OTTAWA – While one-third of Canadians say they have read the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, many fail to distinguish between its text and that of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, a new sur...
Well yeah, unless you're an immigrant or refugee that recently got citizenship, Canadians were likely last educated about the Charter back in grade school or high school. And never again since unless they look it up themselves.
Edit: to clarify, we DO have the right against self-incrimination and being compelled to take the stand but we don't have Amendment rights—we have the Charter 'n shit
I still have trouble accepting either of these beliefs are commonplace among Canadians. My late-20th century education only briefly touched on the Charter but it seems common sense that stuff from US TV wouldn't apply to us.
The odd times I've had questions about various areas of law or governance, I always have to spend time looking them up. (Seems to me people in the US should still research these things though. It's not like TV/movies are accurate, complete, and up-to-date.)
Was the average Canadian educated in it even then? As far as I can recall, the Charter was barely touched on in any required material during my mandatory schooling. We spent more time on stuff like the internal timeline of the Seven Years' War than we did on any kind of civics.
Granted, that was back in the 20th century. I really hope that the subject matter covered in mandatory education has been rebalanced since then, but I'm not holding my breath for the result having been any better.
If it was covered back then, I don't remember. It's been literally a generation since I was in school. So what little I did learn has certainly been lost by now.