Canadian Self identityBefore I start, there is something that I feel must be said...This is something that I learned while watching Olympic curling at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics (my friends have still not forgiven me for dragging them to that!). Let me be clear to my rabid Canadian friends... The official winter sport of Canada is CURLING... C-U-R-L-I-N-G... curling... not hockey, curling!!! My point here is that Canadians will allow themselves collectively to believe what they want to believe - especially when the truth is so embarrassing... :-)
I have received many megabytes of mass "Canada specific" emails from a variety of sundry Canadians. After reading through enough of it, one begins to notice a set of recurring themes. The main point of many of these mails center around -
Anyway, I find it interesting that the United States figures so closely into the way that Canadians view themselves. Canadians spend a lot of time characterizing themselves by the fact that they are *not* American. I have never seen so much energy constantly expended to maintain a lack of identity. I think this complex with their self identity stems from, in large part, the fact that they are more like Americans then they would like to admit and yet they are terrified of being culturally drowned by them. My wife tells me that New Zealand has a similar relationship with Australia. On a bad day, this self identity complex manifests itself as a full blown inferiority complex... One telling example... when I was working with a Canadian consulting company, we were negotiating with a government agency to secure funding to build 5000 houses in India as part of a special economic zone (SEZ) outside Bombay, India. This is not an insignificant project to be sure, but just the tip of the iceberg with the potential that the New Bombay SEZ offered. However, the government officials didn't see it that way. We received quite a bit of resistance because "the project is way too ambitious, Canada is not big enough [to take on such a project]". I found this incredibly depressing that one's own government would have so little confidence of the ability of its people to make a significant difference in world affairs. In the grand scheme of things, yes, India is a risky place to do business but building a town one fourth the size of Powell River should not be beyond the capabilities of one of the largest wood producing countries in the world. On a completely separate note, this was also the meeting where, as I was taking out my Handspring Visor and external keyboard to take notes (a pretty geeky setup to be sure), someone else in the meeting reached for *his* Palm and external Palm keyboard! I felt years and years of nerdliness validated! Canadians cling tightly to their British roots even though nobody will openly admit that Canadians have become much more "American" then I'm sure that they would care to admit. On one hand...
They're a very divisive bunch. They're constantly talking about seceding or expelling parts of the country or how other parts of the country shouldn't belong. It feels like most countries that are this fractious are either ruled by totalitarian dictators or crumbling in the ruins of civil war or severe ethnic tensions... but, hey, Canada pulls it off! Some examples I have heard include:
This is a fantastic story I heard... while hanging out in a nice European hotel, a friend told me of a drunk Canadian running around yelling at the top of his lungs "I am not an obnoxious American!" :-D
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