Happy Canada Day! I know that many people I know want to remind everyone of the terrible things that happened to my family and my people over the centuries .... I acknowledge that history but I also want to celebrate the significance of this country with you all today. We can respectfully acknowledge both at the same time.
I've been to over 30 countries in my life ... I've wandered into rural Morocco, toured into city Cairo, went around Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Burma, I've been to India, Sri Lanka, gone to Cuba, Columbia and Peru and I've seen lots of Europe. Between seeing the world as a third world hell or an unreachable wealth in the first world ... I know that we are very fortunate to be here in Canada, no matter who we are immigrant, indigenous, or born here ... this is a great country.
Also no matter your politics (except for the extremists) we have a good system ... very heavily influenced by money and power but every system in the world is ... but we have a good system that gets better all the time.
As terrible as the things that happened to my dad through the residential school which he was forced to attend ... he always reminded us of how great and amazing this country was. He lived through famine in the 1940s here in northern Ontario and he said that the fact that there are social support systems today means that people don't just starve to death.
In my lifetime, none of the political advocacy we conduct as indigenous people wouldn't be possible if we existed in an ultra conservative, intolerant government.
The one thing I want to see change is in dealing with extreme wealth and power in this country. There needs to be more wealth equality in this country and a system that spreads the wealth to more people everywhere. Corporations, companies, monopolies and the ultra wealthy shouldn't control our lives so much. And that is a change that would benefit everyone ... Indigenous and non indigenous.
I think a true Canadian value would be exactly what you’ve pointed out here: acknowledging the horrible past we have and it’s effects on our society today, as well as celebrate what we have now and toast to a better future. One can focus on both!
As a relatively new Canadian, I'm happy to be given the opportunity to build a life here and proud of how the culture is very welcoming. I love the country and its diversity.
There are a few things that need to change, but most importantly, the housing crisis needs to be addressed meaningfully. As a homeowner myself, it's creating a massive divide between the ones who were able to get into the housing market vs the ones who weren't.
The rising unaffordablility will manifest in many ways such as increasing crime, polarized views, fascism, extremism, aggressiveness, and so on.
In my opinion, the only thing that can substantially slow down or limit the rising costs is not just by simply building more homes, but actually banning home owners from owning, say, more than 3 properties. But not sure if that's even possible or ethical. Just my 2 cents.
Pride: Hot take for my region, but I'm actually pretty happy with our federal government and the policies they come out with. Bill C-18 and C-22 recently, for instance. I also love how we take in the most immigrants per capita of any major Western country, I really feel like we're doing our part to share this planet.
Change: Well, cost obviously. I don't love our electoral system either (yes, I'm pissed Trudeau lied about fixing it). I worry quite a bit about our reliance on the US and on various private entities. Our history is dark, and has not been fully dealt with.
The last shreds of what could be considered my national pride were torn away from me in June 2010. Nothing has been done to attempt to heal or even seriously acknowledge the damage that was done by politicians and police to the rule of law in Canada. Now I just live here, slowly dying, because I am too poor and disabled to leave and no one gives a fuck about disabled people in Ontario.
Not Canadian, but when I visited my Canadian aunt & uncle a few years back, they told me that a toll bridge from my last visit (Surrey BC) was no longer a toll, and that most toll projects drop the toll after they're paid for. My experience in the states is that once a road is a toll road, that's a new tax that's never going away and often goes into the pockets of international investors. Made me love Canada a little bit more that day.
Also, the Butchart Gardens & Vancouver Island in general give me all the warm fuzzies for Canada. Happy Canada Day y'all!
I occasionally enjoy the fact that I can go to a hospital and get fixed up without extra charge -- and I gladly pay extra tax for that, even though I make above the average. I'm proud to pay it. That my tax ends up 1% higher than it would be in America is another cherry on top.
I enjoy that I'm generally safe from gun violence, even in a major city -- very different wariness level from when I was in NJ and NYC.
I have a few beefs. I am disappointed that I can't openly talk about some of them. I will say that genociders should have reduced propaganda rights, but I know why that's unpopular and if ordered back to Service to defend it I guess I'll go.
I'd like to see us spend as much time worrying about our massive forests as we worry about Brazil's massive forests. Protecting them as the Earth's lungs is more a priority than we seem to demonstrate.
Lucky to be Canadian, proud to do my part so others can feel lucky too.
Speaking as someone from rural Nova Scotia, I have to disagree with you slightly. Transit in major urban areas may be some of the best, but there are basically no transit options for most rural areas. 100% agree with you on housing though!
What need to change? Real steps toward reducing greenhouse gas. Stop subsidizing cars (even electric ones!) and invest all that money into public transport. That would be a good first step. Then maybe I'll be proud to be Canadian.
It's kinda silly, but I'm proud that I can order a bag of weed online with my credit card and have it delivered to my door.
I don't know about any straight up changes... there's a lot of issues, but it seems things are being done, just not enough. Global warming is the big one. There is some effort being made there, but not nearly enough.
I 100% agree with you about housing. Im no expert, but putting a cap on the number of properties an individual can own seems like a reasonable solution. I'd also be in favor of strict regulations concerning properties used as Airbnbs. Also, regulations that curb the number of investors buying up properties sight unseen.
One thing that happened recently that made me real proud to be Canadian when I was walking in downtown Toronto, was when someone tripped on a mobile barrier and fell on their face, I wasn't the only one who rushed in to help. Several people together helped this guy up, and more than a dozen people asked if he was alright.
What we need to do better is give our competition legislation/bureaus more teeth, and stop getting complacent with increasing controls of our industries by the major oligopolies.
Short sighted? This was the plan!! Do you not realize how insanely wealthy people have gotten off of housing and monopolies? It's not corruption, Canada was literally created by corporations for the purpose of facilitating their extraction of value from natural and human resources. This is Canada as it was designed: a colonialist nation that exists to exploit us.
Don't fall for the bullshit folklore we tell ourselves.
I'm proud of the beauty of our country. From the obvious landmarks like the Rockies, the Bay of Fundy, or rural Ontario in the fall, to the simple, natural beauty of local parks and quiet rivers near where I live. Canada has some of the most naturally beautiful landscapes in the world, and I feel very lucky to get to see and enjoy them.
As for improvements... It's a small one, but I wish we would improve on our littering and levels of consumption/garbage production. It's always disheartening to see Timmies cups rotting away in bushes, or the fact that we're at the top of the list in garbage produced per capita.