CANADA - OF THE UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA
The Canadian identity has always been difficult to define. We, as
Canadians, have continued to define ourselves by reference to what we
are not - American - rather than in terms of our own national history
and tradition. This is ironic since the United States is continuing to
be allowed by Canadians to take over our economy and literally buy our
country. Culturally Canada has its own distinct government and
institutions which differ and are better from those in the United
States, but economically the country has been all but sold out to
America. The major cultural differences to be examined are that of
Canada’s strong government, institutions such as welfare and universal
healthcare, and our profound respect for law and authority.
These establishments make Canada a
separate nation from the USA. Economically, it will be examined how
Canada has become a victim to Americanization through the purchase of
Canada with our own money, the shocking statistics of Canada’s foreign
ownership, and the final payment for our country, free trade. All in all
we have our own government, our own flag, our own anthem; but are we
really Canadian or a not quite United State of America?
In Canada, strong government involvement plays an immense role in
determining the destiny of its people for the good of the society.
In Canada you are reminded of the government every day. It parades
before you. It is
not content to be the servant, but will be the master...
Henry David Thoreau, 1886
Although slightly outdated, as of 1982 47.3 percent of Canada’s GNP was
in government hands, compared with 38% in the United States. Government
spending in Canada was 24.4% greater than in the U.S. and if you
subtract the U.S.’s excessive national defense spending, the gap between
the two countries considerable widens. The United States has adopted a
more Freudian “survival of the fittest” concept towards government where
the rights of the individual are predominant and industry is publicly
owned and run with little help from the government. Although there
is some government control and ownership of industry in both countries
it is much more common in Canada where “the state has always dominated
and shaped the ... economy.”
Of 400 top industrial firms, 25 were controlled by federal or provincial
governments.
Of the top 50 industrialists, all ranked by sales, 7 were either wholly
owned or
controlled by the federal or provincial governments. For financial
institutions, 9 of
the top 25 were federally or provincially owned or controlled ....
Also, Canadian subsidies to business and employment in public enterprise
were five times the level in the U.S. Government involvement is a
crutial part of the distinctness of our Canadian identity.
Similar variations occur with respect to Canada’s welfare policies. They
are clearly implemented for the good of the society, giving aid to any
citizen in need. This system is considered superior to that of the
United States where some people have no source of income whatsoever and
no chance to claim welfare. Welfare policies have generally been adopted
earlier in Canada and tend to be “more advanced in terms of program
development, coverage, and benefits”. Another advanced Canadian
institution is that of Canada’s famous universal health care system.
Although it is a complex system its highlights consist of: government
run, non profit insurance plan that uses public funds to pay for a
private, comprehensive system. The concept of the program being
universal means that the service is available to all Canadians
regardless of income. This system has been said by many to be Canada’s
most successful and popular program globally. It also separates us from
the misconception that we are similar to Americans.
Perhaps as important for our national identity, the Canadian approach to
health
insurance also clearly distinguishes us from the United States. The fact
that we have
developed such a different system suggests that we really are a separate
people, with
different political and cultural values. Even better our system works
well while the
American alternative does not.
In the U.S. there are forty million people, more than the entire
population of Canada, who have no health insurance. And even the best
medical insurance plan in the U.S.A. only covers 31.5% of expenses.
Moreover, the Canadian systems costs are well below that of the U.S. and
have produced lower infant mortality rates and longer life expectancy.
In 1986, average out-of-pocket expenditures for health care were $1135
per household
in the United States, and $446(US) in Canada. For hospitals and
physicians American
households paid $346, Canadians paid $33.
It is clear that the Canadian universal system of health care is by far
superior to the U.S. system. This may also be said true for Canadian’s
superior respect for law and authority. Canada’s fathers of
confederation stressed a great Canadian motto of “Peace, Order, and Good
Government” which implies control of, and protection for the society.
The parallel motto developed by America’s founding fathers is “life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness”, this model suggests the upholding
of the rights of the individual. Due to the Canadian motto being geared
towards the rights and obligations of the community “the crime control
model .... emphasizes the maintenance of law and order, and is less
protective of the rights of the accused and of individuals generally”.
Due to the American ‘s stress on the rights of the individual “there is
a greater propensity to redefine or ignore the rules .... (there is)
greater lawlessness and corruption in the United States”. For example,
in 1987 the murder rate in Canada was 2.5 per 100,000 population; for
the U.S. it was 8.3. In the U.S. last year, every 17 seconds a violent
crime was committed; a rape every 5 minutes, a murder every 23 minutes,
an assault every 51 seconds. Also, because it is a constitutional right
for an American to own a gun, every day 15 children aged 19 and under
are killed with guns, it is the leading cause of death for people
between ages of 15 and 24. Licensed firearm dealers sell an estimated
7.5 million guns a year including 3.5 million handguns.13 In Canada
“ownership of offensive weapons or guns is considered a privilege, not a
right”. And 83.3 of Canadians show support for a law which would require
a person to obtain a police permit to purchase a gun . Even though a
representative of the Canadian Justice department is quoted as saying
“it is almost impossible to get a permit to carry a handgun”. Though in
the U.S.A. a handgun can be purchased in less than 24 hours.
In 1992 handguns were used to murder 36 people in Sweden, 97 in
Switzerland, 60 in Japan, 128 in Canada, 33 in Great Britain, 13 in
Australia and 13,495 in the United States; God Bless America!
Again, a major Canadian system has proven itself superior to its
American counterpart. It is surprising that Canada’s most important
social institutions are far superior to those of the U.S.A. although it
is well known that the U.N. (United Nations) has chosen Canada as the
best place to live in the world two years running. These successful
institutions promote Canada’s cultural identity for they can be used as
models to countries around the globe.
Americans should not underestimate the constant pressure on Canada which
the mere
presence of the United States has produced. We’re different people from
you and
we’re different people because of you .... living next to you is in some
ways like
sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even tempered the
beast, if I
can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt .... It
should not therefore be
expected that this kind of nation, this Canada, should project itself
.... as a mirror
image of the United States.
Pierre Trudeau (1969)
Culturally, Canadians are Canadians but
economically Canadians are Americans. Ever since the end of World War I
the U.S. cleverly began to purchase our country. Through foreign
investment “the Americans accumulated Canada at the unbelievable rate of
a billion dollars worth yearly” from 1955 onward. Not only were they
buying out Canada but they were doing it with Canadian money. The way
that they did this is through trade profits, for instance: Just before
World War II the U.S.A. was buying goods off of us at a rate of $35 per
Canadian, we were buying goods off them at $50 per Canadian. The
difference comes to $15 per Canadian per year in the American’s favour.
Our population was 11 million at this time therefore this trade deficit
translates into a profit of $165,000,000 in the American’s favour, per
year, at a $15 trade deficit, with an 11 million population ($15 x
11mil. = 165mil.).
In 1947 our trade with the United States reach such proportions that it
was draining
from us the amazing total of $70 per person per year.
In the 10 years from 1947 to 1957 Americans bought $20 billion worth of
goods from us (figures are rounded), they sold us $27 billion worth. In
other words, we handed the United States seven billion dollars. And that
same figure (seven billions) happens to be almost exactly the amount of
money the Americans “invested in Canada” in the years 1947 - 1957. In
other words:
In 10 years American financiers took from the Canadian people seven
billion dollars,
and during that very same period they used our seven billion dollars to
buy up a large
portion of our country.
This did not only happen between 1947 and
1957 but if you research any year in modern trading history between
Canada and the United States you will come to the same conclusion
(except the figures keep growing and growing as time progresses).
Due mostly to the Americans purchasing our country “Canada is already
the most foreign-dominated of any industrialized country in the world”.
100% of the tobacco industry, 98%of the rubber industry, 92% of the
automotive industry, 84% of transportation, 78% of electrical apparatus
industry, 78% of the petroleum and coal industry, 76% of the chemical
industry, and 75% of heavy manufacturing are foreign owned, mostly
American.
This foreign takeover has turned Canada into a branch plant economy
where parent companies in the U.S. make decisions concerning Canadian
companies and Canadians rarely have the ability to reach top management
positions. This current situation “erodes Canadian sovereignty and
diminishes Canadian independence” it is also a “threat to our power to
implement decisions within our own borders - a threat no less real,
though more subtle, that if a division of Marines were marching across
our border.” Another way of describing Canada’s branch plant economy is
to call it a new form of mercantilism. We are just a colony of the
United States and we are acting for the betterment of the Mother
country.
We are the servants of a new mercantilism. The foreign subsidiary in
Canada clearly
exists to further the interests of the parent corporation, whose home
country in most
cases is the United States. The hinterlands - like Canada - are to
supply the
corporations with raw materials, and organize the disposition of
subsequent consumer
capital goods.
Although foreign ownership creates jobs for Canadians, it does not
create the top jobs, nor does it promote economic progress or even
prosperity. It actually costs Canada $35 billion each and every year in
revenue taken out of the country. “Americans have drained from Canada
more wealth than they have hauled out of all other countries combined”.
And the government is still allowing more and more foreign investment.
“No other country seems prepared to tolerate so high a degree of foreign
ownership as exists in Canada”. And now, with free-trade, it has become
even easier for America to control Canada and exploit it for all
America’s wants and needs.
New Democratic party leader, Edward Broadbent, referring to Brian
Mulrony and free-trade between Canada and the United States said “I can
tell you that for the first time in the history of Canada, we have a man
who is Prime Minister who has, without even being asked, volunteered
Canada to be the 51st state in the United States .... This is
essentially what free-trade meant for Canada. John A. MacDonald had
called free-trade “veiled treason”, and for 125 years prominent Canadian
figures warned fellow Canadians that “without an economic border we soon
would not have a political border either”. The best way to describe
free-trade is to quote some of John Turner’s detailed and moving speech
delivered in the House of Commons.
Mr. Speaker, we are here today to discuss one of the most devastating
pieces of
legislation ever brought before the House of Commons...a bill which will
finish
Canada as we know it and replace it with a Canada that will become
nothing more
than a colony of the United States. In this bill...we find that
Canadians can be fined,
even imprisoned for contravening American law....Why are we now being
forced to
give hasy approval to legislation which represents the largest sell-out
of our
sovereignty since we became a nation in 1867?...We have given up control
of our
capital markets...This deal sells out our energy, the life blood of this
country...The
National Energy Board becomes nothing more than a monitoring agency...it
is
Washington that is taking control of our energy resources...With this
deal we have
succeeded in the fulfilment of the American Dream! Fifty-four Forty, or
Fight!
Manifest Destiny! At long last they found a Government in Ottawa dumb
enough,
stupid enough, patsies so craven in the face of American demands that
they just caved
in to every request made of them...I say to the people of Canada that
this is not a
trade deal. This is “the Sale of Canada Act...
When free trade was finally implicated into the Canadian society, the
first three years cost 1.4 million jobs. Archie McLean, Vice President
of McCain’s Foods, testified that 100,000 to 150,000 jobs would be lost
directly from free trade in his company alone. By September 1992, Canada
had the highest number of unemployed in its history.
B.C. millionaire Jim Patterson said:
“We’re taking everything we’ve go and pushing it into the United
States... I keep telling our people to forget the border - it doesn’t
exist anymore”. Free trade was obviously a bad deal for Canada and
should have been obvious when it was laid on the table. Even the
American public knew what they were getting when they obtained the free
trade agreement. An American economic forecaster, Marvin Cetron, wrote
in his 1990 bestselling book, American Renaissance : Our Life at the
Turn of the Century:
Once the free-trade agreement with the United States takes full effect,
the next logical
step will be to accept politically what has already happened
economically - the
integration of Canada into the United States
In conclusion, it is evident that Canada is different form the United
States within its government and institutions and, in most cases, have a
superior system, but economically Canada is owned and dominated by
America. Benjamin Franklin once said that “the man who would trade
independence for security deserves neither. Canada is slowly
volunteering for the American vision of Manifest Destiny where not one
gun has to be fired. Ex Prime Minister John Diefenbaker expressed his
opinion by stating that “We are a power, not a puppet...I want Canada to
ve in control of Canadian soil. Now if that’s an offence I want the
people of Canada to say so. We must to several thing to break free from
these restraints which are upon us. First, though, we must scrap free
trade, control foreign ownership, and balance our trade with the enemy -
the USA.
Canada has gone form being a colony of France, to being a colony of
Britan, to being
a colony of the United States. It’s time now to become a nation.
Bibliography
1. Berton, Pierre. Why we Act like Canadians. Toronto: McClelland &
Stewart, 1982.
2. Lamorie, Andrew. How they sold Our Canada to the U.S.A.. Toronto: NC
Press, 1976.
3. Lipset, Seymour M. North American Cultures. U.S.A.: Borderlands
Project, 1990.
4. Nader, Ralph. Canada Firsts. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1992.
5. Orchard, David. The Fight for Canada. Toronto: Stoddart Publishing,
1993.
6. “The center to prevent hand gun violence”. National center for health
statistics, 1994. Internet document.
7. “The FBI Uniform Creme Reports”. The Los Angeles Times, Nov. 19,
1995. Internet document.
8. The Star-Spangled Beaver. Ed. John H. Redekop. Toronto: Peter Martin,
1971.
9. Thomas, David. Canada and the United States, Differences that Count.
Peterborough: Broadview Press, 1993.
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