Comment on Is there a word in English to describe someone who wants to preserve a (minority) culture against erosion from a majority culture?

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Kecessa@sh.itjust.works ⁨9⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

Supposedly?

French was in decline until the introduction of Bill 101 and it needed to be updated to reflect today’s reality and to patch some of the flaws in it.

Anglos can still receive services in their language as it’s something protected by the Constitution.

It’s it that far-fetched to communicate with immigrants in the official language of the place they decided to live in? No matter how long we would have given them, some people would have been mad that we didn’t just communicate with them in English forever needing they would feel like they don’t need to learn French to live in Quebec (like many Anglo-Quebecois feel).

As for Bill 21, Quebec had a hard split with religion in the 60s contrary to the rest of Canada and religion is treated like something that stays in the private sphere by French Quebecois. Considering our history with the church and how it might have protected our culture but it also oppressed us, it’s no wonder that we want a true separation of religion and State.

I’ll ask you something I never get a real answer to, should a judge be allowed to wear a political party logo on their robe? Because that’s currently forbidden at both the provincial and federal level and it’s also something protected by freedom of expression, just like religious expression.

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