Quebec is more French than France
Quebec City, despite its proximity to the U.S. and confederation with Anglophone Canada, is in many ways more authentically French than France. Our global village of cheap jet transport and liberal immigration policies has resulted in many of the world’s cities drawing their inhabitants from whatever countries are most populous and/or whichever countries have the most poverty, crime, and government oppression. This results in enough similarity of one big city to another that some folks don’t bother traveling anymore.
Quebec, by contrast, has stubbornly resisted immigration for centuries. After the British took over in 1760 they tried desperately to get English speakers to move here to dilute the French language, culture, and loyalty. In the 19th-century the Quebecois themselves began leaving for various New England states in which high-paying mill jobs were to be had. Instead of the hoped-for immigration this was an outflow of roughly 1 million people. Today Canada brings in nearly 250,000 immigrants per year but most of them want to go to Toronto, Vancouver, and other English-speaking cities. Quebec, with 24 percent of Canada’s population, is the choice of only 15 percent of immigrants and most go to Montreal where it is possible to get by with only English (Montreal was where Ahmed Ressam started his life in the New World). Some combination of cold weather, a persistently moribund economy (they’ve tried everything here: big government, small government, agriculture, heavy industry, high tech, etc.), and the terror of having to learn French keeps folks from wanting to pile into Quebec City and, to an even larger extent, the small Francophone towns of Quebec.
All of the folks who work basic service jobs seem to be native-born Quebecois. Any signs in English are directed at tourists. McDonald’s has a section “reserved for smokers”. Can this island of pure French culture survive? A schoolteacher told me “I know that the day will come when I can’t speak French here anymore.” At the inception of the language wars in the 18th-century the French language was holding its own quite nicely in the worlds of literature, science, and day-to-day use. Today, however, the results of England imperialism have spread the English language far beyond what could have been foreseen 250 years ago. The huge number of countries and people that use Spanish and Chinese have further reduced the French language to obscurity.
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