Pages

Monday, April 19, 2021

Desperate PQ Embraces Anti-English CEGEP Fantasy

Hypocritical PQ leader educated at McGill
With the PQ facing an existential crisis, it isn't surprising that desperation has dictated an attack on English CEGEPS, cast as the latest English bogeyman in another vain attempt to generate some sort of political traction.

The Parti Quebecois isn't in danger of disappearing, there will always be a core of militant separatists who although ageing, still endure, albeit in smaller and smaller numbers.
But the PQ actually faces a future that may be sadder than its actual demise, that is to remain what it has become... sad and irrelevant.

With sovereignty unachievable, the PQ has had to carve out another role for itself, and so now defines itself as the defender of Quebec's 'pur laine' society..
So we can expect the continued and constant harangue of 'Chicken Little' warnings of imminent linguistic and cultural doom.
It is tiresome and sad.

With zero chance of gaining power, the party has been freed up to embrace a more radical platform which includes a proposed referendum and more language militancy. The leadership, which has always tempered the hubris and excess of the militant base no longer has anything to lose.

And so the PQ leader, who opposed the idea of banning English CEGEP for francophones when he ran for the leadership has abruptly changed positions.
As they say, desperate times call for desperate measures.

"Plamondon started his academic studies at Collège André-Grasset, which he graduated from in 1997. He would later receive a bachelor's degree in civil and common law from McGill University in 2001, a diploma in International Law from Lund University in 2001, and an MBA from Oxford University in 2006." Wikipedia

By the way, Lund University is in Sweden and offers Law courses in Swedish and English. The website doesn't list a course in International law, but rather International Human Rights law, a course taught in English.
I don't begrudge Monsieur Plamondon an English education, I actually applaud it. An English education opened up the world to him, as too it would for francophone CEGEP students.
It's a bit sad that he's now defending an anti-English education platform for political expediency because he always seemed to be a realistic straight-shooter. It's sad how politics and the pressure of leadership in a dogmatic party bring out the worst.
Just ask Thomas Mulcair whose leadership was brought down for his lack of enthusiasm for moronic radical policies.

I'm reminded of the 1950's musical gem "The Music Man" where a flimflam artist tells the townsfolk that a pool hall is threatening their community and that the only cure is to set up a marching band with him conveniently selling them the instruments.

"Friend, either you're closing your eyes
To a situation you do not wish to acknowledge
Or you are not aware of the caliber of disaster indicated
By the presence of a pool table English CEGEP in your community
Well, Ya got trouble, my friend, right here
I say, trouble right here in River City Quebec"

The threat of English CEGEP  is as simplistic and just as stupid.
When I first watched the movie I wondered out loud how the townsfolk could be so gullibly stupid.
Now I know.

Motive aside, let us examine the so-called threat that English language CEGEP poses to Quebec's francophone majority because after all, every policy should address a specific issue or problem or a semblance thereof.
Saying that francophones and Allophones attending English CEGEP is a threat to French Quebec may be easy to do, but not so easy to prove because frankly it is, just more separatist smoke and mirrors, a fantasy woven to fire up the moribund apathetic Francophone electorate.
You got trouble....

I usually try to make a researched and thoughtful (in my opinion) rebuttal of the issue I address but in this case, I will not attempt to disprove this nonsense. It is like arguing against the idea of a flat Earth.

Suffice to say that there isn't a study or reference or published fact that would support the idea that English CEGEP is a threat. Everybody who has led any political party knows this truth, including the current PQ leadership.

The only point I wish to make is to address the fantasy that those who go to English CEGEP are somehow magically transformed into anglophones.
Francophones schooled in French and who were brought up in a French home remain Francophones even if they attend English CEGEP.(just like the PQ leader.)
Allophones who absorb themselves into the English community have made that choice long before CEGEP. Most who do have been brought up in an English milieu at home, despite being schooled in French
I have heard the racist argument that Francophones who go to English CEGEP are in danger of marrying or partnering with a dreaded Anglophone and are lost to the francophone nation.
The only fact in this article that I do cite is that in the case of an Anglophone/Francophone union, two-thirds of the children are sent to French primary schools.

Most francophone parents are alright with their children being forced into French primary and high schools.
But for parents of highly gifted and motivated children who want to round out their education and life prospects by attending English CEGEP and university, denying them the opportunity is akin to telling them that they are second-class citizens.
It is political dynamite that no party which actually aspires to power would embrace.

And finally, until the PQ provides some facts and figures to support their anglicization fantasy we should not engage them in useless and silly debate.
The mainstream media, both English and French fail miserably to call out the PQ on this nonsense.

It isn't incumbent on those who believe that the Earth is a sphere to disprove that the Earth is flat, it is the other way around.

4 comments:

  1. To continue the Music Man:

    Trouble, oh we got trouble
    Right here in Q City!
    With a capital "P"
    That rhymes with "C"
    And that stands for Crazy...


    I consider this PSPP guy even worse than Lévesque's first cabinet with the likes of graduates from MIT (Yves Bérubé), Cambridge U (UK - Jacques-Yvan Morin), Boston College (the rabid, vitriolic gas-bag who authored Bill 101), The London School of Economics (Jacques "Money and the ethnic vote" Parasite), Columbia U (Claude Morin), Denis Lazure (U. of Philadelphia) etc. etc. etc.

    He was born right after the PQ was elected and came long after the Quiet Revolution started and finished. I'm sure most of his history education in Quebec was très biased, vindictive vitriol against everything heenglish, so while I'm sure he's "well-read", his readings were too much on the wrong side of history.

    That being said, and considering HE attended at least two world-renowned educational institutes of higher learning (I didn't know of this Lund University. Most Swedes I've met are well-educated and well-rounded people, so that alone convinces me it's probably a fine institution). Whatever. Here you have a young man with sparkling credentials who got his education in fine English language institutions and then HE hypocritically turns around with a political objective of depriving Francophones from attending English CEGEPs. Like Mr. Berlach, I too applaud his past education and endeavors, yet he doesn't endorse those following him the same opportunities he has gotten.

    Thankfully, I have met post-PQ youngsters who see to still have an enriched interest in seeing American movies in the language they were made (Francophones in my youth, when the PQ was strong, still said they preferred English as translation creates deficiencies that may lessen the quality of the film), and English concerts still fill up with French fans.

    Anyone and everyone, I'm sure, who reads this blog knows French is in no danger of dissipating despite all the scare tactics racists promote to keep the fires of hatred burning.

    I'm sure Mr. PSPP's education, experience and intelligence can be put to much better use, but let him have his kick at the can if he has political aspirations, maybe in better places somewhere down the road. Good luck with it!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Philip writes:

      "Most francophone parents are alright with their children being forced into French primary and high schools."

      Not sure where Philip gets this. The two times I've seen public opinion polls asking francophone parents if they want freedom of choice in language of education for themselves, they have answered "yes" in the majority.

      Delete
  2. Why not include the English universities in the revamped Law 101? When, in a few years, the PQ (CAQ, QC-LIBs, and others) discover Law 101 isn't working they will ask for this anyway. Does anybody else see the emerging pattern here?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Marc: [Place a yawn here followed by a snort of derision.]

      English translation: Who cares? Separatist fanatics in Quebec are part of life...always have been, always will be. The eyewitnesses of the Quiet Revolution are the long-gone or the near-dead. Now let me get back to sleep...in peace here in Ontario!

      Delete