6 Things Nobody Tells You About Canada vs the USA

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Ameer Corro

Ameer Corro

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 725
@AmeerCorro
@AmeerCorro Ай бұрын
👉 Before jumping in, here’s what you need to know: This video focuses on big, English-speaking cities like Toronto, Vancouver, New York, and LA. But let’s be real: Canada and the U.S. are so much more than just those places. Québec, Calgary, Halifax, the Midwest, rural towns, and smaller cities all have their own rich cultures, values, and dynamics that deserve attention. There’s as much diversity within each country as there is between them. I had to pick a lens for this video, and this was it-but it’s not the full story. If your experience wasn’t reflected here, I’d love to hear about it in the comments. Your perspective helps us all learn more, and who knows? It might even spark ideas for a future video! Thanks for watching, and let’s have a thoughtful, respectful conversation.
@BigMamaDaveX
@BigMamaDaveX Ай бұрын
I came, I saw, I liked, and SUBBED! 👍
@carolynrobe5957
@carolynrobe5957 3 күн бұрын
This was great and I feel interested that Indigenous people were not mentioned. As one of the races...The first peoples, the first Nations...whose land was taken. The different ways they were treated in US and Canada leads to differing attitudes. I know this is about Toronto and NYC but this land is and was recognized as indigenous even in cities...: Canada is quite different in its approach vs USA.
@existentialpoet8216
@existentialpoet8216 Ай бұрын
The significant difference is that Canadians have a "collective" view of the "commonwealth," while Americans have an individualistic view. We are not socialists, as Americans may rant or have you think; instead, we think of the community's well-being. This is a significant difference in government policies. Our motto is "peace, order, and good government," while the motto for Americans is 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Canadians love people; Americans are our dear friends and allies, even with our differences.
@philippebracq884
@philippebracq884 Ай бұрын
Good government? You're kidding right!
@existentialpoet8216
@existentialpoet8216 Ай бұрын
@@philippebracq884 It's best to do research about our "ethos" and check out the history and meaning of "peace, order, and good government." It's a combined concept of moral and political thought, not based on your ideology. Good luck.
@SonicCommenter
@SonicCommenter Ай бұрын
I think there is an irony in a country having a motto of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness", but the reality is they actually are some of the unhappiest people on the planet, have little regard for life (considering the amount of mass shootings they commit), the obsession with "rights" for guns over people, and have expressed willingness to give up their liberties for the comfort of authoritarianism by voting for Donald Trump and expressing admiration for Vladimir Putin.
@lyndaanderson6165
@lyndaanderson6165 Ай бұрын
@@philippebracq884we do now. If the conservative guy gets in, we’re hooped. He’s a mini Trump. Everyone I know is going to vote NDP.
@dawnknox4640
@dawnknox4640 Ай бұрын
​@@existentialpoet8216 This current government is the exact opposite of good!
@Donna-l7r
@Donna-l7r 22 күн бұрын
As a dual citizen of both countries and living in Canada for over 45 years the biggest difference is that when I grew up in USA the propaganda was over the top! Being taught, we are the best country, everybody should be like us, blah blah blah. Absolutely had no interest in learning anything about any other country and it shows today. It doesn’t look like anything has changed.
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
perfect word to describe the American education system - propaganda, not real education.
@thebowandbullet
@thebowandbullet Ай бұрын
Re. Politeness: As a Canadian, I think it's at least in part because we're more reserved than our boisterous Southern neighbours. It takes longer to get to know us, for us to share our opinions and trust people. Until then, we remain polite and 'nice' as a way to keep the peace and social distance. From what I understand, this is pretty common culturally among northern countries (e.g. Scandinavia) though I'm not sure why.
@icantwiththis
@icantwiththis Ай бұрын
Northern people are colder
@burnyizland
@burnyizland Ай бұрын
1. In cold climates you traditionally would have to rely on your neighbours more. 2. In cold climates you traditionally would spent more time indoors, pent up with the same people.
@Aggromerchant
@Aggromerchant Ай бұрын
And even northern parts of The States. Before they finally open up, New Englanders can be very distant. Once they open up, though, forget it: you can't shut them up. Having Canada as a neighbor is quite cool, by the way.
@thebowandbullet
@thebowandbullet Ай бұрын
@@Aggromerchant lol I'd say that's pretty accurate. We're not cold people, we just warm up slowly. This said, French Canadians tend to be much more friendly at the outset.
@TheSwisscanada
@TheSwisscanada Ай бұрын
Because Canada is more like Europe, the influence of French and the British shows a lot, polite and warm and SMART
@americanexpat8792
@americanexpat8792 Ай бұрын
Born in Chicago, but spent many years outside the US in Middle East, Ireland, and many countries on business. It's easiest to understand the world if you rank countries across a spectrum. Think of pure Individualism at one extreme and pure Collectivism at the other extreme. Countries can then be ranked between the two. The US would be closest to the Individualism extreme, with China and other Asian countries at the other extremes. Canada and Western Europe would be more in the middle, but leaning to the Individualism side. Much of the rest of the world is more towards the Collectist side of the spectrum, since they are older societies and learned that they had to stick together if they wanted to survive.
@johnandrews3568
@johnandrews3568 Ай бұрын
In small town Canada there is a vast difference in talking to strangers than in the big cities. Small town people are way more engaging and more willing to share views or a laugh than in say Toronto. Generally speaking.
@scottcameron3783
@scottcameron3783 Ай бұрын
Another context about social interactions between the countries (Canadians being polite and Americans being more boisterous and freely giving their opinion) is the applicable laws. Americans who point to Canada and say "you don't have freedom of speech" are generally correct as we have freedom of expression instead, which not only protects the speaker's right to say something but also the listeners rights as well. In the US, by having a general declaration of being legally able to say what you want has given Americans the "confidence" to say whatever they want, even if they know it may be taken as offensive. In Canada, based on the principle of POGG, we acknowledge our rights only extend as far as hurting someone else (either physically or non-physically). As such, we learn to socially self-restrict our comments based on the applicable audience, so we don't purposely or offhandedly offend someone. All which turns out to be another tenet of politeness which is "if you don't have something nice to say (or at least neutral) don't say anything at all"
@graceguan3247
@graceguan3247 Ай бұрын
​@@jmac5937 this is not censorship. It is consideration and thoughtfulness. A human being with a warm heart and sympathy can naturally do this.
@graceguan3247
@graceguan3247 Ай бұрын
Agree. A difference between Americans and Canadians I discovered recently is that highly competitive environment ad culture make people tend to be more cold-hearted and lack of sympathy to the vulnerables
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Ай бұрын
I think it became clear just how dangerous the USA's version of free speech was during Covid when Right wing misinformation posts on social media lead to the deaths of hundreds of thousands in the USA. The right turned the pandemic into a tool to attack government with and ignored the advice of medical professionals and the scientific community. They are still spreading the same debunked crap even today. That's not free speech and should never have been allowed.
@billn7183
@billn7183 Ай бұрын
The niceness is gone ever since the 51st state comment. It is not being taken as a joke !
@johnandrews3568
@johnandrews3568 Ай бұрын
Canadians are polite until we're not. The Geneva Convention was written because of how savage Canadians are during war. We're your best friend and your worst enemy. Choose wisely.
@the_Kurgan
@the_Kurgan Ай бұрын
Yes, it is. The media freaked out, but most Canadians aren't offended at all. Many of us see the humor but think it's actually a great idea.
@Paul-ec8jr
@Paul-ec8jr Ай бұрын
​@@the_KurganI doubt it
@johnandrews3568
@johnandrews3568 Ай бұрын
@@the_Kurgan WRONG
@the_Kurgan
@the_Kurgan Ай бұрын
@@johnandrews3568 Why are you yelling?
@bringyourownbrilliance4353
@bringyourownbrilliance4353 Ай бұрын
Canadian here; celebrating my 62nd year. Landed Immigrant in 1964 from West Germany [during the period] and decided to become a Canadian citizen in 1984. This KZbin Content Creator offers a great presentation that ignores the advent of the invention we all take for granted nowadays, marketed and known as "The World Wide Web" or "The Internet." Algorithms, government legislation, and more influence this amazing "socializing with media" tool. Another point I want to rubber stamp here, please World, stop calling Canadians "polite", "kind," and "nice." Could you stop this habit? Please refer to Canadians as understanding. To illustrate my point with words: you arrive at Pearson International Airport in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and disembark from a plane full of an aggressive attitude, self-importance, bent on destruction: plainly we will kick your ass. If however, you arrive in our country with the desire to better yourself by supporting others in our community goals to improve life in this country [there is lots of room for improvement] then we have your back. Thanks for reading this long post. Best wishes for every success.
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
love the kick your ass comment - do you remember kids stomping around the schoolyard arm-in-arm yelling "Hey Hey Get Out Of Our Way, We Just Got Back From The USA" pretending to be rude Americans?
@mmrgratitudes
@mmrgratitudes Ай бұрын
I love Canada 🇨🇦 it’s geopolitically lonely as a hegemon. I always feel like Canada is our larger, nicer, dependable, and calm little brother. I would be so sad if Canada was not our neighbor.
@KenHubbard-jz1vq
@KenHubbard-jz1vq Ай бұрын
AND ID BE SO HAPPY AND OUR COUNTRY SO MUCH BETTER OFF I YOU WEREN'T OUR NEIGHBOUR ,MEXICO O K CANADA'S HAD WEAK LEADERS FOR FAR TO LONG. ,AND THIS SILVER TONGUED LIZARD MR PEE AIR WILL ONLY ADD TO OUR PROBLEMS
@bonniediep5324
@bonniediep5324 Ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@manoncoutu3915
@manoncoutu3915 Ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤
@JFDoria79
@JFDoria79 Ай бұрын
It would make sense for the provinces to become states and join the USA. Quebec can become its own country.
@KenHubbard-jz1vq
@KenHubbard-jz1vq Ай бұрын
@@mmrgratitudes OVER MY DEAD BODY, WHY DON'T YOU JUST MOVE THERE AND LEAVE. US CANADIANS BE , THERE WOULD BE A GORILLA WAR ,JUST LIKE VIETNAM IT WOULD NEVER STOP
@mts764
@mts764 Ай бұрын
I am a Canadian and love this country. I never want to be anything else.
@chris_schenkel
@chris_schenkel Ай бұрын
Bullshit. A Canadian would never say that.
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Ай бұрын
@@57gfrdfww Better chance in making the US the thirteenth province. Given the US economy and low standards of living.
@CheryleThomas
@CheryleThomas Ай бұрын
ACTUALLY as being g a Canadian would never become an American
@CheryleThomas
@CheryleThomas Ай бұрын
And never 51st State
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 21 күн бұрын
@@57gfrdfww never spoken to anyone in my 58 year who wanted to be a yank here in Canada. We make fun of them far to much to consider that. The standards of living in the US2B are so bad nobody wants to live like that. Education is so below average and under valued there it makes the people just sound stupid. The high crime rate and prison population just makes it seem like nobody there respects the law or each other, one in four people in prison globally is in a US prison, then add in those who served their time or are out on parole of some sort. Any wonder why the police are the way they are there?
@MichelleIkoma
@MichelleIkoma Ай бұрын
Politeness is about public behaviour as being respectful of others in interactions, but it does not have anything to do with kindness which is more about. Intention to look after others. Canadians tend to be more hands off unless you ask for assistance. We respect the other person and let them lead the interaction.
@AlexReims
@AlexReims Ай бұрын
I am sorry to announce that after 71 years of witnessing Canadian and American behaviors, Canadian are way more polite of everybody I had the chance to meet and discuss different matters that people get involved in. I think you will only find people older than his counterpart being polite and courteous as he would be the youngest between the two. I always open doors to youngsters (I am 71) and their interest will be for you to get in first and let the second ones handle the door by himself. I give my chair in public transportation when I see a young mother with three kids she needs to watch and they always refuse until I insist. I always turn it as a joke saying "I want to grow up", which always get smiles all around.
@kimtrinh4811
@kimtrinh4811 Ай бұрын
Canadian is more generous in tipping than American according to the staff services in Mexico resort
@KaediPlays
@KaediPlays Ай бұрын
I am planning for immigration to Canada (yes actively working through the very tough steps... not just a passing thought), and this video was extremely insightful. While there was a lot of the technical details you shared that I was already familiar with, your insight to the cultures between the U.S. and Canada is incredibly helpful.
@philippebracq884
@philippebracq884 Ай бұрын
Don't come,it's a major shithole in 2024
@lyndaanderson6165
@lyndaanderson6165 Ай бұрын
@@KaediPlays …we are hoping that highly educated people and those who have other skills come to Canada. There is a shortage of medical professionals, especially in smaller cities. The population of the city I live in is 78,000.🇨🇦
@aahna_anaaya
@aahna_anaaya 18 күн бұрын
I am planning to. Got some offer from London, On. Really concerned about all the negativity
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
better to get real information from a real Canadian, this guy is clueless about us. Good luck coming here : )
@blanchemoyaert3714
@blanchemoyaert3714 Ай бұрын
You over looked Canadian diversity in terms of French culture and indigenous influence. These differences are due to a very different history. US has a Latin and African element historically. Whereas Canada has French as a founding nation. I know you mentioned in the beginning you were comparing only English cities, but this overlooks a very important cultural difference.
@KimInCalifornia
@KimInCalifornia Ай бұрын
We have more indigenous people than Canada...I think we're much more of a melting pot than Canada just in terms of the number of people who have immigrated here from numerous countries.
@alvinnay2629
@alvinnay2629 Ай бұрын
which is our biggest problem!!!
@blanchemoyaert3714
@blanchemoyaert3714 Ай бұрын
@KimInCalifornia exactly, Canada is not a melting pot, but rather a mosaic. We are officially multicultural More like a tossed salad than a melting pot. 🫠 This is another difference between the two countries. In Canada, people are encouraged to keep their original identities, and integrate rather than assimilate. And we have an official reconciliation policy with the Indigenous people. They are also recognized as treaty people and the land unceded territory. Of course, you have more indigenous people because you have eight times the population in general. I suppose the only group we have 'more' are French speakers. 😊
@karagi101
@karagi101 Ай бұрын
⁠@@KimInCaliforniaNobody talks about raw numbers. The US is more populous so of course it will have more people who immigrated to the US. But in terms of percentage foreign born, Canada blows the US out of the water. Toronto , for instance, is often noted as the most multicultural major city in the world.
@karagi101
@karagi101 Ай бұрын
Lived here since 1970. I haven’t seen much indigenous influence other than in place names and some art.
@joshmcritchie4351
@joshmcritchie4351 Ай бұрын
My daughter turns 3 today, when I was working I gave them updates and when she was going to be born my company said "take the week off!" I'm a person not a number!
@jwallace9984
@jwallace9984 Ай бұрын
A week!?! I’m Canadian. When my daughter was born I was given a years paid (by the government) maternity leave, at about 50% of my previous salary. Babies need more than a week to be launched into this word!
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Ай бұрын
@@jwallace9984 New parents can take up to 18 months divided however they chose to use them. You can also take up to 6 months care and nurturing leave to look after a sick child, spouse, parent of someone who is in your care. Add that to the fact we don't pay to go see a doctor or be in the hospital plus there are several drug plans by various provinces. Can't imagine some group of millionaires profiting on other peoples hardship.
@joshmcritchie4351
@joshmcritchie4351 Ай бұрын
@jwallace9984 I just requested it, I took 5 months off paid leave 🙂
@JuneGriffiths11
@JuneGriffiths11 Ай бұрын
*I'm favoured only God knows how much I praise Him,* $230k every 4weeks! | now have a big mansion and can now afford anything and also support God's work and the church.
@JuneGriffiths11
@JuneGriffiths11 Ай бұрын
Only God knows how much grateful i am. After so much struggles I now own a new house and my family is happy once again everything is finally falling into place!!
@JoeRobert-qw3gg
@JoeRobert-qw3gg Ай бұрын
Wow that's huge, how do you make that much monthly?.. I have been looking for ways to be successful, please how??
@JuneGriffiths11
@JuneGriffiths11 Ай бұрын
It's Ms. Evelyn Vera doing, she's changed my life.
@JuneGriffiths11
@JuneGriffiths11 Ай бұрын
I started pretty low, though, $5000 thereabouts. The return came massive. Joey is in school doing well, telling me of new friends he's meeting in school. Thank you Evelyn Vera, you're a miracle.
@StephanieElison
@StephanieElison Ай бұрын
Wow...I know her too she is a licensed broker and a FINRA agent she is popular in US and Canada she is really amazing woman with good skills and experience.
@davidbarts6144
@davidbarts6144 Ай бұрын
Fun fact: Last November, CBC (Canada’s public radio and TV broadcaster) ran election-night live special coverage as the results came in, much like the US networks did. (And no wonder, given how much the outcome affects Canada.) I could not imagine any major US network doing the same for a Canadian election (again, not surprisingly, given how much less the outcomes of Canadian elections affect the USA).
@Yosetime
@Yosetime Ай бұрын
Good point! As Trump recently said when Ontario pushed back on the tariff threats: "The US is subsidizing Canada". Toad!
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Ай бұрын
@@Yosetime Yet Trump as usual got things backwards. Canada is keeping the US going as after years of mismanagement of their resources the US simply can't survive without Canada. While Canada could do great without the USA.
@drumclean9384
@drumclean9384 13 күн бұрын
I hate his guts ​@@Yosetime
@scogginsscoggins
@scogginsscoggins Ай бұрын
Canada has a national health service which is paid for through gereral taxation, there are no handguns legally owned in public, there is no capital punishment, higher education is highly subsidised, much less crime, greater equity in society, French and English are official languages, a parliamentary system of govt, and their taxes are 5-8% higher.
@buckodonnghaile4309
@buckodonnghaile4309 Ай бұрын
But there are legally owned handguns in Canada.
@jamesnelson5110
@jamesnelson5110 Ай бұрын
The difference in taxes is probably less if you look at the hidden taxes in the US. Especially if you look at the differences between states which can be quite significant
@scogginsscoggins
@scogginsscoggins Ай бұрын
@@buckodonnghaile4309 only for security guards and diplomatic security. They were banned two years ago. Most Albertans opposed the ban.
@7Dorie
@7Dorie Ай бұрын
​@@socomxx Canada is much better. It's true. Sorry, big guy. LOL
@xAnAngelOfDeathx
@xAnAngelOfDeathx Ай бұрын
@@jamesnelson5110 Factor in health insurance in the US and Americans pay more for less.
@mikepurdue7472
@mikepurdue7472 Ай бұрын
Canadian here and I just wanna say, Merry Christmas to our southern neighbors. We love you guys. Have a great one eh!? 🍻
@victoriapearce6145
@victoriapearce6145 Ай бұрын
The bit on the fairness doctrine in broadcasting says a lot about the difference in the two countries
@jacquesgiard6943
@jacquesgiard6943 Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@stevedavenport1202
@stevedavenport1202 Ай бұрын
I didnt know Canada that well until I traveled to areas outside of tourist zones and started to talk to actual Canadians. Thankfully, most conversations weren't through the filter of "I'm Canadian and You're American" So, I was able to get a real sense of what Canadians are like day to day.
@LouisLuzuka
@LouisLuzuka Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your joy with us Amir 😊
@michaeldowson6988
@michaeldowson6988 Ай бұрын
Canada almost entirely missed the 2008 banking crash. A couple of banks received temporary loans that they paid off.
@MeloraFoy
@MeloraFoy Ай бұрын
My boss has Canadian/US citizenship. He told me that Canadian banks were requ I red yo keep a higher percentage of their assets liquiid. So the downturn did not effect them as much.
@luddity
@luddity Ай бұрын
We definitely noticed economic changes here in Canada at that time. Jobs became harder to come by and husing got more expensive.
@michaeldowson6988
@michaeldowson6988 Ай бұрын
@@luddity Changes is just life. Nothing is immutable, and Canada doesn't exist in a rarified paradise. We do make some effort to avoid the excesses in plain view in the USA & UK.
@johnmacgregor9136
@johnmacgregor9136 29 күн бұрын
That's true, as far as Canadian banks are concerned. They were protected by Canadian (tougher) rules. BUT, indirectly, the US economic downturn did affect Canada. Yet another example of how Canadians are affected by what happens in the US.
@Claude-n5o
@Claude-n5o Ай бұрын
So tired of hearing about the US on the news, newspapers, social media, over and over again...
@blazingstar9638
@blazingstar9638 Ай бұрын
Ive always assumed when I’m on social media that because they’re American companies mostly, that a lot of USA content would be on there. But I’ve noticed USA in our news way more since 2016!
@kathrynmcmullen2344
@kathrynmcmullen2344 Ай бұрын
I'm 61 and have lived in Vancouver for 41 years. Vancouver is a friendly city; it just depends what part of the city you are in. Downtown Vancouver is a less friendly place, but if you go to the areas surrounding it like Kitsilano or False Creek, you are more likely to. Get a friendly hello from a passing stranger on a residential street than you are in the West End.
@johnmacgregor9136
@johnmacgregor9136 29 күн бұрын
As an ex-Vancouverite (born and raised In Vancouver and still visit family there), I fully agree. Get out of the Vancouver downtown core and into neighbourhoods such as Kitsilano, or Marpole, or Port Moody, or Steveston, or even Kerrisdale, you have a better chance of friendly interaction.
@antoinenosotti2548
@antoinenosotti2548 19 күн бұрын
Interestingly, Canada has a higher social mobility index than the United States. So the born poor and made a fortune narrative that is so prevalent in the US seems to be less true in the US than it is in Canada and many other countries. Although income distribution measures seem to show that the US is a great place to be born rich...
@alexistourand8058
@alexistourand8058 Ай бұрын
Canadian here!! I did love the video, however, I think that the francophone culture (primarily seen in Québec, New Brunswick, and eastern Ontario) has a significant impact on Canadian culture. That’s where you get some of our most iconic foods like poutine and maple syrup (that is in fact made in Québec). Aside from that, I am currently vacationing in Hawaii, and the cashiers here quite like making conversation-the cashier at lululemon was very interested in Canadian currency and found it peculiar that we abolished our penny while they still use it (honestly, I find that it’s a pain in the arse to have to fetch exact change but oh well).
@dorianlindberg1662
@dorianlindberg1662 Ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing out the difference in the media exposier between the providers in US Vs Canada. It is pretty substantial, and I am very happy to have some some 'somwhat' more balanced coverage up here in the Great white North!
@LouisLuzuka
@LouisLuzuka Ай бұрын
Vancouver Canada checking in 😊🎉
@AmeerCorro
@AmeerCorro Ай бұрын
YESSIRRRR
@MrJamesdeanhunter
@MrJamesdeanhunter Ай бұрын
you glossed over public policy related to diversity, probably one of the most important difference between the two countries. The US melting pot: go along to get along, blend in, Americanize your name etc. versus celebrating and enjoying our different cultures in Canada: There is probably a different cultural festival every week in Toronto. Americans are louder and talk to strangers, Canadians are more conservative and need to be introduced before we'll talk to strangers. You are quite young and still learning the ways of the world.
@sparkfx5874
@sparkfx5874 Ай бұрын
Hey Ameer, just wanted to wish you a Happy Holiday season. I just had some time with my family and was playing my lofi Christmas playlist which included some of your tracks which have been such a staple in setting the holiday mood. Thanks for the good vibes and Merry Christmas to you and your fam :)
@AmeerCorro
@AmeerCorro Ай бұрын
Hey! Thank you for listening to my tracks, that's awesome to hear! Happy Holidays to you and yours too!
@joe.ramsay
@joe.ramsay 6 күн бұрын
One of the reasons Canadian know so much about US politics is that Canadian elections are short lived and far less dramatic than US elections, eg. there is less media coverage. The U.S. presidential election process spans nearly two years, beginning with candidate registration and announcements in the spring of the year before the election. Canadian federal elections are much shorter. The campaign period lasts a minimum of 36 days and a maximum of 50 days, as mandated by the Canada Elections Act.
@brucepenner6493
@brucepenner6493 Ай бұрын
This is a rich topic that Canadians love to analyze. And Americans could not care less. I am a Canadian that has lived in USA for 14 years and see the root being the French trapper style integration into indigenous societies to generate French wealth vs Protestant extremists from England escaping religious persecution.
@stevedavenport1202
@stevedavenport1202 Ай бұрын
Very retro. The reality for French beaver hunters was quite different. Their numbers were limited and they operated deep inside indigenous lands as single men. So, the reality on the ground dictated a different approach towards the natives. The Anglo protestants lived within comparatively large, insular communities of extended kinship networks and had a bit of geographic separation from native communities.
@estherabrams7274
@estherabrams7274 Ай бұрын
I think you really nailed it with Canadian politeness. When one has to think about not offending or causing conflict, interaction becomes a lot more tiring, so we tend to want it to end sooner. As for the West Coast, there is a significant Japanese population on Canada’s west coast, so the politeness likely does get bumped up a couple of notches, as Japanese culture likewise emphasizes politeness.
@paulk1945
@paulk1945 Ай бұрын
Underrated video. I am Canadian living in the US (East coast) and work certainly takes up a lot of my time but it is definitely rewarding as well.
@GamersDelight4541
@GamersDelight4541 Ай бұрын
As an American, I believe Canada should be left alone. Everyone knows how Trump is. It's something all of us will have to deal with for the next 4 years. I didn't vote for him.
@paulamcgovern6135
@paulamcgovern6135 Ай бұрын
Great video! It touches on many things that I find difficult to explain to Americans when I'm travelling there for work - but the LLPH vs POGG is really helpful! (I see a lot of nitpicky comments; if I were you I'd do the polite Canadian thing and ignore them) Related story: I was on a day trip on a boat in Jamaica last week and one of the crew told me they could tell the difference between Americans and Canadians because the Canadians always "clean up after themselves, like they'll actively pick up a piece of garbage and dispose of it. Ask any of the crew!" he said. Thought that was interesting.
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
I'm polite, just sickened by spouting of US propaganda by someone so obviously ignorant
@juanpemberthy
@juanpemberthy 27 күн бұрын
I am deeply enamored with and proud of the way we, most Canadians, live our lives in our country. Sure, i might not have the same level of disposable cash as our counterparts to spend on material things, but i wouldn't change the amount of quality time with my family and the stability of work/life balance. To some i may lack ambition, but to myself I'm extremely ambitious with my personal life goals.
@Goldrefinedthrufire
@Goldrefinedthrufire Ай бұрын
The U.S isnt bigger... it has a higher population. Canada is the 2nd largest country in the world... if you want to say "bigger".
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
yeah, the derogatory US propaganda he ignorantly spouts is sickening. Wait until he gets a good dose of racist America, he'll change his tune like they all do.
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Ай бұрын
The USA does not have the highest GDP. That myth has been debunked since 2017 when it was shown the US was using large amounts of foreign production from Asia to inflate US figures. Now care to explain how figures from corporations like Apple who produce most of their products in Asia and China specifically have any impact on the US economy? The workers get paid in the money of the country they work and live in. That pay gets spent there helping that economy even more. The infrastructure improves the economy of the nation it's built in as well. The taxes those workers pay again help the nations they live and work in. The product they build is sold around the world with little going to the USA. The money the corporation makes never returns to the USA to be taxed because the US has a much higher tax rate than other nations. So there is a great deal of production the US claims that belongs to other nations cutting US figures and increasing those other nations. That's why the US was officially surpassed by China in 2017 and last year had 32% of the worlds production compared to the USA's 16%. The US is long beyond being a superpower and leading economy. Less and less nations use the US dollar to trade with as well because it's simply unstable.
@shostakov66
@shostakov66 Ай бұрын
interesting video - glad I watched it! I am moving to Canada soon and expect that I will see differences (although I've been to Canada many times over the yrs)
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
this guy knows zilch about us so I suggest you find real Canadians to talk to, first thing to remember is NO HANDGUNS ALLOWED.
@ValerieStockert
@ValerieStockert Ай бұрын
Visited Newfoundland in 2005. Don't ask a passerby where a good restaurant is...they'll take you home for dinner.
@Shan_Dalamani
@Shan_Dalamani Ай бұрын
Why is that a problem?
@user-pr5tv3dz7s
@user-pr5tv3dz7s Ай бұрын
It's not a problem. Just shows how friendly they are to visitors.
@davidleaman6801
@davidleaman6801 Ай бұрын
Go to Newfoundland to find NICE.
@n4tune8
@n4tune8 Ай бұрын
I was going to say most Canadians are polite, but the ones from the maritimes are nice.
@burnyizland
@burnyizland Ай бұрын
I prefer to wait for them to come here. Most do.
@7Dorie
@7Dorie Ай бұрын
@@burnyizland NOT anymore. No longer have any interest south of our border
@lyndaanderson6165
@lyndaanderson6165 Ай бұрын
@@n4tune8 as are most of us in British Columbia🇨🇦
@lyndaanderson6165
@lyndaanderson6165 Ай бұрын
@@n4tune8 I live in British Columbia, and have worked in many other provinces and countries. It depends what political party is in each province and how the they are treated. We have mini Trump running for the Conservative Party. 🇨🇦
@rima0396
@rima0396 Ай бұрын
I love my beautiful country Canada 🍁 I’m proud Canadian citizen 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦❤️❤️❤️❤️
@7Dorie
@7Dorie Ай бұрын
Thanks for admitting up front that you have no real data upon which to make these comparisons. This video doesn't represent Canada, just Toronto.
@ALuimes
@ALuimes Ай бұрын
The differences between Canadian and US minorities is that in the US they're mainly domestic (or come from over the border) rather than overseas immigrants coming in more recent times.
@cameroncressman9496
@cameroncressman9496 Ай бұрын
Interesting, for sure, certainly worth my time. I do wish to point out a couple glaring omissions, specifically under #5, Diversity. You completely missed the Anglo/Franco key central difference. The influences of both as well as their historical impact is pretty well central to all the other topics you talked about. There is also the geographic diversity. The East Coast, Newfoundland (which is not the East Coast), BC La La Land, the West, etc. Much of your discussion and examples are "Toronto centric". I say this as someone originating from the Waterloo Silicon North area who has lived in Fredericton, Montreal, Saguenay, North Bay as well as travelled and worked from coast, to coast, to coast, as well as having lived several years in Germany. I'm not faulting you and I know you were trying to stick to generalizations however, there is great difficulty in identifying and defining these generalizations. All in all, an interesting video. Thank you.
@brucewalsh-in6np
@brucewalsh-in6np Ай бұрын
Newfoundland isn’t a Maritime Province, but it’s an Atlantic province and we are all East Coasters
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Ай бұрын
East coast is New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland. Ironically the west refers to Ontario and Quebec as eastern Canada while we in Eastern Canada refer to Ontario and Quebec as central Canada.
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
and Toronto is our most American like city so it's a really bad reference point.
@jimdavison4077
@jimdavison4077 Күн бұрын
@@gonelooney5698 how is Toronto anything like a US city? American is not a nationality. You mean Usian. There are over a billion Americans on two continents in the western hemisphere. Not one nation called America. Toronto is a mix of people from all over the world in assortment no other city outside Canada can claim. Since the start of the 21st century Canada has grown by 10 million people while the US has shrunk by more than that. About one in four Canadias was born in another country and moved here for a better life. People are leaving the US in droves, according to their own border figures as many as 8 million people a year leave the US with many renouncing their US citizenship and seeking immigration to other nations. That since 2016.
@mikewalker161
@mikewalker161 Ай бұрын
I am Canadian by very many generations And yes... we are polite and respectful ... but don't piss us off because we as Canadians will bite back I love my American friends and all of them support me. What Trump is doing is killing our family relationship ... damn I always thought of America as a friend... Trump is ruining that! Damn we are in a nasty timeline right now where everything feels surreal !
@itsmeh4868
@itsmeh4868 Ай бұрын
As a Canadian feel really bad how trump treat us recently. I won’t never forget 51st state joke!!!!
@lyndaanderson6165
@lyndaanderson6165 Ай бұрын
@@itsmeh4868 Trump is being told what to do by Putin and Leon Musk.
@davidhookway1451
@davidhookway1451 Ай бұрын
It's ELON Musk. NOT Leon !
@lino9222
@lino9222 Ай бұрын
I have never thought The USA was a friend they have been using us as milk cows and we let them we help fight their financially based war profit.
@socomxx
@socomxx Ай бұрын
We just want secure borders, 10x more terrorist come from the northern border than the southern border. Huge security threat, they are using Canada as a staging ground since of your lax immigration laws. Americans are traumatized by terrorism, we don’t like it.
@markaxworthy2508
@markaxworthy2508 Ай бұрын
The circular graphics (04:33 & 05:07) are visually inaccurate, massively overstating the US size relative to Canada,
@AmeerCorro
@AmeerCorro Ай бұрын
Gosh, you're totally right - my bad! 🤦‍♂️ I didn't realize this while editing. I thought that simply scaling up the circles by 8x and 12x would be accurate, but as you correctly pointed it out, it's not. Thanks again for highlighting this and I'll make sure to get this right in the future videos! I appreciate you bringing this up.
@markaxworthy2508
@markaxworthy2508 Ай бұрын
@@AmeerCorro Tanks for being responsive. It is a good sign for future work.
@SmallvilleSP
@SmallvilleSP Ай бұрын
New Yorker who lived in Toronto for 4 months. I cut my stay short, but I feel like I experienced quite a bit of Canada (traveled to Niagara Falls, Ottawa, Ontario, Quebec). Everything you mentioned in your video checks out with what I've lived through up there. Canadians are overall more polite, but can also be passive-aggressive. Americans are louder, but chattier. Both countries are indeed governed differently and have a different approach to debate. I also find it interesting that people in Canada watch CNN and Fox as much as they do, which I definitely noticed during this US election cycle. It could have been interesting to compare the two nations from the standpoint of their respective levels of desperation/crime. In my opinion, the US has way more dereliction, abandonment and poverty-stricken areas than Canada proportionally, although that doesn't mean Canada doesn't have problems of its own. I was shocked while living in Toronto at the news I'd see of frequent gun violence carried out indiscriminately across the city, from random areas to really crowded ones. Really grateful to have taken a piece of Canada home with me in the end. What happens up there matters as much now as what happens right in the U.S of A :)
@AmeerCorro
@AmeerCorro Ай бұрын
Wow, thank you for leaving such a thoughtful, reflective comment! You bring up a lot of things I've also thought about as well, and I'll keep them in mind for future videos.
@stevevarga8621
@stevevarga8621 Ай бұрын
You are very right about how much we Canadians pay attention to American. It’s like you guys are just across the street so we can’t but help but watch the show. Unfortunately we also are heavily affected by your gun control problems. I would hazard a guess that 99% of our illegal guns are smuggled across the border. This is not a problem in, say Norway with Sweden. We get all your media, movies and guns. You get our comedians and maple syrup.
@WakandaleezaRazz
@WakandaleezaRazz Ай бұрын
You lived there 4 months and didn’t learn Ontario is the province that both Niagara and Toronto are in? 😂
@josieramirez9483
@josieramirez9483 Ай бұрын
@@SmallvilleSP totally agree! I also think that poverty here in Canada is well mascarade because Canadians are way more reserved and not many will tell you that they are struggling to get by.
@AlanKelly-nm9lx
@AlanKelly-nm9lx Ай бұрын
cause in Canada we have a lot of human barn animals who watch their television programming from their monetary masters! and all the crime in Toronto is created by csis our cia! let thanks csis agent Bain coote who lived at 1032 Dovercourt rd! Till I chased him from his home!
@missshroom5512
@missshroom5512 Ай бұрын
If you Google Fox News it says that they ARE NOT a reliable news source. Very disturbing that Fox watchers do not know this and we as a society do not care😞 Canadians are awesome! Canadians love being Canadian! They are wonderful neighbors! ❄️💙😁
@evanhenry9179
@evanhenry9179 Ай бұрын
Looks like the leftist ABC,NBC,CBS,MSNBC,NPR,ect. have just been proven the ones with the unreliable news. They all follow the same wording and one-sided views with a lot of un-truth. Politics rule the country; the government runs and controls the people. We have little say as the Taxpayers.
@lyndaanderson6165
@lyndaanderson6165 Ай бұрын
@@missshroom5512 I watched FOX news once. Terrible station. CBC only now.
@carlosbotta4186
@carlosbotta4186 Ай бұрын
Consider saying "the US" every time you said "America."
@dorianlindberg1662
@dorianlindberg1662 Ай бұрын
You are absolutely right that hte world is a beautiful place! I have met people from every corner who are straight up awesome! I could start listing them off, but that is a VERY BIG list!
@harryjones8952
@harryjones8952 12 күн бұрын
I found your last segment to be interesting, I am Canadian by choice and yes we’re polite but reserved, we do not go out of our way to insert our selves into other peoples conversations or life’s
@marlenemmc2339
@marlenemmc2339 Ай бұрын
You have to travel more around in order to do this type of comparing
@davidskeffington1269
@davidskeffington1269 Ай бұрын
So far you seem to be missing the fact that in Canada you have a chartered bank system for people separate from commercial banks.
@nolabachiu7690
@nolabachiu7690 Ай бұрын
I think you mean more populated not bigger. Geographically Canada is larger.
@carolynrobe5957
@carolynrobe5957 Ай бұрын
When in the certain parts of Appalachia a form of politeness can deliver an absolutely lethal message at times.
@carolynrobe5957
@carolynrobe5957 3 күн бұрын
I found this to be true when I lived in Appalachia.
@yournanna866
@yournanna866 Ай бұрын
I think the states will notice Canada a little bit once ford turns off their natural gas…
@shanicestella2226
@shanicestella2226 Ай бұрын
I think Americans are more loud especially when it comes to flexing the American Exceptionalism and American Patriotism , American Patriotism is bit strange for me , it feels more like a nationalism and bit of jingoism in a guise of patriotism In every sports event , it definitely no secret its a chance for many Americans flexing that American exceptionalism , Not all Americans although undeniably large portion of the people
@BonnieLiz-hy9vs
@BonnieLiz-hy9vs Ай бұрын
I love your essay style intro plus your written disclaimer in the notes. Clearly this aint ur first rodeo! And Thank You for addressing how integral the CRTC and CanCon has been to preserving our culture. At least u suggest ur going to in ur intro...lol
@vgnvideogameninja2930
@vgnvideogameninja2930 Ай бұрын
Interesting thumbnail there. There are parts of Canada that don't get much if any snow and isn't cold in the winter. As far as wealth goes, when you consider the population differences than Canada is nearly as wealthy as the US. US wealth isn't impressive considering the large population. Also, Canada has 57 billionaires, which is quite a few for our population. I'm one of them and even in the US I'd be richer than about 99.99% of Americans. Your whole video sounds like you're saying, "US is better than Canada." It is not. Enjoy the blackouts when Doug Ford cuts the electricity.
@TyroneTheBest
@TyroneTheBest Ай бұрын
Your username is vgnvideogameninja2930 you are a 12 year old not a billionaire lmao
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
he won't enjoy meeting racists. He's just spouting US propaganda BS - like he's getting his "facts" from Trump.
@edmundmiller70
@edmundmiller70 Ай бұрын
I know that when I visit Canada, people have treated me exceptionally well, and my family statue is in Quebec.
@johnlyle1127
@johnlyle1127 Ай бұрын
The other thing is I have lived in areas of USA where a lot of Canadians have moved. They lecture how Canada is paradise but then they tell me they moved to USA to get out of paying the taxes in Canada that make Canada paradise. This especially with professionals.
@canardchronique3477
@canardchronique3477 Ай бұрын
They moved because of the weather, not the taxes- Canadians treat the U.S. like the U.S. does Mexico. The vast majority of middle class jobs pay roughly the same in either country, with a few entertainment and tech jobs being the main exceptions. When you factor in health insurance, Canadians pay significantly less in taxes, and receive far more in return.
@johnlyle1127
@johnlyle1127 Ай бұрын
@@canardchronique3477 The doctors also moved to USA because of pay
@canardchronique3477
@canardchronique3477 Ай бұрын
​@@johnlyle1127 Only a very small proportion of Canadian medical doctors move to the U.S. for employment, and I've personally met a few American doctors who've moved to Canada because they have less stress, as they don't have to deal with insurance companies, assorted middlemen, and other nuisances. Tech is the only major field where there is a large benefit to moving to the U.S., even though there are several trade-offs (outrageous real estate prices and rent in Silicon Valley, medical insurance hassles, higher violent and property crime rates, worse poverty and middle class education systems, failing infrastructure, etc...).
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
The US is welcome to those type of people.
@malakoffterry9233
@malakoffterry9233 Ай бұрын
You have also forgotten maternity leave.
@taralynnlee178
@taralynnlee178 6 күн бұрын
It's in his other video. This one is specifically on more subtle differences people don't talk about.
@bonitasilver9379
@bonitasilver9379 Ай бұрын
What I love about Canada is that we are not the USA
@stevendblois69
@stevendblois69 Ай бұрын
3:16 Toronto sucks....has for decades. Not a fan at all.
@gerberjoanne266
@gerberjoanne266 Ай бұрын
Actually, LLPH and POGG are not opposing values. It's a question of emphasis, rather than of choosing one or the other. Peace, order, and good government are all necessary for sustaining an environment in which life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness can thrive. Individual freedom may seem to undermine stability, but it actually depends on stability to be maintained. On the other hand, without liberty for the people, the quality of governance, and certainly its concern for collective well-being, will be jeopardized; the government would lack accountability to the people, and could eventually become less democratic or more corrupt.
@johnirvine9942
@johnirvine9942 Ай бұрын
I thought something seemed off with that comparison. Thanks for the explanation.
@chrisjohnson7929
@chrisjohnson7929 Ай бұрын
In fact section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms: 7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
Great description of the failings of the corrupt US government.
@josieramirez9483
@josieramirez9483 Ай бұрын
I live in Toronto and I haven’t met many polite people in here. I have met a lot of jerks and double face. In my experience people in canada are more scared to show their dark side than in the US. In the end, they both can be very rude.
@derekhorlock1976
@derekhorlock1976 Ай бұрын
Toronto isn't Canada!
@KoolKat42
@KoolKat42 Ай бұрын
@@derekhorlock1976great, thanks for proving your one of those double faced jerks……….and if we are taking your narrative that Toronto isn’t Canada, then NYC, LA, SAN Francisco, Chicago and so many other major US cities would also not be United States
@KoolKat42
@KoolKat42 Ай бұрын
Americans are much more open and accepting of other cultures when compared to Canadians. I have lived in both countries and have unfortunately experienced more discrimination in Canada. Might be surprising for some but it’s true.
@derekhorlock1976
@derekhorlock1976 Ай бұрын
@KoolKat42 bullshit!
@alexbreault
@alexbreault Ай бұрын
People in Toronto have their own slang and attitude. Go to a small town in Northern Ontario, and you'll find really polite people.
@marihutten
@marihutten Ай бұрын
We export more culture to the US than you may think. Most of the popstars, producers, filmmakers, technical film workers are Canadians. Practically all the mainstream music and film consumed nowadays has been produced by a Canadian that moved to America. Unfortunately our music and film industry absolutely sucks, so we have no choice but to leave to America. We produce a crazy amount of creative talent. To the extent that it's something that if I was a scholar I would love to research why. The creative industries are pennies on the dollar, terrible pay, without mandates on radio play there would be no Canadian music on the radio, and the fact that Canadians have low self esteem and would rather hire an American to do the exact same work because apparently it's "fancier". I really don't know how Canada produces such great creatives when the place doesn't seem indusive to creativity. I say this as person that works I the music and film production business in Canada. I know people in audio production who do the work exactly the same way I do with the exact same equipment, sometimes even worse equipment! And some Canadians go to hire them just because they're in America, therefore, automatically "a big deal".
@stevedavenport1202
@stevedavenport1202 Ай бұрын
Interesting. Yes, I have noticed the outsized ratio of Canadians in the American creative sector. Am not sure why this is so outside of the push factor of the comparative lack of opportunities in Canada. In terms of the mandate for Canadian content. Well, yeah, on the radio it's kinda cringe inducing. The token Canadian bands radio stations are forced to play sound like cover bands from the local pub "forcing" their mediocre home brewed songs down your throat. However, CBC TV shows can be quite entertaining with top shelf production values and great acting.
@alvinnay2629
@alvinnay2629 Ай бұрын
@@stevedavenport1202 i don't like canadian content garbage, makes for lazy crappy content. want air play make a product that some likes.
@scottcameron3783
@scottcameron3783 Ай бұрын
Canada's creativeness (relative to the US) comes from the structural ability to: view more than one side of an issue by having a news agencies that present more than one side; view more than black and white politics by having more than a two party system; acknowledge and know about the world beyond our borders; experience more than one culture through our mosaic of cultures (without expecting that the other cultures should be subdued into a melting pot); see the strengths in other countries and cultures without ridiculing them as "not-American"; continue to develop and create because we don't see ourselves as the greatest-of-all-time and still see room for improvement; live and exist without the fear that poor health will result in crushing debt; have a greater access to post-secondary education; have the ability to laugh at ourselves (including our politicians laughing at themselves) and so forth...
@3questionspodcast
@3questionspodcast Ай бұрын
In my opinion Canadian are generally more polite or nice BUT Americans are more friendlier, conversational and honest. Canadians in my opinion sacrifice honesty for the sake of being nice.
@williamcunningham6141
@williamcunningham6141 Ай бұрын
We also have better public schools, as well as a large Indigenous peoples whose knowledge about the natural world and their ancient culture healthy natural medicines, and the protection of a rich environmental knowledge. It was the 1st Nations leadership and the trust betrin General Brock and the Great War Chief Tecumseh were onsible for Americans worst defeat in history. This is often not mentioned enough. The descendants of Tecumseh's people still have their farms along the Thames River Valley of southern Ontario. It was now disgraced 1st Prime Minister who broke a Solemn Oath that Queen Victoria demanded before she gave her approval for Confederation. This is history that needs to be remembered and why Ist Nations lands are still Sovereign Territories. This is very important to be remembered.
@markaxworthy2508
@markaxworthy2508 Ай бұрын
Is there not an inverse relationship between the degree of "hustle" and the degree of "politeness? The higher the former, the lower the latter and v.v.?
@andrewmcfarland6681
@andrewmcfarland6681 Ай бұрын
It's pretty ironic that the United States was born through a rejection of a monarchy....and now in 2024 has become a monarchy
@aztroxkai
@aztroxkai Ай бұрын
I love both countries, Canada of its security, conservative lifestyle, social healthcare while US of its disruptive innovation and entrepreneurship.
@markmontpetit8513
@markmontpetit8513 Ай бұрын
This misses a lot of historical context. Canada was not formed (less) on the basis of values other than loyalty to the Crown. There was a fear of US invasion at the time of Confedration (not really justified), especially the sparsely populated west. Plus there were economic reasons - US protectionism, loss of British support and opportunity for the west to get access to an east (through a railway getting built, the CP rail). I am not sure Canada is any less individualistic than the US. Finally, Toronto is not representative at all of the Canadian population - it’s a socially cool and unfriendly city. Go outside the GTA and other parts of Canada to truly understand the country better.
@Shan_Dalamani
@Shan_Dalamani Ай бұрын
It's ludicrous to just visit Ontario and think you "know Canada."
@bronwenhook6088
@bronwenhook6088 Ай бұрын
Some of your comparisons make little sense. For instance a straight comparison of investments without factoring in population is ridiculous.
@Nurse.Addison
@Nurse.Addison Ай бұрын
OH yes, Canadian's know more about the USA because of the USA's influence but since Trump it's more of "Keep your friends close but keep your enemies closer."
@jb_makesgames2264
@jb_makesgames2264 Ай бұрын
Good video - There are of course a lot of things that you could have touched on like health care - Constitutions - supreme courts - gun laws - elections and how money plays in politics - national defence - wealth inequality - Public Education - etc.
@vanmanmike
@vanmanmike 13 күн бұрын
On politeness, us Americans come off as probably somewhat rude, depending where you're at in the U.S.. But I think the root cause of that is for some reason Americans are always in a hurry. Don't ask me why. It doesn't make sense to me either. But I know a good place. If you go into the deep south, you'll find some of the warmest, helpful, friendliest, hardest working people in this whole country. Give you the shirt off their back. You know the ones, the ones with that twang in their voice. Great music too. Mike from Michigan.
@DarleneBurgess-qm1sy
@DarleneBurgess-qm1sy Ай бұрын
When I worked I always worked 6 days a week and usually 70-80 hours a week. My husband also worked 6-7 days a week with 16 hour days as he owned a service station. I managed a law firm and was also the accountant. I know many people who work more than 50 hours a week. 5 days and 40 hours is the requirement but Canadians have very good work ethics. Until Covid most people I know would drag themselves to work on their deathbeds. We learned that wasn’t healthy for the general population
@karenburrows9184
@karenburrows9184 Ай бұрын
I think the Americans need to know more about Canada; on the sole merit that we are their biggest trading partner, and our proximity to Russia and our northern trade routes require them to have a better grasp of our geography, politics and economics.
@ericktwelve11
@ericktwelve11 Ай бұрын
Thats what i said to 3 Americans when i was driving trucks to the U.S in Viriginia, i like both countries, 🇨🇦 and 🇺🇸 are both different countries
@fiyamage
@fiyamage Ай бұрын
Canadian here and the only non polite people I've met in the US is the TSA workers. Everybody else were cool and friendly. From the Uber driver to the rando in the elevator.
@johnirvine9942
@johnirvine9942 Ай бұрын
I’d Canadians are also concerned with life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
@martinutr
@martinutr Ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I like that you started by mentioning the limits of what you are observing and by providing background details.
@dred1046
@dred1046 Ай бұрын
The opening picture and its stereotype always annoys me to no end. The furthest point south in Canada is point pelee in lake erie. There are 17 u.s. staters wholly north of that point , and an additional 18 partially north. California northern border is only 200 miles south. The ignorance is expected , yet mindblowing
@MarkLasbyCNC
@MarkLasbyCNC Ай бұрын
You missed the significant differences between the richest 1% and the middle class.
@kacwa124
@kacwa124 Ай бұрын
Toronto doesn't represent all of Canada?? Do they know this??
@beatrizmarcelin9261
@beatrizmarcelin9261 Ай бұрын
@@lanceb. bravo !
@beatrizmarcelin9261
@beatrizmarcelin9261 Ай бұрын
@@lanceb. agree
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
Toronto doesn't represent Canada at all, it's basically a cleaner, slightly safer American city, the least Canadian of all our cities.
@gillesarpin5091
@gillesarpin5091 Ай бұрын
The private money plays a toi large rôle in the us election. In canada campaigns are financed mainly by public money… so Closer to the citizen aspirations than in the us, otherwise you would already have health care. Insurance company money plays against citizens… Fair?
@jodyyonts
@jodyyonts Ай бұрын
US does NOT have a two party system. It’s a multiparty system that is dominated by two parties.
@malcolmkendall1547
@malcolmkendall1547 Ай бұрын
Difference 6, Polite vs nice, is definately true, especially in Canada west of the Rockies.
@jjmarcgagnon2386
@jjmarcgagnon2386 Ай бұрын
first of all America is a continent not a country. From Argentina to Canada (including Greenland and Caribbeans)..... And assuming you are talking about USA, the main difference between USA and Canada is that Canadians will never have voted or accepted a convicted criminal as a candidate or Prime Minister.
@ShelleWells-i2b
@ShelleWells-i2b 5 күн бұрын
But they (US) should know what’s happening in other countries, especially their neighbours! Not knowing is why a lot of Americans think we (Canadians) want to be Americans. Or would realize what they do has affects on other countries!
@philmarks4254
@philmarks4254 Ай бұрын
Lets take this section by section Ameer. Values; America was founded on a rebellion and saddled it’s citizens with a 2 party system, dictators, it turns out, rely on the same political systems. We also don't blindly support genocide that started in the 1930's under the UK and then a full blown assault on innocent people that took Jewish refugees in that fled European antisemitism and NAZI gas chambers. So expect this list to be frank and to the point. Scale; Everything is bigger in america, accept the percentage of people with health coverage and the percentage of people with bankrupting health care. On the other hand, politics in Canada is much bigger, 7 main parties and 13 other options as well. Likewise, our parties have to work together to get things done, and we can dump leadership if they mess up enough. America also has way more oligarchs than Canada does and a ton more bank bailouts and failures so, congratulations. Working: On top of having far better labour laws, we don’t have things like health insurance to pay for so americans have to work more to actually get less. Risk: In Canada, having followed parliamentary systems, we have far stronger regulations to protect the average tax payer from having to pony up as many bank bailouts. For reference, physical assets are more reliable than ventures are although they have a generally lower enrichment value. They also don’t go bankrupt and land goes up, every, year. Polarization: Politically, I’ve already covered parliamentary vs dictator, sorry, 2-party systems, work. In Canada, polarization is the conservative party vs every other party, that explains why in elections with less US interference 2015 and 2017 vs 2006, 2008 and 2011, where americans from both parties wanted a more tractable leader in Canada. Media: Oddly enough, a large portion of Canadian print media is US owned. Fortunately, to operate in Canada Post Media owned outlets have to follow the rules too. On the other hand Post media gets themselves into trouble all the time for being children, rather republican like in fact. For a laugh here’s a citation: www.nationalobserver.com/2015/11/24/news/tawdry-fall-postmedia-newspaper-empire Outside of that, our media gets to generalize and obfuscate for israel just like US media does. Politeness: Having met a lot of US visitors to Canada, americans are a tad rude I’m sorry to say. (I’m sorry because I routinely have to deal with asses from down south, in my city.) Americans are also cheap, which when it comes to tipping in Canada where a server’s wages are a fraction of how they actually support their family, americans are terribly ignorant there. I really hate to break the news to you Ameer. Happy holidays!
@gonelooney5698
@gonelooney5698 Күн бұрын
YES!!!
@ginocastro5107
@ginocastro5107 Ай бұрын
You are Canadian! I'm sure! And no... I don't agree with your statement that we are more alike than not alike. I think we are very different given all the topics you so well presented and why I subscribed!
@aptrando
@aptrando Ай бұрын
How can you not agree with we’re more alike than not alike? Compare the two countries to anywhere else in the world, and it’s obvious how much there is in common. That doesn’t mean that differences don’t exist.
@bonniebluebell5940
@bonniebluebell5940 Ай бұрын
Perhaps we are now a hybrid of both but leaned toward Britain years ago due to our Loyalist ties. Therefore, our way of life was more British. Now it is quite the opposite; more so since the 1970's. We are much more Americanized now due to the expansion of communications, transportation, and cross-border trade. Let us not forget that even though we have both evolved over time, we were born of the same Spirit --- Strong and Free. When you strip it all down to the core, we are brothers and sisters at heart.
@Nurse.Addison
@Nurse.Addison Ай бұрын
I think "United" was perhaps the wrong description, especially when each state acts like their own country. I am Canadian, and I don't want to be impolite, so I won't say what I think about the USA.
@JamieHumeCreative
@JamieHumeCreative Ай бұрын
The USA receives a flow of talent from Canada in several areas including research. The USA depends upon talent flow from outside their country, probably due to their social issues. When talent goes to the US, the pressure is to become an American. Many do so, but not everyone even though they may become permanent residents. It's a bit of a false flag on the Americans part. Right now a lot of Canadian media is owned by US media moguls. I don;t like watching American news frankly. It's a pain to listen to it. I prefer direct information with as little opinion imposed as possible. A commentary, should be a commentary, but news reporting, should be as objective as possible. " Invites you to form your own opinion" I agree. FOX is more of an entertainment channel, not a news channel.
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