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by UseStrict
3237 days ago
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Someone hasn't had their coffee yet. We do have top-tier universities (UBC, University of Toronto, UWaterloo), who have produced outstanding research and individuals who went on to do great work abroad and developing here at home. We're home to top-tier companies like Shopify. Plus our education is much more consistent across the board, not as pay-to-win like America. And how is 150 years of forming the Dominion of Canada not something to celebrate? "150 years ago, Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia – united to create the Canadian Confederation, called the Dominion of Canada. On account of the British North America Act that became law July 1st 1867, these British colonies would be recognized as an independent nation." http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/france/150Canada150.asp... |
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I agree. I didn't deny that. Now compare how many top universities we have in the US? If the US has hundreds of top universities and Canada has a handful, how does that make canada an education superpower? If canada is an education superpower, then is north korea a nuclear superpower? Isn't the word superpower supposed to mean something?
> We're home to top-tier companies like Shopify.
Shopify is top-tier? It has revenues of $151 million/year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shopify
>On account of the British North America Act that became law July 1st 1867, these British colonies would be recognized as an independent nation."
But they weren't an independent nation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Act_1982
Canada became "independent" in 1983. Canada celebrated its first Canada Day in 1983.
To claim canada is 150 years old is a verifiable lie.
Listen, canada is a wonderful nation. I have nothing against canada. My complaint is about the article. Its assertions don't make any sense.