many quebecois think they’re a sufficiently distinct culture and don’t buy into the canadian multiculturalism thing.
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Replying to @mendel
there’s a phrase that refers to a “purebred” Quebecois: “pure laine”. I don’t think it gets much use anymore but you get the idea
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Replying to @mendel
moving ahead to the 1995 referendum (when I was there!) the head of the Parti Quebecois blamed the “non” win on “money and the ethnic vote”.
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Replying to @mendel
“Money”, of course, meant rich Anglo Montrealers, of which an awful lot are Jewish. And the ethnic vote. The premier said this.
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Replying to @mendel
And Quebec City is the capital of Quebec province, and is firmly Francophone. I’m sure most Quebec City residents are open-minded,
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Replying to @mendel
but it is overwhemlingly white, and Catholic, and even more so once you get out of the city into the suburbs and into the “townships”.
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Replying to @mendel
right, so, never mind the American-ish right wing problem we’ve got out west; Quebec has its own special set of problems.
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Replying to @mendel
I don’t know if these terrorists were “pure laine” Quebecois, or Nazis or Freemen on the Land or what, but in the context of Trump, …
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Replying to @mendel
keep in mind that Quebec has its own take on anti-immigrant sentiment. (And its own immigration laws! It’s complicated up here.) /thread
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Replying to @mendel
I assume Montreal isn't a reflection of Quebec in general? Montreal felt extremely multicultural.
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Montreal is not representative at all, yeah. It’s also very Anglo (and was more so before the political instability there).
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