Nutz
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- Feb 27, 2014
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Given the fact that there is this Ted Cruz love affair among the low-information pseudo-conservatives...I thought I would begin to educate you guys on the facts about canada and canadians.
Did you know that canadians, throughout history, have been teaching their children to hate America and Americans. Given the fact that Cruz was born in canada and still has not renounced his canadian citizenship...perhaps you should wonder how much anti-American drivel has been instilled in his thought process.
Anti-Americanism spoonfed to Canadian grade school kids
by Judi McLeod
They even go as far as to teach Michael Moore's, Fahrenheit 9/11 as fact:
And, apparently canadian propaganda is working:
NEVER TRUST canada and canadians.
This has been a public service announcement to prevent conservatives from backing a canadian idiot for President of the United States.
Did you know that canadians, throughout history, have been teaching their children to hate America and Americans. Given the fact that Cruz was born in canada and still has not renounced his canadian citizenship...perhaps you should wonder how much anti-American drivel has been instilled in his thought process.
Anti-Americanism spoonfed to Canadian grade school kids
by Judi McLeod
More at link...`
Its not just overreaction or Yankee imagination. Anti-Americanism is not only alive and well, its spoon fed in Canada.
And it stems from a taxpayer paid source: the classroom.
The Three `Rs, Canada style, have been teaching school children as young as grade school an image of Americans as dishonourable, churlish and even bullying. This less than admirable image emerges in a study, presented this week to the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences, hosted by the University of Manitoba.
Amy von Heyking is a professor of education at the University of Alberta. A specialist in the history of curricula and teaching materials, von Heyking relied on actual Canadian classroom textbooks--75 of them--used in Canadian history, geography, civics and social studies courses in elementary and secondary schools.
Ironic that the release of the study coincides with the 60th Anniversary of D-Day.
The Canadian grade school set get their anti-Americanism during the school day.
Down through the decades, in Canadian textbooks American society has been portrayed as revolutionary and lawless. Americas contribution to World War 1 is dismissed, textbook form, as coming late, when the tide had already turned.
They even go as far as to teach Michael Moore's, Fahrenheit 9/11 as fact:
more...It has just come to my attention that the Bush-bashing 2004 documentary film Fahrenheit 9/11, written and directed by leftist American filmmaker and political commentator Michael Moore, has been added to my daughters high school curriculum in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Surprisingly, no other viewpoints were presented to counterbalance this extremely anti-American, biased film in which Moore airs all of his disapproval of American society. By showing only one side, the school has actually endorsed Moores film and all it represents.
Moores Fahrenheit 9/11 accuses Bush of orchestrating 9/11, claiming it was an inside job. No blame is placed on al-Qaeda or any other Islamic terrorist group, which suggests that the United States is as morally corrupt as al-Qaeda, the Taliban or any other jihadist terrorist organization. The students of Current Politics walked away from this film with a very one-sided biased viewpoint: hating America. And this view is further reinforced by a socialist agenda that is being pushed in class by the same teacher who, like multi-millionaire Moore, is against at the capitalist nature of American society.
And, apparently canadian propaganda is working:
more...The 'evil empire' is next door, youth say
Evil is a word usually reserved for serial killers, Austin Powers villains, and kids who tear the legs off baby spiders. But, a new poll shows a significant number of young Canadians would use "evil" to describe their U.S. neighbours.
By The Ottawa Citizen June 27, 2004
Evil is a word usually reserved for serial killers, Austin Powers villains, and kids who tear the legs off baby spiders.
But, a new poll shows a significant number of young Canadians would use "evil" to describe their U.S. neighbours.
In a telephone poll of 500 teens aged 14 to 18, more than 40 per cent of respondents saw the U.S. as an evil global force. Among French-Canadians, that number jumped to 64 per cent.
Ontario proved the most conflicted on the issue; there, nearly one-fifth of youth were on the fence.
"Teens have taken (Ronald) Reagan's concept of the Soviet Union as an evil empire and turned it back on the U.S.," says Rudyard Griffiths, director of the Dominion Institute.
"Clearly, the anti-American sentiment isn't just something coming from 30-somethings or even 20-somethings."
Avnish Nanda, a 15-year-old from Edmonton, says he sees the American government as neither totally good nor totally bad.
"When George (W.) Bush came into power, he was a real force of evil, getting into a war people say was about oil," Avnish says. "But all over the world, America gives aid to countries whether they deserve it or not, and that's really good for people."
NEVER TRUST canada and canadians.
This has been a public service announcement to prevent conservatives from backing a canadian idiot for President of the United States.