Talk:Quebec
I think the sentence in the heading "Quebec is also the sole territory north of the Caribbean Sea – aside from France itself, and the thinly populated archipelago of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon – where French is spoken by a majority of the population." needs to be changed. If I'm not mistaken St. Pierre & Miquelon have a very similar status as a department in metropolitan France. It's almost exuivalent to refferring to "the United States and Hawaii" or "The UK and Northern Ireland."Ggrzw 19:08, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
I felt pretty insulted on the first words having a mispronounciation validated by documentation Quebec (pronounced [kwə'bεk] the w shouldn't be there, anglophones pronounce it because they lack prounciation, it should sound like K-BEK you should add a tiny vowel between but it's a much better way than kwebek ! --DynV 09:13, 29 July 2006 (UTC)
- This isn't insulting at all. This is the english Wiki and this is how english-speaking people pronounce it. This is exactly the same as, say, "Newfoundland" being called "Terre-Neuve" in the french wiki. And before you ask, yes, I'm a french speaking Quebecer myself.
Different linguistic backgrounds result in different pronunciations in different languages, and "Quebec" has historically been pronounced "kwe-bek" in English. In English it can sound very affected to say "K-Bek". The vast majority of anglophones mean absolutely no disrespect whatsoever in the use of English pronunciations of "Quebec" or "Montreal" and no offence should be taken. In the French Wikipedia article on British Columbia, I would expect the French name of the province to be used. "Ontario" is pronounced slightly differently in French and English, and I wouldn't expect Ontarians to be insulted or blame it on some defect in pronunciation. One sign of a secure, cosmopolitan culture is the acceptance of different words for placenames in different languages based on the evolution of speech. England/Angleterre/Inghilterra/Inglaterra. France/Frankreich/Francia. Venice/Venise/Venezia. Would the English or French or Venitians be insulted? Corlyon 04:47, 27 September 2006 (UTC)Corlyon 26 September 06
With regards to the 'high school dropout rate' this is not an entirely fair statistic in the context of Quebec vis-a-vis the other Canadian provinces due to the fact that Quebec enjoys a school system that is somewhat distinct from the rest of Canada, with CEGEP etc... The linked table of statistics only shows school leaving rates at age 20; however one will find that within Quebec there is a significant number of students who are able to return and complete their schooling - a statistic at age 25, for instance, is markedly different from what is shown.
See also Talk:Quebec/archive 1
The only official language in Québec is french… not French/Englich..! (1974)
The Change of colonial powers section is not realy accurate, theres no word on the effect of it for first nation or the mention of any battle between people. The french article in wikipedia contain much more information and talk about first nation.
It looks like if Inuit is in the list, it must be a list of First Peoples, not First Nations? or is the article on First Nations wrong? -- Someone else 07:26 Mar 12, 2003 (UTC)
- I have no problem with First Peoples. My objection was to making that a link to Native Americans. ☮ Eclecticology
For the present, I've removed the link to a "separatist statement" that was added. I don't think it's especially valuable just to link to some individual separatist's statement. Even an official link would be best served under, say, Parti Québécois for example. - Montréalais
==
Flag of Quebec
Hi, it seems to me that the blue color on the flag is not the same one as the actual flag! Alain Michaud 20:22, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
- Looks fine to me! E Pluribus Anthony | talk | 05:14, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
Excessive maps
Resolved
Why are there so many different maps of Quebec on here? Surely one can be removed. It looks strange having so many different versions.
- Agreed, too many are just confusing. There are 2 that are completely identical in content and scope, except in colour. So I moved that one away. And I also moved a historical map to, suitably, History of Quebec. --Menchi 03:58, 17 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Voltaire
Voltaire did not say that Canada was quelques arpents de neige, as he's popularly quoted to have said. He said that Acadia was quelques arpents de neige near Canada. Bearcat 02:12, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- The exact Voltaire quote I've seen is: La Nouvelle-France: quelques arpents de neige qui ne valent pas les os d'un grenadier français. Not Acadia, but Nouvelle-France. So I'm restoring it. P.T. Aufrette 13:59, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- The correct quote is Vous savez que ces deux nations sont en guerre pour quelques arpents de neige vers le Canada, et qu'elles dépensent pour cette belle guerre beaucoup plus que tout le Canada ne vaut. [1] [2] Note also that if you google on it, the "vers le Canada" version exists in a number of actual footnoted Voltaire reference pages, while the "Nouvelle France" version can only be found as an isolated, anecdotal quote. This is a case where a variety of versions are remembered (you can also find pages where it's claimed that he wrote quelques arpents de neige, habités par des barbares, des ours et des castors), but none of them are what was actually said. Bearcat 16:05, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- In French, vers would mean "towards", but in the sentence of Voltaire, it means more "around" or "nearby" or "in the surroundings of". This could mean Acadia I guess, but I find it far fetch. Voltaire never named Acadia. I think he probably was referring to the disputed borders between New France and the British colonies (which indeed is Acadia). Snow was pretty much a feature of le Canada in the imaginary of the French at the time. It is unfortunately still the case today. According to them, we are all riding skidoos, getting stuck to each other when we kiss (because of the cold), we all know how to make igloos (!?!) and we are all related to an Indian somehow. :-) Mathieugp 18:19, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- I created an article on of a the few acres of snow quotation this morning; I've added the link to the "See Also:" section here. Bearcat 22:42, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)
NPOV s. bill 101
I don't feel comfortable starting a counter-edit war being new here, but I sort of question the anonymous removal of among Anglophones. It doesn't seem to me like a significant amount of Francophones are against the Charter. -- Valmi Dufour 15:36, 24 Jun 2004 (UTC)
I agree with Valmi Dufour.
Furthermore, this phrase is not correct: "Often known as "Bill 101", it defined French as the only official language of Quebec". French is the official language of Quebec since the (non-separatist) liberal prime minister Robert Bourassa voted Bill 22 in 1974 (July 31rd) (reference). The french version of the page has the same error.
It should be mention also that all main political parties in Quebec since the fifties were nationalist except the Equality Party, a marginal Montreal west-islander anglophone party formed in 1989 (I think they're dead now, they didn't win any seats at the national assembly since 1994). The thing is not all of them were promoting independence. There should be a link to the History of the Quebec sovereignist movement page. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 68.2.83.174 (talk • contribs) .
Further agreement ...
In 1977, the newly elected Parti Québécois government of René Lévesque introduced the Charter of the French Language. "Often known as" (awkward ... should be; refered to as, the Bill name, that received favorable passage) Bill 101, it defined French as the "only" (if only one language is recognized "only" is redundant. Plus the point is just wrong) official language of Quebec. "To this day it remains controversial," (opinion, plus it is unclear what is, in the editors opinion, controversial ... the Bill or the French language) "and widely misunderstood both inside and outside Quebec." (judgement and opinion, no given proof, then again, pick a bill at random, Bill 32 ... any clue, either inside or outside, simple cojecture and rather empty value:) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.81.40.14 (talk • contribs) .
Complete disagreement. It is factually wrong to say that French is the only official language of Quebec. According to the Constitution (and the British North America Act before it), Quebec is officially bilingual. The provincial legislature does not (and never did) have the power to change this. Claims to the contrary only stand because this provision of Bill 101 has never been directly challenged in court. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 207.115.105.94 (talk • contribs) .
The previous unknown guy just says: "Claims to the contrary only stand because this provision of Bill 101 has never been directly challenged in court." Well according to that, the 101 DID go in court and lose on "concerning English-language schooling in Québec" issue of the law. (reference) And i'm agreeing to the fact that a majority of Francophone agree with the Charter (reference; sorry for the bad looking image) --Zerat ca 23:02, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
Quebec Act
It should be mentioned that the Quebec Act of 1774 contributed to unrest in the Thirteen Colonies prior to the War of American Independence.
some thoughts
The article mentions that bill 101 is "to this day still controversial and widely misunderstood inside and outside Quebec". I would say that inside Quebec today, the bill would only still be controversial to anglophone and allophone communities, at most. I feel the initial fears have dissipated since the bill's adoption.
The article mentions "widespread complaints of the destruction of NO ballets "(sic). There was widespread complaints from both sides about the other side's illegal dealing in this referendum. I think mentionning only one side's is very partial and reflects a point of view, which I believe should be avoided in "encyclopedia format".
What do you think ? should these be editted ?
- 1. Bill 101 is still misunderstood inside Quebec. Obviously, people who only get their daily information from the English language press are more in the dark then the others, but nevertheless a lot of people do not know the contents of the law and the regulations passed under it.
- 2. Yes, you are right. This is not NPOV at all. It was added recently by some anonymous. It should be removed in my opinion.
-- Mathieugp 16:21, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Why not Québec?
I understand this is the English article on Québec, but in Canadian government, the province is referred to as Québec (with the accent). Perhaps the article could be moved from Quebec to Québec.
- That is not correct. The federal government's English style guide (The Canadian Style) specifies that the province is "Quebec" in English, "Québec" in French. This matches the centuries-old common practice of English-speaking Quebecers, and the no-accent style is the most common spelling of professional editors everywhere. Indefatigable 00:48, 9 May 2005 (UTC)
- Quebec, and Montreal for that matter, are perfectly valid English-language versions of Québec and Montréal respectively. For the same reason the English language Wikipedia uses words like Italy, Warsaw and Prague (rather than Italia, Warszawa and Praha, respectively), we should use the English language norm, which is Quebec. In any event, using Québec and Montréal in written English, unless one is using it in the context of a French-language term (e.g. "Journal de Montréal" or "Ville de Montréal"), comes across as an affectation. Skeezix1000 19:31, 20 December 2005 (UTC)
Pierre Trudeau, the RCMP, and the FLQ?
I have never heard about this before I read this page. I believe I have a fairly wide ranging knowledge of the era and the incident and I would just like a source to the inquiry that says that Trudeau pushed the RCMP to inflitrate the FLQ to push them to violent actions. Much of the evidence of the time points to the idea that the RCMP had very little in the way of background on the FLQ and it was part of what led to the massive confusion on the part of the federal government at the time.
I could not find it in English (of course), but here it is in French:
http://www.vigile.net/00-10/octobre-grandchamp.html (last article at the bottom)
You can use Google or Babelfish to get a rought translation. I will translate it myself this weekend.
The name of the inquiry is the McDonald Commission. They also mention a Keable Commission in 1977.
In English, I only found this one good article:
http://www.vigile.net/01-1/flq-citizen.html
-- Mathieugp 12:12, 16 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I found a radiocast on the subject of the MacDonald commission in the online archives of Radio-Canada:
http://archives.radio-canada.ca/IDCC-0-9-1500-10144/guerres_conflits/espionnage_canada/
-- Mathieugp 15:11, 16 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I'm quite aware of the debate surrounding the level of crisis. What I am not aware of is information about Trudeau using the RCMP to infiltrate the FLQ and push it to violent activities. I did not read anything about this in the links provided. I really think if this can't be substantiated that it should be removed. Benw
- OK. I guess you cannot read French. In the night of July 26, 1974, Robert Samson, then working for the secret services of the RCMP, accidentally triggered the bomb he was going to set up behind the house of Steinberg's president in Ville Mont-Royal. (If you never lived in Quebec, Steinberg was a chain of grocery stores). Then he was arrested and lated tried. It of course made the news. His revelatations during the trial is the beginning point of all we know. He was being payed by the RCMP to do criminal acts which would later pass as crimes committed by the FLQ. Premier of Quebec René Lévesque set up the Keable Commission, mandated to inquired on the illegal activities of the RCMP on the territory of Quebec. Trudeau immediately setup a competing McDonald Commission. A lot of evidence was brough to light at that time. The Keable commission started to inquire, but was blocked on many levels. Many of the documents they demanded from the federal government were kept secret. The federal government of Trudeau tried to shut down the Keable commission and succeeded. The government asked the Supreme Court if a provincial government had the power to inquire on the operations of the federal government. The supreme court ruled in favor of the federal government. After that, the lawyers of the government reduced the inquiring powers of its own McDonald Commission.
- In 1992, a lot of the documents that were given to the Keable and MacDonald commission in the 70s were finally made public. These documents contradicted the version of the story that Trudeau had given to his MacDonald commission. The cabinet reports for October 14 and 15 has many ministers expressing their opinion that the government has not demonstrated that there exists a threat of insurrection. Three ministers demanded evidence that the War Measures Act was necessary.
- Reg Whitaker, professor of political science at York University, member of the Canadian Association for Security and Intelligence Studies published a memoir on the subject in August of 1993, but the English language media largely ignored it as Pierre Trudeau published his biography around the same time. The memoir stated that the security comitee of the cabinet authorised the RCMP to compile information on the members of the RIN as soon as the middle of the 1960s. Under the Trudeau goverment, the RCMP was instructed to treat the separatist movement as a whole (which in their definition included the FLQ and the PQ) the same way the communist Party was being treated.
- Regarding the PQ, the Secret Services of the RCMP stole their list of members in January of 1973 at the explicit request Trudeau's cabinet. The cabinet emitted a directive for the RCMP on this subject during its meeting on December 19, 1969.
-- Mathieugp 2 July 2005 00:30 (UTC)
This is all true and i wish more of those truths would make it to the first page. -SB
Historical Corrections Sabotaged
I've put back my modifications concerning the 1837 "rebellion" of the french canadians.
I am an historian who devoted his whole life to this brief moment of Québec history and I find it offuscating and frustrating to see a complete denial of the real story.
Most of the sources can be found in Normand Lester's Le Livre noir du Canada Anglais and are factual proofs.
Please respect the people that horribly died in this dark period...
"Je me souviens"...
- Lester's book is hardly a reputable source; it has been widely criticized by both francophone and anglophone historians -- at least those who take time to comment on it. HistoryBA 23:12, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- By the way, since you raise your own qualifications to justify your position, would you mind expanding on them? What do you mean when you call yourself a "historian"? HistoryBA 23:14, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Excuse my average english : How come there is no talk about the British invasion ? "Great Britain acquired New France through the Treaty of Paris (1763)" true but after they invaded and declared war and destroyed so many lives. It WAS NOT a peacefull trade in as this line would imply. Try to add a line about it. Lots of lives were destroyed in the process and there is not a single mention... why ? this whole entry is so biased.. there is so many thing left unsaid just because they could make anglophones or British folks look bad. The french language was barely protected until recently , english assimilation was prenominent , there was no desire to protect the french language 50 years ago much less 100 or 200 years ago. The october crisis was seen as a great human right violation, read the lines about it in the october crisis article, it seems like the prisoners were treated with the greatest respect. What a joke. People were arested for dumb reasons like being in a worker union or kept in jail for weeks without any accusation. Wikipedia's articles are as biased as can be, not surprising given it becomes the truth the majority of people believe.
- Man, I thought I would never read someone who makes any sense at all on this whole discussion page. I too think that the whole history section is biased in an awful way. As you said, people tend to forget a lot of things as decades go by. But wait ! Some events are only 20 years old and they still show bias ! First of all, the 'lower canada revolution' section is all wrong. And don't expect me to correct it... cuz I did it once and everyone actually agreed that these corrections were not factual. How the heck do you care about factuality when the Canadian history page doesn't even mentions the sequestration of every asian people in the country during WW2 ???? Frankly, you guys disgust me.
Le livre noir du Canada anglais
This book has valid sources, and most of what is written in it is valid too. However, it is a pamphlet. Its avowed objective is to demonstrate the hypocrisy of these Anglophone columnists who desperately try to stain the reputation of Quebec nationalists while remaining silent on the wrong doings of Canadian nationalists. That being said, the history of the "rebellions" is complex enough that it can't seriously be summed up in a short biased paragraph like the one added by the anonymous user.
-- Mathieugp 03:21, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- I'm not questioning its sources, but rather using it as a source. It is simply not a reliable NPOV source. We should be very suspicious of using any statements from the book as fact, unless they can be properly verified or corroborated by a reputable historian. HistoryBA 03:32, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- I don't think we should be very suspicious of it only because it has a point of view. At least, Normand Lester had the honesty of making his objective with his book quite clear unlike so many other people before him. We should simply be aware that it is a pamphlet and not the work of a historian, but a journalist: big difference. However, on the whole, the information in the book is well-referenced and, as such, his own references are worth digging into. The dumb sentence written by the anonymous user is of course nowhere to be found in the book! You will however find all kinds of interesting and factual details on the episode of the burning of the Parliament of Canada in Montreal ( and the fanatics who later repeatedly tried to kill Lafontaine and the other politians who supported the Rebellion Losses Bill), the antisemitism of the elite of Canada before and after the second world war, the KKK in the West and all kinds of details I didn't even know about.
- Also, relying on a "reputable" historian is something you want to do only if you intend to commit the logicial fallacy of appealing to the authority. I would advice we all bother to take the time to find out what's true and what isn't on our own instead. -- Mathieugp 14:12, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- The problem is that the anonymous editor is not citing the sources used by Lester, but citing Lester himself as an authority, which he is not. I agree that we need to verify facts ourselves, but we often need to rely on published sources, such as those written by established historians. After all, Wikipedia has a policy against publishing original research. HistoryBA 23:15, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- We should be concerned with what is fact and what is not, and the *presentation* should be NPOV. The sources don't have to be NPOV, they just have to be verifiable fact. MikeCapone 02:54, 22 October 2005 (UTC)
- I agree. My argument is that we cannot say that something is a "fact" just because it is in Lester's book. HistoryBA 23:00, 22 October 2005 (UTC)
A. Lafontaine's version of Quebec history
User A. Lafontaine, which is believed to be yet another incarnation of DW/Angelique, is at it again telling us what the history of Quebec really is all about. Since I have a few minutes to spare, I will take the time to refutate what he has written:
"In 1774, the British Parliament passed the Quebec Act that helped ensure the survival of the French language and French culture in the region. The Act allowed Quebec to maintain the French civil law as its judicial system and sanctioned the freedom of religious choice, allowing the Roman Catholic Church to remain."
What a distorsion of events. All of a sudden, the governors of Canada and the British Parliament of the 18th century are concerned with the faith of the Quebec people, concerned with 20th century concerns over the fragility of its language and culture in the era of globalisation. In its infinite generosity, the always enlightened politicians of England would have allowed the "French" of Canada not to be deprived of the most basics human and civil rights. What wishful thinking.
Are we, the descendents of the Canadiens supposed to thank the British Parliament of the time for recognizing, finally, after 11 years of illegality, the rights it was supposed to have already recognized with the Montreal Articles of Capitulation? Quoting Louis-Joseph Papineau, here is what really happened between 1760 and 1774:
The aristocracy, armed with the sword of Brennus, and his Vae Victis roaring, issued that English laws would be those of Canada "for as much as the circumstances allow it."
There was an odious and studied ambiguity, which delivered everything to arbitrary rule, and left to the judges the possibility to always decide for the friend, the party, the purchaser, always for the English, since "the circumstances allowed it."
The public offices were openly sold with rebate, by the holders to their substitutes.
The General (James Murray), shocked by the violence of the Judge-in-chief, had to suspend him and send him back to England. All the English population of Canada was irritated by the Governor's action, while the few Canadiens who took part in the events expressed their confidence in him.
Disgusted by the task he had to accomplish, he wrote to England: "Under the pretext that the exclusion laws against Catholics in England and Ireland are applicable to Canada, the new subjects are excluded from all public offices. There is only among the English and Protestant population that magistrates and juries are taken. This population accounts for 450 men, the majority despicable by their ignorance. They are drunk on the unforseen importance that has fallen upon them, and hasten the excercice of their new powers with ostentation and rigour. They hate the Canadien nobility, because it is respectable, and the rest of the population and me, because I prevent a little of the wrongs they would like to accomplish."
The merchants of London, influenced and blinded by those of Canada, demanded the recall of Governor Murray and obtained it. His commission was revoked because he had become sympathetic to the Canadiens. He asked for an enquiry, and, after examination, the Privy Council decided that the charges brought against him were not founded.
Finally, the law officers of the Crown were consulted. In 1766, they repudiated the ordinances of 1764 which had excluded the new subjects from any participation in the administration of justice, and passed one which enabled them to be jurors and lawyers.
This is the limit to the amount of justice that was granted to them at the time.
And then everything remained chaotic and in disorder until the Quebec Act or Bill was adopted, after the officers in law of the Crown had formally declared that the King alone was not a legislator; that He was legislator only with the two Houses of the Parliament; that the proclamation of 1763 and all that had been done of supposed legislation under His authority were as many unconstitutional and null acts.
Thus, the most perfect government in the world according to Montesquieu, Blackstone and Delorme, had remained twelve whole years in the ignorance of its ignorance, its usurpation, its incapacity and its negligence to govern by law rather than by arbitrary rule, always armed with the sword of injustice, never with the balance of justice.
---
DW then continues on to let us know that:
"Like there counterparts in Upper Canada, in 1837, English and French speaking residents of Lower Canada, led by Robert Nelson, formed an armed resistance group to seek an end to British colonial rule. Their actions resulted in the Lower Canada Rebellion. An unprepared British Army had to raise a local militia force and the rebel forces were soon defeated after having scored a victory in Saint-Denis, south of Montreal."
First of all, the invasion army lead Robert Nelson, that's in 1838. The 1837 events do not start by the actions of the "rebels". The starting point is when the unelected colonial government issues mandates to arrest 26 leaders of the Patriotes. The people who come to arrest them are not the police, they are the army. The law is being violated by those who enforce the law.
Prior to this, the loyalists of Montreal had already begun to organise themselves in militias. They were parading in the street and were very provocative. In reaction to this, some Patriotes created the Association des Fils de la liberté to arm citizens so they could defend themselves in case things got worst. We must remember that British soldiers had already shot three unarmed citizens in 1832. Everybody knew that at the time. Many men could not tolerate to see Loyalist thugs menace their families.
It is the approval of the Fils de la liberté by the leader of the Patriotes, LJ Papineau, that would have given the governement an excuse to unleash the troops of John Colborne on the population. It is on the news of the military intervention that the Upper Canada rebellion started. When civil rights were suspended, all there was to do was to cross the border over to the US or resist. The battle of St-Denis was not part of a military strategy on the Patriotes side. There is a possibility that some Lower Canada patriotes were hoping to organize themselves appropriately and kick the British goverment out. There is however no substancial evidence of this. When the mandates of arrest were issued, the Patriotes are still in the middle of their boycott strategy.
--
DW then tells us something we didn't know about Durham's report:
"After this clash, Lord Durham was asked to write a report on this incident and gave the opinion, in laguage traditional of the day, that the French population were "without history and culture of any kind" and were "to be assimilated". However, the British Parliament did not agree with Durham's opinion and maintained all the rights accorded the colony's French-speaking citizens under the 1774 Quebec Act."
The British Parliament did not agree with one part of the report, that is granting ministerial responsibility to the new merged colony. However, they agreed with the assimilation policy and that is why the two colonies were indeed merged together. To claim the opposite is plain wrong.
-- Mathieugp 6 July 2005 18:54 (UTC)
Open letter to A Lafontaine
Mister,
Since you've been busy modifying the history section lately, I'll consider that you didn't read the discussion titled "A Lafontaine's version of history".
So, I'll let you revert your latest modifications by yourself, hoping that your obsession with Mister Durham and his fascist opinions is not chronical.
Sincerly yours
Removal of unsubstantiated text
I removed:
- 1)"Interestingly, Laporte's kidnapping happened a few days before he would have been formally indicted for racketeering, since Pierre Laporte had powerful connections with organized crime."
- 2)"it should be noted that kidnapping Pierre Laporte conveniently avoided the embarrassment of having a government minister indicted as a member of organized crime."
Documented facts are needed as such unsubstantiated allegations do not conform to Wikipedia:Policy. A. Lafontaine 16:08, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
This is an article about the Province of Quebec. I removed/changed inappropriate titles not suitable for this article such as "Towards soverignity" which is covered in great detail elsewhere. A. Lafontaine 16:14, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
I removed:
- "mostly thanks to extensice efforts by the Federal Government to grant citizenship to many more immigrants than the normal rate, as well as efforts by Casper Bloom to entice canadians from other provinces to register on the electoral rolls by exploiting an electoral law loophole; as a result, more than 30,000 persons who do not have residence in Québec (they were not listed on the Medical Insurance records which, by definition, lists every Québec resident) were nevertheless able to vote in the referendum."
Snide remarks are unacceptable in Wikipedia and documented facts are needed as unsubstantiated allegations do not conform to Wikipedia:Policy. 16:19, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
Edit : this is a known fact and well documented at statistic Canada. usually 21 000 immigrants are granted citizenship a year. The year of the referendum there was an astonishing never seen before and never duplicated peak of 43 000 people. 1/4 of that number was for the month of october only. Its the first time in history Quebec received more immigrants they Ontario. " Looking into the data for a longer period of time, we see that the increase in certificate attributions jumped by 87% between 1993 and 1995. The year of 1996 saw a drop of 39% in the attributions of citizenship certificates. " [3]
I removed:
- 1)"without due process - none of which had any connection with the FLQ; actually, plenty of them were political opponents of Pierre Trudeau."
- 2)"Martial law was imposed and civil liberties suspended."
The War Measures Act is not martial law. Documented facts on exactly who was arrested and proof they were not connected to the FLQ is needed as broad unsubstantiated allegations do not conform to Wikipedia:Policy. A. Lafontaine 16:35, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
WAR MEASURES ACT - I inserted the numbers arrested under the War Measures Act plus those charged. This is taken from the McGill University Website [4]about the October Crisis written by a senior Quebec Cabinet Minister at the time and McGill University Law Professor, William Tetley. User:Marc Allaire
- you put the same thing on the october crisis page. As I asked, whats make you think that comments made by someone who at the time was in the government would be less "unsubstanciated" then those in a position paper made by a large union central ?--Marc pasquin 14:21, 5 August 2005 (UTC)
Constitutional negotiations 1981
This section should include a link to Night_of_the_Long_Knives_(Canada), along with a note that Levesque's version of the supposed 'betrayal' is not universally accepted, and has in fact been explicitly denied by the other participants.
Jacques Parizeau resignation
Jacques Parizeau said that he planned to resign if the referundum was to not pass. We can't for sure know that he resigned because of the media pressure after his controversial speech. Pierre Duchesne on the other hand in his biography of Parizeau say that Bernard Landry requested Parizeau resignation a day after the speech. In any cases, I think that section of the article needs an edit. Fad (ix) 17:10, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
Ethnicity
Please look at this:
Ethnic origins Canadian - 68.7% French - 29.6% Irish - 4.1% Italian - 3.5% English - 3.1% Scottish - 2.2% North American Indian - 1.8% Québécois - 1.3% German - 1.2% Jewish - 1.2% Haitian - 1.0%
I don't understand why Québecois, Canadian and French ethnicities are separated because its essentially the same thing (if we consider the ancient definition of "Canadians")
Also, I don't understand why there's only 1.3% of Québécois in Québec...weird.
Could someone explain that to me please? Thanks!
- Aparently, a lot of people answered "french-canadians" but statistic canada counted those as being a multiethnic answer. This mean that "canadian" consist of people answering "canadian, french-canadian & english-canadian" and that french contain "French (as in from france), french (as in francophone) and french-canadian". --Marc pasquin 02:50, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
- Dude, frankly, I don't know where your stats come from. I'm from Quebec and I always lived here. I've lived in almost every cities on the side of the St-Lawrence river. 1.3% Quebeckers ?? I doubt it. You don't have ANY idea what you're talking about. Get the fudge outta here.
- No, Marc Pasquin knows what he's talking about. This Quebecois ethnicity is a statistical artifact. Or rather, a survey artifact. Not until recently (maybe 10-15 years ago) did Canadian pop up as a possible ethnic origin. Before, "Canadian" ethnicity was split into "French" or "English" with no "Canadian" added, which did not provide much distinction those whose families have been living in the country generations and for recent immigrants from the UK or France. Now "Canadian" ethnicity does not make any distinction between language or more conventional ethnic origin either, because it is done through self identification. You can look up the "Call me Canadian movement" who lobbyed for changing census choices. Anyway, since "Canadian" appeared as a choice, "Quebecois" subsequently appeared through self-identification (just like, say, one might write-in "Jedi" as a religion in the census).--132.206.150.33 15:57, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
- The 1.3% quebecer is just silly... the guy who wrote that is just an ignorant of Quebec Etnic status
- I wrote the stuff, and if you follow the reference link, you'll see that it's direct from Statistics Canada. I'm not making it up. The "Ethnic Origin" question on the Canadian census is 100% self-reported - Statistics Canada asks you what your Ethnic Origin is, and if you say "Haitian" even though your family is from Mozambique, you will show up as Haitian. If you say "Québécois" (because StatsCan considers that one of the options), then you go down as "Québécois". I am NOT making any comment about whether it is or is not a "legit" ethnicity. I am NOT making any comment about whether 1.3% is a valid assessment of Quebecers' ethnic feelings. I AM saying that the StatsCan numbers are by far the best we have available, and thus they should be in the article. To be completely honest, I think that having "Canadian" in there as an option makes the numbers a bit odd, but I don't care, I still believe that they're what should be in this, our encyclopedia. AshleyMorton 18:45, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
- p.s. Please don't call me ignorant until either a) you know me better (because you might be right, but you don't know me), or b) you're willing to sign your name to your comment. AshleyMorton 18:45, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
Some interesting adjectives for Quebec
I have to admit I had a good laugh when I looked up this page and found that, apparently, "Quebec's official language is gay." Also, I am apparently a "dumb shit" for reading the article. There is also the fact that "The province, which sucks, occupies a vast territory (nearly three times the size of France), most of which is very sparsely populated." And finally, the "Quebec Boundaries Extension Act, 1912 created the stupid Province of Quebec of today."
Horrible, but it's funny because it called you a dumb shit. Don't vandalise this, people.
Link Farm
One of the editors on this page might want to consider getting rid of many of the Wikilinks. Many are redundant, and others appear unnecessary. All those links actually detract from the article, rather than make it more useful. Merci, mes amis dans le nord de la frontière. Jim62sch 18:06, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
History section
I would recommed that the history section be moved up near the top of the article, and many of its sections shortened and moved to the History of Quebec article. Many of the history subsections could have main links to other articles in Wikipedia. I think that would increase the readability of this article. Any thoughts? -- Jeff3000 05:17, 8 April 2006 (UTC)
- That History section definitely needs to shrink considerably.--70.81.13.192 00:39, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
Official Language?
Will any editor please provide a reference confirming that English is not an official language in Quebec? Someone... Svelyka 06:42, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
- French was made the sole official language of Quebec through the Official Language Act in 1974. The text of the Act can be read online here: http://www.oqlf.gouv.qc.ca/charte/reperes/Loi_22.pdf
- Note that this law was superseded by the Charter of the French Language later in 1977. An mofified version of the Charter is what still applies today. -- Mathieugp 14:11, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Title
Québec or Quebec? We could make a redirect. 69.158.65.32 00:57, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
I think we should stick with Quebec. As much as I like the 'e' with the little mark over it (looks cool), I think that we should use the English spelling since this is the English wikipedia. For example, the article for Rome is not Roma, Athens is not Athína, Warsaw is not Warszawa, etc. Redtitan 00:45, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
Act of Union
The section concerning the act of union forgot to mention the final conclusions of the report. This VITAL information is of NPOV and should not be removed, whatever is your opinion.
Please respect history, at least a tiny little bit.
Corporations Leaving Quebec
"Quebec's separatist debate has influenced many corporations to move their Canadian headquarters from Montreal to Toronto."
This would be hardly surprising, but still, I request a source giving the case of many notable corporations that have left Montreal to move to Toronto because of the separatist debate. --A Sunshade Lust 22:53, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
If you want proof that corporations left Montreal for Toronto you have to look no further than the Royal Bank of Canada which used to have it's NATIONAL headquarters in Place Ville Marie and the Bank Of Montreal also moved it's national HQ to Toronto. Those are but two examples. Jringer Sept 24 2006 3:47 am.
It's probably true, but two exemples is not enough. Mister Horse Sept 24 2006 21:38
- Having lived in Quebec for over 40 years, I can attest it's true. You should find several references like this one [5] if you search for "Quebec" and "corporate exodus" in your search engine. Also please note this subject is significantly more debated in the English-language local press than in the French-language one. And I would suggest the sentence be modified to:
"Quebec's separatist debate influenced many corporations to move their Canadian headquarters outside of the province of Quebec, mostly to Ontario."
- Not all headquarters that moved were in Montreal, and they didn't all move to Toronto. And most importantly, this happened mostly from 1976-1980. The exodus is long over; it's certainly not still happening now.--Ramdrake 12:58, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
As a CA student in Montreal, I can attest that the corporate exodus isn't long over but instead has been transformed into a silent factor in the decision-making of many companies. Unless a Canadian company is tapping the Quebec market, it would rather locate its facilities in Mississauga than Laval for language and political reasons. This is especially true of Canadian subsidiaries of American firms.
The government of Quebec has been trying to stimulate the growth of the private sector by having the lowest corporate tax rates in Canada for years (and ironically, the highest personal tax rates, but then again the population is immobile). Nevertheless, Montreal's unemployment rate remains around 11% while, in neighbouring Ontario, Toronto's is 6% and Ottawa's is 4%. Montreal also has the peculiar distinction of having an unemployment rate higher than the surrounding province (8.5% in the rest of Quebec), which isn't true for any other major city I have data for.
Gregory Csikos (gregory DOT csikos AT mail DOT mcgill DOT ca) email address changed to preven spam -Royalguard11(Talk·Desk) 22:12, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
Even if it's was true that corporations left Montreal for Toronto, it's a POV that the reason is the sovereignty movement. A lot of corporations left NYC for LA during the same period anyways. I realy don't understand why this line is still in a protected article. Anyways, does it realy deserve its place in a 10 lines summary of the economy of Quebec? I don't think so.
The "corporate exodus" is an important part of Quebec's financial history. It marked a turning point as to which companies occupied most of Quebec's financial space.--Ramdrake 15:37, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
- How do you know it's because of the sovereignty movement? It may be important in the financial history, but not in the overall economy. It is clearly not a fact.
- Maybe because I happened to live there when it happened and I happened to read the newspapers in both languages? What makes you think it's not true?--Ramdrake 22:02, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
While the financial center of the US may have diversified away from being solely focused in NYC (where I grew up), New York is still the financial center of the country. Economic growth isn't a zero-sum game so LA's rise didn't challenge New York's dominance. Remember, two planes went into NYC's WTC and not LA's US Bank Tower.
In Canada, Montreal went from being the major commercial capital of the country to a secondary player within the span of a decade. The process was completely different and completely due to the sovereignty and Frenchification movements.
By the way, if you're going to make uninformed, asinine objections, at least sign them.
Gregory Csikos (gregory DOT csikos AT mail DOT mcgill DOT ca)
- I'm not sure if I would call Montreal post-financial exodus merely a "secondary player", but it is definitive that Toronto stole first place back then. And I would say the movement sparked more from the political uncertainty stemming from the sovereignty movement than from any regulations in the wake of the francization movement that accompanied (or closely followed) it. But otherwise, you're quite right.--Ramdrake 22:35, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
What's with the blanking?
Is it always the same person(s) who come in here almost every day now and either blank out the article or "remake it into a stub"? How controversial can the subject be to deserve that????--Ramdrake 17:33, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
Area
Quebec is not "the second-largest [province] in Canada". It is THE largest and by far, being one and a half times the size of the closest runner-up which is Ontario. The only Canadian jurisdiction larger than Quebec is the Territory of Nunavut. But it is not a province.
- The Provinces_and_territories_of_Canada page and my old Hamond Atlas agree, so I edited the page. (Bold, eh?) ==Kevin Crowston
Language
Someone added "english" to the official languages. English is not an official language of Québec, so I deleted it. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 67.68.135.219 (talk • contribs) .
Article quality
I made a minor edit that led to deletion of an entire paragraph that then led to reading the entire article. Frankly, it is a hodge podge of assorted claims mixed with some documented facts that together is far from being part of an encyclopedic work. It will be a sizeable job to get this in proper factual format and will require much collaboration. I removed this because it is factually wrong and/or misrepresented, plus it lacks context and fluidity within the article:
- Loyalist, or Tory, refugees from the war settled what is now Ontario and the Eastern Townships area of Quebec. This marks the beginning of an English Canadian presence in Quebec. The Constitutional Act of 1791 saw the colony divided in two at the Ottawa River to accommodate the new arrivals; the western part became Upper Canada (now Ontario) and changed to the British legal system. The eastern part became Lower Canada. Both colonies were granted elected Legislative Assemblies.
- The Parti Canadien (later Parti Patriote) soon won constant majorities in the Quebec Parliament : tensions soon rose as the governor refused to include them in his council of ministers. The Parti campaigned for "responsible government", i.e. the democratic right to elect a government responsible toward the House of Representatives, not the unelected Governor.
- The "Family Compact" was the mainly Scottish and English clique that monopolised the ministries, but also new land development and growing imperial commerce, to the exclusion of the vast majority of "Canadiens". The ensuing tensions were to lead to rebellion after the Russell Resolutions of 1834 received no answer from London.
Lionel GM 16:11, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
I have also removed the following paragraph as it is not relevant to Quebec and has no sources provided:
- The occurred at the same time as the "Grand Dérangement", or deportation of the French Acadians, beginning in 1755, from the present-day provinces of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island : the ethnic cleansing gave their lands to English colonists. Some Acadians fled in the woods to what became New Brunswick, where some of the dispersed later joined family survivors. The Acadian population was dispersed between the 13 colonies, France, and British jails, splitting up families. Some of the Acadians eventually made their way to Louisiana (see Cajuns) or to Quebec, where they are said to have 1 million descendants.
Lionel GM 16:26, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
Quebec is a country?
Is this vandalism? I don't really know how / don't have the time to look into how to deal with it right now, but last I checked Quebec is a province in Ontario, not a country.
- Quebec is a province in Canada. Sébastien Savard 21:41, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
In french, it's a Nation, which differs from English meaning of Nation.
Quebec as the largest what?
By area, Quebec is the largest province in Canada: only the territory of Nunavut is larger - is it me or is this badly worded? shouldn't it read 'By area, Quebec is the second largest province in Canada: only the territory of Nunavut is larger'
- Just in case you didn't know, in Canada a territory is not the same as a province. Thus, Quebec is in fact the largest province, and the second-largest administrative division of Canada, after the territory of Nunavut. Hope it helps.
Vandalism or misplaced line?
I removed the line: after the 1980s, the population of the rival British colonies to the south had surpassed 1 million, compared to barely 60,000 for New France. This was the first line under "Fall of New France". If anyone knows where it belongs, then edit and add again.Gary Joseph 07:59, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
Okay people. This site is a disgrace. School children doing their research on Quebec are going to think it's like Iraq or Afghanistan here (no insults intended to Iraqis or Afghanis).
Lets get a decent article together here. This is an encyclopedia entry, not a political discussion forum.
Lets start by cleaning up the intro. It's too long. The intro mentions the Caribbean Sea. That's not relevant to Quebec.
Lets keep it short an focused. Look at the entries for France and Ontario, and lets model this page on that. History should be way, way down the list. Every single country or province (take your pick) has history way down on the list. You guys might care about the Patriotes and the War Measures Act, but 99.9% of the people coming here will be from China/India/USA. You need to tell the reader what they want to know, not try to influence them to your way of political thinking. People here seem to have trouble with that. Users won't give a fig about the petty fights between the French and English. If you want to rant about the inevitable march of history and list petty grievances , go to www.marxist.org or www.anglosphere.com.
The written style here is atrocious. Do any of you know how to write? If you do not know how to write good standard English, stick to editing the French site. No offense, but I wouldn't dream of editing the French wiki site with my French. Please extend the same courtesy here.
Let's try this:
Quebec (Québec in French) (pronounced [kʰwəˈbɛk] or [kʰəˈbɛk] in English and [kebɛk] in French) is the largest and second most populous province in Canada. It is the only Canadian province with a French-speaking majority and whose only official language is French.
Quebec is bordered by the province of Ontario, James Bay and Hudson Bay to the west; by Hudson Strait and Ungava Bay to the North; by the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the provinces of New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador to the east; and by the United States (the states of New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine) to the south. Quebec's capital is Quebec City and its largest city is Montreal.
Most of Quebec's population resides in cities like these on the banks of the Saint Lawrence River. The northern portion of the province is sparsely populated, but houses vast stores of hydro-electicity, forestry products, and mineral resources that drive Quebec's principal industries. More recently, information and communication technologies, aerospace, biotechnology, and health industries have replaced traditional textile and manufacturing industries.
Quebec was carved out of New France as a colony under the British Regime in 1763. It became a founding province of the Canadian Confederation in 1867. The "Québécois" have their own cultural identity, with a flourishing secular French-speaking culture. As a result, Quebec often goes its own way politically, exercising limited autonomy in taxation, immigration, foreign relations, language and culture. It also has a strong democratic independence movement.
There. That sounds pretty neutral.
Repeated sockpuppet vandalism
YAY for article protection! Thanks Samir! --dragfyre 22:01, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
- This is just getting to be too much. Hopefully a checkuser will clear somethings up. The user that keeps vandalizing happens to own this category. It's scary. -Royalguard11(Talk·Desk) 02:00, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
Please remove this unencyclopedic sentence
"Quebec's separatist debate has influenced many corporations to move their Canadian headquarters from Montreal to Toronto."
- Agreed its unencycolpedic in the sense that doesnt have any references, buts its a fact. Before and after the 1995 referendum, a myriad of businesses closed up shop in Quebec to move to Ontario or elsewhere. Ill find sources. --Gregorof/(T) 01:20, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
- Until then, it should be removed. But even if you find a valid source, I don't think it's important enough to be in a 10 lines section on the economy of Quebec.