Quote:
Originally Posted by kool maudit
the american thing just doesn't seem like something that is part of the torontonian self-ideal. i don't find the city's demeanour or character to be very american, even as its physical environment, to some degree, is. america and americans are louder and warmer. toronto is commonwealth high-capitalist, an example of convergent evolution.
other canadian cities feel more american to me, or at least like they could be more plausibly stitched into the american nation. halifax, oddly enough, is one.
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Well, Toronto doesn't really feel like a city in the United States because it is not in the United States. But to me at least (and to many other people I would guess) it does feel like a Canadian city that kinda... sorta... a teensy bit... tries to be like an American city - without actually going all the way over the edge.
Just visiting and talking to people from across the country, Torontonians (and people in Southern Ontario) seem to be the Canadians who have the biggest "we Canadians built a better America" schtick going on, and from this flows the mentality that in Canada you can have all the "good stuff" about the U.S. (NFL, Chuck E. Cheese's Pizza Time Theatre, peanut butter, etc.) without all of the bad stuff (ghettos, slavery, rednecks, Tea Partiers, military boondoggles, crime, etc.).