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[personal profile] ciroccoj
OK, now this is freaking hilarious:


1) Do you like to shoot people? Circle one: yes / no

(If you answered "yes" you should know that there is no Second Amendment or equivalent thereof in the Canadian constitution. Perhaps as a consequence only 22 percent of Canadians own guns as opposed to 49 percent of Americans, while handguns and assault rifles are verboten. Perhaps related to that statistic, the violent crime rate in Canada is 10 times lower than in the United States. This may have no connection to guns, though, and rather a strong correlation to general mellowness of the Canadian temperament. (See Question 3, below.)

2) Have you recently shot someone? Circle one: yes / no

(If you answered yes, you may find Canada appealing. The Canadian courts abolished capital punishment in the '70s, and Canada hasn't seen an execution since 1962. Texas hasn't seen one since about 11 seconds ago.)

3) Do you like to smoke pot? Circle one: yes / no / only for medicinal reasons / only with John Ashcroft

(Judges in at least three provinces have now decriminalized marijuana possession and the federal government is considering decriminalizing it in small quantities. We are advised that the feds also grow great masses of it in large underground caverns and may soon expand the use of these caverns as shelters to which the entire country would retreat in the event of a terrorist attack or to spur mass-munchies in case of a national Doritos glut. And only in Canada would you find marijuana advocates genuinely arguing that people actually drive better stoned.) CirNote: And they're really, really not kidding about this one. Stupidity has never respected national borders.

4) Are you covered in vast quantities of coarse, black fur? Circle one: yes / no

(Don't kid yourself. It is freakin' cold up there. While 90 percent of Canadians live within 100 miles of the U.S. border, the places they live north of are Green Bay and Buffalo.)

5) Do you like to wear white sneakers (Canadians call these "running shoes") with jeans? Circle one: yes / no

(Canadians are an extraordinarily stylish people, without the excess snobbery of Europeans; and most of them manifest this by being strikingly well-shod. Canadians generally find themselves perplexed by shiny tracksuits, leggings, baseball caps, and sweaters with reindeer on them.) CirNote: OTOH, we're more likely to be caught dead wearing earmuffs.

6) Do you generally find being alive to be just fine? Circle one: yes / no

(For some reason Canadians seem to live longer, be healthier, and pay less for these privileges. It has something to do with national health insurance, adequate primary care, particularly for children, and the availability of quality prescription drugs. (See, e.g., Question 3, above.)

7) Are you gay, or, alternatively, do you suspect that the institution of marriage should be open to all couples who are committed to living together and/or raising children in a loving environment? Circle one: yes / no

(Six and possibly soon seven Canadian provinces currently permit gay marriage. Before leaving office last year, Prime Minister Jean Chretien referred the question of the constitutionality of same-sex marriage to the Supreme Court for an opinion. The court hasn't yet decided the question.) CirNote: Left to right, the six were BC, the Yukon (not a province but a territory), Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia. The seventh is Saskatchewan, where the ruling came down yesterday.

8) Are your political views either too complicated to be expressed in two-word bumper stickers, or, alternatively, do you find that you just don't much care about your neighbors' views on guns/the unborn/or which deity is their copilot? Circle one: yes / no

(Canadians tend to subscribe to a live-and-let-live view of political ideology. It's not that Canadians don't care about their politics or moral issues. It's simply that they appear to operate under the assumption that, whatever their personal beliefs might be, you, their neighbor, may not care all that much to learn every detail of them on the way to the 7-Eleven. As a consequence, T-shirts in Canada are still funny, signage is still commercial, and bumpers are reserved for smashing into telephone poles after cottage parties. [Cottage: Def. Sprawling lakefront estate in rural Canada, quaintly Hamptonesque but with indoor plumbing optional.])

9) Are you bored to death of razor-thin margins between radical ideologues in every aspect of public life? Circle one: yes / no

(The 5-4 split on the Canadian Supreme Court is male/female as opposed to crazy/crazier.)

10) Does the idea of pluralism appeal to you? Not just in the sense that I-want-to-be-surrounded-by-lots-of-diverse-and-fascinating-people-who-all-worship-my-Lord, but rather, in the sense, that a country is a richer place for competing values, religions and cultures? Circle one: yes / no

(When Canadians talk about "multiculturalism," it doesn't only mean they're for blondes hanging out with redheads. Canadian TV shows actually teem with racially diverse characters, and the major national catalogs have been known to feature models in wheelchairs. Moreover, Canada has not one but two official languages, and no one seems to be suffering for it. Indeed, some believe it makes them sort of interesting. Certainly it will be interesting when the thousands of Bush-dodgers someday return to the United States to visit relatives and amuse them by explaining that the Teton Mountains actually mean "big boobies" in French.)

Here's the full article from Slate: Moving to Canada, Eh?

A link from the above took me to CANADA: A PRIMER, which includes the following:

FOOD: The staples of the Canadian diet are fatty meats, beaver, processed cheese, pancake flour, lard, hard candy, and French gourmet foods, such as Capitaine Crounche. (Poutine, said to be the national fast food of Canada, is actually styrofoam covered with gravy.) CirNote: 100% true for poutine, but I can't believe they left out Canada's #1 source of vitamins, minerals, and joy: beer.

Date: 2004-11-06 12:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] daf9.livejournal.com
WAAAAAAAAHHHHHH! i wanna come home.

Chortle!

Date: 2004-11-06 03:55 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I-want-to-be-surrounded-by-lots-of-diverse-and-fascinating-people-who-all-worship-my-Lord

Snicker, snicker! Fun, fun, fun! Reminds me of that link I posted the other day about the Prez and pop culture which mused whether The Daily Show needed Bush in order to stay funny.

And I'm off to follow your links...
Sarah
http://www.upsaid.com/teachermom

IF only

Date: 2004-11-06 07:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] animaltalker.livejournal.com
it wasn't so damn cold! I grew up in AZ and this time of year in Denver I start complaining, in about a month I'll be insufferable. Only thing that helps is Bill is a human equivalent of a radiator (and he is covered in fur -occasionally he pleads with me in the summer to thin out his back hair and about once a month his neck's gotta be shaved below the collar- I've never seen him with out a mustache and beard!)

Yep he'd make a great Canuck but not me I so wanna be a snowbird - I suppose if I learned Spanish i could go south but I don't know that that would be a very good alternative I thgink Fox is a lot like Bush eh?

Date: 2004-11-06 07:54 pm (UTC)
ext_41593: (HRG)
From: [identity profile] tudorlady.livejournal.com
Hey, like this is the line for Vancouver, right?

Now I just need to explain to other people in my state that I *don't* mean that dinky little town just across the river in Washington...

Seriously, if I didn't own property... and there was a cute enough Canadian Guy waiting on the other end, I'd seriously go, eh? The weather doesn't faze me a bit. (uhm, what do they do to people who write smut up there? Anything? No? I mean, I'm not exactly Sue Johansen, I just do it for fun...)

Date: 2004-11-06 08:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ciroccoj.livejournal.com
and there was a cute enough Canadian Guy waiting on the other end
I'll try to rustle one up, complete with RCMP uniform ;)

uhm, what do they do to people who write smut up there?
Make you provide French translations. It's easy, though - just become familiar with the terms fellatio, cunninlingus, sodomie, seins, âne, and robinet :)

wow!

Date: 2004-11-06 10:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] animaltalker.livejournal.com
Paul's last name (minus extra letters is risque? Who would have thought it So what's a robinet?

Re: wow!

Date: 2004-11-06 11:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ciroccoj.livejournal.com
So what's a robinet?

Well, see, I thought a Robinet was a faucet. There's some L&O website that said that "Paul Robinette is actually Paul SomethingElse in French L&O, because it would sound silly to call him ADA Paul Faucet." OK, sure, that makes sense, and it goes with my own imperfect knowledge of French.

But BabelFish (http://world.altavista.com/), a translation site I occasionally use, gave me the word robinet when I typed in... um, ::blush:: "cock".

Oddly, when you type in "robinet" and ask it to translate back to English, it gives you "tap."

Oh I get it

Date: 2004-11-07 12:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] animaltalker.livejournal.com
in chemistry we use a device called a stopcock it turns the fulled on and off in burettes and in soem types of glassware it is basicly a glass faucet so indeed a robinet is a faucet, a stopcock or a tap but if we want to think of him as paul something else that's our perogative.

Wonder if anyone else comes up with an odd translation?

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