Originally posted by Dan Stack
US will probably get bigger too - if Quebec ever breaks away from Canada, conventional wisdom has those Provinces east of it joining the US. If the ties are meant to be, they will be.[/B]
Quite some time ago, IIRC during the push for the first Quebec referendum, an American economist and political scientist studied the Quebec situation. Their theories were:
1) Quebec would be the first of the Canadian provinces to join the US. I don't recall all the reasons that they gave but it was interesting when the CBC reporter asked about Quebec's language laws. They said that although the US does not have an official language Quebec would be subly forced into accepting English. The other thing of note was the time frame. In their opinion Quebec would petition joining the US in 5 - 15 years from separating from Canada.
2) Atlantic Canada would risk becoming a third world country on their own as the US would not want a welfare state. I remember a lot of anger over this statement.
3) Western Canada would be the last to join the US. At the time they assumed that Western Canada would have sufficient natural resources to be the most financially stable of the new nations.
I don't remember what they said about Ontario. I don't think they included Ontario with Western Canada.
This was the same year that The Canadian Civil War wargame came out. I think it was in the early 80s.
"The darkest places in hell are reserved for those
who maintain their neutrality in times of moral crisis."
Dante Alighieri
"A day without sunshine is like, you know, night."
Sandra
"Michael Moore is reminiscent of a heavy-handed Leni Riefenstahl, who glorified Nazism in the 1930s." Peter Worthington, Toronto Sun.