Jeff wrote:lupercal wrote:Those numbers are striking, you bet. But renewing Canada, qu'est-ce que c'est (not familiar with the term sorry), do you mean by not seceding and was that an option in this election?
Layton spoke the unmentionable truth that after 30 years, Quebec is still not a signatory to the constitution and that Canada needs to recommit to a process of correcting that. Quebeckers responded to this, and to the shared values of the NDP, by one of their generational demonstrations of collective will. The hope of that is now, at best, deferred four more years. I don't know that Canada has that much time.
Thanks Jeff, this is très intéressant and all best wishes for the next four years. Thanks also Feilan, Volin et al. for hashing it out here, long live RI! But I hate to start a fresh page without a fresh thought so I might as well toss in my hairbrained theory: since as you say Toronto is the most Anglophilic part of Canada (which accords perfectly with my impressions of UT as compared to UQAM) it would not surprise me if part of the deal letting Obama pull the plug on the long-running but ever-profitable bin Laden franchise -- and even France had lately gotten into the act, with recent threats emanating from the bearded one aimed at boosting Sarkozy's participation in Afghanistan -- was to do it in a way that would prop up the Anglo-Canadian connection.
Dumping that dumb fairy tale was one of Obama's better moves, but I don't think he could have done it if he didn't have his ducks in a row, namely Panetta temporarily heading up the CIA and the Pentagon. So poof goes Osama and who cares how much make-believe it took. Unfortunately I can't imagine those ghouls in the royal family, and don't try to tell me they're "figureheads," having any of it without a fat consolation prize and thus we get Osama's demise the day before your elections. That's my theory anyway, with apologies.