Martine Ouellet - Trudeau insults Quebec

DirtyDaveII

Banned
Oct 20, 2010
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http://montrealgazette.com/news/quebec/pq-candidate-martine-ouellet-trudeaus-canada-day-video-insulted-quebecers - shown here mimicking how she would give a blowjob if she wasnt a Nazi dyke - Fascist French Feminist Fuckstick Martine Ouellet says Trudeau was out of line when he said "one nation, one country one Canada", and claimed it was an insult to the unknown nation of Quebec. Apparently she does not know anything about what comprises a nation or even anything about politics at all, which makes her a perfect candidate for the leadership of the Parti Quebecois - the same party that collectively shit its pants when they almost won the referenDUM back in the 90s because they had no plan for what to do if they actually succeeded. I think she would make a great Vice President for Trump if she wasnt french. Can someone post a link to this on her Freakbook page?
 

harryass

Well-known member
Oct 27, 2010
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You can get a lot of mileage out of being butthurt in the political theatre. She's just playing the game.
another mindless politician trying again to make a name for herself over nothing.
 

johnhenrygalt

Active member
Jan 7, 2002
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Actually she's right. There are two founding nations of Canada : British and French ( you can probably add aboriginals as a third one) , The cover of my Canadian passport shows two flags: the British flag and the old royal french flag which represent two founding nations of Canada. So he should have said "two nations, one country one Canada" because Canada is a binational country
Exactly, but unfortunately too many uneducated and under-educated numbskulls don't understand the difference between the concepts of "nation" and "sovereign state".
 

bassetto87

New member
Mar 29, 2014
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The previous Harper government recognized Quebec as a nation within a united Canada. So technically it should be "two nations, one country, one Canada".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Québécois_nation_motion

IMO anyone who has spent any time in Quebec would know that it is culturally so different from English Canada that there can hardly be a stronger case for recognizing it as a nation. Spend a week in Montreal then spend a week in Boston; most likely you will find that Boston feels less foreign to you, even though it's in Boston that you're on foreign soil.
 
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