Rant of the Day – October 29, 2009

29 10 2009

My rant of the day is about Quebec and I don’t know where to start. I never understood the language laws in Quebec and I still don’t. I understand that the Quebec french speaking population wanted to preserve their language and their culture but I don’t understand (and never understood) why the rest of the country was forced to be bilingual. I’m not a french hater or anything of the sort but Canada is huge and the majority of the people who live in the province of British Columbia are never going to be as far east as Quebec so what’s the point of forced bilingualism.

The second part of this rant hits more home to me. All throughout my thirty-odd years I’ve hear about countless incidents when some Quebecers wanted French spoken only. Now in Quebec they law requires that signs be in French.  The clothing store Old Navy for instance was asked to change their name to  ’La Vieille Rivière’. I don’t know if Old Navy dropped their English name for the French, or what ended up happening. Their are other instances of a woman who threatened to call the language police on the owner of a petstore  because the parrot she bought spoke English only.  One last example of and Quebec-Indian restaraunt owner being warned by authorities that coasters at his bar were breaking the law because they advertised a British beer.

Quebec sounds like it is being run under a language and cultural dictatorship. Now not all Quebecers feel this way, it seems to be an even split. Half of their province’s population want to separate from Canada and half want to remain. I understand their need for preservation of culture but why is the rest of Canada not allowed to ever do the same as Quebec. Heaven forbid if a new immigrant came to Ontario and chose to go to a French streamed school and not be allowed to.  Preserve your language and your culture but don’t squash the English and their rights as a Canadian in Canada a predominantly English speaking country. I think Engllish Canada would have alot more sympathy to the French-Canadian language dilemma  if the  double-standards weren’t a part of the equation.

Thanks to www.cbc.ca for some of the stories used in this post.





An Honest Look at Canadian Healthcare from a Canadian

29 10 2009

I know it’s a controversial issue and being debated in the US presently but what is the real deal with Canadian healthcare. I will explain. I should preface this with the fact that I don’t have any political motivation in writing this either for or against. Just the facts as I see them.

I live in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). In the GTA there is a massive doctor shortage, there just aren’t enough to go around. So many of us go to clinics. Clinics have a receptionist who takes your healthcare and then quizzes you of your reason to be there. After that you are to take a seat with the promise that a doctor will see you soon.  If the clinic is not busy (non-flu/cold season) the wait could be an hour.  Now the waits are about 2-3 due to the current H1N1 flu going around. 

A  Hospital Emergency Room wait can take a very long time. Life and death emergencies are dealt with promptly but any non-life threatening situation can vary from 1-10 hours. My daughter fell last summer and bashed in her top four teeth and her dentist was closed. Fearing damage to her mouth, I took her to the ER. That wait was 6 hours and then the ER doctor-on-call told us that their was nothing he could do and she should see a dentist. I don’t know why the nurse at the front desk couldn’t tell me that but that’s for the Rant of the Day.

Another thing about Canadian hospital is, they aren’t as elegant as the American hospitals are. Our hospital rooms are the bare bones, nothing but essentials and a little third world looking. In comparison, American hospital rooms look like a luxury hotel.

If you ever need a test like a MRI for instance, depending on the severity of your ailment. You are going to wait from days until months to get an MRI. It is not unheard of that Canadians living near the US border will pay for their own MRI in the US.  Buffalo MRI gets alot of Canadian business. 

We have a service in Ontario called ‘Telehealth Ontario’. What this does is to be an information service to Ontario Health Card holders in case they have a health related question. Usually Telehealth nurses tell you they don’t know what to do and you should go to a doctor. Telehealth Ontario wait time to talk to a nurse on the telephone during the H1N1 flu has been reported as being as long as 11 hours and I am not kidding.

Waiting lists for doctors, extremely long wait times for everything, ugly hospitals then what is good about Canadian health care you ask?

It’s free for the most part. If I brake my arm, I don’t need to worrying about paying any insurance company. There are things that aren’t covered by our government but if you or your family had a health problem, the doctor, emergency visit and most tests will be paid for by the government.

It is definately two-tiered meaning it’s geared for people who are not wealthy but in the end I would rather have it where I didn’t need to mortgage my home to have to pay for an emergency hospital stay and the government foot the bill instead.