Are all of you such staunch Anglos that you can't possibly see why implicitly celebrating the final defeat of France in North America might be sensitive in a country that claims two founding nations?
It seems cultural sensitivity has never been the Anglo-Saxon world's forte,
Don't you think that your rather sweeping statement concerning Anglo-Saxons is insensitive? I do, and I'm not even an Anglo.
Sober analysis is one thing--and I do appreciate the desire to make history come alive--but making a festival out of this in particular strikes me as inflammatory. And a politically correct vigil makes a poor salve.
Positioning the British victory on the Plains of Abraham as the pivotal founding event of this country carries with it the implicit assumption that the Canada we know today is inherently better than the "Canada" that would have resulted had fortunes been reversed and France had a greater role in shaping this part of the world.
Are all of you such staunch Anglos that you can't possibly see why implicitly celebrating the final defeat of France in North America might be sensitive in a country that claims two founding nations?
After that, promptly announce the sale of Quebec to the United States.
Would "Anglosphere" be more palatable? I meant it in the collective civilizational sense, referring to the common assumption that its cultural norms (e.g. common law, individualism) are inherently superior to those of others, likely rooted in the relative geographical isolation of the countries in question.
Most former British colonies have done much better than most former French colonies. Would you rather live in Haiti or Barbados? Cambodia (albeit improving now) or Malaysia? Algeria or Egypt? The British Empire wasn't perfect and was definitely exploitative as any empire is, but it left in its wake a strong sense of commerce, law and structure that the French usually were unable or unwilling to implement.Positioning the British victory on the Plains of Abraham as the pivotal founding event of this country carries with it the implicit assumption that the Canada we know today is inherently better than the "Canada" that would have resulted had fortunes been reversed and France had a greater role in shaping this part of the world.
Had Montcalm not lost, the French would probably have sold Quebec off anyway to the Yanks. Louisiana purchase, part deux.