Quote:
Originally Posted by big T
I think Molson’s "we built this place too" referring to the historic Anglo community is also missing the point to an extent. The concern around language nowadays is largely about fairly recent (as in 1-2 generations) and current immigrants. Like, Vietnamese kids raised here who end up identifying as anglophone even though they’re near perfectly bilingual, and increasingly people using bogus study programs to end up in low wage customer service jobs (making the issue all the more visible and touchy). Even though I think those are usually overblown, they undeniably exist and need to be addressed.
I suppose you could argue that these more recent arrivals are in fact the contemporary torch bearers of a continuing anglophone presence, but that, I think, is unrealistic. Language territoriality is a thing most everywhere for a reason, and the fact is here and now, it’s French. That is the culture immigrants should expect to join within the borders of this polity.
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The anglophone community has already considerably transitioned away from its British roots, as evidenced for example by the people who run Montreal's English school board:
https://www.emsb.qc.ca/emsb/about/governance/commissioners
I don't think there is a true British Isles surname amongst all of the commissioners there. It's very predominantly Italian and Ashkenazi Jewish.
It's ironic that in Quebec the true descendants of the original anglo community are probably divided in three, with one third still in the province and still part of the anglophone community, one third living outside Quebec (mostly in the ROC with some in the US) and one third seamlessly assimilated into the francophone majority.
Yet the community continues to grow demographically due to the assimilation of newcomers of all origins to the anglophone sphere, and tomorrow's torchbearers for "historic English" in Montreal will be that Vietnamese kid you mention, plus Palestinians, Brazilians, Romanians, etc.
It's as if a Polish dude moved to Winnipeg, noted that there is lots of Franco-Manitoban history in the province and in parts of the city like Saint-Boniface, learned French instead of English and started getting all aggressive about French and calling anglophone Winnipeggers racists and shitheads. Now multiply that by a couple hundred thousand.