this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2025
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New vulnerabilities are surfacing. While most polls suggest the vast majority of Canadian adults are resolute in resisting any such takeover, the younger generation (18-35) is much more inclined – given certain favourable terms – to join the United States. The younger you are, the more likely you are to be susceptible to Trump and his appeals.

One of the most unacknowledged reasons is the failure of our school systems to teach the current generation about historic Canadian resistance to U.S. threats, incursions and trade sanctions going back to the American Revolution.

The result that alarmed Colin MacEachern, a former Halifax high school history educator now teaching in Australia, was the susceptibility of today’s students and their teachers to Trump’s bluster and blandishments.

MacEachern wrote on social media that his students would likely have no comprehension of the U.S. doctrine of “Manifest Destiny” or the American threat to Canada that was a major factor in nudging us toward Confederation.

It’s also fair to assume they have little or no knowledge of critical events of U.S. pressure on Canada such as the American invasion of Quebec in 1775, the War of 1812, the 1911 election reciprocity debate, the nuclear warheads controversy of the 1960s or American pressure to join the Iraq War in 2003.

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[–] streetfestival@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'm not sure what word you're looking for but it probably isn't presupposition when the claim is backed by multiple polls. Care to expand?

While most polls suggest the vast majority of Canadian adults are resolute in resisting any such takeover, the younger generation (18-35) is much more inclined

[–] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I think the presupposition refers to young people not knowing the history of conflict with the US.

[–] streetfestival@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 day ago

My goodness that comment is getting a lot of airplay. Again, the article provides data.

The first Canadian History Report Card, published in June 2009 by the Dominion Institute, found that only four provinces – Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba and Nova Scotia – required all high school students to take a mandatory Canadian history course. Most provinces and territories simply offered courses in social studies.

Co-authors of the report, Mark Chalifoux and J.D.M. Stewart, delivered a stern message. “As a country, we are letting our students down when it comes to educate them about Canada’s past,” they wrote in 2009 in The Globe and Mail. “ That remains true today.

I'm in Ontario, graduated high school in 2007. And my compulsory grade 10 history class was probably the least serious class in my whole high school curriculum. We watched the original Saw movie. In class. Don't ask me what it has to do with history, because I don't know either