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  #1  
Old 09-06-2006, 04:28 PM
RACooper RACooper is offline
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Canadian-US Differences & Relations

I know in the past I had a thread covering information about Canada… mainly to try and educate people about my country or at least to provide a forum to promote a better understanding of the differences between Canada and the United States of America (yes they do exist).

Anyways I decided to do some surfing through wikipedia looking for relevant articles covering differences in politics, attitudes, laws, and policies… mainly again to provide a source of education – and yes I know that wikipedia isn’t exactly an academic source, but it is great for an introduction to the pertinent issues. Now from my perspective I did gain some insights into the differences from an American point of view: specifically dealing with political structure and constitutional issues…

Canada and the 2004 United States presidential election:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_...ntial_election

Religion in Canada:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Canada

Canadian Parliament:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Parliament

Political Culture of Canada:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politic...ture_of_Canada

US-Canada Relations:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US-Canada_relations

Canada and the Iraq War:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_and_the_Iraq_War

US-Canada Politics Compared:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US-Cana...itics_compared
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  #2  
Old 09-06-2006, 05:48 PM
RACooper RACooper is offline
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Just thought I'd update with one major difference right now...

Currently I'm watching the live coverage on CBC (you know that evil "liberal", "socialist", or even "communist" government agency according to FOXNews) of the repatriation ceremony of the latest Canadian casualities in Afghanistan.

So, since the family okayed it, the entire nation can watch the coffins being unloaded from the aircraft to be recieved by an Honour Guard from the dead soldier's regiment, accompanied by bagpipes and the padre - to see the regiment and the families pay their first respects to the deceased, and to see the sorrow expressed at the loss.

The new Conservative government tried to ban any coverage of these events, and tried to have the coffins come home at night without a "production", ala the current US policy. The public, media, family, veteran's, and military outrage at the decision forced an over turning of this policy... and led to a serious loss of respect for the Minister of Defense (a retired General) - so much so that soldiers refused to salute him, or some even turned their backs on him on parade in Afghanistan... a very serious sign of disrespect from the military (for those who are familiar with Canadian or British military culture). I know that the government was worried that the grief could errode the support for the Afghanistan mission.... and I do know that some of the more hard-line conservatives felt the open displays of grief by some soldiers wasn't "respectful" - but to be honest f*ck Harper and O'Connor's views on this - I for one have no problem watching a soldier weep for a fallen comrade; and in many cases watch a soldier weep for a family member or spouse... as has been the case recently.


PS> I am touched by the class and respect shown by the US Air Force, who sent a senior officer as a representative to today's repatriation ceremony, to express their condoloences and regret for the friendly-fire incident that claimed one life. It takes a brave man and a gentleman to be their to express sorrow and regret to soldiers, the regiment, and the family...
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Last edited by RACooper; 09-06-2006 at 06:20 PM.
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  #3  
Old 09-08-2006, 12:30 AM
CutiePie2000 CutiePie2000 is offline
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These are the differences between Canada and USA:

neighbour / neighbor
colour / color
cheques / checks
Girl Guides / Girl Scouts
Girl Guide cookies: Canada has 2 kinds- the gross Chocolate Mint Kind in November, and the "one row chocolate, one row vanilla kind" in April
Girl Scout cookies: apparently the American Girl Scout cookie..there is "multiple" kinds that you can buy? I've never eaten an American Girl Scout cookie. SOMEONE SEND ME SOME, LOL!!

Canadians go to university, Americans go to "college".
In Canada, you are in Grade 4, in USA you are in the 4th grade.

Canada: you can pay with USD$ and no one bats an eyelash
USA: Canadian money will be looked at with suspicion, as though it was monopoly money, due to it being of different colours. (some places close to "the line" on the US side might accept Canadian money, but those are few and far between).

"Thank you"
Canada - "You're welcome"
USA - "Uh huh" (as observed by me in Seattle)

And USA has way wider a range of repertoire of candy bars selection (chocolate bars in Canada)

And in Canada, we say "pop" and in the USA, depending where you live (i.e. region), it's "soda / pop / Coke" (see other old GC threads...this soft drink topic has been covered before, at least once).

Canada: runners
USA: sneakers

Retail in Canada is in, general, pretty crappy compared to the American cousins.
USA has Victoria's Secret shops, we have to deal with crappy a$$ La Senza and La Vie en Rose.
USA has "Bed, Bath and Beyond", we have crappy "Linens and Things".


If I think of anything else, I'll come back.

Last edited by CutiePie2000; 09-08-2006 at 12:42 AM.
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  #4  
Old 09-08-2006, 08:49 AM
KillarneyRose KillarneyRose is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CutiePie2000
Girl Scout cookies: apparently the American Girl Scout cookie..there is "multiple" kinds that you can buy? I've never eaten an American Girl Scout cookie. SOMEONE SEND ME SOME, LOL!!

CP2K, when Girl Scout cookie time rolls around, I promise I will do my part to bolster US/Canada relations and buy a couple of boxes to send to you! Do you like peanut butter? They make peanut butter cookies called Tagalongs which are a cookie spread with peanut butter and dipped in chocolate. I keep them in the refrigerator. Yummmm! But, yeah, I'll e mail when it's cookie time!

********************

On an unrelated subject, though, I think many Canadians may have gotten pissed off about Wayne Gretzky up and marrying an American and leaving Edmonton for LA. I don't think relations have been the same since.
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  #5  
Old 09-08-2006, 12:54 PM
CutiePie2000 CutiePie2000 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KillarneyRose
Do you like peanut butter? They make peanut butter cookies called Tagalongs which are a cookie spread with peanut butter and dipped in chocolate.
ME LOVE PEANUT BUTTER!

I would love to help bolster Canada-US relations and would be pleased to receive American Girl Scout cookies!
And I would send you some Canadian Girl Guide cookies. And actually, the chocolate mint kind is not really 'gross' but people either love 'em or they hate 'em. There is no grey area.
And some people are not big on the mint.

And you can have fun reading the French side of the box label!
Oui, oui, bonjour!

Last edited by CutiePie2000; 09-08-2006 at 01:11 PM.
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  #6  
Old 09-08-2006, 01:27 PM
Taualumna Taualumna is offline
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Another diff I've noticed:

In the US: Elementary School to refer to the lower grades

Canada: Seems to be a split between elementary and "public" school (official gov't term is elementary and secondary)...being from the separate system (govt funded Catholic schools), I prefer "elementary"

US: THE Prom

Canada: Prom (no "the")/Formal/Grad (didn't know this term was used until I was in university. Maybe it's regional?)
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  #7  
Old 09-08-2006, 01:56 PM
RACooper RACooper is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariesrising
We never used prom here until recently. It was always "grad". NowI've heard some schools have prom earlier in the year and then the end of the year "grad". I don't get prom at all, it makes no sense lol. It's grad and that's that lol.
Same here... it was "Grad" for me - but I missed it 'cause I was off at Basic Training. I do know that my sister's school called it "Prom" for the first time back in 2000... she was on the planning committee and opposed the change.
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  #8  
Old 09-08-2006, 02:11 PM
Taualumna Taualumna is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariesrising
We never used prom here until recently. It was always "grad". NowI've heard some schools have prom earlier in the year and then the end of the year "grad". I don't get prom at all, it makes no sense lol. It's grad and that's that lol.
Were Grade 11s allowed to go?

At my school, the formal was not only for OACs (Grade 12s now, of course), but also open to the 11s and 12s. Prom/Formal makes it more "equal" I guess. Lower grades were allowed to go to the dance only. Dinner was open only to the graduating class

At my school "grad(uation)" dance=post-commencement dinner reception/dance for the class and parents.


ETA: Always thought "grad" was weird. I was confused for a long time when floormates were talking about their "grad". It was either "formal" or "prom" for me.

Last edited by Taualumna; 09-08-2006 at 02:15 PM.
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  #9  
Old 09-08-2006, 02:36 PM
Taualumna Taualumna is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariesrising
For our grad dinner/dance grade 12s, their dates, and even parents could come. After grad was another story=)
That's a very BC thing, I believe (at least according to a girl I did my study abroad program with). Over here (at least at my school and at my friends' schools), parents didn't get to go to the formal. Parents did host a pre-party for the graduating class, their dates and faculty chaperones.
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  #10  
Old 09-08-2006, 02:38 PM
CutiePie2000 CutiePie2000 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Taualumna
Canada: Seems to be a split between elementary and "public" school (official gov't term is elementary and secondary)...being from the separate system (govt funded Catholic schools), I prefer "elementary"
I was born and raised in Canada and lived here for my entire life and I have NEVER heard the term public school in place of non-private school for grades K-7. It was always elementary school.

It's only used if you are talking about, 'Hey did you go to private school?'
'No, I went to public school.'

Quote:
Originally Posted by Taualumna
Were Grade 11s allowed to go?
Only if your invited date was a Grade 11'er.

At my grad dinner, it was you, your date and your parents. And then the after-grad was woo hoo, get down!
But we had parents there at the party to chaperone and yes, booze was served out in the open (this was a non-religious private school grad, by the way)

Last edited by CutiePie2000; 09-08-2006 at 02:41 PM.
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  #11  
Old 09-08-2006, 02:48 PM
Taualumna Taualumna is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CutiePie2000
I was born and raised in Canada and lived here for my entire life and I have NEVER heard the term public school in place of non-private school for grades K-7. It was always elementary school.

It's only used if you are talking about, 'Hey did you go to private school?'
'No, I went to public school.'
I've heard "I went to public school in ABC City and middle and high school in DEF City" a few times in my life.


Quote:
Only if your invited date was a Grade 11'er.
That's what I thought. I guess that's why ours was called "The Formal" (or maybe the full name used to be the VI Form Formal (VI Form would have included Grade 12s AND 13s. My school stopped using "forms" in the early 70s)

Quote:
At my grad dinner, it was you, your date and your parents. And then the after-grad was woo hoo, get down!
But we had parents there at the party to chaperone and yes, booze was served out in the open (this was a non-religious private school grad, by the way)
Sounded like our post-commencement dinner/dance, except we didn't bring dates to that.
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  #12  
Old 09-08-2006, 04:13 PM
RACooper RACooper is offline
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Almost always the term "public" refered to a non-Catholic school; be it Elementary or Highschool... when it came to private schools for the most part the people just said that either they went to a "private school" or a "private Catholic school".

Of course there is bound to be some serious differences between our experience and Taualumna's; the world of BSS, Royal St. George, St. Andrew's, and UCC is a very different one indeed.
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  #13  
Old 09-08-2006, 04:43 PM
CutiePie2000 CutiePie2000 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RACooper
the world of BSS, Royal St. George, St. Andrew's, and UCC is a very different one indeed.
I went to "public HS" for Grade 8 and 9 (and that public HS was hardly slumming it), and my Grade 10-12 years were spent at a private school, in the "same league" as Ridley, Branksome Hall, Bishop Strachan, Havergal (Have-a Girl....LOL is what my Havergal alumnae friends called it)...
We offered the 3 R's: Rugby, Rowing and 'Rithmatic
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  #14  
Old 09-08-2006, 05:03 PM
Taualumna Taualumna is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariesrising
It's funny, we had elementary and high schools (aka secondary schools) here, but we had one junior high.

Each high school had about 3-4 elementary schools that fed into it - yet one area fed into a junior high that then fed into my high school. This junior high went from 8-10, and they came to my high school for 11 and 12. It's the weirdest set up, grades 11 and 12 are huge classes at my alma mater compared to the other grades.

I think BC and Quebec (and parts of Ontario--Kingston and York Region elementary schools are K-8) are the only provinces where junior highs are rare. I know that in Alberta and in the east, elementary is K-6, Middle (or junior high) is 7-9 and high school is 10-12. My cousins from Alberta thought it was weird that Ontarians are in high school for 4 years (9-12).
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  #15  
Old 09-08-2006, 05:21 PM
CutiePie2000 CutiePie2000 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariesrising
We're usually K-7 elementary and then 8-12 for high school. I just like the idea of moving schools once lol.
What she said.

And even though "Grade 13" in now extinct in Ontario, I still don't get it. Like, why did it even exist? Were people in Ontario not smart enough, that they needed that extra year to learn in 14 years (i.e. K-13) what the rest of us could learn in 13? (K-12). I don't get it. And it is/was called OAC or some random thing. Bizarre.

Last edited by CutiePie2000; 09-08-2006 at 05:30 PM.
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