Oh for cryin' out loud! This is a nation of immigrants........and a great one. But you are missing the point.
One hundred years ago;
If an immigrant demanded to wear a mask in court, they would be jailed for contempt.
If immigrants held rallies against our allies and in support of our enemies, if they were lucky, they would just get ridden down, clubbed, and deported.
If immigrants were suspected of spying, of industrial espionage, they would be arrested, tried, and publically hanged.
If an immigrant demanded their children not eat with other religions at school.......they would be laughed at.
If an immigrant demanded the right to carry a weapon amongst a disarmed people, they would be jailed.
That is because we used to know who we were, and we were confident in our own skins, and brooked no stupidity from anyone who came here to take advantage of our SUPERIOR society. If it was not superior.....why did they come????
Now they come to our society, and want to drag it down to the level of the cesspits they left.
It is absolutely disgraceful.
And in WWI, Ukrainian Canadians were all jailed as enemy aliens to do forced labour for the profit of the jailers. So it woudl seem you're wrong about your claims about deportation. They were used as profitable forced labour instead, just for belonging to the wrong ethnic group.
About 90 years ago, a head was placed on the Chinese, not all immigrants of course, but specifically the Chinese.
In WWII, Japanese Canadians had their property confiscated and they were all interned.
About 60 years ago, Inuit were forcibly relocated to fight the cold war.
Up until about 30 years ago, PROFUNC was a secret government plan to intern Canadians who identified themselves as communists. I don't believe in communism myself, but whatever happened to freedom of belief?
Up until about 50 years ago, forced residential schools where children were raped, beaten, and even killed were still in operation.
The beliefs that contributed to these acts are the exact same beliefs that contributed to the acts you'd just mentioned.
Why do you think Canada is culturally more united today than it was before? Simple answer! We stamped out other cultures, especially the First Nations, quite violently.
So it shouldn't be too surprising that the actions you describe would have been considered quite mild back then.
Oh, how I long for the days when all the bars had signs that said 'No dogs or Irish allowed'.
I thought it was 'No dogs and Chinese allowed'?
Oh, and what about 'Speak White':
YouTube - Michèle Lalonde - Speak White - Notre Poésie 1970
I love this poem. And this was only in the 1970s, not that long ago.
It's a bilingual poem by the way, so you should understand at least some of it. She also mentions many English poets, pronouncing them in French, but you'll progably pick up on it. She mentions a few famous Quebec poets too, so if you're familiar with Canadian poetry, you'll probably pick it up too.
Actually, forget the 1970's. I remember a friend who told me how he'd been told to 'Speak White' just a few years ago in Gatineau of all places.
Machjo
fej
chang
how
Happy New Year
Ni de xin nian hao ma?
Wawa ? On the coast it is either Salish or Kwakitul. Unless one went north of Pr. Rupert where Tinglit or Russian was spoken.I have a book hiding around here somewhere that I inherited that has the trade lingo used in B.C. in the 1800s. The only word I remember is "Cultus", which means worthless. Which is what multiculturalism is.
Wawa was the native language of very few. It had developed as a trade language, beginning in Oregon but, owing to the many different languages of the region and the simplicity of this trade language, it had quickly spread as a common language among many. Here's what its status was in 1890:
An international idiom : a manual of the Oregon trade language, or "Chinook jargon"
You can read much more here:
Internet Archive Search: chinook jargon
Though I should point out that Chinuk Wawa is a more recent name of the language. At that time it was usually called, in English, 'Chinook Jargon', and in Chinuk or Kamloops Wawa, either Lelang (probably from French 'La langue), or just Wawa (meaning speech in the original Chinuk language, not to be confused with Chinook Jargon, an interlanguage spoken by few as a first language except perhaps those born to international families int eh region at the time).
The first video I posted just above was recited by the original poet. Here is another rendition that I also like of the same poem by another reciter:
YouTube - Moulin à Paroles - Speak White
The original recitation is much better though, especially seeing that it was memorized unlike this one.