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Subject: On the Anglosphere and Union (corrected)


Author:
Steph (U.S.)
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Date Posted: 00:57:06 01/25/05 Tue
In reply to: Steph (U.S.) 's message, "On the Anglosphere and Union" on 00:00:49 01/25/05 Tue

One of the most controversial questions on this board is the issue of the United States in the proposed union. As all of you who have been reading the board for some time must know, I am enthusiastic about the proposed federation of the Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. I believe that this would be in the interest of the United States and of the crown commonwealth countries.
However, I hope for considerably more than this. At the least, I hope for the United States to be included in the Commonwealth of Nations. My favorite case would be a federation with the U.S. in it.
In this post I want to address a number of concerns, some quite understandable, that have been expressed on this board and give my ideas about Federation or Confederation.
I certainly understand that there is concern that the U.S. would overwhelm the rest of the CANZUK countries because of its shear size. However I think it is important to realize that the U.S. is by no means as culturally unified as this concern would require to be fully valid. There are at least four different English origin cultures in the U.S. In addition there is a definite Spanish speaking one and an African origin culture. In a federation or confederation these will mix with the Canadian, Scots, Welsh, Irish, English, Australian, New Zealand, and etc. cultures. The cultures will remain distinct while gaining some things from one another. While there are likely to be common features, it is by no means certain that they will come from the U.S. cultures.
The question of anti-Americanism I am not sure how to address. If we are hated-blamed because we are powerful or because we are powerful and the world isn’t perfect, then there isn’t much to be done about it. I frankly think that a lot of it is resentment that socialism doesn’t work very well, but I grant that is a biased opinion.
On the question of how closer relations should be put in place, I see a number of different methods.
First, a federal Union like the one being proposed here with the States of the Union as member states of the Federation. Such a federation would of course have Her Majesty as Head of State.
The exact number of the member states of the Federation would depend on a number of factors. The UK could be four states (England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland) or it could be more. (Even Cornwall could be a member state) The question of the Bailiwicks of Guernsey and Jersey along with the Isle of Mann would have to be dealt with. Canada and Australia both have territories that, while they are part of their Federal government, have a lesser status (or so I understand) than the states and provinces. The U.S. has Porto Rico and some other territories and dependencies. This is no doubt not a full list the questions about the number of member states, but it gives an idea
Another question under this scenario is what should happen to the existing Federal or Union governments. Should the Commonwealth of Australia, the Confederation of Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States cease to exist, or would they be kept on for some of their current purposes. This also brings up the question of what powers should be delegated to the federal government.
The second possibility is a federation of the existing national governments. A federal government with Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States as the member states. This would have the advantage of least disturbing the current governmental systems, but the federation would probably not be as tight as fewer powers would likely be delegated to the federal government.
The third possibility is a two stage federation. The first stage would be a CANZUK federation of the Crown commonwealth. The second stage would be a confederation of CANZUK, India, and the United States. This would also allow for an English Speaking African Federation lead by South Africa to become a fourth member of the Federation. The Confederation would likely be very lose, basically a permanent defense alliance, free trade agreement, common currency, a court for setting common law precedent, and some joint citizenship arrangement.
The fourth option is a CANZUK federation with the U.S. as a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. This is self explanatory.
There are many other questions to be answered. If the First or Second options are followed what is the status of the Republic of Ireland, India, Jamaica, and South Africa? This just a start, but I wanted to post my thoughts so far.
Cheers
Steph

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Replies:
[> [> Subject: sorry steph...


Author:
Andrew(Canada)
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Date Posted: 19:23:31 01/26/05 Wed

im sorry steph, but i think you are a minority among your countrymen. i lived in the US for a few years, and i have to say my time spent there wasn't very pleasant. i think the US has become very self-centred and has little concern for the affairs of others. as well, i cant see a country that fought so hard to become a republic going back to a constitutional monarchy. as well, i had the unfortunate experience of seeing first hand the brash american pride that believes they do everything right and everyone else owes them a living. i feel, whether you believe so or not, that the US parts of the anglosphere would seek to dominate it. the US has become too used to running its own show for them to turn back now. and im not saying that americans are inherently bad people, because many are not, but i feel the US government and media has greatly crippled their understanding of the outside world. also, i feel the US gave up any chance of becoming part of our Commonwealth when they rebelled against our King in the 1770s. I feel the Federal Commonwealth is one thing that the US should be left out of. we are too different, and i feel that US membership would create resentment towards the FC that wouldn't necessarily occur if the US weren't part of it. maybe im strange, but I dont really want the FC to become a gigantic superpower. a smaller, more-friendly 'superpower' would suit me fine.

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[> [> [> Subject: Well...


Author:
Ed Harris (London)
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Date Posted: 23:35:03 01/26/05 Wed

I disagree. New Zealanders and Australians can still integrate pretty well into British society, but Canadians and South Africans seem very alien to us now: but no more than Americans. Given that Canadians in Britain are often mistaken for Americans, any attempt to play on the 'otherness' of Americans will also affect Canadians. Most Brits think that Canadians are Yanks who speak slowly. I'm not saying that it is right, just that it is so.

Moreover, the 13 colonies did not rebel against the King in the 1770s, just parliament. That's why the Declaration had to have to many references to the evil of George III., because they had to convince a sceptical public that total separation was justified, rather than merely political independence, such as was enjoyed in Rhode Island, Massachussets etc.

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[> [> [> [> Subject: just because its that way...


Author:
Andrew(Canada)
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Date Posted: 23:50:21 01/26/05 Wed

well, just because Britain sees Canada and the US as one and the same doesn't mean its so. many Canadians here are originally from Britain, with a few Aussies and Kiwis mixed in. my family hails from Cambridge, Manchester, and Durban, South Africa. i am only a second generation Canadian. as well, going on how someone speaks is a pretty poor measure of what they are like. Canadians may speak more like Americans, but they think along the same lines as other Commonwealth citizens. many people in the US, however, do not think the same way that we do. Canada and the Commonwealth have similar cultures, and we definitely see ourselves more like Britain than the US. i blame poor schooling/the media(on both sides) for portraying Canadians in the manner you speak of. we are really very much the same. my main point was that based on culture, society, and government, not what your accent sounds like, is why we are similar to each other and the US is not. i realise Ed you probably dont think this way, im just trying to explain my stance on the issue. i think its so hilarious sometimes how four countries who are inherently very similar and from a common history treat each other like they are complete strangers. political correctness gone mad if you ask me.

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Oh, I agree...


Author:
Ed Harris (London)
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Date Posted: 00:19:42 01/27/05 Thu

I am the first to leap up and shout at people on the telly who say that Michael J Fox or Dan Ackroyd, for example, are American. I am also keen to point out to Brits that Chris Plummer or Mike Myers, whom they assume are just British, are in fact Canadian, as this reinforces the impression that we're not that different.

On the other hand, to continue with the idea of celebrities as examples, the most Canadian-sounding actor whom we know is John Lithgow, who is in fact from New York or somewhere equally ghastly. I think that he sounds more like Lloyd Grossman than Paul Martin, but so long as the majority are unable to get it right, you're going to have problems convincing the British public (although not me!) that Canadians are more like us than they are like Americans. As you say, one's accent is not a reliable indicator of character, but as a superficial way of judging people it is pretty much the easiest and most convincing.

Can you tell the difference between the accents of a Frenchman and a Luxembourger? Or a German and an Austrian? I can because I speak French and German, but most people - in Canada too - can not. Similarly, while the inability to distinguish Canadians from Americans may not be excusable, it is certainly understandable.

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[> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: true...


Author:
Andrew(Canada)
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Date Posted: 00:24:45 01/27/05 Thu

i agree with your statements, and I hope before the FC is started there is a programme to educate citizens of each country and disspell silly stereotypes. if they stereotypes are removed, I feel people in all four countries would be more receptive to the idea.

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Agreed


Author:
Brent Cameron
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Date Posted: 01:39:11 01/28/05 Fri

Ed:

Could not agree more. And that makes the whole situation all the more lamentable.

Not to cast dispersions on any other Commonwealth nation, but we may be the only ones outside the Mother Country who actually had to fight a war to remain "British." Moreover, we should not really forget who wanted to end our status.

Yes, Aussie, I am not forgetting your account of WWII, but to compare your experience to ours in 1812, the Imperial Japanese forces would have had to occupied the State of Victoria AND burned the City of Sydney to the ground.

Ontario was occupied, and Toronto was put to the torch.



To those who want to understand why Canucks have some conflicted feelings about the US, please research the accounts of the United Empire Loyalists and the experiences of Canadians during the War of 1812. Then think about Dubya's vow to bring democracy to the Big Blue Marble, and the fact that the thing that separates us from the likes of him is not an ocean, but an imaginary line...

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[> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Good grief!


Author:
Ed Harris (London)
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Date Posted: 02:20:27 01/28/05 Fri

Two people who agree with me! I must write this down in my diary as a unique event... or perhaps emigrate to Canada, since the best I've managed in Blighty is one person.

In one respect, though, you're wrong. There's another people out there in the world who fought a war to remain British: the British South Africans. Indeed, we fought a couple of wars, although admittedly the first one was a farce which lasted for a few minutes at Majuba Hill, and as such was a skirmish rather than a war. We call it the First Boer War, they call it the First War of Independence: in reality, it was a rather pointless battle.

There is another similarity between British South Africans and Canadians: we are both the only former colonies with a significant non-British community - in the case of South Africa, the Brits were and are a minority community. In Canada, you are a majority but by a small margin. This has always served to reinforce our Britishness, because - perhaps regrettably - people tend to define themselves by what they are not. We are not Boers, you are not French. (I here include 'African' South Africans on the British side of the ledger, since they supported us against the Boers, for the same reasons for which Turkeys do not vote for Christmas.)

In this context, though, there is an important difference: in the end, we lost in South Africa owing purely to demographics: there were more Boers, and they just bided their time until Britain's weakness gave them their opporunity to establish the barmy, fundamentalist Christian, racist state which we had fought a war to prevent. In Canada, you are strong enough to stand up for yourselves against the occasionally deranged Quebecoix without military assistance from Britain (and if anyone contends my definition of the Quebecoix as deranged, then I refer you to their language laws).

It is for this reason, in my opinion, for which British Canadians and British South Africans are the most loyal of all the descendents of British colonists: unlike the Australians and New Zealanders - indeed, unlike in Britain itself - there has always been a hostile internal bloc which serves to remind us where we came from and who we are.

South Africa, though, as I have stated, is now a dead loss: we must pray that Canada does not go the same way through fear of offending its minority community.

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[> [> [> [> [> [> [> Subject: Point taken, Ed


Author:
Brent (Canada)
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Date Posted: 13:44:37 01/28/05 Fri


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