, should the rest of Canada support that and wish them well?
Thats what I mean though, we had a PM whos riding was in calgary and yet AB was content with status quo. If it were me I would of still been hammering the governmentThis has been realized. Albertans know when a CPC government takes over, there is little improvement just a pause until the Natural Governing Party is back.
I was a bit older.I was 15. I was in Eastern Ontario.
The charm offensive of 95. I was there in Montreal. It was more for a united Canada than a love of Quebec.I remember Canadian flags everywhere and the My Canada Includes Quebec movement. Big rallies to show our wish for them to stay.
I’ve been spit on by angry Anglos. in the NCR. And told to speak Canadian. I went to a rally to save my school because angry Anglos didn’t think we should have one when by law they had one extra seat on the school board (a vestige from the law 17 days). And don’t get me started on the brawls in Gatineau between Franco’s and Anglos. And the Association for the preservation of English in Canada that came out of Carleton place. A border line hate group in my mind.I also remember we some anger towards separatists in Quebec. But not like I am seeing towards separatists in Alberta. And I remember the anger being more... I don't know the term... Educated, or informed maybe. There was was validity to the grievance.
I see a seperatist movement detached from reality like most of those movements.What I see towards the movement in Alberta seems to be more based on pre-existing on political biases and beliefs and a rooted in central Canadian discard and disdain for issues and grievances from outside Ont and Quebec.
They said the same thing about Brexit. So far no unravelling and négociations led to severance of most benefits.Just like Quebec it's not that easy. There will be negotiations and debts to be paid.
Not to mention it will probably unravel the whole country.
From a standpoint of them as a people having a right to self determination? Sure, generally yes. When we get into more complex issues like treaty rights, citizenship, debts and social benefit entitlements and such, the practicalities will rapidly get complicated. The path to ‘final lines on a map’ would be complex. There seems to be an assumption that Alberta, a country, would physically match Alberta the province. That may not be the case.Here's a broad question.
If 84% of the electorate participated and 92% of voters approved independence in a referendum, should the rest of Canada support that and wish them well?
Agreed.Just like Quebec it's not that easy. There will be negotiations and debts to be paid.
Not to mention it will probably unravel the whole country.
Good points. Would you go so far as to support the use of force to prevent them (or Quebec)from separating and taking Canadian material and resources with them?From a standpoint of them as a people having a right to self determination? Sure, generally yes. When we get into more complex issues like treaty rights, citizenship, debts and social benefit entitlements and such, the practicalities will rapidly get complicated. The path to ‘final lines on a map’ would be complex. There seems to be an assumption that Alberta, a country, would physically match Alberta the province. That may not be the case.
Too vague a question to meaningfully answer. We’d need really specific circumstances and a record of relevant court decisions to assess something like that.Good points. Would you go so far as to support the use of force to prevent them (or Quebec)from separating and taking Canadian material and resources with them?
Complaining is the AB government way, there is a lot of problems in AB within its own control, however even the anger of those issues is being focused on ottawa.A couple of pipelines later an Alberta the disadvantaged drones on. Not exactly positive reinforcement for the construction of anymore
What about worse case scenario.Too vague a question to meaningfully answer. We’d need really specific circumstances and a record of relevant court decisions to assess something like that.
They said the same thing about Brexit. So far no unravelling and négociations led to severance of most benefits.
The UK’s economy is in the tank, their immigration is worse than it was and the US has them by the balls in any trade deal they try to make. And all the Brexiters are all pretty quiet now…
Your last paragraph hits the nail on the head quite well. Time and context matter grearly in the comparison between Alberta and Quebec.I was 15. I was in Eastern Ontario.
I remember Canadian flags everywhere and the My Canada Includes Quebec movement. Big rallies to show our wish for them to stay.
I also remember some anger towards separatists in Quebec. But not like I am seeing towards separatists in Alberta. And I remember the anger being more... I don't know the term... Educated, or informed maybe. There was was validity to the grievance.
What I see towards the movement in Alberta seems to be more based on pre-existing on political biases and beliefs and a rooted in central Canadian discard and disdain for issues and grievances from outside Ont and Quebec.
