• Glide@lemmy.ca
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    22 hours ago

    Jesus christ, we’re still polling on values like nationalistic pride? Don’t get me wrong, we’re not doing awesome right now, but fervent, aimless pride in the piece of rock I was born on isn’t something I value.

    Actually, after reading the article: the collective response for “I have a deep emotional attachment to my country” and “I am attached to my country as long as it continues to provide a decent quality of life” was 84% in 1991, and is 81% as of the most recent poll. People are just substantially more inclined to agree with the latter. So we’ve moved away from blind, fervent nationalism, and instead recognize that the goal of the state should be to provide a good quality of life for it’s citizens, and agree that Canada is doing a good job of this.

    …fucking good? Nationalism is down, and satisfaction with our country remains the same. This is a win, and it’s kind of insulting that the headline, and discussion here, tries to suggest otherwise.

    • Jamablaya@lemmy.worldOP
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      20 hours ago

      Miss the point some more. Patriotism/Nationalism is directly related to whether or not there’s any regard for the government, federal in particular. That’s gone. You are a direct result of the “post national state” someone wanted to build. You wanna know what happens when nationalism really tanks? YOu get guys like me that could seriously care less if the states took over tommorow, one eastern bullshit federal government is the same as another

      • Glide@lemmy.ca
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        19 hours ago

        I’m believe your the one who has missed the point. The data provided is being misinterpreted to suggest that Canadians are in some way disgusted by their country. A closer look at the data reveals that this is not true. They just believe that the state is responsible to them, rather than the other way around. Again, the percentage of people who value their country has not changed much, so it’s not “Canada” that anyone is upset with.

        I’m not sure why you feel so strongly about attaching your personal value to a national identity. You are more than the piece of dirt you were born on. You don’t need to attach your entire conceptualization of self to the happenstance of your birth.

        This whole self-loathing thing seems like something you should be looking inward to fix, not something you should be looking to your government to fix for you.

        • Auli@lemmy.ca
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          7 hours ago

          Sure but you need some nationalism. Our military cant recrute enough people which mean our already pathetic army well get more pathetic. Olson get people who could care less if America took over.

          • Glide@lemmy.ca
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            4 hours ago

            Why do we need a strong, aimless, nationalistic pride to see value in having a strong military? It’s a job like any other that provides a service a group of people, in this case the country. To go back to the statistics this thread is discussing, the shift from having “an emotional connection to canada” versus “being attached to Canada as long as it provides a good quality of life” doesn’t reflect a population that is completely unwilling to work for the Canadian military. Just one that expects to receive good living for doing so, as they should.

            Likewise, I don’t think caring about if America takes over should have anything to do with national pride. I don’t want to be a part of America for a long list of practical reasons, from the fact they the country doesn’t at all share my values, to the complete disregard America seems to have for the fact that Canada is about as diverse as America, and the notion of governing it as one state is about as sensible as governing Florida and California as one state. I don’t need to drink the nationalism Kool-aid to recognize that joining America would be a horrible thing.

            We should fight tooth and nail for our existence as a country because joining America would be a fucking horrible thing for many of our peoples, not because “hoo rah, Canada!”

        • Jamablaya@lemmy.worldOP
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          19 hours ago

          Canadians are disgusted by their country, go talk to some. I’m gonna give the rest of that the respect it deserves by ignoring it.

          • Glide@lemmy.ca
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            10 hours ago

            And yet, the data you’ve provided disagrees. 81% of surveyed Canadians either are deeply and emotionally attached to Canada, or are attached to Canada as long as it provides a good standard of living for its citizens. Regardless of how you or Angus Reid attempt to spin that data, it’s right in front of you: Canadians are not disgusted with our country.

          • i_love_FFT@jlai.lu
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            18 hours ago

            Anyone who’s not at least a bit disgusted by their own country needs to learn more about their country’s history.

            Fuck the Catholic Church and old Canadian governments creating boarding school for indigenous people! It’s impossible to be blindly proud of Canada, but it’s still an awesome country.

            • Auli@lemmy.ca
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              7 hours ago

              Oh come on get over that. We should not feel bad for what others have done. I hate this B’s of we must be shamed for what the past has done.

              • flyingSock@feddit.org
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                7 hours ago

                Acknowledging the past, realising/feeling bad things were done, and deciding future choice need to be better is not the same as personally feeling shame. Feeling responsible for a better future and feeling responsible for bad past decisions are independent concepts.

                • Glide@lemmy.ca
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                  4 hours ago

                  Right, my anti-nationalism spiels goes both ways. I don’t think we should feel a personal sense of shame for the things others who came before us have done. But that lack of personal shame doesn’t take away being responsible for the future. I’ve been advantaged by my forefathers at the loss of others, and that makes me responsible for using that advantage to give back. That is not the same as feeling shame for the circumstances of my birth.

                  Even outside of politics, I tend to preach a philosophy of accountability, but not blame. Blame is “I should have done better,” while accountability is “I can and will do better.”

            • Jamablaya@lemmy.worldOP
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              15 hours ago

              No. It isn’t. I don;t know why it is so hard to distinguish that the country is the government, The people are just people.

              • Glide@lemmy.ca
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                10 hours ago

                Because that’s simply not true. A country is not its government. Look at literally any revolution in the entirety of human history and that’s an obvious fact. The peoples, the cultures, the social norms that give a country the distinct feel that defines what it is survives beyond any given government.

                The Canadian government works for, or at least is supposed to work for, Canada. It is not Canada in of itself. I’m so sorry that you feel so disenfranchised that you seem to believe otherwise, but we collectively decide what out country is. No elected official gets to decide it for us.