For a guy who claims to have two university degrees you seem to have an awfully hard time sticking to an issue. The issue is whether non-Canadians inside Canada have legal rights, not whether we must let them into Canada.
. . .
Implicit in my statement was that America was a risk of carrying it out. Several years ago I read in an old, multi-volume history of the Royal Navy that in 1917, at the naval Battle of Jutland, Admiral Jellicoe left a battleship squadron out of his line of battle in case the US navy tried to attack Britain when she was fighting the Kaiser’s fleet. In 1925 there was an international naval conference held in Washington, DC. Its purpose was to set limits on numbers and size of capital ships. The political fear that made the conference necessary was of a naval arms race between America and Britain. Few of today’s authorities remember the US/Britain antagonisms; they focus on Japan. US-British-Canadian Relations have been so good for so long that today’s generations do not remember world relations at the turn of the 20th Century.
