That was the cheerful headline
that The Financial Post put on my May 17,
1980, column, written from Washington DC almost
(aargh!) 20 years ago. The Parti Quebecois'
first referendum was about to be held. And,
quite clearly, about to be lost.
A mere practical triviality of
that sort did not deter me, of course. My
argument, later developed in my book The
Patriot Game: "A nation has been
allowed to develop in Quebec, and it is utterly
unnatural for free nations to exist in the same
state." English Canada, I said, "is
being led into a battle where victory is itself
defeat." The result of trying to bribe,
bamboozle and bludgeon francophone separatism
into quiescence: "English Canada's energies
would be totally absorbed."
My conclusion: "If Quebec
can't be persuaded to secede from Canada, it
should be expelled." (Unthinkable? Well,
the Czechs have subsequently expelled the
Slovaks in just this manner. So there!)
Well? Well?
You always get overwhelmingly
favourable mail in English Canada, in my
experience, if you succeed in maneuvering this
heretical viewpoint into Establishment print.
But the reaction from the political class was
(and no doubt still is) very different.
Now it can be told: Michael
Pitfield -- today Senator Pitfield, but then
Clerk to the Privy Council and a key intimate of
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau -- actually wrote
to Donald Campbell, then chairman of MacLean
Hunter, which owned The Financial Post,
expressing distress that a responsible Canadian
company would allow me to say such a terrible
thing.
I presume poor Campbell, a
humble bean-counting chartered accountant, must
have seen "CRTC" in letters of fire
five feet high. (A.k.a. Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission -- Maclean Hunter was critically
dependent on cable TV licences, over which
Ottawa has unfortunate control.)
The stout professional
journalists who ran The Financial Post
responded somewhat differently. Neville
Nankivell, then the editor and still with us as
the National Post's Ottawa columnist,
thoughtfully omitted to send me a copy of the
Pitfield missive at all, thus depriving me of
any documentary evidence of my brush with
immortality. Overall, I wouldn't say I could
prove any positive damage to my career. On the
other hand, I never returned to work in Canada.
I wasn't really surprised at
Michael Pitfield's letter. The year before, I
had attended a conference put on by St. Lawrence
University, a leading center of Canadian Studies
in upstate New York, designed to help them spend
some grant money they had obtained in the usual
mysterious academic way. This was during the
brief Clark interregnum. Trudeau operatives were
blinking in the unaccustomed sunlight of the
private sector.
I spoke up to propose a special
program to study Quebec in its own right To my
amazement, Mr. Pitfield, there in some private
sector capacity that I no longer remember,
denounced the idea vehemently. It was
irresponsible in view of the upcoming
referendum, he said.
Of course, this was ridiculous.
We were there to advise an American university
on the scholarly pursuit of eternal truths, not
shill for Canada's federal Liberal Party and the
Trudeauvian state. Weren't we?
But I was shocked, and silent. I
suppose in those days I was just too immature to
defend myself. I see from The Financial Post
columnist photograph that I still had
astonishingly long sideburns. (Remember
sideburns -- ah, forget it.) Also cheekbones.
Mr. Pitfield, by the way, seems
to be a very nice man, at least so far as I
could judge from the post-conference drink
sessions. He wished me luck -- no doubt in a
field far removed from Canada.
This sort of repression about
Quebec has long been a striking feature of
English Canadian intellectual life. Back in
1982, the editors of the U.S.-based Atlantic
Council's authoritative survey, Canada and the
United States: Dependence and Divergence, felt
obliged to record the objection of some
(Canadian) members of their working group not
merely to the perfectly sensible conclusion of
their Quebec chapter, by the American academic
Albert O. Hero, but to any special chapter on
Quebec at all.
More recently, it explains why
the PQ's victory in January's Quebec provincial
election was discounted with exactly the same
wishful thinking as its 1994 victory -- although
everyone must know the PQ came within an ace of
winning the subsequent referendum.
Nations sometimes simply take
wrong turns. They can waste decades and even
centuries. Russia was modernizing rapidly before
the disaster of the Revolution. Egypt was within
hailing distance of some European countries
before Nasser diverted it into socialism and
pan-Arab adventurism.
English Canada had to redefine
itself when the British Empire abruptly imploded
after the Second World War. Unfortunately, the
answer its political class came up with -- what
Rene Levesque once accurately called "this
bilingual, bicultural monstrosity" -- was a
mistake.
I don't worry too much about
Canada, because I think the mistake will right
itself -- the Quebecois will see to that. What
does worry me, however, is the motive that
ultimately underlies the English Canadian
political class' mistake. It means they have to
be stopped before they kill again. And it's also
a problem right across the English-speaking
world.
What underlies the attempt to
coalesce with Quebec, it seems to me, is a
profound revulsion from any political identity
based on a specific ethnicity and culture -- in
short, the nation-state itself.
You can see this everywhere, in
a whole new range of "isms," quite a
few of them invented in Canada. Multiculturalism
(The University of Bradford, in the north of
England, has just announced it will no longer
play God Save The Queen at commencements because
Britain is now a "multicultural
society.")
Bilingualism (which actually
means foreign language retention -- in New York
it is now possible to receive a public education
entirely in Spanish). Diversity (President
Clinton's claim to have a Cabinet "looking
like America," which means remaking
American according to a new ethnic
proportionalism.)
Maybe this revulsion is a
misconceived reaction to two World Wars. Maybe
it's an extrapolation of the contemporary
pathological fear of "racism." But it
explains both Britain's attempt to sink its
historic identity in "Europe" -- with
the entirely predictable result that the Scots
are looking for a new identity -- and the U.S.
elite's extraordinary policy of transforming the
country through mass, non-traditional
immigration.
These, too, are epochal mistakes
-- because the traditional nation-state, like
the traditional family, is fundamental to
liberty and civilization. But, unlike Canada's
Quebec mistake, they have no imminent solution.
Peter Brimelow is a senior
editor of Forbes Magazine in New York, and the
author of Alien Nation: Common Sense about
America's Immigration Disaster.
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