I was quite shocked a few years back when Harper announced at a G20 Summit (in 2009, after he'd just delivered an official statement of apology in 2008 to the survivors of the residential school system) that 'Canada has no history of colonialism'. I could only wonder how ignorant our PM could possibly be of Canadian history.
Anyway, I'm currently rereading Multiculturalism with in a Bilingual Framework: Language, Race, and Belonging in Canada, by Eve Haque (I'd read it quite quickly, almost skimming through it initially). The book outlines some the true motives of the B&B Commission and the passing of the Official Languages Act, mainly to protect Anglo-French hegemony in the form of the 'two founding races' in the face of challenges from 'other ethnic groups' and 'indigenous peoples'. As I was reading, I'd found this quote from Trudeau from 17 October 1968 in the House of Commons while debating Bill C-120 (later to become the Official Languages Act):
'In the past, multi-cultural states have often resulted from conquest or colonialism. In the modern world, many are based on a conscious appreciation of the facts of history, geography, and economics. This latter case of Canada, a country blessed with more prosperity and political stability than most countries, and where we are making our choices methodically and democratically'.
Considering that some Canadians might view Trudeau and Harper as standing on opposite ends of the political spectrum as PMs, were any of our PMs that different from one another?
Just as Harper had made his comments about a year after apologizing to the survivors of the residential school system, Trudeau made these remarks not long after the publication of Book ! of the Report of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Bilingualism, which states, among many other unsavoury ideas, that:
'We should point out here that the Commission will not examine the question of the Indians and the Eskimos . Our terms of reference contain no allusion to Canada's native populations. They speak of "two founding races," namely Canadians of British and French origin, and "other ethnic groups," but mention neither the Indians nor the Eskimos. Since it is obvious that these two groups do not form part of the "founding races," as the phrase is used in the terms of reference, it would logically be necessary to include them under the heading "other ethnic groups ." Yet it is clear that the term "other ethnic groups" means those peoples of diverse origins who came to Canada during or after the founding of the Canadian state and that it does not include the first inhabitants of this country.'
So I have to ask the question, in spite of the fact that there some of our PM's have been more economically left-leaning, and some more right-leaning, have there ever been any real difference in the colonialist mindset of any or our PM's?
Anyway, I'm currently rereading Multiculturalism with in a Bilingual Framework: Language, Race, and Belonging in Canada, by Eve Haque (I'd read it quite quickly, almost skimming through it initially). The book outlines some the true motives of the B&B Commission and the passing of the Official Languages Act, mainly to protect Anglo-French hegemony in the form of the 'two founding races' in the face of challenges from 'other ethnic groups' and 'indigenous peoples'. As I was reading, I'd found this quote from Trudeau from 17 October 1968 in the House of Commons while debating Bill C-120 (later to become the Official Languages Act):
'In the past, multi-cultural states have often resulted from conquest or colonialism. In the modern world, many are based on a conscious appreciation of the facts of history, geography, and economics. This latter case of Canada, a country blessed with more prosperity and political stability than most countries, and where we are making our choices methodically and democratically'.
Considering that some Canadians might view Trudeau and Harper as standing on opposite ends of the political spectrum as PMs, were any of our PMs that different from one another?
Just as Harper had made his comments about a year after apologizing to the survivors of the residential school system, Trudeau made these remarks not long after the publication of Book ! of the Report of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Bilingualism, which states, among many other unsavoury ideas, that:
'We should point out here that the Commission will not examine the question of the Indians and the Eskimos . Our terms of reference contain no allusion to Canada's native populations. They speak of "two founding races," namely Canadians of British and French origin, and "other ethnic groups," but mention neither the Indians nor the Eskimos. Since it is obvious that these two groups do not form part of the "founding races," as the phrase is used in the terms of reference, it would logically be necessary to include them under the heading "other ethnic groups ." Yet it is clear that the term "other ethnic groups" means those peoples of diverse origins who came to Canada during or after the founding of the Canadian state and that it does not include the first inhabitants of this country.'
So I have to ask the question, in spite of the fact that there some of our PM's have been more economically left-leaning, and some more right-leaning, have there ever been any real difference in the colonialist mindset of any or our PM's?