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The media is making more of this then needs be...most likely because of what is going on in the Ukraine. Quebec is where I was born and raised, so I have an idea of how some Ukrainians may feel, but should they decide to go on their own, I will lose no sleep on it or shed blood for it. I see it a s job creator , and money saver, how you may ask?
1] Jobs will be created in the boarder security field.
2] Razor wire production as I lay it around their swamp of a country
We will save millions of dollars in not having to be bi-lingual any longer, this will also stimulate jobs in our road sign manufacturing as we change back to English only signs.
Canada will save money on it books in the area of welfare, health insurance, road maintenance, transfer payments etc. I see a bright future for the rest of Canada with all these monies coming back into the kitty.
I believe our beer sales will spike for a while as most Canadians will lift their beers to toast freedom from the whining and crying french. We will toast them like this..." Good luck you dumb asses and don't let the door hit you on the ass as you leave."!
http://www.bnn.ca/News/2014/3/5/Separatist-battle-in-Canada-rekindled-with-Quebec-election.aspx
Canada is bracing for another fight with Quebec separatists.
Premier Pauline Marois today called an election for April 7 as she met Lieutenant-Governor Pierre Duchesne to ask him to dissolve the provincial legislature. Polls show Marois’ separatist Parti Quebecois may have enough support to form its first majority government in more than a decade.
“Today, I have summoned my ministers and we have taken the necessary steps to dissolve the National Assembly and call an election,†Marois said in televised remarks in Quebec City. “It’s now up to you, Quebeckers, to decide.â€
A majority would set the stage in the French-speaking province for a possible referendum on secession from the rest of Canada, roiling credit markets and threatening to push the Canadian dollar lower.
“If they get a majority, I fully expect they will hold a referendum during their next mandate,†said Harold Chorney, a political science professor at Concordia University in Montreal. “Marois isn’t going to give up sovereignty.â€
A majority victory for the Parti Quebecois would mark the third time since the mid-1970s the party has taken sole control of the province’s legislature, propelling Quebec into another confrontation with the rest of Canada that a former premier once likened to a never-ending visit to the dentist.
1] Jobs will be created in the boarder security field.
2] Razor wire production as I lay it around their swamp of a country
We will save millions of dollars in not having to be bi-lingual any longer, this will also stimulate jobs in our road sign manufacturing as we change back to English only signs.
Canada will save money on it books in the area of welfare, health insurance, road maintenance, transfer payments etc. I see a bright future for the rest of Canada with all these monies coming back into the kitty.
I believe our beer sales will spike for a while as most Canadians will lift their beers to toast freedom from the whining and crying french. We will toast them like this..." Good luck you dumb asses and don't let the door hit you on the ass as you leave."!
http://www.bnn.ca/News/2014/3/5/Separatist-battle-in-Canada-rekindled-with-Quebec-election.aspx
Canada is bracing for another fight with Quebec separatists.
Premier Pauline Marois today called an election for April 7 as she met Lieutenant-Governor Pierre Duchesne to ask him to dissolve the provincial legislature. Polls show Marois’ separatist Parti Quebecois may have enough support to form its first majority government in more than a decade.
“Today, I have summoned my ministers and we have taken the necessary steps to dissolve the National Assembly and call an election,†Marois said in televised remarks in Quebec City. “It’s now up to you, Quebeckers, to decide.â€
A majority would set the stage in the French-speaking province for a possible referendum on secession from the rest of Canada, roiling credit markets and threatening to push the Canadian dollar lower.
“If they get a majority, I fully expect they will hold a referendum during their next mandate,†said Harold Chorney, a political science professor at Concordia University in Montreal. “Marois isn’t going to give up sovereignty.â€
A majority victory for the Parti Quebecois would mark the third time since the mid-1970s the party has taken sole control of the province’s legislature, propelling Quebec into another confrontation with the rest of Canada that a former premier once likened to a never-ending visit to the dentist.