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- Xref: sparky can.general:3434 can.politics:5407
- Newsgroups: can.general,can.politics
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!marky
- From: marky@engin.umich.edu (Mark Anthony Young)
- Subject: Dominions (was Re: Political power of provinces)
- Message-ID: <S5S-a__@engin.umich.edu>
- Date: Sat, 25 Jul 92 12:45:43 EDT
- Organization: University of Michigan Engineering, Ann Arbor
- References: <12341@audetf> <1992Jul23.031511.7088@csi.uottawa.ca> <12370@audetf>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mtrans.engin.umich.edu
- Lines: 35
-
- audetf@Software.Mitel.COM (Francois Audet) writes:
- >In article (Christopher Browne) writes:
- >>Until that time, no province is a state. Not even Quebec, which is,
- >>even still, a part of the Dominion of Canada, a state that is, by
- >>federal policy, officially bilingual.
- >
- >Sorry to disappoint you, but Canada is not a Dominium (i.e., a vassal
- >state of the British Empire) anymore.
- >
- It's not really so hard to understand, Francois:
-
- Mr. Baker is a jeweller;
- M. LeJeune is quite old;
- The Dominion of Canada is an independent state.
-
- The term "dominion" is like the term "aspirin". It was originally a
- brand name, and then became a generic name. The confederation was
- (and _is_) named "the Dominion of Canada." Since Canada was the first
- such "vassal state of the British Empire", it gave its name to the
- class. Canada has since evolved out of that (form of) relationship,
- but the name remains. People still use the full name for effect
- (just as people say "the United States of America" instead of "the
- US" or "America"---for effect). Nothing more is meant by it.
-
- If the name really offends you so much, you should write your MP to
- ask that it be changed. But beware! Once this gets started, there
- may be no way to stop the royalists who think that the country
- should have been called "the Kingdom of Canada" from the start :-).
-
- ...mark young
-
- PS: The use of the term "dominion" in its political sense is largely
- restricted to political scientists. Since there aren't any
- (British) dominions anymore (are there?), there's no need for
- people to know the term anymore.
-