Bilingualism in Canada is a SCAM

Do Canadians really speak French and English? Or is it only a tiny elite?
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[1] www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-re...
[2] www.canada.ca/en/privy-counci...
[3] www.canada.ca/en/treasury-boa...

Пікірлер: 10 000

  • @Amethystic95
    @Amethystic955 жыл бұрын

    Oh my gosh, the number of people in the comments section that are just like "lol Anglos just learn a second language already." Clearly nobody here has studied second language learning in any serious depth! Trained ESL educator here: not only did JJ rightly point out in the video that it's extremely difficult to gain proficiency in a language that you have ZERO use for in your everyday life (where on earth is a poor prairie farmer's kid going to study French in Anglo-majority rural Alberta??), but developmentally it is extremely difficult to acquire fluency in a second language. Unless you had the privilege (gosh, I hate that word, but it truly does apply in this case) of having parents who decided to/were able to put you through French immersion school, anyone who wants to learn French for professional purposes has to start from scratch as an adult, expending a tremendous amount of time and money (which many people don't have) to even have a chance at gaining proficiency; the older you are when you start, the more difficult it is, developmentally speaking, to become fluent. Anyone who looks at any other second language learner group in Canada already understands this: think of the great many immigrants from China, Africa, etc. who have been here for decades, have often gone through several programs to improve their English, and have to function every day in a society where English is used and spoken; they receive tons of practice in their second language, and yet how many of them still have strong accents, poor grammatical skills, a lack of academic-level vocabulary, etc.? Is any of this because they are "lazy" or just need to "work harder" at being fluent in English? No! While practice makes perfect, the fact is that many of these difficulties stem from developmental and cognitive factors out of their control, and to blame their supposed lack of hard work for their inability to acquire professional-level fluency is unfair and completely ignorant. tl;dr - People who think becoming fluent in a second language isn't incredibly difficult (arguably to the point of being impossible for many adult learners) are extremely out of touch and need to acknowledge that it is often an accident of birth that determines whether or not you'll have the resources necessary to become fluent in two languages, not simply hard work or laziness.

  • @JJMcCullough

    @JJMcCullough

    5 жыл бұрын

    Amethystic95 Thank you for this insightful comment. Language learning, acquisition, and retention is, as you said, a very complicated human cognitive undertaking. Bilingual Quebeckers need to be a little more introspective about how they wound up that way, and why Canadians elsewhere might have wound up differently. In the future I think I just want to make a video about language learning in general.

  • @nighthoodlupin3500

    @nighthoodlupin3500

    5 жыл бұрын

    Why does anyone NEED to though, unless you want to be PM or certain jobs? Where are people getting this idea from? The majority of English speakers have done just fine ignoring French all this time, although I think it'd be nice if a lot more people were bilingual . Learning it, like learning anything really, just opens up more opportunities for you, that's all. But I would hope that anyone who wants to be our PM would be smart enough to pick up a second language at least, and who says you need to be perfect? Bilingual leaders have rarely been perfect in their bilingualism. Anglophone PMs and those running for the postition in the past had no qualms picking French up and vice versa, and they governed just fine despite sounding near-horrible in the language they learned.

  • @MegaBanne

    @MegaBanne

    5 жыл бұрын

    I can understand that older people would be against it. But I live in a very much bilingual society. The country I live in is ranked to have the population that is best at speaking English as their second language in the world. Having mandatory french classes in school should be a thing in Canada. Same thing with English in French Canada. Either you accept the problem or does something about the problem. But for gods sake stop bitching. Your not facing some kind of third world problem or something. If anyone has something to bitch about in Canada then it is the Native American minorities.

  • @mikeyslakowski1299

    @mikeyslakowski1299

    5 жыл бұрын

    Would probably easily be fixed just by teaching French and English next to each other in public schools even if they only teach French conversationally they would learn from a young age and probably speak it among themselves as well as teaching English and French in French areas. It's honestly never a bad thing to learn another language I am bilingual it's the same thing in the US people don't want to learn Spanish and immigrants don't want to learn English as some sort of culture war and it's just kind of pointless and lazy. Just learn another language all it can do is serve you even if you aren't fluent any bit will help you in life.

  • @nighthoodlupin3500

    @nighthoodlupin3500

    5 жыл бұрын

    @sergio diaz nila - oh, I agree it definitely gives you benefits and advantages in life in general, I meant priviages from the government. Anyway I edited that comment because yeah, bilingualism is practically necessary for being PM at least (although Kevin Oleary tried to prove that wrong), so anyone who is already bilingual is 'privilaged' in that sense (but the majority of bilingual people had to put the work in at some point to learn their other language anyways, no one is BORN bilingual), but you and other repliers are correct that it isn't that hard to learn another language in the first place. I would hope that anyone who wants to be PM would at least put that amount of effort into educating themselves for the job. I still remember basic French stuff from learning it for 6 years of grade school, it just faded and didn't stick with me because I didn't need to use it much. If there were some great french songs, movies, or tv shows I liked and wanted to understand since those years of learning maybe I'd even be fluent now. Hell, I DIDNT EVEN GO TO SCHOOL for the other language I'm (almost) fluent in, I just watched movies and listened to people in that language. I think it simply comes down to exposure and how much you want to or need to learn it.

  • @kingjustin81
    @kingjustin815 жыл бұрын

    Do you say “a boot” instead of “about” on purpose. As a Canadian I had never heard a real Canadian say this until now

  • @bradleymacklin7896

    @bradleymacklin7896

    5 жыл бұрын

    Justin Goodman I was just about to comment this. He just sounds stupid

  • @concars1234

    @concars1234

    5 жыл бұрын

    he's playing it up for sure lmao

  • @pisse3000

    @pisse3000

    5 жыл бұрын

    He sounds like he's from Toronto, but wants to sound "Canadian" to his American friends lol. It's not supposed to be said like "a boot", but rather like "a bow-t". He overdoes it to the point of parody.

  • @EEYore-py1bf

    @EEYore-py1bf

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@pisse3000 He's actually from BC though. I've never heard anyone speak quite like him around here, though tbf I've really only been in the Fraser Valley and Vancouver. Everyone where I live speaks with more of an 'oa' sound, like in boat and foam.

  • @Gluteus.Maximus

    @Gluteus.Maximus

    5 жыл бұрын

    Only Newfies talk like that. He's faking it

  • @nat8602
    @nat86025 жыл бұрын

    Being a Canadian myself I’d never heard anyone pronounce “about” as “a boot”.. until now

  • @Kr0pD

    @Kr0pD

    5 жыл бұрын

    C’est un clown BS called

  • @themoneyguy7323

    @themoneyguy7323

    5 жыл бұрын

    Newfoundland...

  • @godzillaman823

    @godzillaman823

    5 жыл бұрын

    Same here aahahah so cringy

  • @mikia.d

    @mikia.d

    5 жыл бұрын

    I know, I was just like: damn, they do exist...

  • @SenorMeinKrafter

    @SenorMeinKrafter

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's called Western Canada. Most people in Canada have American accents because of how much influence they have on our entertainment.

  • @FK-tz7gs
    @FK-tz7gs4 жыл бұрын

    When I was visiting Montreal a fistfight started in a subway over this very topic

  • @gordonmorris751

    @gordonmorris751

    4 жыл бұрын

    not 1 english only university or collage inside the terrorist dictatorship of quebec . yet they demand the rest of the country bend over and take it by forcing franco terrorist training centers be built for them . when quebec refused to sign the constitutional accord they should have been flushed like the shit they are

  • @louispetitjean1652

    @louispetitjean1652

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@patrickvilleneuve1375 As a current McGillian in Montreal, I confirm this. Classes are in English

  • @archdukefranzferdinand567

    @archdukefranzferdinand567

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@louispetitjean1652 Isn't McGill like the second most prestigious university in the country lol

  • @gato-grande

    @gato-grande

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@gordonmorris751 BRITS OUT OF QUEBEC

  • @gato-grande

    @gato-grande

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@gordonmorris751 VIVE LE QUEBEC LIBRE

  • @laserwolf65
    @laserwolf654 жыл бұрын

    American here. This comment section is gold! I haven't been this entertained in years.

  • @marc-alexandrelaroche6632

    @marc-alexandrelaroche6632

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ltbubbas Moi aussi mdr.

  • @XavierbTM1221

    @XavierbTM1221

    4 жыл бұрын

    No entendí lo que dijiste

  • @marcpell133

    @marcpell133

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dude we do the same thing, just with your entire country 😂

  • @leebot558

    @leebot558

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sterling Mitts anti Americanism again

  • @carlaw6981

    @carlaw6981

    3 жыл бұрын

    I’m American too and I’m over her laughing and it’s about midnight

  • @ThomasGauthier
    @ThomasGauthier5 жыл бұрын

    To answer your question, I don't like your new hair color.

  • @vonzack9353

    @vonzack9353

    5 жыл бұрын

    Vas-tu faire une vidéo à son sujet Thomas?

  • @gfleury1549

    @gfleury1549

    5 жыл бұрын

    Décalisse le Thomas svp. Merci

  • @JJMcCullough

    @JJMcCullough

    5 жыл бұрын

    Zoot alors!

  • @Michael-di7bg

    @Michael-di7bg

    5 жыл бұрын

    Bon, beh écoute, j'pense que c'est le temps d'allez me chercher des Chips.

  • @Nincubura

    @Nincubura

    5 жыл бұрын

    oof

  • @whyit487
    @whyit4875 жыл бұрын

    *When you're at a café in America, HUNDREDS OF MILES AWAY FROM CANADA, while watching a video about English-French bilingualism in Quebec, and then a person a few feet (sorry for the imperial) away from you, in the same café, who can't see your screen, WHO IS FROM FRANCE, starts talking to another person about ENGLISH-FRENCH BILINGUALISM IN QUEBEC.* 0_o *WOAH*

  • @gameu360

    @gameu360

    5 жыл бұрын

    Holiday magic

  • @justinperreault9130

    @justinperreault9130

    5 жыл бұрын

    THIS IS CANADA YOU MAPLE SYRUP PUCK SNOW HOCKEY STICK WE SAY KILOMETERS sorry for swearing in canadian

  • @ethanbrown4656

    @ethanbrown4656

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@justinperreault9130 You are banished to nunavut

  • @FATTYBONGRIPS

    @FATTYBONGRIPS

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@ethanbrown4656 a worse fate than death

  • @SxVaNm345

    @SxVaNm345

    5 жыл бұрын

    I’ve had stuff like that happened to me before as well

  • @rotorous
    @rotorous3 жыл бұрын

    I’m glad we here in the US were too lazy to implement an official language.

  • @karsten3360

    @karsten3360

    3 жыл бұрын

    Or they just don't care

  • @sportspro2.049

    @sportspro2.049

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@karsten3360 technically it's because America itself isn't necessarily supposed to have an official language

  • @thepizzaelf

    @thepizzaelf

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well English technically is the official language even if it’s not written down as so

  • @GZQ9

    @GZQ9

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think a lot of the founding fathers wanted our national language to be German as well to distance ourselves from the British, But American German speaking died off a lot during the world wars

  • @GZQ9

    @GZQ9

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ginch8300 ah, Thanks for pointing that out about the founding fathers, but I definitely know that were more german speakers in the United States before the world wars, and there’s a even a Texan dialect of German that survives with a few older Texan german speakers

  • @Geomat1c
    @Geomat1c3 жыл бұрын

    the thing that kills me about our bilingualism is that a territory like Nunavut's most populous language is not French or English but instead Inuktitut yet this language is not provided by the Canadian government.

  • @shanemcgrath2809

    @shanemcgrath2809

    3 жыл бұрын

    How many people live there? Probably not enough to make a difference in terms of national languages

  • @josephbouthillier6637

    @josephbouthillier6637

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@louisd.8928 Evidently, Pierce did not do research... before making a comment.

  • @goofygrandlouis6296

    @goofygrandlouis6296

    Жыл бұрын

    Fight for it !

  • @RoyalKnightVIII

    @RoyalKnightVIII

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shanemcgrath2809 and? Their language is still the language of the land. The French speakers get disproportionately more funds than all native languages. After countless genocides they deserve some language support

  • @appa609

    @appa609

    Жыл бұрын

    Nunavut is considered a territory i.e. colony. The inuit do not see themselves as Canadian we just claimed the land they were living on.

  • @jnsn94
    @jnsn945 жыл бұрын

    Je suis canadien français ! Mon très bas quotient intellectuel ne me permet pas d'apprendre l'anglais ..je n'ai rien compris de ce qu'il a dit mais je m'estime heureux car j'ai finalement eu la connexion internet dans mon igloo et il me reste assez de sirop d'érable pour finir le mois

  • @HermelThePolyglot

    @HermelThePolyglot

    5 жыл бұрын

    best comment ever! (t'as-tu compris ?)

  • @jnsn94

    @jnsn94

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@HermelThePolyglot bin oui !pis je veux me fouttre de la gueule du monde en écrivant ça 😂😂👌c'est crissement pas vrai

  • @HermelThePolyglot

    @HermelThePolyglot

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@jnsn94 you don't say? Hehehe

  • @blackcappedchickadee8469

    @blackcappedchickadee8469

    5 жыл бұрын

    Pure Genius!!! J'aurais pas mieux dit! C'est pas drôle être aussi jambon pauvre gars. It's ok though, I heard that ignorance doesn't hurt.

  • @jnsn94

    @jnsn94

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@blackcappedchickadee8469 hahahhahahahaaha 😂 ciboire le monde me prend au sérieux

  • @SomeDudeQC
    @SomeDudeQC5 жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry, but the Franco-Ontarians fighting for their rights are not "Quebec migrants." They've lived there since before confederation. They often founded the cities in which they live. The government forbade french language institutions and the lack of a french language University forces them to come to Quebec to study, and leave their province behind.

  • @blacksmith67

    @blacksmith67

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Rob M Did you watch the video or fully read the comment?

  • @beyondxbeautiful

    @beyondxbeautiful

    5 жыл бұрын

    Rob M research your facts before saying whatever you feel like, google is free. Can you please name me these 6 french universities? Ontario has 2 bilingual, not French, Universities, big difference. UOttawa and Laurentian. That means they do offer some partial French programs, but most upper year courses need to be taken in English. There’s of course Université de Hearst but it’s part of Laurentian University, it’s not an independent university and again Laurentian is bilingual not French. Meanwhile Anglophones in Quebec have THREE full english universities, McGill, Concordia and Bishop

  • @CoolRabbitPenis

    @CoolRabbitPenis

    5 жыл бұрын

    You're a grade A moron if you think that requiring businesses to provide services in French as well as English is depriving someone of a right. By that very same faulty logic, the French minority living in Western Canada is being horribly oppressed by finding it impossible to be serviced in their own language.

  • @jakobpeterli5284

    @jakobpeterli5284

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Rob M if quebec banned anglo universties what would do?

  • @jakobpeterli5284

    @jakobpeterli5284

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Rob M your forgetting about the cegeps that are public and when you are a quebec resident universities tuition is reduced no matter the language only for people outside of quebec it is the full price

  • @carsivus4866
    @carsivus48663 жыл бұрын

    An extremely easy situation to this would be to just have translators in the ears of politicians who don't understand French/English. It's what they do in European Parliament. That way being bilingual wouldn't be a requirement for becoming an MP or party or any other high ranking government job.

  • @mirabeaux851

    @mirabeaux851

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@louisd.8928 yeah he’s very sloppy with the truth when it comes to where people are actually required to be bilingual and where it’s simply a realpolitikal one

  • @bobfearnley5724

    @bobfearnley5724

    2 жыл бұрын

    yet the government is looking at how much french is spoken at home as a success metric. This criteria for upholding language laws is unrealistic

  • @southerncoyote

    @southerncoyote

    2 жыл бұрын

    It is amazing how often governments blatantly overlook the simplest solutions.

  • @southerncoyote

    @southerncoyote

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@louisd.8928 maybe not for politics de jure but it is a requirement for high level government administrators. Those are people who have worked for years to build up skills in leading large organizations. Do they really need to also be bilingual? Why shouldn’t they just have translators and focus on finding the best leadership.

  • @josephbouthillier6637

    @josephbouthillier6637

    2 жыл бұрын

    Translation in parlement? Already exists. LOL.

  • @lexscott3739
    @lexscott37393 жыл бұрын

    As a French-Canadian from Ontario, I learned English through videogames because I was not going to understand the plot otherwise, through television for similar reasons because there were three or so French channels, and through the radio because lord knows French-Canadian music is hit-or-miss. By 7 I was fluent. By 12 I could count on my fingers how many conversations I had had in English because the French community is so freaking self-isolating I was half-convinced - weirdly enough - that English was some made up language people came up with to act cool like some kind of secret code. I met my first unilingual English friend at 13, which coincided with the year French-Canadian school starts making English classes compulsory. (Seriously; I'm convinced at least half of high school drop-outs were just people obstinately refusing to learn English). My grades took a small dive because the class was so boring for someone already fluent that I couldn't focus to save my life, but through the power of procrastination, things worked out and resolved themselves the next year. It took me four months to learn that my friend was unilingual because I'd taken it as a matter of course that he simply preferred English on the basis that he had greeted me in the language when first we met. By the time others in my classes were capable of speaking full sentences in English, so too could my friend in French, only motivated by the fact that we could speak it to pull the wool over his parents' eyes when we were up to our teen antics and didn't want them to overhear our plans. Timeskip of ten years? The man hasn't had a reason to speak French in four and had to ask me to repeat slowly when I greeted him in French, we defaulted to English after ten minutes of talking. It was the last time I heard him speak French at all. It's not learning the language that's difficult; it's keeping the knowledge when you have no use for it in your day-to-day. But beyond that, frankly speaking; French is a pain in the ass because of all its literary regulations. Speaking it is the easy part; writing it is the real pain in the ass. At 27 years old, I still make spelling mistakes as a native speaker with a post-secondary degree in the freaking language, how lame is that?

  • @carolthedabbler2105

    @carolthedabbler2105

    2 жыл бұрын

    Right -- use it or lose it! I learned Spanish well in college, then forgot most of it. When a friend married a Mexican woman, I spoke "broken Spanish" to communicate, and my vocabulary improved but I still couldn't conjugate. Haven't seen them for a while and my Spanish is again atrophying.

  • @ewill3435

    @ewill3435

    2 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely! Hello from the U.S by the way. After studying German for over eight years through high school and college and even minoring in it, I still have the reading level of a child! You can spend hours a day, every day learning grammar and vocabulary, but until you're immersed in the language, you're going to hit a ceiling.

  • @uriurw8630

    @uriurw8630

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, in ontario too and I am a native french speaker, most people in my school are also native french but prefer english for some reason when i hear them speak french is like hearing a B1 level speaker messing up every few phrases, its kinda sad :/

  • @klarissaclairiton9010

    @klarissaclairiton9010

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ewill3435 I have started learning German too.

  • @patrickbuswell
    @patrickbuswell5 жыл бұрын

    French speaking people who apply for job in the government need to learn or know a second language (English) also. Same for anglophone. How is it unfair?

  • @TheSpectralFX

    @TheSpectralFX

    5 жыл бұрын

    For dumb teenagers.... French is haaaard

  • @missquark_

    @missquark_

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's only unfair because some english speakers think they are superior to everyone else and/or are lazy. The hidden goal was to assimilate the french over the generations, not to culturally enrich the english.

  • @beefjuice2153

    @beefjuice2153

    5 жыл бұрын

    I'm not taking J.J.'s side, but his argument is that there are minorities besides French speakers who are not given the same priority as French minorities. He implies that requiring politicians to speak French inherently points their focus at just French and English issues, indirectly causing the same exclusion of other languages. Essentially his point is 'why prioritize knowing French over another second language, when we have translators?' I don't believe J.J. is suggesting that learning a second language is unfair, but that the French Canadian population is in decline, while still possessing a cultural stronghold in the government.

  • @gauvaindf

    @gauvaindf

    5 жыл бұрын

    ​@@TheSpectralFX Je suis Français, ça fait 20 ans que l'Anglais est enseigné depuis un jeune age et pourtant les Français sont loin d'être bilingue, donc c'est quoi le plus dur l'Anglais, le Français L'Anglais est une des langues les plus difficile au monde (en tous cas le Français est plus simple a parler, demande a un linguiste tu verra que j'ai raison) I'm French, it's been 20 years that English is taught from a young age and yet the French are far from being bilingual, so what is the hardest English, French? English is one of the most difficult languages in the world (in any case French is simpler to speak, ask a linguist you'll see I'm right)

  • @gauvaindf

    @gauvaindf

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@beefjuice2153 It's the same in all countries, the elite will always find a reason to be in power and it's studies speaking two languages is a good reason. We must not forget that they are elected by sweet talk there is only to see in the debate by comment, there is always someone to criticize grammar or spelling, but not the concept The elite argument, you are less educated, shut up.

  • @gent8940
    @gent89405 жыл бұрын

    As a French teacher, I have to say that it’s unfortunately true that students in Toronto (Immersion or otherwise) almost NEVER have any cultural support for the French they learn in school. It’s an uphill battle to keep it authentic and relevant to their lives. Their families, friends, music, media, everyday society and identity are anglophone. To tell them to stick with French because of a possible leg up in the economy in the future is very abstract and statistically unlikely. I at least try to encourage them to enjoy it.

  • @Sultan-mj7sr

    @Sultan-mj7sr

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same kind of thing happens in the US with Spanish. I took German in high school so you can imagine it being even more difficult to stay motivated and participate actively in a language which is spoken by like less than 5% of the people in my home state and an even smaller percentage spoken natively. I've been learning for almost a decade and I'm still just barely reaching a point of mild fluency where most of the time I'm speaking Denglisch when I try to speak German.

  • @sumdumbmick

    @sumdumbmick

    2 жыл бұрын

    why is that unfortunate? if that's unfortunate then it's identically as unfortunate that you don't magically natively speak Yaqui. you've clearly failed to grasp what JJ said.

  • @paris2070

    @paris2070

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for being rational.

  • @simonjesusbeliever3467

    @simonjesusbeliever3467

    Жыл бұрын

    I talk to my family in french since they speak English not well but enough to get citizenship. My friends , I talk to them in both French and English because they generally know both and I know them from my francophone school. Music and media is bassicly English because it's more heard in things like schools etc, so yeah. I don't use French that much.

  • @ainmiky4620

    @ainmiky4620

    Жыл бұрын

    It's because it's being forced instead of letting it organically grow.

  • @pnutbuttrcrepes8129
    @pnutbuttrcrepes81294 жыл бұрын

    Scrolling through these comments a year and a half later. Still so much animosity between the most vocal English speakers and the most vocal French speakers.

  • @InumiDarkness

    @InumiDarkness

    2 жыл бұрын

    I mean, I'm a Frenc Candian and I think the English are right

  • @micahhewko2215
    @micahhewko22153 жыл бұрын

    Reading the salty french commenters' comments made learning french worth it.

  • @benozkleenex

    @benozkleenex

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol as a french canadiens this was funny to me.

  • @Comprends-ton-Dim

    @Comprends-ton-Dim

    2 жыл бұрын

    Glad you learned our language 🙂

  • @darreljones8645
    @darreljones86455 жыл бұрын

    Interesting you ended this video with a French-language version of "O Canada". Did you know this song was originally composed in French, and then translated to English?

  • @SuperSaiyanKrillin

    @SuperSaiyanKrillin

    5 жыл бұрын

    'Translate' isn't quite accurate. You'll notice that the French O Canada has completely different lyrics when properly translated into English

  • @nic12344

    @nic12344

    5 жыл бұрын

    "Translate" isn't quite accurate. "Stolen" would be a better word . You'll notice that the French O Canada was supposed to be a French Canadian patriotic song and even became the unofficial anthem of Quebec. Then, it was stolen by anglophones because they had enough of signing "God Save the Queen" and they liked "O Canada" better then their "The Maple Leaf Forever".

  • @dustinwatkins7843

    @dustinwatkins7843

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@nic12344 like all the transfer payments the East steals? cool

  • @darreljones8645

    @darreljones8645

    5 жыл бұрын

    Well, as an ignorant American who doesn't wish to take sides in Canada's linguistic disputes, can't speak French, and doesn't even know the English lyrics to "O Canada", could someone provide links to this, including a direct English translation of the French version?

  • @nic12344

    @nic12344

    5 жыл бұрын

    ​@@dustinwatkins7843 Yes, exactly like that! Just like Alberta will steal it back in a few years from now when they won't be able to sell their expensive oil anymore... As a libertarian, I believe equalization payments should be abolished because they a nuisance to the economic development of the country!

  • @emilecartier5822
    @emilecartier58225 жыл бұрын

    The canadian bilinguism was created to avoid the independance of Quebec. Its a deal the English speaking canadians made to avoid a resurgence of the Quebec indépendance mouvement. In Quebec, passing your english classes is mandatory contrary to other province.

  • @rvanzo925

    @rvanzo925

    5 жыл бұрын

    In hindsight, they should’ve never be part of Canada.

  • @weazz

    @weazz

    5 жыл бұрын

    They why do so many outside of Montreal speak only French?

  • @TheHewoks

    @TheHewoks

    5 жыл бұрын

    @indoctus41 We wouldve separate but we got scammed. First with all those fear monger campaign and next when we actually had a majority of vote for the separation, They decided they needed more than that. in comparison they passed Brexit with a far smaller %.

  • @Fan1Magic

    @Fan1Magic

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@weazz I'll bring out a point from the video: No one wants to learn a language they have no use for

  • @weazz

    @weazz

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Fan1Magic like outside of Quebec nobody having a use for French? Even the French from France think Quebec is stupid. So sure, we have no use for the French.

  • @juanfranciscovillarroelthu6876
    @juanfranciscovillarroelthu68764 жыл бұрын

    Canada: French is one of my official languages The World: Do you speak it? Canada: ... o_o

  • @TheAcadianGuy

    @TheAcadianGuy

    4 жыл бұрын

    Anglophones tend to stick to monolingualism. Why learn any other language when you can survive pretty much anywhere using English only.

  • @FairyCRat

    @FairyCRat

    4 жыл бұрын

    Tbf a lot of countries in Africa have French as an official language due to past colonialism, sometimes it's even the one and only official language, but aside from an educated elite, it's not spoken by many, especially in rural areas.

  • @w8stral

    @w8stral

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@TheAcadianGuy Why waste time when I can spend my time learning something more important? Unless you want to work in W. Africa or Haiti, French is useless

  • @TheAcadianGuy

    @TheAcadianGuy

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@w8stral French is the 5th most spoken language in the world. English is first as it is quite easy to learn. Anglophone, in general, are quite lazy intellectually when it comes to learn anything outside their circle of knowledge. I don't blame you for not learning French. In fact, I understand you. It takes smart people to master its grammar and syntax.

  • @Lucysmom26

    @Lucysmom26

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@TheAcadianGuy This is why nobody likes you, Quebec. Just saying.

  • @spookyshark632
    @spookyshark6322 жыл бұрын

    Having the English and French requirement further marginalizes other minority language speakers who now need to be trilingual.

  • @valeriehancotte-galan4790

    @valeriehancotte-galan4790

    2 жыл бұрын

    Remember, their choice to move to your country. Everyone should learn some of the language of the country that they are immigrating to. It is NOT the host country's responsibility to speak accommodate the rest of the world !

  • @isaacg5438

    @isaacg5438

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@valeriehancotte-galan4790 I think he means the natives that were here long before Canada or English.

  • @greatdune3174

    @greatdune3174

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@valeriehancotte-galan4790 Yeah, but they shouldn't have to also learn a third, barely useful, minority language on top of learning English just to have any meaningful chance at politics.

  • @evilkhamzat

    @evilkhamzat

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@valeriehancotte-galan4790 no it’s a complete waste of time for migrants to learn a language used predominantly by one province. You Gauls man arrogance doesn’t even begin to describe it.

  • @SuperKing604

    @SuperKing604

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah many immigrants I know who think about moving from one province to another immediately subtract quebec for there choices cuz they think they need French in quebec even though in montreal they could manage with english.

  • @jayrum106
    @jayrum1065 жыл бұрын

    First Canadian I have ever heard seriously saying "A boot" ... you're making us look bad.

  • @luludrinkerofcoffee4035

    @luludrinkerofcoffee4035

    5 жыл бұрын

    As a Yank, I hear this often enough... but my ear might be more sensitive to it when its less obvious.

  • @iarrcsim2323

    @iarrcsim2323

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, makes me wonder if he's not Canadian. It is an unrealistic stereotype.

  • @benjfrog99

    @benjfrog99

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yeah y'all look bad

  • @dubbingismagic9995

    @dubbingismagic9995

    5 жыл бұрын

    I'm Canadian and didn't even know Canadians said that till the internet.

  • @karldilkington8587

    @karldilkington8587

    5 жыл бұрын

    Listen to him say "out" If he weren't faking, they would be the same sound.

  • @frloopr
    @frloopr5 жыл бұрын

    ***As a french Canadien myself, I'll try and respond to this as best I can:*** 1. I completely agree that many of the seats of power does not necessarily need french to be filled. However, influential or elected position in the government decidedly requires it. Many Quebeckers vote on whether or not you speak french (This is just the reality). 2. The french university and service fiasco stems from the fact that Toronto is Canada's largest city and is a representation of Canada as a whole. It's normal that the french minority of the city (despite being in Ottawa, some don't exactly have the tightest relation to Quebec, as they were flying a different flag in the clip you presented) would complain about something like this. I *imagine* if a place of worship for another minority was cancelled, you'd get a similar reaction. Doug Ford being... diplomatically challenged doesn't help either. 3. The two nations theory is still true. Back when it was just ontario/quebec, quebec was being oppressed and could not develop the means to expand into the rest of Canada like the English majority could. If they wouldve been given the chance, the french language would be much more prevalent in Canada. Saying that the two nations theorem does not apply feels unjust. (at least, to me) 4. Grouping all ethnic minorities other than French together is shaky at best. They all have different needs, ways of life, voting preferences, etc. You can't lump all of them together to make a point. I would go as to say it borders on racist, but I know you didnt mean it that way. 5. Many Quebeckers still have memories of oppression, and are understandably hesitant to give English Canadians legroom. Almost all of them don't see themselves as benifitors of a political scheme and are only trying to protect themselves by instinct. I honestly suspect Quebeckers'll be more welcoming and friendly in the next 20 years. 6. Overall, the video is great at bringing up a tense issue in Canada's political climate. However, you're not doing yourself any favours by pointing out what is wrong without constructive criticism. Remember, Quebeckers do not think they are more powerful than the English, they're in fact quite fearful. It would've been better to talk about the topic level-headed and without things that may be construed as slander. How'd I do?

  • @beyondxbeautiful

    @beyondxbeautiful

    5 жыл бұрын

    Pepsi Puppy could not have said it better myself! Very well said. All these comments against the francophones are just filled with prejudices and discrimination. They’re not actually educated comments. You have to be smart to understand and to want to understand the whole thing fully unlike many others who rather be ignorant and resort to bashing the French because of prejudice attitudes

  • @frloopr

    @frloopr

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@beyondxbeautiful A shame really. I know quite a lot of Quebeckers that are welcoming of the English. It's unfortunate that some English Canadians responds negatively to an outspoken minority and generalizes Quebec, which in turns jades the rest of the population. It's a painful, vicious cycle.

  • @firstlast-cs6eg

    @firstlast-cs6eg

    5 жыл бұрын

    How about only positions in power specific to the area of Quebec be required to be bilingual instead of the whole country. Conversely everywhere else people are allowed to be English only. Keep in mind that if Quebeckers are suppressing others with over representation, this can create backlash and increase prejudice.

  • @Billy97ify

    @Billy97ify

    5 жыл бұрын

    I think it would be better to separate Quebec from Canada. If some new sense of direction is not found for the country it will separate into five or more smaller states. The nation does not work together economically or politically in its present state.

  • @Jean-Poule_II

    @Jean-Poule_II

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Billy97ify It doesn't work because you don't believe it can. I could say that the country is doing well on an econimical level. That it's doing well with its immigrants and that it has a good reputation worldwide. Wether you percieve it as working or not is a product of your contexte and interpretations. Just go outside and try to challenge those. Go meet the people and learn about how they actually are doing and how's the country. You might be surprised, or not and still believe we're going into a wall. Either way, if you haven't been in Québec, before making your opinion, I suggest you come here and try to understand comprehensivly its people and history, without any judgement.

  • @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta1
    @DiscipleOfHeavyMeta14 жыл бұрын

    And this is why Quebec and Canada should've parted ways in 1995.

  • @biteme9486

    @biteme9486

    4 жыл бұрын

    ​@Paul Tello How exactly can Jews be obsessed with money AND communist?

  • @biteme9486

    @biteme9486

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Paul Tello Speaking as someone with Jewish heritage, i can assure you I'm not ruling over anything, nor is anyone in my family

  • @biteme9486

    @biteme9486

    4 жыл бұрын

    Like white privilege?

  • @biteme9486

    @biteme9486

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@firstnamelastname6926 What about all the disadvantages that come with being Jewish

  • @coledavis5212

    @coledavis5212

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bite Me some people just hate Jews for literally no reason lol They think Israel is evil and is taking over the United States and the world, and should immediately be destroyed. However, I’m pretty sure they don’t want to be destroyed by their Muslim neighbors, and they have alrighty sort of attempted to reconcile with Syria. They also say all jews are communist only because Karl Marx was a Jew. But... if communists don’t want money, but jews and communist are same thing? Woooot? Dat nott mak thenth! Also, I don’t understand where the Jewish privilege thing came from, Hitler just said they have privilege and are influential in Germany (which is not really true, because pretty sure other non-Jewish people were allowed to have business) in literally one of his many speeches and now people think “oh no! jew take money and government!¡”. Only because Hitler said that. Jew’s don’t seem evil to me.

  • @ethanwelte6402
    @ethanwelte64024 жыл бұрын

    I'm fortunate to have been put in french immersion lol. I definitely feel like I do have many advantages speaking both French and English in Canada. Thanks dad!

  • @w8stral

    @w8stral

    4 жыл бұрын

    Name two...

  • @JohnBobRoger

    @JohnBobRoger

    4 жыл бұрын

    It only means a high probability that you only grasped 50% of the concepts which required full on English.

  • @vitasoy1437

    @vitasoy1437

    4 жыл бұрын

    Wish French is more commonly taught... Didn't start learning kindergarten stuff until 5th grade.....

  • @gato-grande

    @gato-grande

    4 жыл бұрын

    ENGLISH FRANÇAIS ESPAÑOL PORTUGUES

  • @gato-grande

    @gato-grande

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@JohnBobRoger ESTADOS UNIDOS HABLA ESPAÑOL BARILOCHE ARGENTINA

  • @migasfiesta
    @migasfiesta5 жыл бұрын

    if they are/can learn English to communicate with the rest of us, so why can't we learn french?

  • @GorrilazWarfare

    @GorrilazWarfare

    5 жыл бұрын

    good person above

  • @MrLuchenkov

    @MrLuchenkov

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@connorjohnmark 1)True. Although, it's not like French is an obscure language. There's plenty resources for French online. 2)Absolutely. Again, however, a mere glance at duolingo or other websites can tell you there's a lot of French speakers ready to help. 3)Aye, that they do. It somewhat drives the point home for French speakers in Quebec, though: if we leave our culture unprotected, sooner or later, economic or political forces will force us to assimilate. 4)I disagree there. There's a lot of varieties of French (Swiss, Belgian, Breton, Marseillais, Parisien, Quebecois, Montreal's French, not to mention all the former colonies in Africa and the Caraibes). Horrible French pronunciation is better than not trying to speak French at all and everyone that I know really appreciates when an English speaking person makes the effort to try to say a few words in French, no matter how broken. Moreover, you learn a language by speaking it. There's no other way.

  • @beyondxbeautiful

    @beyondxbeautiful

    5 жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @GorrilazWarfare

    @GorrilazWarfare

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@connorjohnmark "Given that there are a lot of varieties of English and plenty of non-native speakers of English, one can get by with horrible English pronunciation. This is not true for French." Em no, at least people who try to learn (even if their french would be "not perfect") are miles ahead those that would rather complain like J.J. Trying earns a certain kind of respect.

  • @wiartonwillie7731

    @wiartonwillie7731

    5 жыл бұрын

    Around 86% of Canadians have a working knowledge of English, while only around 30% have a working knowledge of French. What makes more sense, for 14% of the population to learn English or for 70% of the population to learn French? French is also a useless language in North America everywhere other than Quebec, New Brunswick and maybe a tiny bit of Louisiana. I'm not saying don't learn French, knowing more than one language is great! What I am saying is people should not be forced to learn what is essentially a useless language to them in order to get a job.

  • @fim9048
    @fim90485 жыл бұрын

    Tous les commentaires en français me rendent heureuse. Cette vidéo est mal construite et sa compréhension de l'histoire est horrible. Je suis une anglophone qui a appris le français et mainentant je travaille comme une traductrice. Je ne suis pas parfaite mais c'est complètement possible.

  • @martins.2502

    @martins.2502

    5 жыл бұрын

    Je suis d'accord, il y a complètement ignorée les faits qui ne supportaient pas son argument.

  • @fredo7985

    @fredo7985

    5 жыл бұрын

    Tout à fait d’accord. Bravo, madame! J’ai fait la même chose que vous, mais à l’inverse. ;)

  • @brennanhuard966

    @brennanhuard966

    5 жыл бұрын

    Mon mari est venu au Quebec des EU come adulte. Il a apris la langue mieux que moi qui est ici depuis l'age de 4 ans avec des parents qu n'avait acune inclination d'apprendre le francais. C'est une question de volonte et une bonne attitude.

  • @happyhandylife4101

    @happyhandylife4101

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@brennanhuard966 Yep, I totally agree.

  • @petretepner8027

    @petretepner8027

    5 жыл бұрын

    Fiona Murray - Juste pour te rendre heureuse, je commente en français. Je suis anglophone européen, de l'Île de Jersey - donc quasi-bilingue, je suppose. Keskil a, ce mec? Sans doute il a raté son examen de français au collège, et en veut à tout le monde. Entre parenthèses, j'adôôre l'accent tchébétchais, pardon, québécois.

  • @deaddodo3319
    @deaddodo33194 жыл бұрын

    This makes me think of Belgium (unsignificant country if you leave out Brussels and the big port cities like Antwerp). Belgium is divided in six regions: first the 3 linguistic regions (Flanders region, Walloon and Brussels region, German speaking region) and the 3 geographical regions (Flanders region, Brussels region, Walloon region which includes the german parts). Now the thing is, each one of these regions has it's own government, except for the Flemish who fused them. And there is the federal government. So Belgium has 6 almost completely indepent governments for a population of 11 mln. The Flemish speak dutch, the Walloon speak french and some maybe german and Brussels is officially bilingual. They are overall not good at the others language at all, even if we learn all 3 national languages at school in addition to English. No one really speaks dutch as a native tongue in Wallonia. In Flanders, people mostly don't speak French natively, except for this very small community of (previously) rich folks mainly concentrated around Antwerp (nicknamed 'les francophones d'Anvers'). The reason they speak French is that they had money for education in older times, and anything of high class was in French. Now since Flanders is NOT bilingual, they do everything in dutch too and because the social gap is much smaller, most of them speak better durch than French. Now back to the relation between Flanders and Wallonia. It's kinda complicated, and to put it all together, a considerable amount of Flemish would like Flanders independent, whilst Wallonia wants to stay together. Flanders is more right wing, whilst Wallonia is very left wing. Idk why anyone would read this but ok.

  • @mafyatekin

    @mafyatekin

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice summary of the situation. It was really informative. Thank you.

  • @IvyANguyen

    @IvyANguyen

    10 ай бұрын

    I found it interesting to read as a monolingual American (outsider of outsiders!).

  • @dalepeto9620
    @dalepeto96204 жыл бұрын

    Here is the solution to your language problems. Everyone switch to Spanish.

  • @TheAcadianGuy

    @TheAcadianGuy

    4 жыл бұрын

    Qué?

  • @robertchan8630

    @robertchan8630

    4 жыл бұрын

    CluelessGmer Qué le fuck?

  • @xp_studios7804

    @xp_studios7804

    4 жыл бұрын

    ESPERANTO

  • @mistushipper

    @mistushipper

    4 жыл бұрын

    big brain

  • @jamesthomson8659

    @jamesthomson8659

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bongboi2831 Student at Job interview in 1980: "What's the social life like in Fort McMurray?" Interviewer: "Do you speak Cree?"

  • @nathanlong5374
    @nathanlong53745 жыл бұрын

    Ok good, I was worried the french canadians were beginning to like you again.

  • @BicBoi1984

    @BicBoi1984

    5 жыл бұрын

    I still like him though :/

  • @Gabrielm624

    @Gabrielm624

    5 жыл бұрын

    WHO DAT

  • @justdaniel8529

    @justdaniel8529

    5 жыл бұрын

    I’m an anglophone Quebecer lol, I Suck at French

  • @KINGeorgesV

    @KINGeorgesV

    5 жыл бұрын

    Im a french Canadian and I still like him

  • @bimonsmeen1687

    @bimonsmeen1687

    5 жыл бұрын

    i never hated him tbh

  • @ldo92
    @ldo925 жыл бұрын

    that Quebec youtube guy isn't going to be happy about this.

  • @monge999

    @monge999

    5 жыл бұрын

    He murdered JJ with powerfull argument last video he made

  • @lorenzomabalos9851

    @lorenzomabalos9851

    5 жыл бұрын

    Gauthier

  • @godliekjewoofy3867

    @godliekjewoofy3867

    5 жыл бұрын

    Who cares.. he's French. Maybe if he makes a video in English we will care

  • @Michael-di7bg

    @Michael-di7bg

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@koopadaquick9862 *Frappe la table en anglais.*

  • @lucaslonchampt613

    @lucaslonchampt613

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Michael-di7bg frappe*

  • @lenina61
    @lenina614 жыл бұрын

    As someone whose native language is Urdu, I agree that English is the dominant and therefore most useful language for individuals to learn to get ahead financially. To preserve culture, yes preserve language, but not to grow the economy. I find it so strange that the same Quebecers that are fighting for their language rights as an oppressed minority are the same ones that oppress their own minorities. In English Canada I can learn English, contribute to the economy and preserve my culture without any issues. It is not assimilative by nature. Whereas in Quebec, you must do as the Quebecers do. I know how to speak French as well, it's a neat language, I want to be fluent but literally won't be attending any immersion programs in Quebec cuz I wear hijab and feel unwelcomed. I have never felt unwelcomed in English Canada.

  • @mirabeaux851

    @mirabeaux851

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah they went way overboard there. And unfortunately they’ve become French in all the bad ways too

  • @automaticcaptions

    @automaticcaptions

    2 жыл бұрын

    this one comment encompasses the hypocrisy of Quebec. Respect.

  • @vulpes7079

    @vulpes7079

    2 жыл бұрын

    Abandon the death cult of Islam and you'll be fine

  • @magiccarpets

    @magiccarpets

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vulpes7079 Get a job, and some real life skills and you MIGHT be fine.

  • @vulpes7079

    @vulpes7079

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@magiccarpets I assume she has both, and so do I

  • @rizka7945
    @rizka79452 жыл бұрын

    Canada: Panders to a language minority. Finland: Hold my beer.

  • @zombiehorsefranzferdinand9304

    @zombiehorsefranzferdinand9304

    2 жыл бұрын

    What is this referencing?

  • @rizka7945

    @rizka7945

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@zombiehorsefranzferdinand9304 We have a much smaller Swedish-speaking majority (around 5% and shrinking). They are concentrated in certain coastal regions and younger generations are increasingly bilingual. Here in Tampere, largest city outside Helsinki region, Swedish language is non-existent. It's been years since I last heard Swedish spoken here - various other languages are present, though. As a colonial remainder, Swedish-speakers still possess a disproportiate amount of wealth and political power, though. The government maintains it for future generations by easier admission standards for Swedish-speaking versions of the most lucrative university programs. Every pupil and every student in every school level everywhere in Finland learns Swedish. Finland is a bilingual country and we need to guarantee public services in their language you know! (Like there wouldn't be cheaper and more efficient ways...) Young people are highly unmotivated in those classes as they would rather be learning something useful like say, French. On lower levels, you'll pass those courses basically by attending. Which then can backfire in universities. They don't require fluency there, don't get me wrong, not even close. But still, mandatory Swedish becomes a barrier of graduation for many there.

  • @zombiehorsefranzferdinand9304

    @zombiehorsefranzferdinand9304

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rizka7945 thanks. It’s interesting, I’ve never heard anything about that from here in England. Before JJ I only knew the bare minimum about Quebec. I wish there was more stuff like this in the news. Not just US, UK and China.

  • @prplt

    @prplt

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rizka7945 well in general Finnish schools offer a lot of languages so if someone wants to learn French as well (in addition to Swedish) they can do it (for example in middle school I learned English, Swedish and French (and I could've picked German as well if I wanted))

  • @rizka7945

    @rizka7945

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@prplt You can. I learned German for eight years from the 5th grade to end of high school so I know it is possible in many places. Not everywhere, though. However, back then in 00's, few others did as it was purely an extracurricular activity. The number of volunteers hasn't increased since, on the contrary. Which eventually has an impact on which languages are offered. Just get rid of mandatory Swedish altogether. Make everyone choose a second foreign language from options available where they live. We would build a generation where everyone would speak English and some other language. (And still, let volunteers learn more as extracurricular activity, of course.) Someone would speak German, someone French, someone Russian, someone Spanish and so forth. Some would still prefer to learn Swedish, even in Tampere. In Vaasa probably most would. Great! I don't know who makes the absolute best choice for themselves. But I know that a collective of people, like a workplace or a hobby group, is much more ready to tackle situations then. It should be no-brainer and it is for huge majority of people. Even most of elected MPs always agree before the election. Still, nothing happens and nothing will.

  • @Ak3r0n
    @Ak3r0n5 жыл бұрын

    Anglophone in Qc: 600K English-language University in Qc: 3 English-language colleges in Qc: 10 English-language hospital in Qc: 11 Francophones in Ont.: 500K French university in Ont.: 0 French-language colleges in Ont.: 2 French-language hospital in Ont.: 1

  • @stevexu95

    @stevexu95

    5 жыл бұрын

    Everybody should just use English. I know it's not ethical but look at the Dutch universities, the nordic ones, and the internet. Bilingualism is not only a scam, but also a myth. Language is a tool for communication, not a tool to show how smart you are. Those who wish to reverse the trend of history will be eventually discarded by history. The future is definitely a single language. This is not about race or culture. We need to identify the differences between different sociological concepts.

  • @catenaris

    @catenaris

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@stevexu95 Everybody *should* use english? Why is that? Certainly not. The beauty of foreign languages, what it brings of a satisfaction to be able to speak a new language, how it develops your brain abilities? You just don't care. (?) If I'm on a video game with germans, I'll insist on speaking german. If I play with belgian or dutch players, I'll do with the best of my abilities to try speaking dutch. I even try with Polish, although they rarely understand me or try to. Just being lazy about doing this effort you could potentially make doesn't mean it's the right thing to do! Moreover, communication in German is far more interesting than in english, because of how differently you can express and explain some concepts, in my opinion. I'm "not wishing to go against history" as your statement says, I'm not writing this comment in french as far as i know. 😂 However, I find it hardly justifiable. My comment does at no point involve race, culture or religion. I don't care at all, I only see potential benefits ^^ And it's not either about showing you're smart. We *are* psychologically able to do so (even for these people who have trouble learning languages, it's nothing immuable), but the circumstances or social norms refrain us from doing so... I respect your comment but... I'll never agree.

  • @quinnodonnell3906

    @quinnodonnell3906

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Rob M you said that in another comment thread and were proven wrong... none of that is true stop trying to trick people into believing it. If you've ever lived in Ontario you'd realise the road signs are usually only in English

  • @adamnowek

    @adamnowek

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@stevexu95 I graduated from a Dutch university and my partner is a professor at one (she teaches in both Dutch and English), where most bachelor-level programmes are conducted in Dutch. Dutch universities encourage students to learn Dutch because it is how people communicate here. I'm not sure what point you're trying to make.

  • @nicolasrenaud6875

    @nicolasrenaud6875

    5 жыл бұрын

    English-language hospital in Qc : 18 (16 on the island of Montreal btw, more than the total of French language hospitals on that same island, even though native French speaking people are still more numerous)

  • @kreiontresadenn5633
    @kreiontresadenn56335 жыл бұрын

    Eh ben, mes amis, c'est pas gagné on dirait... Nous les Bretons savons qu'il est facile de faire disparaitre une langue et une culture si personne ne se dresse pour les défendre. Canadiens francophones, je vous envoie plein d'ondes positives de Bretagne.

  • @tylerb9877

    @tylerb9877

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sorry I don't speak surrender language

  • @kreiontresadenn5633

    @kreiontresadenn5633

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@tylerb9877 Weak trolling... OK, my turn. Let me try. You're American, which means you basically speak a sort of broken english. How can we expect you to speak any other language when you don't seem to master a single one, be it your mother tongue. :( Of course you can't speak "surrender language". Thanks for your effort, but I'm affraid you've just turned into the ultimate Captain obvious here, mate.

  • @tylerb9877

    @tylerb9877

    5 жыл бұрын

    Kreion Tresadenn That was such a lame response.

  • @kreiontresadenn5633

    @kreiontresadenn5633

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@tylerb9877 I swear I tried my best :'( But to be honest, it was really hard to come up with something as stupid as your first answer. You definitely beat me on that one. You know what? I raise my white flag and surrender ;) ;) ;) ;)

  • @tylerb9877

    @tylerb9877

    5 жыл бұрын

    Kreion Tresadenn It's okay bro.

  • @jamesquaine6264
    @jamesquaine62643 жыл бұрын

    This reminds be of what Irish could be like in Ireland if a substantial proportion of the population actually spoke it (they don't only about 1.5% speak it daily outside of education) and everyone in Ireland has English anyway so we all just kinda keep learning it school for the sake of it. Which is nice for keeping our culture I guess

  • @judahsutherland6827
    @judahsutherland68273 жыл бұрын

    Oof. Hard logic hurts. I'm a bilingual anglo-Canadian born and raised in Alberta, and I'm very attached to French, maybe a little too much. Many of my friends are franco-Albertan, and I'm very interested in Quebec culture and language. I'm doing my best to become fully fluent, and I believe I'm well on my way. I think French will open many doors for me and I'm very glad to have learned it, however, I'm not sure if those doors should have been closed in the first place. Thanks for the quality insights!

  • @BigBoss-sm9xj

    @BigBoss-sm9xj

    3 жыл бұрын

    Exactly the doors shouldn’t be closed

  • @coledevlin3984

    @coledevlin3984

    3 жыл бұрын

    I feel like I’m in a slightly similar situation to you, I am a bilingual Anglo-Canadian born and raised on Vancouver Island. I too have a soft spot for Québécois culture and the French language as a whole. But I feel like my ability to speak French shouldn’t put me above my fellow British Columbians if I want a federal government position. B.C has only ever had one prime minister, and that was Kim Campbell...

  • @raymendez3403

    @raymendez3403

    3 жыл бұрын

    Merci pour ce beau message et vous avez entièrement raison, la porte ne devrait pas être fermée en premier lieu et ce n'est pas à vous de vous offrir vous-même ces opportunités mais bien au Canada de le faire et pour tout le monde. Au Canada anglais, on enseigne le français très basique très tard dans le système d'éducation et malheureusement aucune chance pour les élèves d'atteindre un niveau de fluidité compétant avant de quitter l'école alors qu'au Québec, et en tant que fils d'immigrant, je peux vous dire qu'on enseigne l'anglais et le français en même temps et que j'ai appris les deux à l'école! Je vous ai écris en français pour que vous puissiez vous pratiquer un peu :)

  • @judahsutherland6827

    @judahsutherland6827

    3 жыл бұрын

    Merci je l’apprécie!

  • @fivantvcs9055

    @fivantvcs9055

    3 жыл бұрын

    Congrats for the endeavours you have made !

  • @rocketmars27
    @rocketmars275 жыл бұрын

    I wish the school system had a better curriculum of teaching us French. I swear we were literally taught the same few lessons for years. I know barely anything about how to speak the language. And now they keep pushing back when kids are learning French. They now start at grade 6. I wonder if tensions wouldn't be as serious if more people could actually learn and speak French.

  • @bok..

    @bok..

    5 жыл бұрын

    and french immersion programs pretty much become unrealistic for the child after kindergarten.

  • @bigchef8521

    @bigchef8521

    5 жыл бұрын

    Born in Saskatchewan and am currently in High School. Most elementary schools teach no French whatsoever. You only learn French if your parents decided to put you in one of the very few french immersion schools, or if you decided to pick it up in high school. I was always interested in learning French, but got discouraged from a lot of people so I never ended up taking it.

  • @rocketmars27

    @rocketmars27

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@bigchef8521 I get it. I was discouraged to because of how poorly the subject was taught and so was most people I know.

  • @lebrackofranco5785

    @lebrackofranco5785

    5 жыл бұрын

    Here in Québec they start teaching you English at school at, I think around at least 3rd grade or something.

  • @lebrackofranco5785

    @lebrackofranco5785

    5 жыл бұрын

    Also I admit French has gotta be pretty hard to learn if you don't live around it, though I think he's really one sided and out of touch with the situation in québec, people here have as much use for English as you guys do for French, I NEVER use English in my day to day life, everything's in French (except for on the internet or with my dad), despite this, here in Montréal you can't even get a job if you don't speak English (mostly to serve the English minority, tourist or immigrants), we have tons of English hospitals and universities, our politicians even do English debates, and we have less anglos here than there are francos in Ontario. Kinda makes you wonder why we give them so many services while we get treated like crap in other provinces...

  • @partytilyoupuke321
    @partytilyoupuke3215 жыл бұрын

    So I am a quebecker and work for the federal government and yes, most positions require you to be bilingual. While you can argue that this favors French people as more of us are actually bilingual, we do have to learn English in the first place. English is a mandatory school subject in Quebec. By the time you graduate high school, you have give or take 7 years of English classes to your curriculum. It's not like we're born in bilingual homes or anything. Now I used to have a manager who spoke little French which was holding her back, keeping her from higher positions. Well guess what, the government sent her on a full year of French training, still getting her salary while not actually being at work since she was learning French. My point is, most bilingual people had to put in the work to that effect. I do like some points you're making but remember that Quebec is always making waves because we do have a language which isn't the omnipresent English one, and we're afraid of being slowly assimilated by the dominant culture.

  • @weitheceo

    @weitheceo

    5 жыл бұрын

    Like the natives?

  • @ericktwelve11

    @ericktwelve11

    5 жыл бұрын

    Relax, Canada doesn't have a dominant culture, if French Canadians follow the anglo's standard? Then they are very weak minded

  • @partytilyoupuke321

    @partytilyoupuke321

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@ericktwelve11 Hi Erick, for starters I was quite relax when I wrote this, as I still am. Culture is probably not a word I should have used since my thoughts were really aimed at the language. That being said, I wasn't limiting this only to Canada but rather Canada and the US which makes french much more of a minority than putting it in opposition to the ROC. Of course English being omnipresent does make it easier for us to learn it and practice it and I'm not out of touch with the ridiculousness of let's say a federal employee, who works in Regina let's say, to have to be able to speak french. If there are 43% of federal positions that require a certain degree of bilingualism, I'd be curious to know how any of those 43% are in fact in the National Capital Region; mostly because you'd be exposed to french a lot more in Ottawa and I would argue that it is a crucial asset to go up the government ladder, not merely because it's mandated but rather because you're sitting on the actual Quebec border. As for "French Canadians follow the anglo's standard? Then they are very weak minded", I really have no idea what you're trying to say, but it sounds rather mindless to me.

  • @ericktwelve11

    @ericktwelve11

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@partytilyoupuke321 Me as a latino born in Canada, I don't follow Anglo Canadian standards, what I mean by that? I mean Canadian has no culture, I was raised in a Latin American single mother household spoke only in Spanish and eat food from back home, so I think differently and follow my mother's culture more, why do you think a lot of immigrants don't integrate in Canada? because there's no dominant culture here, when I have my own kids, I'll teach them Spanish, it such a beautiful language, I don't want my kids lose it and not to follow anglo Canadian standard because it's bland, lack of family values, cold culture and etc ,we may not be rich economically but culturally we're rich, so if people wants to speak only English and lose their native tongue, than they're weak minded .

  • @partytilyoupuke321

    @partytilyoupuke321

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@ericktwelve11 Thanks for expanding more on what you said earlier, let's just say you're original comment needed more meat around the bone. You're letting me know you understand the need we have to preserve our language, our culture as French Canadians, and all the merits to you for wanting to preserve your own as well. I think your mistaken to say that there isn't a dominant culture, at least in the historical context of Quebec and its relation with the rest of Canada. Nowadays, Canada is indeed an inherently multicultural nation which makes it a lot more a matter of perspective and I wouldn't expect you to have the same as I do. But like you implied, maybe unknowingly, French Canadians aren't weak minded (at the very least not on the topic of actively preserving our culture,) but it is still driven by a notion of fear of being assimilated, a notion that is still very alive in the imagination of French Canadians, whether it's warranted or not.

  • @granzert1711
    @granzert17114 жыл бұрын

    I totally understand people being reticent to learn French when they live in places like Alberta or British Columbia. But I met native anglophone Montréal residents who couldn't speak French.

  • @hexa3389

    @hexa3389

    3 жыл бұрын

    Those people are just being lazy or are too old to give a damn. But everyone else should not need to learn a language because a few people dont want to learn it.

  • @jeffreykaufmann2867

    @jeffreykaufmann2867

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hexa3389 Quebec is a free society. If someone doesn't want to learn French cause they can live in English that's their business.,

  • @hexa3389

    @hexa3389

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jeffreykaufmann2867 that's exactly what I'm saying...

  • @hexa3389

    @hexa3389

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@GooseQcLeRoi you don't need to know French to serve in the German government and vice versa.

  • @jeffreykaufmann2867

    @jeffreykaufmann2867

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@GooseQcLeRoi The majority? 47% of Quebecers know how to speak English and 94.5% know how to speak French so stop complaining. There's a lot of Trilingual people on the Island of Montreal.

  • @lajya01
    @lajya014 жыл бұрын

    Next: You should do the ultimate haters magnet video: The Irish community of Quebec

  • @daquariussmith9772

    @daquariussmith9772

    3 жыл бұрын

    Could you or somebody explain this to me?

  • @mattydraps5170

    @mattydraps5170

    3 жыл бұрын

    My great grandmother was an Irish Quebecer and she loathed the French protestants with a passion

  • @johncenaplayingstarcraft9580

    @johncenaplayingstarcraft9580

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mattydraps5170 as one should. like how Irish Americans loved black women

  • @Libertyjack1

    @Libertyjack1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mattydraps5170 There weren't too many French Huguenots in Quebec, especially as they were not allowed to immigrate there.

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    Quebec has an Irish Community????!??!!!!!!

  • @charlie7466
    @charlie74665 жыл бұрын

    I’d be worried for you if you went to Quebec (Edited) Wow this got a lot of likes jeez

  • @redacted3504

    @redacted3504

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@emileroberge9459 Committing an act of violence against someone you disagree with, how mature.

  • @JonathonPrieston

    @JonathonPrieston

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@emileroberge9459 you're not really helping the stereotype that Quebecers are hot headed cry babies

  • @FeZe1997

    @FeZe1997

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@redacted3504 what can we expect from a minority?

  • @emileroberge9459

    @emileroberge9459

    5 жыл бұрын

    I was joking

  • @emileroberge9459

    @emileroberge9459

    5 жыл бұрын

    I just want french to stay the primary language of Quebec

  • @VulcanTrekkie45
    @VulcanTrekkie455 жыл бұрын

    To play devil's advocate: Quebec is a heavy hitter in Canadian politics. Quebec is the second largest province by population, with the second highest GDP in the country. And nearly 80% of its population are native French speakers. So yeah, when you have a province that majority speaks a language other than English, that other language should most DEFINITELY have a place at the national table. Regardless of the national rates of bilingualism.

  • @wadopotato33

    @wadopotato33

    5 жыл бұрын

    Quebec gets extra rights that they don't deserve because politicians want them to remain part of Canada. The rest of Canada sees this special treatment and it does create resentment. The second highest GDP is because the population is large. Quebecers have low incomes when compared to much of Canada and they recieve a shit ton of money in the form of transfer payments. They are not "haves" when it comes to Canada, but rather are spoiled children that have their hands out and demands special rights not afforded to other Canadians. There is a good portion of Canada that could care less if they left. And I am bilingual.

  • @Felix-vg4mv

    @Felix-vg4mv

    5 жыл бұрын

    We are like the Texas of Canada.

  • @Ruuku1

    @Ruuku1

    5 жыл бұрын

    The rest of Canada with Alberta doing most of it, subsidizes Quebec with massive amounts of money. It's absolutely sick how much of a free ride Quebec gets.

  • @VulcanTrekkie45

    @VulcanTrekkie45

    5 жыл бұрын

    I don’t see why any of that matters when it comes to whether or not French has a place at the national table.

  • @Felix-vg4mv

    @Felix-vg4mv

    5 жыл бұрын

    Spencer O'Dowd It does not Actually you completely missed the point.

  • @ColleenTempleart
    @ColleenTempleart2 жыл бұрын

    I’m from Ottawa and it can be VERY difficult to get a decent job there, in the government or not, unless you’re fluently bilingual. I really regret not taking French all the way through high school and beyond. But it’s never too late to start again! However, yes, outside of ON, QC and NB and the public service, there isn’t as much pressure to learn it, so hence why most English ppl aren’t bilingual.

  • @hikazayanikushi9086

    @hikazayanikushi9086

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s never too late to learn French. It might just be a bit more challenging

  • @azouvizir4282

    @azouvizir4282

    Жыл бұрын

    Hello

  • @daniellat5763

    @daniellat5763

    Жыл бұрын

    In most populated parts of Ontario you absolutely never hear French anywhere. Go to Toronto area….who speaks French….not many ppl

  • @robertwarner5963
    @robertwarner59632 жыл бұрын

    Canada's bilingualism policies are silly in comparison with Swiss language policies. Switzerland has 4 official languages: French, German, Italian and Romansch. Romansch is an old Italian dialect that is only spoken in a few small valleys. Any Swiss federal document can be published in French or German or Italian. Translation into any of the other federal languages is optional. Swiss are far more polite to the countrymen - who speak another language - than Canadians are to each other. A few years back, I was invited to teach a course in Switzerland. Students spoke: French, German, Italian, Serbian, English, etc. but we quickly settled on French as the most common language and conducted the bulk of the course in French. Only one student was unilingual French. I speak fluent English and French, speak the basics of German and Spanish and greet my co-workers in another dozen languages: Africans, Arabic, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portugeuse, Punjabi, Slav, Spanish, etc.

  • @goofygrandlouis6296

    @goofygrandlouis6296

    Жыл бұрын

    So you're saying the Swiss are smarter ? 😋 That might be true, actually. Only an IQ test on the general population could allow us to know for sure ^^.

  • 5 жыл бұрын

    At this point, his obsession with how the rights of French Canadians supposedly oppress the right of English Canadians is just laughable. 😂

  • @axelthegreat3895

    @axelthegreat3895

    5 жыл бұрын

    Marc André The guy’s from BC as well. He’s so far away from Quebec that he has created this extremist view of Quebeckers. I bet he’s never even met a francophone.

  • 5 жыл бұрын

    @@axelthegreat3895 Indeed he wrote in a major American newspaper that all Francophone Quebecers are racist but he doesn't understand why the National Assembly denounced him and now he just hates all French Canadians 😂

  • @joeairbender267

    @joeairbender267

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hey Marc. you remember about speak white and how they oppressed the french speakers in the past? They are so hypocrite, but when a war will happen we will be the one protecting Canada lol. They are a bunch of SJW that always blame us.

  • 5 жыл бұрын

    @@joeairbender267 of course I remember speak white. But JJ isn't a SJW how could a conservative be one? He's just a francophobe like most conservatives from the West.

  • @mikael8763

    @mikael8763

    5 жыл бұрын

    @True, but he's a shallow conservative, only hates French people because we were mean with him at one time.

  • @radiomandelbrot5868
    @radiomandelbrot58685 жыл бұрын

    Just don't send us the army when we separate, and everybody will be happy.

  • @mikael8763

    @mikael8763

    5 жыл бұрын

    On les a battus a chateauguay avant, on peut le refaire

  • @radiomandelbrot5868

    @radiomandelbrot5868

    5 жыл бұрын

    ​@@mikael8763 chu d'accord avec toi dans un sens mais malheureusement y a le fucking OTAN qui prendrait ça comme une attaque envers leur allié le Canada... si la France se met de notre bord ça pourrait aider mais ça risque d'être pas évident (comme avec les Catalans). Ce qui serait nice c'est que la population canadienne soit comme «ok criss allez vous-en donc ça nous tente pas de tuer nos soldats pis de dépenser nos taxes pour vous autres» lol

  • @Babbelbob1
    @Babbelbob13 жыл бұрын

    I live in the Netherlands. To pass high school we're expected to be reasonably fluent in English and French or German. Many higher ranking jobs require knowledge of English and oftentimes also German or French. I don't see the problem in having to learn one extra language in school.

  • @micahhewko2215

    @micahhewko2215

    3 жыл бұрын

    the problem is that the schools are shit at teaching it.

  • @Mullkaw

    @Mullkaw

    2 жыл бұрын

    another problem is that people around the world learn English because it's guaranteed to be useful in society and everyday life. Pouring resources into French instruction in a country that already speaks the universal language would just exacerbate the problem that J.J. is talking about here.

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    English and Dutch are VERY Similar.

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Mullkaw Is French really THAT Hard to learn?

  • @Mullkaw

    @Mullkaw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cakeisyummy5755 No, and neither is English, yet you seem to struggle with it seeing as you completely misunderstood both the video and my comment.

  • @KaisTestKitchen1
    @KaisTestKitchen12 жыл бұрын

    I'm an anglophone and I took French from elementary school and high school and a little bit in college, and have dated some French women; I haven't ever had to use it outside of the classroom or at best very rarely

  • @brianmurphy3395

    @brianmurphy3395

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@BurnBird1 He attended French classes up through college. What other "opportunities" do you think English Canadians have to learn French?

  • @purplehorseneigh
    @purplehorseneigh5 жыл бұрын

    Je ne suis pas Canadien. Je suis né aux États-Unis et je n'ai jamais besoin utiliser Français où j'habite parce que tout le monde parle en anglais, pas Français. Il n'y avait pas d'une raison pour moi à l'étudier. J'ai juste étudié parce que je peux. Je ne peux pas parler ou écrire en Français parfaitement. Non, je suis sûr que j'ai écrit quelques choses incorrectement. Ça fait très longtemps depuis j'ai suivi des cours en Français. Mais, il y a beaucoup des gens comme moi! Beaucoup des gens qui ont commencé tard, beaucoup des gens qui pensent qu'apprendre une nouvelle langue n'est pas facile! Mais, nous essayons. Quelques gens ont une raison, quelques gens n'ont pas. Quelques gens ont des bonnes resources, et quelques gens n'ont rien. En fait, 56% du monde sait deux langues ou plus! La majorité des gens ont enduré ça! Apprendre une deuxième langue n'est pas la fin du monde! Bien que souvent j'ai ressemblé un idiot aux gens qui parlent Français, je me sens plus intelligent qu'avant j'ai étudié Français! Mon monde et ma vie sont plus riche! Si moi, un Américain stupide, peut parler en Français mieux que beaucoup des Canadiens qui vivaient dans un pays avec plus des resources et plus de Français autour d'eux dans la vie tous les jours, ...c'est un peu pathétique, n'est-ce pas?

  • @Nenufort

    @Nenufort

    5 жыл бұрын

    Je suis tout à fait d'accord avec vous, mais malheureusement, certains, par paresse, ne savent pas profiter des opportunités qui s'offrent à eux. Greetings from Quebec to our American neighbors and friends!

  • @SenorMeinKrafter

    @SenorMeinKrafter

    5 жыл бұрын

    Omelette du fromage, oui oui

  • @nater9634

    @nater9634

    5 жыл бұрын

    Very well said, unfortunately it’s quite sad and honestly embarrassing to see some of my fellow Canadians being so ‘francophobic’ and narrow minded. Their attitudes are based on prejudices and rather than educating themselves they rather spread hate

  • @roms4154

    @roms4154

    5 жыл бұрын

    bonjour sage Anderson je suis francais , et ton francais est tres bon ! tous ce que tu as écrit est très claire , bravo mon ami ! le francais est une langue tres difficile donc c est normal de faire des fautes meme les francophones en font ! donc continu ! savoir parler plusieurs langues est une vrai richesse ! moi je parle l anglais et un peu d arabe marocain ! j ai vu qu aux USA le francais acadien est en train de renaître en Louisiane est ce que tu habites la bas ?

  • @Valandix

    @Valandix

    5 жыл бұрын

    Gros, Rom's, iI a un meiIIeur français que toi IeI (Prends pas maI, tu peux m'insuIter si tu veux) Bref Anderson, à part queIques fautes de sens/Iogique voir un peu de semantique, c'est pIûtot impressionnant ! En BeIgique, nous on doit apprendre 3 Iangues Français, AngIais et NéerIandais ou AIIemand parfois. Mon probIème est que ça reste compIiqué d'étudier certaines Iangues, comme Ie NéerIandais aIors que j'ai pIus de faciIité en angIais

  • @PixelOverload
    @PixelOverload5 жыл бұрын

    You say "32% of all senior rank bureaucrats in the Canadian government are native French speakers" as if that's some excessive amount, but considering 21% of all Canadians are native French speakers it's not like it's grossly disproportionate. Especially since only 57% of the population are native English speakers, and while i can't find any stats on how many senior bureaucrats are native English speakers, i'd wager it's in the high 60s, probably 67%, as i'm not aware of any significant percentage of 3rd language native speakers in the higher ranks of government. And you keep talking about how learning French is some barrier of entry to Canadian politics that's hard to "afford" while completely ignoring that French is part of the standard public school curriculum in most of the country, it's in no way inaccessible to anyone with desires of getting involved in government. If anything, Ford's actions against French language services in Ontario only makes it _harder_ for non-native speakers to effectively learn the language (though i'll admit, not significantly at this point). Aside from that, I'd argue that bilingualism is a useful skill in government _regardless_ of what language it is or what position you have or where you're governing (hell, it's a useful skill in life generally, regardless of occupation), being fluently bilingual itself is proof of at least some degree of critical thinking and communication skills which are important for the job, i wouldn't go so far as saying it should be a requirement of every position but calling it "elitist" is just utter crap.

  • @wiartonwillie7731

    @wiartonwillie7731

    5 жыл бұрын

    86% of Canadians have a working knowledge of English while only 30% have a working knowledge of French. Quebec makes up around 24% of Canada's population, and most of the French speakers are in that province. So if 32% of bureaucrats are are native French speakers they are overly represented. That's 32% of all government bureaucrats to accommodate the 11% of people who only speak French. According to the 2016 census 75% of Canadians speak English at home, so I'm not sure where you're pulling that 57% bull, 23% speak French at home, and guess what, almost 100% of them live in Quebec. So if 75% of people are choosing to speak English at home, they are in fact underrepresented in our government bureaucracy. Good day to you sir!

  • @Ptitnain2

    @Ptitnain2

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@wiartonwillie7731, New-Brunswick has a lot of french speaker too (32%).

  • @chrisrose2803

    @chrisrose2803

    5 жыл бұрын

    I'm fluently bilingual (or used to be), and a former civil servant. Being bilingual isn't in itself proof of critical thinking. I grew up in Ottawa, and my father was a public servant so they made sure to put my brother and I into french immersion. I didn't make a critical decision to learn the language, my parents made an educated decision. If you're an anglophone bilingualism is more proof of access than anything else. If you're a francophone bilingualism is proof in an interest in the world and culture beyond the borders of La Belle Province.

  • @PixelOverload

    @PixelOverload

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@wiartonwillie7731 57% _native_ English speakers, if there's an extra 18% of people who choose to speak English at home, that doesn't mean it's their native language, most likely they're French (or other) speakers who currently live with native English speakers, or who have occupations that require them to speak English and choose to do so at home to keep in practice (I can think of at least a few KZreadrs i follow that fit that description).

  • @bulletbourne327

    @bulletbourne327

    5 жыл бұрын

    I'm in high school right now in Ontario. Our French program is a joke, I have took it from grade 4-9 and can't speak a work of French even though I want to be able to. And I would want to take it for grade 10+ but for most jobs you have to schedule you years for it completely so I have had to forget about it. So don't say we are lazy when we will never need it unless we are becoming a politician, so our brains focus more on other more important stuff than French

  • @rigahead955
    @rigahead9554 жыл бұрын

    As a French Acadian NB who speak french like 80% and I can speak english but only like 20%. I prefer talking in french because I sound more stupid in english. So quebec would have no chance.

  • @hhiippiittyy

    @hhiippiittyy

    3 жыл бұрын

    I recently moved to NB. I really like the Acadian accent.

  • @EpicGamer-tw9bu

    @EpicGamer-tw9bu

    3 жыл бұрын

    You want me to speak brayon strain of French?

  • @EpicGamer-tw9bu

    @EpicGamer-tw9bu

    3 жыл бұрын

    Same here!

  • @Shaw4123

    @Shaw4123

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought all the Acadians were gone

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    *Speaking in French

  • @cliffordlesley7746
    @cliffordlesley77464 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Cameroon. Cameroon is also a bilingual county with the French speakers being the majority. I'm from the English speaking minority. Here in my country discrimination against us the English speaking minority is enormous.

  • @FairyCRat

    @FairyCRat

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I've heard there were riots going on in the English-speaking regions. I hope this is gonna stop somehow, apparently even your president barely cares.

  • @berxandre

    @berxandre

    4 жыл бұрын

    I am french and have gone to Cameroon three times. And I can tell you and to everybody that the cameroon problem is much worse. Here, in Canada, nobody is killing nobody. They argue maybe yelling loud but keep peaceful relationships between them. In Ambazonia (wich is the name English speakers give to their cameroonian territory) army commits murders. Every week some people are executed roughly by the Army. French speaking or english speaking, the cameroonian governement is an dictatorship wich kills his own people. C'est impardonnable !

  • @beu9245

    @beu9245

    3 жыл бұрын

    In a lot of countries having a french language community seems to cause internal issues like in: Belgium, Canada and Cameroon

  • @antoinecharlesdegaulle580

    @antoinecharlesdegaulle580

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@beu9245 what exactly are you implying?

  • @coincoindelacanardiere3958

    @coincoindelacanardiere3958

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@beu9245 internal? you mean as in: up their anglo arses you mean? Sure. And why not?

  • @MisterTipp
    @MisterTipp5 жыл бұрын

    You look like a fortnite streamer

  • @bradypostma5167

    @bradypostma5167

    5 жыл бұрын

    A particular Fortnight streamer?

  • @lc4lyf

    @lc4lyf

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Am I disabled I’m not someone to judge people on appearance and put them in a category because of looks but yes. You are 100% right. He does look gay. No offence if you read this J.J. and think it’s offensive. 💞

  • @HeroSword_P

    @HeroSword_P

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hahahahahahahaha

  • @princegoatcheese9379

    @princegoatcheese9379

    5 жыл бұрын

    Wass popping KZread

  • @fnchrstphr

    @fnchrstphr

    5 жыл бұрын

    I gave you a thumbs up only because I wanted to the 250th like.

  • @bandersnach5565
    @bandersnach55655 жыл бұрын

    You can not represent a community if you don't even speak the same language. Its a right for French Canadians to be represented with people who speak their language. Most of them are born in an environment where they only speak French, then why are they able to speak in both English and French, but most anglo Canadians aren't?

  • @OzzyPaco

    @OzzyPaco

    5 жыл бұрын

    So then people who cant speak French have no right to be in government. You cant take someone's rights just so you get to feel better

  • @VEVOsandro

    @VEVOsandro

    5 жыл бұрын

    Man I'll Probably regret this yeah and if they immigrate in quebec they’ll speak french

  • @whodarboilebamnames3990

    @whodarboilebamnames3990

    5 жыл бұрын

    The world runs on English, not French.

  • @VEVOsandro

    @VEVOsandro

    5 жыл бұрын

    Man I'll Probably regret this you really want to push this “everyone speaks English BS” but French is officially spoken in more countries than English which invalidates your argument, and if you continue to argue the quality of those countries( mostly African) compared to Anglophone ones (which would be UK, Australia, Hong Kong and South Africa) you’re just making an ass out of yourself. I think it’s more important for you lazy ass English speakers to not just learn a language out of need (which I’d argue you need anyways) but out of interest, or just give Quebec independence otherwise it’s just cultural cleansing. Saying that 25% speaking it is not enough for the “privileges” they get is straight up fascist. Oh am I being a extreme snowflake. No Im not. You guys are all products of colonies so there’s no arguing on who has the right on this land and since days of ethnic cleansing is over and unwanted either suck it up and learn French or stop bitching about it cause that whole “we’re slowly gonna assimilate them anyways is not gonna work”. Also I know you hadn’t said many of this things and you would argue that you haven’t implied them either, and you can do that. But my reply has to do more with this low-key fascist/Imperial attitude of English speakers who think the world is theirs, and soon everybody will speak their tongue. Especially towards French which is just absurd since French is one of the most spoken languages because of the imperial influence it had too.

  • @whodarboilebamnames3990

    @whodarboilebamnames3990

    5 жыл бұрын

    @[Insert name] The computer or phone that you typed that on is powered by code, code is in English. The language of the internet is English, the language of business is English, and the language of transportation is English.

  • @merc340sr
    @merc340sr2 жыл бұрын

    Politicians who don't speak French will not get the "French" vote....sorry!

  • @lepetitchat123
    @lepetitchat1232 жыл бұрын

    The same situation is happening in Hong Kong where Cantonese vs Mandarin is a contentious issue. As a native Cantonese speaker I have never succeeded in learning Mandarin. Mandarin is NOT an official language yet (actually English is). After the 2019 protests I think more and more young people resist learning Mandarin to preserve Cantonese. Those who choose to learn Mandarin usually do it for practical reasons like finding a job. But with the growing influence of CCP over HK, there will be more elites serving the interests of CCP and speaking Mandarin

  • @Flyway999
    @Flyway9995 жыл бұрын

    There is a same kind of situation in Finland. 5% of people speak swedish here so everyone must learn swedish in school and nearly all government employed people have to speak fluent swedish.

  • @user-iz1xp4jg2x

    @user-iz1xp4jg2x

    5 жыл бұрын

    RgObese yes except here it’s a fifth of the population and the only people who needs to speak it are top jobs in government.

  • @kenlandon6130

    @kenlandon6130

    2 жыл бұрын

    wtf

  • @kenlandon6130

    @kenlandon6130

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@user-iz1xp4jg2x still bad for representation

  • @BurnBird1

    @BurnBird1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kenlandon6130 The Swedish speaking population used to be around 20% at its height. Couple that with the fact that about 90% of Finland's history has been under Swedish rule, along with more than half of all Finnish words being borrowed from Swedish or other Germanic languages, there is a case to be made for learning Swedish. On a more moral side of the argument, why shouldn't the Swedish speaking population, who've lived there for multiple generations, be able to have representation? What gives Finnish speaking Finns a higher status than Swedish speaking Finns?

  • @Shaw4123

    @Shaw4123

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought y’all were free from Sweden and Russia

  • @Gomizilla
    @Gomizilla5 жыл бұрын

    You're so removed from the reality of eastern Canada. The statistics are not weighted (%/population), and just as you said, are self-reported. A lot of the people I know call themselves bilingual can only speak functional English and could not hold a conversation nor file government papers in English. Outside of Montreal, most Quebeckers only speak French and almost never have to speak English after high school. Quebec is NOT bilingual; downtown Montreal is. What would be unfair is to ask people who do not get the chance to speak English in their daily lives to suddenly have so many barriers put in front of them just to be able to function as citizens. Who wouldn't want their own country after that?

  • @ijxrxmy

    @ijxrxmy

    5 жыл бұрын

    Quebec has only one official language and it is French. West-island is very English. And where you might need your English is the Eastern Township (Granby-Sherbrooke region)

  • @olyl3859

    @olyl3859

    5 жыл бұрын

    iJxrxmy non, c’est faux. La majorité des gens qui vivent au West Island (j’ai grandi ici) sont bilingues et spécialement la nouvelle génération. Nous parlons couramment le français, il s’agit simplement de le pratiquer

  • @olyl3859

    @olyl3859

    5 жыл бұрын

    La majorité des Québécois (je suis) ne veulent pas d’un pays, c’est de l’histoire ancienne. Point. En passant, concernant l’anglais au Québec, il est tout à fait possible de le pratiquer à plusieurs endroits à travers la province. Lorsque tu parles d’un Anglais fonctionnel c’est déjà bon, nous avons la chance ici de pouvoir pratiquer 2 langues. En Amérique latine et ailleurs dans le monde les gens n’ont clairement pas cette chance encore moins de pratiquer with some English native speakers. Le fait de voyager dans le monde nous ouvre les horizons sur les langues et je me compte chanceux de pouvoir parler français quand je vais en France ou Belgique et anglais quand je voyage aux États-Unis. J’ai cette chance, car je pratique les 2 langues couramment.

  • @lecoureurdesbois86

    @lecoureurdesbois86

    5 жыл бұрын

    Nowadays, with modern standards of education, even a middle class person like, me was able to learn English at school, and that in the middle of "Bas Saint-Laurent", basically it means that in the whole region there must be 2 English speakers, 2 Chinese and 4 Africans lol. Obviously I have an accent as I don't speak it everyday, but I in many occasions I was able to have a conversation with English speakers and they could understand me very well

  • @lecoureurdesbois86

    @lecoureurdesbois86

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@olyl3859 Selon les dernières stats que j'ai vu, le support de la souveraineté est vers les 30%

  • @chaoking3119
    @chaoking31193 жыл бұрын

    I don't see it as a long-term problem. If it's too much of an issue, Canada and Quebec will just become two separate nations, with two different cultures.

  • @anarchyandempires5452

    @anarchyandempires5452

    3 жыл бұрын

    As a Texan I can assure you that that ain't going to happen, I mean this isn't a real issue for 9/10 of the people, and the government of Quebec has a fairly anti-American standpoint, let's not kid ourselves if the government of Quebec even attempted to move towards independence they would be laughed out of existence. Now if they tried to move twards gaining their independence militarily then the CIA would simply make sure that they all had "accidents". No I'm sure this issue will simply be ignored until some other less egregious minority group outnumbers the french fries and simply makes them irrelevant enough that there won't be any political will to side with them and they alongside their language and their silly little traditions will simply fade into the background much like the large German minority did here in Texas when they were superseded by the Latinos.

  • @lecoureurdesbois86

    @lecoureurdesbois86

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@anarchyandempires5452 Our governement doesn't have an "anti-American standpoint". Only the medias did, until Biden came in office, obviously. The people hated Trump so hard, but when you look at their personal values, everything indicates a lot of them would like Trump if they actually knew something. Why would the CIA give a fuck? The US would let it happen and try to benefit the situation, just like what anyone else would do. And yes, it will be probably ignored. The anglo culture and the progressists love to destroy nations. They destroy them with immigration, the idea of "acceptance" , the fight of against "racism" (dividing the population I should say) and the loss of basic moral values. But not only Québec and our culture will be lost, all of the western civilizations will, eventually.

  • @vibeextreme1940

    @vibeextreme1940

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yee what about New-Brunswick?

  • @bensonfang1868

    @bensonfang1868

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@anarchyandempires5452 Texas doesn’t speak its own language

  • @karsten3360

    @karsten3360

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@lecoureurdesbois86 don't kid yourself the CIA would definitely care to help one of its allies out

  • @gavincstewart
    @gavincstewart3 жыл бұрын

    I love the retro Mac OS styling of this video... You even used Chicago, it is awesome. Well done video, JJ!!

  • @giampyx95
    @giampyx955 жыл бұрын

    Hi JJ, i'm from Italy, which is a country which recognize 6 state level languages , for example french in a region that borders France, but besides the regions that have the minority language, they are not used outside their original regions and everyone mostly speaks italian, so if you go to a region you can see things written in italian and french, then move to another one and see things written in italian and german, but they don't get special places in goverment because of the language they speak. Translator and mediator can help if someone doesn't speak italian well enough.

  • @DiMacky24

    @DiMacky24

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yep! Almost all other nations work this way, including India which has 26 official languages. You are only need to know one of the local languages to hold a government job. Translators are the solution to Canada's problem, but once a group has been given power, they do not want to give it up.

  • @flaviofabrizio8254

    @flaviofabrizio8254

    5 жыл бұрын

    Actually Italy only has one national official language, Italian. Then there is builingualism at a regional level as you said, French and Italian in Valle d'Aosta and German and Italian in Trentino-Alto Adige (although only in Alto Adige they actually speak German)

  • @giampyx95

    @giampyx95

    5 жыл бұрын

    there are more recognized languages than just german and french, and in some situations they can also have matters on a national scale, but the way it's implemented in Italy, as you said it, on a regional level, makes it that one minority languages doesn't carry more power than "italian", the most common language, a lingua franca between everyone in our country, so i think something like it can be used in Canada as well(a rare case where some italian laws work better than a canadian one lol)

  • @richardpelland6110

    @richardpelland6110

    5 жыл бұрын

    In Canada, abbiamo due lingue ufficiali. Vivo in Ontario ma parlo francese. I miei antenati arrivarono in Canada nel 1673 e da quel momento parlavamo francese in Canada. La presenza francese in Ontario risale a più di 400 anni. È normale che vogliamo che il governo fornisca servizi nella nostra lingua, in particolare nei settori dell'istruzione e della salute. Questa persona non ha contatti reali con la popolazione francese canadese e diffonde solo divisione e disinformazione all'interno del nostro paese.

  • @InternetMameluq

    @InternetMameluq

    5 жыл бұрын

    That's a ridiculous comparison, Mr. Fois. The majority of those 'languages' are what in English we call 'Dialects', and the two largest non-dialectical groups are English and French, one of which is ubiquitous in the upper classes of the world, and second of which is barely on the other side of dialect.

  • @Eddong
    @Eddong5 жыл бұрын

    This is definitly proof that history is not a priority of the canadian education system :)

  • @miniraph9921

    @miniraph9921

    5 жыл бұрын

    **of the English education system

  • @whodarboilebamnames3990

    @whodarboilebamnames3990

    5 жыл бұрын

    How would that be?

  • @nararabbit1
    @nararabbit13 жыл бұрын

    This is similar to the fight within higher education to publish in Hebrew vs English in Israel. For them Hebrew is also part of the identity and using English rankles some people.

  • @JoseLavoie

    @JoseLavoie

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think this is an international issue that most anglophone countries are not even aware of. You have to publish in English to be considered in the top of your field. I mean, it does make sense, English being one of the lingua franca, but it still hurts our pride not to publish in our own language.

  • @IDontKnow-pf6en

    @IDontKnow-pf6en

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Jose i think about that all the time, and it really bothers me. maybe we should just go back to everyone speaking Latin 😂

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    You can Publish in Both language.

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@IDontKnow-pf6en Lojban would be a better International Language.

  • @mirabeaux851

    @mirabeaux851

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cakeisyummy5755 translation services can be expensive at times. There was one KZread or who said they paid $200 to have a very long video subtitled. I think it should be offered by institutions as a free service.

  • @davidlegare5021
    @davidlegare5021 Жыл бұрын

    As a bilingual French Canadian who's first language was French, I find language laws to be abhorrent and oppressive in nature, forced upon by people too afraid/lazy to change with the times.

  • @bcrides6717

    @bcrides6717

    7 ай бұрын

    This shit has never affected me in any way

  • @ryancharlebois1043

    @ryancharlebois1043

    6 ай бұрын

    The ending of that statement is very true

  • @acharat6

    @acharat6

    5 ай бұрын

    Not every change that occur naturally is good. Diversity is a good thing too. Many small countries fight to protect their smaller culture and language. If not, the biggest, richest and most powerful will eventually take over. And today this means American culture and English language.

  • @davidlegare5021

    @davidlegare5021

    5 ай бұрын

    @acharat6 Sure, and why is that a bad thing? Personally I give 0 fucks about culture or language or any of that lame stuff. I want affordable goods, access to a wide variety of amenities and good social programs for me, my family and society around me. Globalization seems to be the path forward and forcing to preserve culture only holds back progress.

  • @acharat6

    @acharat6

    5 ай бұрын

    Well basically all you want is money and comfort. Personally I think there's more to life than just that. And globalization "seemed" the be the path forward in the last 30 years maybe, but another trend is showing if you observe the world of 2023: Brexit, economic sanctions against Russia and China, increasing European support to limit immigration all point towards country borders becoming relevant again.@@davidlegare5021

  • @Punk1917
    @Punk19175 жыл бұрын

    Why are english speakers so lazy? In Europe everyone speaks atleast two languages, except the british of course

  • @darexdarex

    @darexdarex

    5 жыл бұрын

    Alfred Gotemark and except the French, and the Spanish, and the Italians, and most of Eastern Europe. Oops. I guess your statement has a lot of exceptions, huh! 🤣

  • @pitaariel1920

    @pitaariel1920

    5 жыл бұрын

    People from USA are the same...

  • @pomperidus

    @pomperidus

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@darexdarex All the countries you quoted have a higher average number of languages spoken than UK, and still very close to two. It is a known linguisitic fact that english grammar and pronunciation is harder to master for a romance language speaker than for a germanic language speaker.

  • @Blaze6432

    @Blaze6432

    5 жыл бұрын

    Why do people care about French? Why not other languages?

  • @lukesampson3294

    @lukesampson3294

    5 жыл бұрын

    You are very ignorant about the UK and Europe. You should get a passport and travel a lot more.

  • @moins52
    @moins525 жыл бұрын

    You claim that learning French is only accessible for a certain elite and at the same time you seem to agree with Mr Ford cancelling a French university in Toronto. That makes no sense to me. I think personally that speaking multiple languages is a chance.

  • @HeavyMetalorRockfan9

    @HeavyMetalorRockfan9

    5 жыл бұрын

    There is reason to cancel the French university if it has Ontarian tax dollars behind it, if its a private institution then it would be fine. The point isn't that everyday anglo-Canadians couldn't learn French, its that they will not have a use for it in their day to day lives practically EVER, and they would only be doing it to appease a minority in the country who is particularly hostile or to get a job in the government. I mean, its silly to think that the govt should be 50/50 when the population is very clearly not. JJ even points out that if you excluded native English speakers, the native French speakers would still be a minority in the country. Its silly to force Albertans to learn French when they're never gonna speak it except if theyre trying to be in government is basically the point.

  • @beyondxbeautiful

    @beyondxbeautiful

    5 жыл бұрын

    Abiril the Archer regarding the money topic, may I remind you Franco-Ontarians also pay taxes? If the Anglophones in Ontario deserve 20+ universities, the Francophones surely deserve at least ONE french university. Also is the French University sustainable, and how much does it cost? Yes. The business plan of the university was developed in close cooperation with the same senior ministry officials who manage funding for the whole university system. The start-up cost for the university is budgeted at $84 million spread over eight years, with half expected to be federal funds. The average annual cost to Ontario is about $5 million for 8 years. This start-up cost amounts to 0.07% of the roughly $6.8 billion spent only in 2017-18 on postsecondary education. Simply put, halting the university’s operations will not lead to any significant savings, and could lead to a net loss through foregone economic activity. That’s right, only 0.07%. For the 1,5 million Ontarians who know how to speak French, it’s not a lot of money like many of you seem to think

  • @HeavyMetalorRockfan9

    @HeavyMetalorRockfan9

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@beyondxbeautiful this is a fair comment

  • @HeavyMetalorRockfan9

    @HeavyMetalorRockfan9

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@j-fd.5611 Wow that totally doesn't scream oppression, forcing people to do things that they don't need or want. Especially coming from a minority group in a country that totally doesn't scream tyranny or aristocracy.

  • @j-fd.5611

    @j-fd.5611

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@HeavyMetalorRockfan9 Ha!!! Oppressed commonwealth dunce let me shed a tear right now... ok done.

  • @edsiles4297
    @edsiles42973 жыл бұрын

    What if, for people who seek a top-government job in Canada, being English-French bilingual was just considered a "plus", instead of a requirement ?

  • @adanactnomew7085

    @adanactnomew7085

    3 жыл бұрын

    That would be good

  • @tablettesamsung4220

    @tablettesamsung4220

    2 жыл бұрын

    22% of Canadians have french as their first language, a top goverment official should represent the nation he's working for

  • @SuperKing604

    @SuperKing604

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tablettesamsung4220 no one person can represent everyone, i wanted talented, smart and competent people in government. You could give bonus points for knowing french in government jobs.

  • @bobfearnley5724

    @bobfearnley5724

    2 жыл бұрын

    for the people who speak French in Quebec, if there is a chance they can't be spoken to French, it is a deal-breaker. Everyone needs to accommodate their needs by learning French

  • @johnnybaxter8078

    @johnnybaxter8078

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SuperKing604 It took me 2 years to learn French. It's not that hard especially when you're wanting to make a career on a national level.

  • @antifasupport4840
    @antifasupport4840 Жыл бұрын

    Who is here after the Parlament meeting

  • @B.B.Woolfe
    @B.B.Woolfe5 жыл бұрын

    Since when being able to speak two language is a « unique skill »?

  • @EJBradley

    @EJBradley

    5 жыл бұрын

    Since they never bothered to improve the French language education in English schools. Really, it's their own fault. Europe has proven that it isn't hard at all for children to become bilingual and it has huge benefits for brain development. And yet, the ones who do put a huge emphasis on bilingualism are being called the "elite". In Ontario, for example, you need to take 1 year of French in English High Schools to graduate, and most students will drop the class after that. However, in French High Schools it's HIGHLY RECOMMEND that you take 4 years of English, not just 1. Furthermore, the English class curriculum is pretty much the same whether you go to a French or English high school. The same is absolutely not true if you take French in an English high school. You're already YEARS behind, even if you do take all 4 years. If proper bilingualism was mandatory, then the problem would be solved as the playing field would be even in the end. Sure, you'd have a HUGE surge in jobs for French immersion teachers and the like, but over time, that won't necessarily benefit just French Canadians. Tons of French Immersion teachers nowadays come from an immigrant or unilingually English background. French Immersion, in general, is already very popular in Ontario.

  • @SimonRancourt

    @SimonRancourt

    5 жыл бұрын

    J'ai appris l'anglais en regardant la télé en anglais.

  • @stepanfedun9122

    @stepanfedun9122

    5 жыл бұрын

    It's a unique skill when only a minority is bilingual and yet you have to be bilingual to rule It depends where you're looking If you're in England, Biligualism is rare, but if you look in the Netherlands, Biligualism is incredibly common

  • @kylem1112

    @kylem1112

    5 жыл бұрын

    B.B.Woolfe uhhh it is in alot of places. maybe not in europe where there's dozens of tiny countries that all have their own respective language... but in places like east asia and latin america it is a unique skill...

  • @dakruise1

    @dakruise1

    5 жыл бұрын

    It just means you can say dumb shit in more than one language

  • @a2n9s3k8
    @a2n9s3k85 жыл бұрын

    literally most of the world: if you want an upper middle class job you're expected to know a second language (implicitly English) Anglos: buuu huuu how on earth would someone FORCE us to learn a second language

  • @joeairbender267

    @joeairbender267

    5 жыл бұрын

    I know right, they are too lazy to learn another language.

  • @HEZAMOTOSPORTswag

    @HEZAMOTOSPORTswag

    5 жыл бұрын

    this is legit only valid for small countries. No big nation requires you to learn a second language to succeed, which is where Canada comes in. Why would you force onto someone to learn a language that only a minority of people speak?

  • @bulbasaur1232

    @bulbasaur1232

    5 жыл бұрын

    English is an ugly language anyway. It's the bastard child of Latin and Germanic lmao

  • @a2n9s3k8

    @a2n9s3k8

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@HEZAMOTOSPORTswag no, it's true for literally every country out of the Anglosphere. English it's a minority language if you take the total world popular into account, yet everyone is still expected to learn it, even though most people don't use it on daily basis. English-speaking Canadian not only stubbornly refuse to learn a globally useful second language, but moreover, it's literally spoken in their own country, with a percentage of older citizens perhaps monolingual.

  • @msflyingfree7

    @msflyingfree7

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@bulbasaur1232 if English is an ugly language I can't imagine what the type of french widely spoken around these parts would fall on the 'UGLY' language scale.

  • @tommymartel5834
    @tommymartel5834 Жыл бұрын

    It’s like listening to Lord Durham in the 1830’s about the French Canadians « a people with no littérature and no history ». French might not be as useless now if English provinces haven’t made so much effort in assimilating Francis. Ontario made it illegal to go to school in French for over 30 years. It did irreparable damage to the French people. The country is just honouring its bilingual heritage.. finally. And now people like you are crying. In live in east Canada. This fight between both sides is pretty much over. I don’t get why western conservative wants to keep it alive..

  • @katherinecantin4196
    @katherinecantin41965 жыл бұрын

    Entendre des gens comme toi, ça me rend encore plus fière d'être Québécoise

  • @gregoryaldous2165

    @gregoryaldous2165

    5 жыл бұрын

    @ArmchairWarrior she said when she hears people like this it makes her more proud to be Quebec. Despite Quebec being a shit hole (not including Montreal).

  • @gfleury1549

    @gfleury1549

    5 жыл бұрын

    Vive le Québec libre!

  • @gfleury1549

    @gfleury1549

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@gregoryaldous2165 rather live in a pretty nice "shithole" than be a spineless squarehead anglophone

  • @gfleury1549

    @gfleury1549

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@gregoryaldous2165 you guys are generic brand Americans

  • @axeleratemtl

    @axeleratemtl

    5 жыл бұрын

    Je me considère fédéraliste, mais avec cet idiot mon opinion pourrait changer 😂

  • @patricks5093
    @patricks50935 жыл бұрын

    90% comments about hair 9.99% comments about comment section being a mess 0.01% comments actually about the video

  • @legendmk52

    @legendmk52

    5 жыл бұрын

    99% of KZread videos have that type of comment

  • @patricks5093

    @patricks5093

    5 жыл бұрын

    LEGEND indeed

  • @than217

    @than217

    5 жыл бұрын

    Me: comments about his pronunciation of the word "About"

  • @Happi-HD

    @Happi-HD

    5 жыл бұрын

    99% of comments are quebecois trashing jj about logic and facts

  • @oconservadorr
    @oconservadorr2 жыл бұрын

    You don't like the fact your country has 2 languages? Try living in Switzerland , Belgium and Luxembourg

  • @SirWeirdGuy

    @SirWeirdGuy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Those countries actually have decent language education, though?

  • @oconservadorr

    @oconservadorr

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SirWeirdGuy Canada doesn't?

  • @apollo1694

    @apollo1694

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@oconservadorr Yes

  • @kyliemadhav1806
    @kyliemadhav18064 жыл бұрын

    J'envoie un petit coucou et beaucoup d'ondes positives aux francophones canadiens de la part d'une très fière francophone afro-américaine

  • @mathieuboucher1287

    @mathieuboucher1287

    4 жыл бұрын

    Merci beaucoup, tu es gentille!

  • @coincoindelacanardiere3958

    @coincoindelacanardiere3958

    3 жыл бұрын

    C'est très apprécié Kylie!

  • @dgdfgdfgdfgd4849
    @dgdfgdfgdfgd48495 жыл бұрын

    Uhh, how can you even say there's a french elite in Canada? Even in Quebec, until 60-70 years ago, French-Canadians had no choice but to do the lowest of jobs as most businesses and companies were owned by wealthy Anglophone aristocrats. Nowadays the situation has improved quite a lot and everybody gets along, but in the rest of Canada most high-paying positions in companies are occupied by Anglophones. Which is normal, as the rest of the country is mainly English-speaking. But don't whine about a "french elite" when there isn't one.

  • @yannickchayer1609

    @yannickchayer1609

    5 жыл бұрын

    I travel across Canada all year long. Work in BC and ontario In the summer, in Alberta in the winter, and in quebec for the rest of the year. Tourism, forestry, farms and restaurants mostly. This guy is just plain delusional. Take it from a guy who interacts a lot with people from all over. Canadians and tourist.

  • @jonathandpg6115

    @jonathandpg6115

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@yannickchayer1609 Yeah this guy is plain dumb tbh. He's salty for not knowing french. Move to quebec and don't talk to anyone in english you'll pick it up quickly and he might learn a thing or two. The idea is simple, Anything from the Gov of Canada should be billingual...anything from other provinces but ontario....well they can be english.Anything from Quebec needs to be french (although a lot is available or partialy available in english AND even if they don't know english the people who work there will try to help you in english. It's called respect)

  • @julianne1066

    @julianne1066

    5 жыл бұрын

    james c True. It’s been that way since 1764. And you know what they say : winners write history. I’m not trying to play the victim here, but we clearly are discriminated against and this guy sadly tells us how the rest of Canada sees us.

  • @makattak88

    @makattak88

    5 жыл бұрын

    LOL!! The modern Québécois are literally the most elite class in Canada.

  • @makattak88

    @makattak88

    5 жыл бұрын

    The Military and the trades. You will get to an elite status very quickly if you flaunt your bilingualism.

  • @Maxislithium
    @Maxislithium5 жыл бұрын

    As someone who lives in Ontario, Specifically Toronto where the French university was going to be, I disagree with much of what you have said. As some one who has spent a not insignificant portion of my life in Ontario's north, I can say that French is much MUCH more common then how you present it and had as much to do with how the country was SETTLED as it does any inter-provenance migration. French language services are soarly needed in Ontario and the fact that the government sees fit to ignore that burns my bacon. And no. I am not a French speaker. I just happen to see the need for French services in Ontario.

  • @bigknee1

    @bigknee1

    5 жыл бұрын

    Ontario is doing fine. In case you did not notice French is becoming a smaller and smaller minority as Canada grows.

  • @johnvermette9466

    @johnvermette9466

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@bigknee1 yeah... but do you Really know why??? It's because, throughout Canada's history (wich, by the way, is much more darker than you might have been led to believe), the english canada has alway had the ultimate goal to assimilate ALL other "strangers"... especially the french speaking one. For example, did you knew that the term "canadiens" were only referring to the francophones before the 1950's? The rest of Canada were referring to themselves as "brittons' or more simply as english. But the worst problem there is in the english canada, is actualy the Order of Orange...wich is an ultra racist and protestant organisation that has always promoted the violence towards the french canadians! Take for example the burning down of the first "United Canada Parliament" that was located in Montreal, on april 25 1849. Look it out and learn what that "organisation" has really been doing, and continue to do, to put oil on the fire that's been burning for centuries between anglophone and francophone since the conquest! How the federal government , prior to the 1995 referendum broke the elections law to prevent Québec from declaring it's independence from Canada... and so on and so forth. You could also read a lot more on the TRUE history of this country when it comes to the french speaking people in the "Black Book of Anglish Canada" by Normand Lester.

  • @catherinepinard7499

    @catherinepinard7499

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@bigknee1 And that's the tragedy. Seeing people whose last name is Tremblay, Gagnon, Simard not speaking one word of French is sad (as much as someone named Wang not speaking one kind of Chinese is sad).

  • @nomorokay2

    @nomorokay2

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@johnvermette9466 The Orange Lodge is primarily anti-Catholic, not anti-French, but since most French Canadians are Catholic, the Orangemen feel justified in oppressing them. In the 1950s, Toronto was ruled by the Orange Lodge. I've spoken to an Irish Catholic and a Scottish Catholic who lived there at that time. One could not find a job, because job applications required you to indicate the Orange Lodge to which you belonged (your Lodge number). The other was fired from Eaton's when they realized he was Catholic. The Orangemen march on the streets in Northern Ireland every 12th of July, to remind the Catholics/native Irish/Celts that in 1690 the Protestant/English/Saxons conquered them. It would be like the Ku Klux Klan marching through Harlem, so it naturally causes bad feelings, and occasional violence. The Orangemen still march in Toronto, but it's no longer there big event that it used to be, thankfully. The old nasty attitudes, and those who hold them, are slowly dying out.

  • @johnvermette9466

    @johnvermette9466

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@nomorokay2 I agree...partially... with what you said. Although, you're ONLY referring the the lodge OUTSIDE of Québec. There's also lodges in Québec, and since the very first representative parliament of "Lower Canada", as Québec was called outside the province, it's been activly targeted french-speaking canadians. Why? Well because , of course! , the vast majority were catholics, but it was mainly because , back in those days, (and I'm quite sure that some till thinks the same way) the anglophones were sincerly convinced that the "french" were just peasants, with no education, and wouldn't "higher their condition" by learning the REAL language of the human race, aka english! Some of their leaders went on to even say that : they don't know what's REALLY good for them! They schould jus let us run things and they'll be happier! WE know what's best for them! And now, centuries later, we still have people like JJJ , who CLEARLY do not know it's canadian history... Oh wait! He must have believed EVERYTHING that they showed in the so-called "Heritage Minutes" capsules that were playing for almost a decade on telivision and before movies in theaters, financed by the federal gov. to "promote" our history, and to build a non-existent canadian culture!

  • @tartaros9426
    @tartaros94263 жыл бұрын

    As someone who grew up in southern NB, and thus only speaks English. And now in my adult life, constantly having bilingualism now being used as a metaphorical roadblock in not just career advancement, but getting work in the first place, I have grown to despise Quebec and what they call "French" with every English fiber in my body.

  • @accordingtothebook
    @accordingtothebook3 жыл бұрын

    While making many great points, I find the main complaint of "Bilingualism is elitist and they get more opportunities" kind of obvious. Yes, learning a second language is difficult, yes most people don't need a second language in their day to day. That is EXACTLY WHY bilingual people have more advantages ANYWHERE, not just Canada. I'm Mexican, completely fluent in Spanish and English. Ever since I started working (about at 20 years of age), my bilingualism has been an advantage, both in the U.S and in Mexico. More opportunities, better pay, better chance at advancement, etc. As for Canada's plight, they need to make a bigger effort in teaching French to anglos and English to Quebec. I mean, how is it that Norway, Sweden, Finland and to a lesser extent Germany, has no problem teaching English to it's citizens, but Canada can't figure it out?

  • @accordingtothebook

    @accordingtothebook

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@louisd.8928 Yes, exactly! What are they doing? A friend of mine from Vancouver told me he kind of sort of got french in school... WHAT? Canda can't just talk the talk, they have to walk the walk.

  • @hello855

    @hello855

    6 ай бұрын

    Agreed on all points. I wish more Anglo Canadians are fluent in French. But I also believe that it's significantly easier to learn English. It's more widely used and there are plenty of opportunities to be immersed in it. It's the standard language for international business, trade, and politics. Most popular films, music, shows, and video games are in English. For people living in English speaking provinces of Canada, French is completely absent from their daily lives. Most students have little interest in acquiring a language (which ALWAYS involves extracurricular efforts) that they most likely won't interact with in their lives.

  • @lrn_news9171
    @lrn_news91715 жыл бұрын

    You should travel to Quebec to see how it's like and maybe learn a little real history about Quebec's relationship with Canada.

  • @makattak88

    @makattak88

    5 жыл бұрын

    Québécois can work anywhere in Canada. Only the Québécois can work in Quebec. Fuck off.

  • @corruptqc8334

    @corruptqc8334

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@makattak88 Its not true, there is a of of english only speaker that works here.

  • @Chabot1801

    @Chabot1801

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@makattak88 if you stop bitching and learned just a bit of french you could. And in Montréal you can work without any french knoledge, people will just look at you like an ignorant.

  • @TheSpectralFX

    @TheSpectralFX

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Chabot1801 so true. At my workplace we are happy to accomodate a guy that only speaks english. But damn... while we *all* fluently switch to english to assist him... its fascinating to see other English-Canadian cry about French... What the stats truly shows is: 1: it's clealry possible to learn both language 2: English-Canada is either Lazy AF or hate filled... Looking at history I'll pick the later

  • @GrimHellscream

    @GrimHellscream

    5 жыл бұрын

    @SpectralFX Quebec just doesn't put out enough French media content to compete with the megaphone that is America. You're 8 million people competeing with 350 million english speakers 2 hours away and as a result, most French know English and most English people (if they don't live in Quebec) don't really have a reason to learn French. It's just a numbers game man.

  • @Air0087
    @Air00875 жыл бұрын

    Je suis élite? Eh ben. On apprend à tout les jours. I'm elite? Guess we really do learn something new everyday day.

  • @Mynipplesmychoice

    @Mynipplesmychoice

    5 жыл бұрын

    As an American this the goofiest fight ever. French should be spoken as much as Latin because it's almost a dead language. How many countries speak frenchies, France, Haiti, and maybe the ivory coast. Canadians shouldn't have to speak a dead language. Although it does sound nice so a few people should keep the language alive so like places Disney world should make a french land... It will seem kind of authentic. I also like it when French people are rude like the soup nazi from Seinfeld. Why don't french people learn Spanish so north America is bi lingual of English and Spanish.

  • @Air0087

    @Air0087

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Mynipplesmychoice I know the stereotype is that the average American doesn't know anything about the world outside his country's borders, but you didn't have to confirm it. According to you, Japanese shouldn't be spoken because it's almost a dead language. Same with Vietnamese, Thai, German, Dutch, Flemish, Italian and a whole bunch of other languages. I mean...how many countries speak those languages, right? And it's funny to hear an American tell us to learn Spanish. Don't you guys hate Mexican immigrants? There has to be a reason that your President wants to build a wall along the Mexican border. Also, a quick Google search would've revealed to you that about 29 countries have French as an official language.

  • @suryavajra

    @suryavajra

    5 жыл бұрын

    Believe it or not French is a spoken language here in the United States of America, and people are trying to revive it. Louisiana French, Paw Paw French, Acadian French, Louisiana Creole

  • @Mynipplesmychoice

    @Mynipplesmychoice

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Air0087 Look people from Quebec are not French.whoever heard of a French person who drinks maple syrup and is fat. It's illegal to be fat in France. Quebec French culture is like a cancerous growth growing out of french culture

  • @suryavajra

    @suryavajra

    5 жыл бұрын

    True. There is no official language and hence a lot of the political fights are avoided at least the national level. But where we are similar is that in the state level, the states have the ability to choose their official language. So a state like Alaska has six official languages. Here states have the right to choose their language so long as there no discrimination in the laws or any law that directly contradicts the Constitution.

  • @omineol9897
    @omineol98974 жыл бұрын

    just from the dislike we now that french speakers arent small at all in canada

  • @Lucysmom26

    @Lucysmom26

    4 жыл бұрын

    They are. They're just much, much angrier about this stuff.

  • @Gabriel-hs9mv

    @Gabriel-hs9mv

    3 жыл бұрын

    Doffy Rob Arrongant American attitude coming from a guy from British Columbia? That’s quite a no-brainer.

  • @luclaplante1346
    @luclaplante13464 жыл бұрын

    You brought up an interesting point about accessibility to education. It sounds a bit hypocritical though when you mentioned that bilingual Canadians get access to better jobs because they were “privileged” to get access to a French education yet applaud Mr. Ford’s cancellation of the creation of a French university in Toronto. This sounds a lot like when people accuse unionized workers of being privileged rather than negotiating better terms and conditions with their own employer. The solution to a disproportionate level of French speakers vs English speakers is not to eliminate French but rather increase access to more French education, more French immersion classes, more access to French language materials and media. European countries manage to function with multiple official languages without the need for translators in every office.

  • @denizbeytekin9853

    @denizbeytekin9853

    3 жыл бұрын

    Which European countriezzz??? You mean Belgium and Swiss only loool

  • @luclaplante1346

    @luclaplante1346

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@denizbeytekin9853 You have two of the most successful ones (Belgium and Switzerland) but you will also find multiple official languages in Luxembourg, Bosnia, Finland, and Belarus. Not to mention a high level of multilingual communities in France, Netherlands, Spain, Germany, Sweden, and Ukraine which all offer a form of education in another language (unofficially).

  • @bobfearnley5724

    @bobfearnley5724

    2 жыл бұрын

    The privilege system for bilinguals is way too powerful in the federal government. It shouldn't even be required to know French to rise to the top.

  • @luclaplante1346

    @luclaplante1346

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bobfearnley5724 why? Because everyone with a leadership position (public or private sector) already speaks English? Why did I, born in a French speaking home, have to learn English in order to advance?

  • @wdalbright

    @wdalbright

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@luclaplante1346 People should not be forced to learn English or French in order to advance in government. My argument is that there should be no language requirements, instead, just hire translators. Having more French classes available would also be very beneficial though, along with more translators.

  • @lilypenney6936
    @lilypenney69365 жыл бұрын

    rip the acadians apparently u_u

  • @EpicGamer-tw9bu

    @EpicGamer-tw9bu

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes. I am an acadian. ❤️

  • @acadiant2756

    @acadiant2756

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yup

  • @k4erie

    @k4erie

    3 жыл бұрын

    yup!

  • @adrianespinel7758
    @adrianespinel77585 жыл бұрын

    Another entry in the long-running "JJ vs Quebec" saga. JJ: "I bet you can't denounce me a second time Quebec!" Quebec (in French): "Keep it up and we'll arrange for you to disappear!" JJ: "I dare you to because that'll just prove my point!"

  • @lexsduck6892

    @lexsduck6892

    5 жыл бұрын

    I hate our governement.

  • @WillHayes44

    @WillHayes44

    5 жыл бұрын

    It seems to be funny to be Canadian...

  • @richardpelland6110

    @richardpelland6110

    5 жыл бұрын

    It seems that he could benefit from moving to Quebec and getting a French girlfriend or boyfriend. He should broaden his horizons. BC is too far removed from French Canada to be making assertions on the relevance of French in Canadian society.

  • @EEYore-py1bf

    @EEYore-py1bf

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@richardpelland6110 I'm from BC and I make the assertion that the French are too important to our culture and history within the British Commonwealth to get rid of them.

  • @WillHayes44

    @WillHayes44

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@EEYore-py1bf Don't bring the Commonwealth of nations into this, I had an argument with an Indian girl, it was quite tiresome to make her think that the Commonwealth is something good.

  • @Nick-nb4hv
    @Nick-nb4hv3 жыл бұрын

    Was put through French immersion throughout primary school and high school and can tell you first hand it does not result in bilingualism. You gain a much better understanding of the language and can speak it much better than someone not in immersion, but when it comes to full on French convos...a 1 hour class 5 days a week doesn’t do much when you’re speaking English the rest of the time and are never forced to use it.

  • @chaklee435

    @chaklee435

    2 жыл бұрын

    As I understand it, immersion means ALL your classes are taught in that language. A 1 hour class 5 days a week is just a language class.

  • @Comprends-ton-Dim

    @Comprends-ton-Dim

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lmao how is that immersion ? 1 hour a week is just literally a normal foreign language class, not immersion

  • @hello855

    @hello855

    6 ай бұрын

    A lot of teachers in immersion programs aren't very fluent in French themselves. It's extremely difficult to implement them in western Canada.

  • @acharat6
    @acharat66 ай бұрын

    As a hardcore Quebec separatist I agree with the absurdity of having two official languages country wide. It does create a ruling class of privileged "bilingual" government employees and politicians (mostly based around the city of Ottawa). I wouldn't call them "elites" though as most of them are really just incompetent parasites with only one skill : bilinguism, except their french is usually so poor they barely could be understood in France. And not only does it hurt English Canada by depriving the country of its most competent people in key government positions, it also hurts Quebec people by giving them a false sense of power, while the so-called bilingual elites only work for their own benefit and never for the benefit of regular Quebec folks. Giving that false impression of power to Quebec people was the intended goal of Trudeau (Father), who wanted to cool down nationalist movements in the province.

  • @Gabtube252
    @Gabtube2525 жыл бұрын

    jai limpression quil nous aimes pas tlm 😂

  • @amirbarzegar9435

    @amirbarzegar9435

    5 жыл бұрын

    Regarde sa vidéo sur Québec, ça expliquerait tout...

  • @simonditomasso9868

    @simonditomasso9868

    5 жыл бұрын

    [Insert name] le gars est tellement loin de l’action il ne sait même pas de quoi il parle

  • @inconnuinconito2969

    @inconnuinconito2969

    5 жыл бұрын

    Mon Dieu, si le français est le problème le plus important important au Canada, il y a juste à nous le dire. Ont va prendre nos sac et partir. Pas comme si ont a pas essayer. deux fois.

  • @nainmayoudavich7541

    @nainmayoudavich7541

    5 жыл бұрын

    non ce dude la c'est genre Martineau anglais qui est en syndrome premenstruel permanent

  • @malaikab3521

    @malaikab3521

    5 жыл бұрын

    Gabtube252 Anyways c lui qui a l’air cave parce qu’il chiale à apprendre une 2e langue genre pendant 3 ans au secondaire alors que nous ici on doit apprendre à partir de la première année du primaire jusqu’au cégep et doivent être complètement bilingue sinon t’a moins de chance d’avoir une job 😂

  • @ayszhang
    @ayszhang5 жыл бұрын

    Why are you purposefully pronouncing "about" like that?

  • @bobbiusshadow6985

    @bobbiusshadow6985

    5 жыл бұрын

    I used to think he pronounces it like that for comedic effect, way before he started making these snake pit political videos.

  • @huazelei4976

    @huazelei4976

    5 жыл бұрын

    Well my brain is like 50 50 I think he says it on purpose for comedy And the other part of my brain is like Nah he ain't doing this on purpose cuz it is so hard to do it on purpose when you talk fast And my gut say Nah he just poor My heart says Mm fuck

  • @personincognito3989

    @personincognito3989

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@huazelei4976 he's born and raised in Vancouver the same as me and we do not speak like that. He's just making some point or being an idiot. Perhaps he thinks he's being funny but it's just annoying.

  • @lemon8944
    @lemon8944 Жыл бұрын

    The government should just make language learning better. Yes, I know, English is the global language and the majority language of Canada. But French is a big deal as well in Canada. I think that if for the moment only a few people are true bilingual (mostly mixed english-french canadians, like Trudeau, or even I), it's because language learning in school is really bad. English (in Quebec) and French (in the ROC) should be taught in a more efficient and funny way that gives the English and French canadians wanting to know about each other's culture...

  • @fronkki
    @fronkki3 жыл бұрын

    If one day this guy become prime minister of Canada, i make my boxes and i move in France.

  • @bensonfang1868

    @bensonfang1868

    3 жыл бұрын

    Good lol, he’s right

  • @thatvexiol

    @thatvexiol

    2 жыл бұрын

    Go away, our daddy UK is richer than your daddy france😤

  • @cakeisyummy5755

    @cakeisyummy5755

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thatvexiol Daddy?

  • @9948845
    @99488455 жыл бұрын

    As a french canadian myself I'd like to correct that at 11:07 french settlers have been in most part of Canada even before english settlements, and that their selfmade institutions were hunted down by the anglo-canadian power for centuries (Yukon, praries, northern ontario, maritimes). at 5:04 i'd like to remember you that Quebec and french-canadian power structures have been overrun by an english elite and even nowadays, english is mandatory for works that could be done solely in french. and at 2:17 i'd like to point out that French-canadians revendications have always been to have his own economic leverages and distinct state to acheve a sustain living for roughly 8 million people. You compare numbers but nations are way bigger then that. It the consciousness about the place we come from.

  • @DPG214

    @DPG214

    5 жыл бұрын

    A few got to modern-day Saskatchewan and created Que'Appelle. That was it. The rest of the francophone herd stayed in Acadia and New France to dispossess the Aboriginals of their land and their 'heathen' customs, and to squat on land that had been discovered earlier by England in 1497 through John Cabot.

  • @DPG214

    @DPG214

    5 жыл бұрын

    @André Lussier www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/john-cabot

  • @DPG214

    @DPG214

    5 жыл бұрын

    @André Lussier I was wrong, the French were not the first into modern-day Saskatchewan. It was the English again, Englishman Henry Kelsey. Your francophones are out of luck, again. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Saskatchewan

  • @DPG214

    @DPG214

    5 жыл бұрын

    @André Lussier Make sure you have your Quebec passport and/or work permit next time you and your minority buddies are passing through English Canada.

  • @DPG214

    @DPG214

    5 жыл бұрын

    @André LussierTravel more??? I was born and grew up in Europe (as an ethnic minority) and emigrated to Canada over 20 years ago. I have traveled most of the world.

  • @christmascactus1882
    @christmascactus18825 жыл бұрын

    I don't know if J. J. realises this, but the entire non-English speaking world has to be bilingual to get anywhere. And I don't mean to get to the top of the political ladder, but just to get into university or to get a basic office job. Learning a second language is not a huge burden, especially a language that is as commonly spoken worldwide as French.

  • @hristosparaskevas104

    @hristosparaskevas104

    5 жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. You can’t erase the people and their language. Also halting the construction of the University denies people the right to learn French, against the will of those who want to learnt. It’s unfair

  • @Imdor

    @Imdor

    5 жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't quite call French commonly spoken, but yes most of the world is bilingual, but most of us have our own language and then learn something that actually helps us internationally, 90% of the time that is english, pretty much noone chooses to learn French, for a good reason, it's simply not useful, even arabic would be more useful than that language.

  • @christmascactus1882

    @christmascactus1882

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Imdor French is the 6th most spoken language in the world. We're not talking about Swahili here.

  • @Imdor

    @Imdor

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yet as a random person on this earth you almost never run into a french speaker, they're pretty much all living in certain areas, not really a language that is head all over.

  • @ertuncdelikaya8237

    @ertuncdelikaya8237

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Imdor upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/50/New-Map-Francophone_World.PNG

  • @MrMoron231
    @MrMoron2314 жыл бұрын

    It’s kinda funny because if you ask a French teacher in like southern Ontario if they would rather teach to everyone or to those that want to learn French they would probably always choose the latter as trying to teach a bunch of people who don’t want to learn the language and hate that they have to it makes the job a hell I would know I am one of those people that went exempt as soon as I got into high school

  • @kevinitou5409
    @kevinitou54092 жыл бұрын

    And Yes, despite your argument on the use of the languange, If the Canadian governments are truly seriouse about bilingualism. French and English should be tought much earlier in schools in respective regions.

  • @ryanrichardson5844

    @ryanrichardson5844

    2 жыл бұрын

    that wouldn't help because ill say it for those who didn't hear, it is not at all applicable. English is the primary language of the world, to the point most Europeans learn fluency in it despite not sharing a country with the British. The French do not have the same reverse card situation

  • @linefrenette9116

    @linefrenette9116

    2 жыл бұрын

    It is already done in Quebec we have English classes from the first grade of primary school ,,,, which is not the case in the other provinces.

  • @adanactnomew7085

    @adanactnomew7085

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@linefrenette9116 No, French immersion is offered in Anglo Majority provinces. However, French isn't nearly as useful as English is, both within Canada, North America, and globally.

  • @leonardogarelli3009

    @leonardogarelli3009

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ryanrichardson5844 damm imagine being these ignorant, never come to mexico with that attitute , you have English. Chinese, Spanish, French And Hindi as the most spoken languages in the world and you still think english should be the only language people should learn, never come to mexico with that attitute or youll ended up dead

  • @leonardogarelli3009

    @leonardogarelli3009

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adanactnomew7085 You live in Canada, a place where 30% of the population can speak french, i live in the states a place where 15% can speak spanish. Saying english is the only useful language in north america is ignorant and far from reality but what you would expect from english people the most ethnocentric people out there

  • @HistoryNerd808
    @HistoryNerd8085 жыл бұрын

    It's honestly really confusing from an American perspective. English is spoken in the public political sphere because 99% of us speak it but it isn't mandated by government because we have no official language. Why force people to learn a language they have no need for?

  • @CheapSkateGamer96

    @CheapSkateGamer96

    5 жыл бұрын

    Idk about you, but where I am, Spanish is becoming a lot more common. Good thing I took 3 years of it in highschool and forgot most of it.

  • @HistoryNerd808

    @HistoryNerd808

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@CheapSkateGamer96 I'm from Texas so yeah, Spanish is pretty common here too. I'm just saying that English is still spoken by practically everyone so it's the language that is used in the political sphere. Other government things like forms and stuff come in a ton more, I think. It still isn't required to know Spanish if you want to get into the political world though whereas it seems up there that they have to learn French simply to appease Quebec.

  • @patrickstump6809

    @patrickstump6809

    5 жыл бұрын

    I fully understand mandating that the PM would have to be French speaking. A few other top jobs might also be necessary but there should only be a handful of jobs (like a couple dozen at most) that require this skill. Not as many as there seems to be now.

  • @jpb2366

    @jpb2366

    5 жыл бұрын

    You need a bit of context and history sadly J.J is not really talking about it. Basically French was 100% of the language of "Canada" at the beginning and after USA war of independence english speaking loyalist went on to live to the newly conquered colony of "Canada" and established themselves mostly in Ontario. So of course with immigration over the centuries French proportion slowly diminished to around 20%. But back when it was around 50%+ there was a real danger that Quebecers fell disconnected and rejected from a english-only country and want to secede, which would be disastrous for Canada economically. So thats it ! The strategies back then and less and less relevant over the years but sadly J.J is skipping over it (he does seems to have a personal beef with Quebec TBH).

  • @HistoryNerd808

    @HistoryNerd808

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@jpb2366 If that's the case, then why keep that requirement around? Just curious as a foreigner.

  • @nessman69
    @nessman695 жыл бұрын

    As a Canadian I am embarrassed both of you and for you.

  • @Slymel22

    @Slymel22

    5 жыл бұрын

    Merci. Thank you.

  • @fredo7985

    @fredo7985

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hear, hear! Merci! You took the words right out of my mouth!

  • @ITFAE
    @ITFAE3 жыл бұрын

    exactly, Im learning french as my fourth language because applying for jobs missing out on that “bilingual privilege” sucks. and i also dislike how it’s “bilingual” and not “french-english bilingual” as if they’re the only ones with language skills. It takes at least three years to become fluent in french and im wondering what i could have done with that time instead that would have been more beneficial

  • @franciswill2487
    @franciswill24873 жыл бұрын

    Yooo JJ congrats on cracking 200k