No more Surname-Surname that a lot of good ole Canadian families like to use.
King-in-Council on
I mean Diefenbaker won a landslide on the unhyphenated Canadian populism. There’s definitely a market for it in Canada 2026. The only PM that didn’t come from British or French heritage – still the only – deeply believed in the unhyphenated Canadian. So it’s a valid in play argument.
Sufficient-Tutor-922 on
Is the guy ever going to drop specifics on anything? And is there a election going on ?
The whole thing was weird and awkward right down to Smith not mentioning Carney or the fact that she signed a mou with him .
It all seemed like watching something from the past.
gohomebrentyourdrunk on
I’ve been speculating that Poilievre won his leadership review largely because the CPC is floundering with zero prospects for good leaders or even serious politicians broadly and at least Poilievre is very good at monetizing the hatred and fear of …*passionate*… people and everybody kind of just knows that keeping those funds flowing is what’s best for CPC business right now.
This story basically affirms my speculation.
Medea_From_Colchis on
No-hyphens sounds like whatever the conservative version of virtue signaling is. Tough, I can’t really say it’s about a call to virtue when it’s for getting upset about someone saying German-Canadian or whatever.
redbouncingball007 on
Isn’t immigration effectively capped now? They have drastically cut programs and aren’t renewing some permits. Using immigration as the blame-all for social and economic woes is so American.
SuperNinTaylor on
I dont think I agree with what the headline is saying. Not sure if there is more context though. Yes, people should adopt Canadian values, but I also believe part of what made Canada great was the diversity of cultures. So why not take pride in people honoring their heritage while also adopting Canadian values at the same time?
aaiissaasaiiuy on
i just don’t think a ’no-hyphen‘ nationalism works in canada, given the realities of quebec, francophone ontarians and acadiens, first nations, metis and northern people– it’s an imperial mindset that belies the underlying legal reality of how canada is constituted
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I guess no more judeo-christian culture.
No more Surname-Surname that a lot of good ole Canadian families like to use.
I mean Diefenbaker won a landslide on the unhyphenated Canadian populism. There’s definitely a market for it in Canada 2026. The only PM that didn’t come from British or French heritage – still the only – deeply believed in the unhyphenated Canadian. So it’s a valid in play argument.
Is the guy ever going to drop specifics on anything? And is there a election going on ?
The whole thing was weird and awkward right down to Smith not mentioning Carney or the fact that she signed a mou with him .
It all seemed like watching something from the past.
I’ve been speculating that Poilievre won his leadership review largely because the CPC is floundering with zero prospects for good leaders or even serious politicians broadly and at least Poilievre is very good at monetizing the hatred and fear of …*passionate*… people and everybody kind of just knows that keeping those funds flowing is what’s best for CPC business right now.
This story basically affirms my speculation.
No-hyphens sounds like whatever the conservative version of virtue signaling is. Tough, I can’t really say it’s about a call to virtue when it’s for getting upset about someone saying German-Canadian or whatever.
Isn’t immigration effectively capped now? They have drastically cut programs and aren’t renewing some permits. Using immigration as the blame-all for social and economic woes is so American.
I dont think I agree with what the headline is saying. Not sure if there is more context though. Yes, people should adopt Canadian values, but I also believe part of what made Canada great was the diversity of cultures. So why not take pride in people honoring their heritage while also adopting Canadian values at the same time?
i just don’t think a ’no-hyphen‘ nationalism works in canada, given the realities of quebec, francophone ontarians and acadiens, first nations, metis and northern people– it’s an imperial mindset that belies the underlying legal reality of how canada is constituted