You really are an idiot. Every time you post you reveal your ignorance, the massive gaps in your knowledge.
Sticks and stones will break my bones,
But Colpy cannot hurt me.
The Americans began to see themselves as Americans quite some time before the Revolution, thus the numerous problems between the mother country and the American colonies. The Declaration of Independence was already written.....the constitution was not written until years after the revolution.
Exactly my point. To say that people in Canada had no similar feelings is exaggerative hyperbole. It is typical of the US view that all such feelings of patriotism are distinctly American in character - no-one else had them. Unknown to many Americans, one author, name forgotten, wrote that fewer than 20% of the people living in the 13 colonies at the time of the
Revolutionary War actively supported it. Things like revolutions and nationalities develop over time. Many people in what is now Canada, especially after 1814, thought of themselves as Canadian.
Meanwhile, Britain had to kick the Canadas out in 1867 pretty well at gunpoint. Who was a people, and who was not????.
Who are the “Canadas”, Colp? This is twice you’ve used the expression. And you claim to be a university educated Canadian? You and Joe the Plumber. I think you’re not even Canadian, Clop; you’re a bloody Yank.
Are you arguing that there was something more glorious and worthwhile about being American than about being Canadian? That’s what it sounds like. Maybe you would have preferred that we shot our way out like your people? Your view is one I’ve ever heard before.
Upper Canada was British....mostly, with an Loyalist element of Americanism that worried the British commanders in 1812. Lower Canada was French.
The Loyalists were those who fled America after the war, Clop.
Lower Canada was French? You forgot all about Upper and Lower Canada until I referred to them. Your US education is showing.
NOT Canadian, as a nationality, or as a people.
Maybe not to you, Colp. There were different opinions of course, then and now. You are taking the extreme anti-Canadian side. That position is dominant in US Republican circles. All the way through WW2 and in much of the historical writing about that war, US historians refuse to recognize Canada as an independent nation. Pierre Burton was one author who believed that the
War of 1812 resulted in the people of “British North America”, as it was sometimes called, coming to recognize a Canadian national identity more strongly after the war than before. Do you know who Pierre Burton was?
Oh, and down here??? In 1812 the Brits gave the militia in St. Stephen gun powder to defend against the American aggressors.......which the town turned over to the people of Calais, Maine to help in their Fourth of July celebrations. Really.
Relevance, Colp. What does that have to do with the issue? The same relevance as Rwanda has to US gun control?
That is EXACTLY my position. We were British, through and through, except those that were French, and some refugees from the US War of Independence that had divided loyalties.
You act as though something as ephemeral as a national identity must at all times be one thing or the other. All of a sudden people woke up one morning and were different from yesterday? Read Pierre Burton, Clop. I am not saying there is no truth to your position. There are still many Royalists here, especially in certain Ontario enclaves and in Victoria, BC. But there was a nascent Canadian identity in 1812, and it is sufficient to allow modern Canadians to claim that Canada beat the US then. If you disagree you are simply trying to put Canadians and put down their national identity. You are no Canadian, Colpy. You’re a Republican Yank.
One might be able to trace some early sense of Canadian identity after the rebellions of 1837........but the fact remains that Great Britain had to boot us out in 1867..........and not without resistance.
One might, might one? Booted us out? No political change of that magnitude is unanimous. Amongst other things many people could see losing influence and wealth as power transitioned. But that is a long way from saying Britain pushed us out at gunpoint. It is, however, a divide-and-conquer statement perfectly positioned to stroke Republican egos and hostilities.
Why would Republicans do that? Because America is fascist and one fascist tenet is aggressive international policy. Some US authorities have always been anti-Canadian because the American mentality historically could not separate Canada from England. England was a competing power. Therefore Canada was to be viewed with nothing more generous than benign hostility. It’s like Cuba, there has been no excuse for American hostility towards Cuba for years, but a US citizen caught with a Cuban stamp in his passport can still face up to five years in prison. That is America in a nutshell.
In the War of 1812, Canada as a country did not exist. It was a full blown COLONY of Great Britain.
True. But nothing in those historical facts prevented people in Ontario then from thinking of themselves as Canadian, and that is what were are discussing. Maritimers were not part of the equation. Pierre Burton has written extensively about the period and has always managed to convey a sense of the people involved thinking of themselves as what we now call Canadian. That, in turn, permits us to identify with them as Canadians. If you prefer not to, fine.