How Canada stole the American Dream

Tyr

Council Member
Nov 27, 2008
2,152
14
38
Sitting at my laptop
The numbers are in. Compared to the U.S., we work less, live longer, enjoy better health and have more sex. And get this: now we're wealthier too.

MacLeans Magazine

Meanwhile in Canada, not only are we wealthier, but we don't even have to work as hard to make that wealth. In 2004, the average Canadian worker put in 35 hours of work per week, while our American counterparts put in 38. Only 30 per cent of Canadians work 45 hours a week or more, compared to 38 per cent of Americans. We also get — and take — much more vacation time. Employed adults in Canada get about 17 vacation days a year, and we take 16 of those days, leaving just one on the table. In the U.S., they get 14 days of vacation, but they only take 11, making them the world leader in yet another category: the working drudge.

Because we have more time off, Canadians tend to have a lot more fun. We spend more time with friends than Americans do, and we're much more likely to have a sit-down dinner with the family at home each night. We also tend to drink alcohol more often, with 27 per cent of us having a drink at least a few times a week, compared to 19 per cent of Americans. Nay says that our richer social lives were one of the biggest differences he noticed when he moved to Toronto. "It was only in Canada that I found myself going to the pub with friends and colleagues," he says. "I spend more time in pubs here than I have in any other place that I've lived.

It's partly the culture, and partly because the quality of beer is fantastic."
Christian Lander is another Canadian living among Americans. He grew up in Toronto, but the 29-year-old moved to Los Angeles 2½ years ago where he runs the popular Stuff White People Like website, and he's publishing a book under the same name on July 1. He also finds that Americans like to do things big, but that doesn't always mean better. "The expectations here are just different," he says.

"There's more ambition. More ambition to acquire more in terms of money and career. Whereas Canadians seem to be more European in that we care more about enjoying life." He's lived all over the country and says that it's very difficult to sum up the differences between Americans and Canadians because Americans are so diverse. The gaps between rich and poor, or black and white within the confines of the U.S. are much deeper and wider than the gap between the two countries. And within that mix, he says there's a subset of Americans who are just like Canadians.

"Left-wing urban Americans," he says. "Canada is just a country of left-wing urban Americans." Still, he says that the relentless zeal, the private schools, the long work hours, not to mention the fact that everyone in L.A. seems to carry a gun, well, it all gets him down sometimes. His wife, who's American, is pushing to move back to Toronto, he says. "And yeah, we probably will."
 

bobnoorduyn

Council Member
Nov 26, 2008
2,262
28
48
Mountain Veiw County
His wife, who's American, is pushing to move back to Toronto, he says. "And yeah, we probably will."

Toronto!? ick, There are a lot of better "American" cities, and not that I like cities, but Toronto? For a Canadian city I'd sooner pick somewhere like Abbotsford, or Kelowna, or Red Deer, or Medicine Hat, or Winnipeg, or Saskatoon, or Sudbury, even Ottawa. In Toronto folks just seem to be going hell bent for leather to nowhere, and getting there too.:lol:
 

Unforgiven

Force majeure
May 28, 2007
6,770
137
63
Happy demisemiseptcentennial!

With Honest Ed's, Nuit Blanche, and too many Chinatowns to count, there is no place on earth like our city

Mar 05, 2009 04:30 AM

1. It is the centre of the (Canadian) universe.
2. Jane Jacobs called it home.
3. Our first mayor led a rebellion.
4. We can finally buy a decent burrito.
5. We can hang up our laundry without stirring up gossip.
6. We have independent bookstores in every neighbourhood – and new ones are still opening.
7. Our sports teams wear blue and purple, and we look damn good in blue and purple.
8. We have a Little Malta.
9. And a Little Azores.
10. There are so many Chinatowns, we've lost count.
11. There's a festival for every neighbourhood and ethnic group in the city – and about a dozen crammed into every summer weekend.
12. A million people can crowd the streets during one of these festivals and nobody gets mugged.
13. Gays and lesbians can marry here.
14. There's a perfect, tiny old church in the courtyard of the Eaton Centre.
15. And a prayer labyrinth.
16. North America's most stable banks are based here.
17. The elegant footbridge at the mouth of the Humber that has inspired thousands of photographs.
18. The surreal spectacle of Church Street on Halloween.
19. Long before wi-fi, we could predict the weather by looking at the beacon atop the Canada Life building.
20. Violent crime is actually going down.
21. The downtown population is actually going up.
22. Admit it: A couple of the seemingly thousands of new condo dwellings are actually rather nice.
23. One of the city's best golf courses runs underneath its busiest highway.
24. We can watch (and cringe at) young daredevils at Cummer Skateboard Park.
25. The newspaper reading room at the Toronto Reference Library.
26. We have a restaurant devoted to poutine.
27. Those streetcar drivers who assert themselves over the automated voice system with their own personal shout-outs for various intersections and attractions along their routes.
28. Going down the giant escalator at the Paramount – er, Scotiabank Theatre.
29. Working up a sweat on the old wooden indoor running track at Hart House, followed by lunch at the Gallery Grill.
30. Dining on pho at 2 in the morning.

31. The inspirational messages on the Inglis billboard keep Gardiner Expressway commuters uplifted.
32. Touring local history (and stopping for a game of chess) at Mount Pleasant Cemetery.
33. The private viewing booths at the NFB's Mediatheque.
34. That guy – you know the one – who insists on wearing shorts in the dead of winter.
35. We proudly display our favourite of Spacing magazine's iconic buttons of TTC subway stations.
36. We dutifully separate our garbage into black, blue and green.
37. Learning to love theatre classics, thanks to Soulpepper.
38. Michael Snow's Canada geese sculpture in the Eaton Centre.
39. If you're bored by what you're watching at the Winter Garden Theatre, you can admire the faux greenery.
40. The artistic Utopia of the gorgeously restored 401 Richmond and the Wychwood Art Barns.
41. We've got more cyclists per capita than Vancouver.
42. The SkyDome (okay, Rogers Centre) when the roof is in the process of being opened or closed.
43. Basking in the sun at the Canada Master tennis tournament (okay, the Rogers Cup).
44. From the Humber Bay butterfly habitat, the city looks almost beautiful.
45. The dim sum is as good as the tapas. (And the antipasti are as good as the panchan. And ...)
46. We've got a sugar museum. And a shoe museum.
47. When you look up you can see hawks circling.
48. The double-decker Go trains flashing by cars gridlocked on the Gardiner.
49. We are a hockey city, baseball city, basketball city and now a soccer city.
50. We are sometimes also a cricket city.
51. Eating your way across the globe at St. Lawrence Market on a Saturday.
52. The Dakota Tavern, the west end's roots-music rec room.
53. Watching leaves turn at the Toronto Botanical Garden in the fall.
54. Stopping in your tracks as a bigger-than-you-remembered Porter plane descends over the harbour.
55. The flume log ride at Ontario Place.
56. Without us, where would they film movies set in American cities?

57. Honest Ed's shrine to kitsch even lets Toronto fill in for Vegas from time to time.
58. We never have to stop traffic for a Stanley Cup parade.
59. A family of beavers made a home for themselves at the Music Garden.
60. Yonge-Dundas Square was supposed to be Toronto's answer to Times Square. It's really no comparison, but don't you want to give the city a big condescending hug just for trying?
61. Colin Partridge's vivid tree carvings in High Park.
62. Getting to the Toronto City Centre Airport necessitates a ride on the world's shortest ferry route.
63. Bumping into a towel-clad celeb at Stillwater Spa.
64. Marvelling at the machines that churn out sweet walnut cakes in Little Korea.
65. Chilled-out revellers and circus performers at free summertime Promise parties put Cherry Beach on the map.
66. You can pay $5 for a cup of coffee at a growing number of specialty cafes – or still get your double-double for 90 cents.
67. For 10 star-struck days in September, Toronto is justified calling itself Hollywood North.
68. The raging fandom on display – for lacrosse! – at Toronto Rock games is inspiring.
69. Spotting a big, beautiful white-tailed deer nibbling greenery at G. Ross Lord Park.
70. Watching a big ugly amphibious Hippo bus taking a swim in the harbour.
71. The legendary white squirrel.
72. We've now got a deli and bagels that make trips to Montreal almost unnecessary.
73. The smiles on everyone's faces during the first warm spell of the year.
74. A hive of indie rock, from Apostle of Hustle to Woodhands.
Hip hop too: Kardi, K-os and K'Naan call it home.
76. Scouting for migrating birds at the Leslie Street Spit – but look out for the snakes.
77. Nuit Blanche, for letting us see the city with fresh eyes.
78. The gorilla compound at the Toronto Zoo.
79. The intimate zoos at High Park, Riverdale Park and Centre Island.
80. A huge festival that treats authors like real celebrities.
81. Exploring the cottagey, car-free Ward Island neighbourhood and wondering why we don't all live there.
82. The united nations of Baldwin Street.
83. Tai chi at Christie Pits.
84. The sad, poignant sculptures at Ireland Park.
85. Being able to overhear – and see – top-shelf jazz from a comfortable perch outside the Nathan Phillips mainstage tent during the jazz festival when you can't afford a ticket.
86. Getting back to nature, almost, in a meandering ravine.
87. Housing is getting more affordable by the month.
88. The view of the city as you drive south on the DVP.
89. Riding your bike along the DVP and Gardiner during the annual Ride for Heart.
90. Lively literati – from Michael Ondaatje to Bryan Lee O'Malley – helped make this a city of the imagination.
91. Enza, supermodel.
92. The glass staircase in the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts.
93. The glass floor at the CN Tower.
94. The perfect blend of old and new in the Brookfield Place atrium.
95. Top-notch, small-scale comedy at Bad Dog, Comedy Bar, Second City – and a dozen other barroom stages.
96. Basking in verdant luxury in the backyards of the wealthy along the Belt Line trail.
97. Shirtless Zanta doing pushups in the cold.
98. Extensive back-alley graffiti, some of which is better than the stuff hanging in galleries.
99. Gehry, Libeskind, Alsopp: Thank you, thank you, thank you, for giving us architecture worthy of debate.
100. Spotting the almost mystical garbage train on the TTC late at night.
101. Fig and molasses, chestnut and birch syrup ... and other exotic flavours from Kensington Market Organic Ice Cream.
102. The care that goes into irrepressibly quirky allotment gardens.
103. Winter? What winter? Eating, shopping and working in the PATH.
104. Rightfully beloved Massey Hall has welcomed too many big names to count.
105. Distillery delicacies: Mayan hot chocolate at Soma, organic beer at Mill Street Brewery, exotic fromage from A Taste of Quebec and a meat pie from Brick Street Bakery, enjoyed in the city's most cinematic setting.
106. The surprisingly vibrant beach volleyball scene at Ashbridge's Bay.
107. Helping a student by riding a rickshaw.
108. Listening to live music at the restored deco classic Carlu.
109. Eating brunch three times a day, every day, in Leslieville.
110. SARS made us stronger – and the resulting benefit concert found a use for the empty expanse of Downsview Park.
111. Ron Baird's landmark kinetic steel sculpture on Dufferin St. south of Steeles Ave.
112. The smell of baked goods at Bathurst and Eglinton subway stations.
113. The giant glowing pill-shaped classroom in the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy at U of T.
114. There's a downtown driving range that doubles as a drive-in theatre.
115. The CN Tower withstands some 50 lightning strikes a year.
116. We saw a guy take his Christmas tree home on the subway.
117. The Dufferin Grove organic farmers market is open every Thursday from 3 to 7 p.m. year round.
118. Going for mojitos at Julie's.
119. Then listening to live Cuban music at Lula Lounge.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTOS BY CHRIS SO (TOP) AND RICK MADONIKToronto, how do we thee? Let us count the ways: At top, a composite image of the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Hindu temple, which is reason No. 122, while the photogenic footbridge in Humber Bay Park checks in at No. 17. 120. Hopping from one you-call-that-art? gallery to another on Queen West for Thursday-night opening receptions.
121. Coming across a part of the city transformed for a movie shoot.
122. The impossibly ornate, painstakingly constructed Hindu temple that seems totally out of place alongside the 427.
123. Sipping from a green coconut and wishing Toronto had palm trees during Caribana.
124. Lining up for Hakka food in Scarborough.
125. Dancing to a band from a faraway land in the open air at Harbourfront.
126. Reading a book on the bizarre slab of granite on Yorkville Ave.
127. Feeling like you're the first to discover fresh pupusas on Augusta Ave.
128. Jackie Richardson, a one-woman musical treasure.
129. Dusk Dances and Shakespeare in the Park: keeping green space interesting.
130. Pillow fights, Zombie Walks, subway parties, Manhunt and Capture the Flag: keeping it weird.
131. Spectacular patios – the Madison, Quigley's and the Rectory, to name just three – filling up at the first sign of good weather.
132. The "secret" patios hiding at the back of dozens of restaurants.
133. Grazing among the cow statues in the TD Centre plaza.
134. Watching glass blowers performing their molten arts at York Quay Centre.
135. Lying on the grass for a concert at Molson Amphitheatre.
136. Determining your favourite pa'an-wallah – by sampling them all – on Gerrard Street.
137. Collecting your winnings – even if you're at a loss overall – at Woodbine Racetrack.
138. The fact that decades after Mies van der Rohe designed them, the TD towers look brand new.
139. The myriad and lovely stained glass windows on Annex-area homes.
140. Singing karaoke with the Gladstone Cowboy.
141. Doors Open proves that yes, we do give a damn about architecture.
142. And there's more to like here than just the Flatiron Building.
143. Neil Young and Glenn Gould were both born here.
144. The Rolling Stones surprise us with a secret concert once in a while.
145. Off-leash areas of parks, where dog owners sit on picnic tables and mingle while their furry charges roam free.
146. The harbour lit up with sails at sunset on a windy summer's eve.
147. Watching an extended streetcar accordion its way around a curve.
148. Winter DJ skating parties.
149. The overhead OMNIMAX screen and comfy chairs you can lay back on at the Ontario Science Centre.
150. Trying not to puke while riding the Zipper at the CNE.
151. Surviving the vomit comet.
152. The awe-inspiring R.C. Harris fortress of water filtration.
153. York University's ravine-shrouded Glendon campus.
154. The best movies you've never heard of at Cinematheque Ontario.
155. The best movies you missed the first time around – for a better price – at neighbourhood rep houses.
156. Ogling the old-money opulence of Rosedale.
157. And the nouveau opulence of the Bridle Path.
158. The sights and smells of the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair.
159. Summertime drum circles at Trinity Bellwoods Park.
160. We have had two World Series championships when cities that have had franchises longer – that means you, Houston and San Diego – haven't had any.
161. Finding the perfectly musty tweed jacket in Kensington Market.
162. Watching a dance lesson through the expansive windows of the National Ballet School.
163. A taste of Dover at Bluffer's Park.
164. The historic outdoor pool at Sunnyside Park.
165. Helping the artisans make meals from scratch at Black Creek Pioneer Village.
166. Actual gold in the windows of the Royal Bank tower makes us almost nostalgic for days of excess.
167. Winterlicious and Summerlicious, when we can afford to dine amongst the expense-account set.
168. The city is finally realizing there's a waterfront.
169. The Mayor is your Twitter buddy.
170. Looking out from a rooftop lounge, you can see how much the city has changed in the last decade.
171. We're nicer than they say we are. We're just a little shy sometimes.
172. Big enough to be anonymous. Small enough to know your neighbours.
173. It's easy to leave.
174. It's just as easy to come back.
175. If we don't love it, who will?
 

Tyr

Council Member
Nov 27, 2008
2,152
14
38
Sitting at my laptop
Toronto!? ick, There are a lot of better "American" cities, and not that I like cities, but Toronto? For a Canadian city I'd sooner pick somewhere like Abbotsford, or Kelowna, or Red Deer, or Medicine Hat, or Winnipeg, or Saskatoon, or Sudbury, even Ottawa. In Toronto folks just seem to be going hell bent for leather to nowhere, and getting there too.:lol:

Abbotsford, or Kelowna, or Red Deer, or Medicine Hat, or Sudbury, or, or. or

I guess she wanted to go somewhere that indoor plumbing and electricity wasn't just implemented

:lol::lol::lol:

btw. In Toronto they aren't "folks", but rather blood sucking androids
 

Tyr

Council Member
Nov 27, 2008
2,152
14
38
Sitting at my laptop
Happy demisemiseptcentennial!

With Honest Ed's, Nuit Blanche, and too many Chinatowns to count, there is no place on earth like our city

Mar 05, 2009 04:30 AM

1. It is the centre of the (Canadian) universe.

175. If we don't love it, who will?

three words.....

Jane and Finch :idea:
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
95
48
USA
Pretty neat watching what you hoped to be another anti-US thread turn into this.

So by just getting electricity in certain areas in Canada means you stole the American Dream. :lol:
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
95
48
USA
No, No... says right up there at the top of the thread. Canada stole the American Dream.

All yours Wolf... ENJOY!
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
95
48
USA
All yours ... and hey, if he doesn't work out, you can have him bronzed and chromed. With that pointy nose, he'd make a great hood ornament....

Oh... I am not looking for a "he" as in singular... I am talking about the whole lot.
 

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
73
48
Ahhh...living that dream baby... just living that dream...

Yeah, that's not my dream..I'm more into the European style of living myself.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
95
48
USA
Yeah, that's not my dream..I'm more into the European style of living myself.

So what are you saying!!!!

You finally STOLE the American Dream and now Canadians want the European Dream!

What's wrong with you people!! ;-)