Talk:Quebec/Archive 6

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Archive 1Archive 4Archive 5Archive 6Archive 7Archive 8Archive 9

Unprotecting

The page has been protected for over a month now, so I'm going to unprotect it as a test. Any signs of the edit war flaring up again though and the page will be re-protected. So try to behave yourselves and don't edit war. -Royalguard11(T·R!) 23:26, 1 October 2007 (UTC)

Consensus among the Academics of Quebec with "Quebec is a nation"

I proved that there is a consensus with Charles Taylor, Bouchard, Pelletier, Paquin. Who could show , demonstrate, proove that there is no consensus in Quebec with the statement that "Quebec is a nation"? Now, please put "Quebec" instead of "Quebecois", or I'll just write it down myself. Pgsylv 00:03, 2 October 2007 (UTC)

There is no requirement that the consensus must be in Quebec. I'm certain that Canadian...even American authors are entitled to as much validity as Quebecer authors. A discussion on Quebec doesn't require a person to be Quebecois. I'm not, but I'm interested. Andrew647 02:22, 2 October 2007 (UTC)
If there is a concensus among Academics in Quebec, it means the nation of Quebec exists, respecting the "axiom" of self-recognition. Nobody else then Quebeckers can recognize theirselves as a nation. For exemple, if the American Academics declare that Quebeckers saying they are from the Quebec nation are in reality from the Canadian nation, it's not valid. If someone from Toronto decides that all Quebeckers are in the Canadian nation, it's not valid either. If 70% of the Quebeckers answer they recognize theirselves as Quebeckers, then you have a nation. Quebec is a quasi-sovereign nation. It's now up to us to decide what we want to be. Please read Reconciling Two Solitudes from Charles Taylor, you'll love it. Pgsylv 19:50, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
There is not a consensus in Quebec. One of my readings has proven it. Give me a few hours to write up the information, and I will post it here, because I do not have time right now. Also, if no one outside of Quebec agrees that it is a nation, then the claim is irrelevant as it is not recognized. Andrew647 23:13, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
I'm a separatist through and through. The fact is there is no such thing as proof on this subject. A large number of Quebecers including myself consider Quebec to be a Nation. Life in Quebec is culturally a vastly different experience than anywhere else in Canada. A VAST majority of people outside Quebec disagree, most of this VAST majority of disagreeers have never lived in Quebec. It's a matter of knowing the difference only because you live there. IMHO Canada's cultures (I mean in the way of life definition) are divided as such: Northern, Western Canadian, Quebecer, Eastern Maritime culture. Of course there are smaller distinctions within these groups, and only having lived in all regions can one truly appreciate that. People who have not actually lived in ALL above areas simply do not understand that angle. It just happens to be that the Quebecois culture is the only one to coincide with provincial lines, the other cultures are more inline with regions than provinces. NO SUCH THING AS PROOF that is the key wording. Think of Tibet trying to declare itself a nation against the Chinese, the Chinese will never agree. IT'S OPINION, IT'S HEART. Within Quebec, the anglophones (like my mother) are numerous enough to tip scales when it comes to trying to quantify those sentiments. Unanimity among anglophones is close to 100% whereas unanimity among francophones is more around 70%. The major factor in Québécois NOT seeing themselves as a Nation are two-fold, elderly people were fed tons of fear propaganda in the 80s when the issue was really hot, and today, the younger generation are less politicised and think first about their wallets and nationalism is low on their priority scale. IN CONCLUSION since there is no proof, one can only state the following: A majority of Quebecers consider Quebec a Nation. What outsiders think is completely irrelevant.--Tallard 02:39, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I glad you feel that way, but I'm not trying to stir any nationalist/separatist sentiment. Your personal beliefs are exactly that: your personal beliefs. That does not make them fact. I agree that life in Quebec is significantly different from life in other parts of the country, because I have lived there. However, that life is not due to a territorial nation, it is due to a cultural and social nation. Either way, I'm demonstrating, as Pgsylv requested, that there are intellectuals outside and inside Quebec that feel it is not a nation. As well, if you had read my article, the names Dominique Clift, Michel Morin and Claude Bertrand are far from being anglophones. Finally, wikipedia is a community based encyclopedia. We must obtain a consensus on facts. Therefore, if people do not believe that a fact exists, or that it is only a claim, then a solution must be found to resolve it. Based on that, outside opinion is extremely relevant. Andrew647 03:10, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
Oh I DID read your essay, but it just did not speak to me, sorry :( I think it relies on some fallacies... I think objectivity on this point is an illusion, so people may as well know where we come from. Those with the pretension of «objectvity» I do not trust. My family's bilingual, my brother and I are on the Nation side, my mother and sister aren't, my N-S mother's lived in Quebec since 1969, and she still can't speak French... But you're right, it's not about anecdotal evidence (like your essay and my family concerns) it's about statistical validity. So what's so wrong with simply stating a majority of Quebecers think «Nation», of course some don't, there's no argument there... But ROC opinions are completely irrelevant on this issue. Fact is the Québécois form a nation that includes some allophones, but not all. Many allophones cling to other lifestyles, that's their choice, it's a free world and they're free to follow their own light. But fact is, the only «fact» we have, a majority is a majority, still...Good night :) --Tallard 10:08, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I've also read Andrew's essay, and while it is quite interesting, I can't but observe that it falls prey to the same fallacy as a part of our discussion so far: obviously, those who argue that Quebec is not a nation (especially from within Quebec) are speaking of a nation as a sovereign political entity, which Quebec demonstrably isn't; those on the other hand who argue that Quebec is a (non-sovereign, of course) nation argue from the socio-cultural and also from the ethnolinguistic aspects. Except for Joe Clark, I don't see anyone denying that Quebec is at least a socio-cultural nation. Let's please accept that there are at least two separate meanings of "nation" and let's be specific about which type of nation it has been argued that Quebec represents. Of course, there can also be residents of Quebec who don't identify with the Quebec/Quebecois nation, but that's the same everywhere (anybody remember Sting's song "An Englishman in New York"? That makes it pretty obvious that not every resident in any nation will choose to identify themselves with the nation they reside in, and that doesn't detract from the fact that the nation still exists - or does someone want to argue that the USA aren't a nation?). In the end, Quebec as a people is undeniably a socio-cultural nation (testified to by the fact that a large majority of Quebecers think so), and it's proper and good that many academics and politicians recognize it, it's fitting that its own government proclaimed it, and that even the Canadian government recognized it. The fact that the federal government couched this recognition in ambiguous terms should not detract from the fact that it is only one of a myriad sources that accept Quebec/Quebecers as a nation.--Ramdrake 12:27, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
My essay was written to provide sources to Pgsylv of intellectuals who feel Quebec is not a nation. It was not intended to prove that Quebec isn't a nation. The ambiguity of the definition of nation used in this discussion is why I recommended in an above post that we do not add the phrase "Quebec is a nation" to the article. I reinforced that proposal with the fact that there is not a consensus among intellectuals that Quebec is a nation, and backed that statement with the sources I provided in the essay.
I am not trying to say Quebec is or isn't a nation. My personal beliefs are not what Wikipedia is founded on. I made a mistake with my essay due to my personal feelings, and I became sidetracked from my original point, which is what I stated above: we should not write that Quebec is a nation because there is not a consensus and the word nation is ambiguous. Andrew647 14:26, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I pretty much concur with you Ramdrake (and Pgsylv for that matter). Obviously nobody's saying that the borders of Québec constitute a seperate political Nation. However the present formulation of «Québécois form a nation» is not quite sufficient either, as our Nationhood is not so indistinct as to represent only individuals. The Québec government is the voice of this majority of Québécois (I dislike French Quebecer because it has a diminutive connotation (we don't say English Americans do we?????, it's a sensitive subject, yes...:). Hence this cultural nationhood we speak of is more than «Québécois are a Nation», because cultural Nationhood is the official position of both our direct government AND our voice at the Canadian level, indeed, «Québec» is a nation within Canada (what on earth is that unified bit I don't care for it as Québec never joined Canada, it's a war victory, nothing more... and Québécois were treated as such until the middle of the 20th century when Québécois finally stood up for themselves)--Tallard 19:21, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
In response to Andrew, I take exception on two points: one, most of the sources he provides (with the possible exception of Joe Clark) manifestly refer to the definition of nation as a "sovereign entity", which Quebec manifestly isn't, and nobody here disputes this fact. Second, not saying that Quebec is a nation, at least in the ethno-cultural sense is tantamount to saying it isn't a nation. Moreover, I'd like to point out for the nth time that the definition of nation isn't ambiguous: there are at least two definitions, one that of a sovereign state and one of the ethno-cultural entity. If we only make it clear that we are speaking of a nation in the ethno-cultural sense, we are successfully addressing all claims of ambiguity. While there may be detractors to the concept of Quebec as an ethno-cultural nation (there are detractors to every concept), I believe just the fact that nearly 80% of Quebecers define themselves as being part of a nation should demonstrate that there is indeed consensus among Quebecers to call themselves a nation. Consensus doesn't need unanimity, last time I checked. The opinion of people in the ROC shouldn't be counted on equal footing, as not all of them (I would dare say even only a minority of them) are fully aware of the Quebec culture, except maybe to decry it.--Ramdrake 19:36, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I hadn't thought about defining nation when stating it. I agree that Quebec is an ethno-cultural nation. I had issues with the generic "Quebec is a nation" without a clear description of what nation is. Not trying to argue with what you say, but I am aware of the Quebec culture; the purpose of that writing was to provide sources for Pgsylv. I do not decry the culture but I believe saying "Quebec is a nation" without description is an ambiguous statement that can be applied by separatist individuals to advance their agenda. That is why I recommended not stating it, because I felt that exclusion was the optimal solution to our argument. However, I would prefer defining nation within that sentence over ignoring it altogether. Andrew647 20:10, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
If your objection was merely the unqualified use of the word "nation" without specifying which definition of nation one refers to, then I fully agree with you. Quebec can be said to be a nation in a specific sense of the word, namely ethno-cultural. I feel that to deny that it is a nation at least in the ethno-cultural sense is tantamount to not accepting reality. In this case, would you care to write up a formulation which you feel would be appropriate? Also, please accept my apologies for the earlier confusion.--Ramdrake 20:25, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
That was exactly what I was trying to say ^^. Andrew647 20:28, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
Would anyone object to phrasing into the intro something along the lines Quebec is a nation in the ethno-cultural sense of the word, or somesuch? Anybody who feel they can better phrase it are welcome to make suggestions, of course.--Ramdrake 23:59, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
Absolutely oppose that wording, we stick with the actual wording agreed upon in parliament, that's the the verifiable fact.--Tallard 10:15, 6 October 2007 (UTC)

I support that phrasing. Let's start over on the left side. If you want to reword this into a new thread, Ramdrake, feel free to move my reply as well. Andrew647 00:23, 6 October 2007 (UTC)

I don't support that phrasing nor its placement in the lead. Most of us agree that Quebec is not a territorial nation and seeing that this is an article chiefly concerned with the territory, i.e. the Province of Quebec, I do not feel that nationhood mentioned in the lead is merited. Because Quebec is not a territorial nation, and that the alternative "ethno-cultural nation" refers to a population, then it should read something like "Quebeckers form and ethno-cultural nation..." and be included in one of the sections concerned with the people(s) of Quebec. To say "Quebec is a nation in the ethno-cultural sense of the word" implies that the territory has some ethno-cultural characteristics that only people can have. CWPappas 07:39, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
Then we come back to the original phrasing, that is that the Quebecois form a nation. The specific meaning of the word nation in this case can be inferred as the ethnocultural meaning of nation, as the "sovereign" meaning applies pretty exclusively to the territory. I would also like to challenge the notion that this article is concerned chiefly with the territory, as at least 8 (or 9) of the 13 sections have to do with history, population, demographics, culture, etc. So, no this article isn't mainly about the geography of Quebec, obviously.--Ramdrake 13:51, 6 October 2007 (UTC)

Ramdrake, you are correct that this article is not mainly about the geography of Quebec. My apologies. I tend to contribute late at night, sometimes hurriedly. Maybe saying that the article is not mainly about Quebec's politics and national identity would be closer to what I meant (I'm even more tired tonight so please bear with me!!). The body of the article starts off with geography, and eventually discusses her history and politics. The present placement of the Quebec as a Nation section seems to be the best place for mention of the National Assembly's and Parliament's motions on Quebec's nationhood. The present placement and wording, in my opinion, are perfect the way they are. The linking of the word Quebecois to its own Wiki page allows the reader to determine for him/herself what the heck Quebecois means. Placing such a statement in the lead would lend too much importance on these declarations. If you tend to believe that too much is made over Quebec nationhood, then inclusion in the lead would inflate the importance to such declarations. If you strongly feel that the Quebec is a nation, then Quebec's nationhood has not received nearly the recognition it deserves. Either way, the declarations are trivial and not worth putting in the lead. The article flows nicely now. CWPappas 08:07, 8 October 2007 (UTC)

Non-internet resources

I have just borrowed several texts from a local library by various authors (politicians, professors, etc) that deal with nationhood in Quebec. I require several days to go through them so that I may bring important points here to the debate. I will post my findings soon. Andrew647 02:19, 2 October 2007 (UTC)

I have just finished writing my review of two books that demonstrate a clear lack of consensus among intellectuals inside and outside Quebec. See my finding here. Please comment on it here. Andrew647 01:57, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
Go back to work. Your "demonstration" is not valid. When I read things like you wrote, I just wish Quebec separates from Canada and builds its own state. I thought it would be possible to have a dialogue with the Canadians but I realize it is impossible. Pgsylv 16:03, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
I will refrain from insulting you, but I can no longer assume good faith from you. If all you want is to push a political view, this is not the place for you. I will not make this a personal issue as you wish to do. Andrew647 16:25, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
It's not personal, but your work is not valid. It doesn't matter what academicians outside Quebec think of this debate. Your references are biaised. Pgsylv 17:13, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
Your references are biased as well. And it does matter what intellectuals outside Quebec think, because Quebec is also a part of Canada, a part of North America, and a part of the world. Andrew647 18:35, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
My references are not biased. They reflect the reality. What the intellectuals outside Québec think is not important in this debate. It's up to the Quebeckers. If 6 millions individuals living in the province of Quebec recognize theirselves as Quebeckers, the nation of Quebec exists. If 1 guy from Alberta says it is not a nation, who cares, it is not his business. Pgsylv 20:14, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
Your references are biased because they represent the political views of the people that wrote them. What the intellectuals outside of Quebec think is just as important as the intellectuals inside Quebec think because simply claiming something is invalid if others do not accept it. Andrew647 20:24, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
Charles Taylor is a Federalist ! WHAT THE INTELLECTUALS OUTSIDE OF QUEBEC THINK ABOUT MY IDENTITY DOESN'T MATTER. What you write is pretty dangerous. You shall not decide who I am. Pgsylv 15:29, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
This isn't about your identity, this is about the identity of the region that your people live in along with other nations. Andrew647 18:13, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
Actually, bad faith is not demonstrated here. If someone pushes POV (even if it is blatantly obvious) and really believes it is objectively true, it is not bad faith. Bad faith requires knowingly writing false information. --Soulscanner 06:28, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
Pgsylv, if what you think is all that matters in identifying yourself as part of a nation, why do you care what intellectuals inside OR outside of Quebec think? CWPappas 06:32, 8 October 2007 (UTC)

Pronunciation of Quebec

Pardon me if this conversation is archived somewhere, but my discussions with linguists on the subject of the correct pronunciation lead to the «kebek» sound being the appropriate pronunciation in ENGLISH as well as French. The reason being that the qu sound has no reason to be whatsoever, as the original First Nation word was «kebek» and the only reason Quebecers spell with a «qu» is that k, although in the French alphabet, is not really used, as it's origins are NOT FRENCH. I really think that those other ugly pronunciations can be mentioned, but readers should be told what the proper pronunciation is.--Tallard 08:02, 3 October 2007 (UTC)

Even though I don't use it, pronouncing kʰwəˈbɛk with the qu sound is very common in Atlantic and Western Canada. Kebek is the correct pronunciation in French, but there are several ways in English. Andrew647 11:02, 3 October 2007 (UTC)
I'm entirely aware of common use. The point I'd like to make is that linguists say it's not the correct pronunciation, in English. This should be noted in the article, so that people may know the right way...--Tallard 12:00, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
Alright, I misinterpreted what you said before. I have to start drinking more coffee. I agree with you, the proper pronunciation should be highlighted. Andrew647 13:53, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
:) Well my prob is I don't have the resources on hand to make the correction and I was hoping an administrator would see this try to do something about it... I'm real new to this project and I'm not sure what other appropriate channels exist in this case, do you?--Tallard 23:11, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
Hold your horses, boys! As an anglophone who lived in Quebec for around 45 years I never heard another Quebec anglophone use the "kebek" pronunciation in an English conversation...always the kwabek version. Perhaps your linguists are talking about the how the kebek version is closer to the original First Nation pronunciation and not what is most commonly used by the resident anglophone population. What does K or QU have to do with anything? They have the same value as phonemes and, besides, the First Nations didn't use an alphabet with either a k or a qu—they are European imports! CWPappas 08:28, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
Yeah I know, same as when they said the earth was round ;) What is common use and what is appropriate use are different concepts. Had the letter K been a regular part of the French language, the French would have spelled KEBEK and Wolfe's followers would have said kebek. The Qu is for the benefit of French language only and should not have inched it's way into the English pronunciation. But it's like I said, I am out of province right now and don't have access to the proper resources for this topic, so I can't do anything about this anyway... I'm hoping for a proper linguist to pick it up... :)--Tallard 10:15, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I just don't understand how a linguist speaking about the pronunciation in English can say that the anglophone residents of Quebec can be wrong and a pronunciation used by non-anglophones and non-Quebecker anglophones is correct. Which linguist did you hear this from? Do you have a source? I'm really surprised. I'd like to check what these linguists wrote and drop them a line. CWPappas 05:09, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
The linguists and translators I worked with years ago in Montreal at an Int'l translation firm. Just think of it this way, had the French spelled it kebek, would you be saying kweebec, kuubec today, NO. So the common English pronunciation is erroneously mimicking the French alphabet instead of the French phonetics. That's the reasoning. But as I mentioned, I personally don't know the online linguistics resources, don't have access to good sources here in Whitehorse, and haven't been in touch with that company since 1999, so I'm waiting patiently and hopefully for a proper linguist to come around and discuss this. oh and just for precision, I AM a Québécois anglophone, doesn't that just kick! :) --Tallard 10:25, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
Read any dictionary. Dictionaries document how the language is used, they do not prescribe, which is why they identify all common pronounciations, the opinions of unnamed translators and linguists nowithstanding. --Soulscanner 06:10, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
The problem is that you cannot apply one language's phonology to a word's usage in another language. For example, the word "Paris"...it is a French word pronounced par-ee but in English the proper pronunciation is pa-ris. Same thing with Saigon... the people living in Saigon pronounce it Shai-gon. In Greek, Greece is prounounced ellas but in Engish there is an enirely different word...the "new" word, or pronunciation, is not incorrect in the adopting language even if the pronunciation in the original language is possible within the adopting language's phonology. CWPappas 06:00, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
Paree is not the issue here, I'm not aware of the issues at hand there. I am aware of the Québec and Brussels issues... the fact is the linguists I knew 7 years ago said the proper way was to forget the u influence. The name Brussels in French had the reverse scenario, Bruxelles ended up being spelled with an X although the proper pronunciation was SS, it is simply a written French alphabet issue. CALL to PROPER LINGUISTS PLEASE :)--Tallard 09:00, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
The word "Paris" may not be the issue here but it is the same principle...when a word in one language is adopted into another, the adopting language's own phonology dictates the proper pronunciation in that language, not the pronunciation in the original tongue. CWPappas 04:51, 8 October 2007 (UTC)

FOR disambiguation page and AGAINST endless futile debates

It is really unfortunate that under a dozen people are participating on this debate. It appears to be a couple of Englishsmen arguing a futile debate with a couple of Québécois on an issue where cultural differences make consensus impossible. IMPOSSIBLE, just as there is no all encompassing consensus for Tibet or Basque Country, among others. We need to get away from all this bickering, nagging and arguing and simply admit we interpret the facts and references differently, that is a fact. Let's create a disambiguation page:
  • Québec, Historical Nation
  • Quebec, Province of Canada
That way the Province of Canada page can be relatively stable, and should include/emphasize administrative differences between Quebec and the other provinces, and let the Québec, Historical Nation (insisting on accent) take over culture, tourism economy, politics, history, etc. If Tibet and Basque Country's example hold true here, the Provincial page will settle, whereas the Nation page will see action. That way everyone gets what they want. The anglophone Canadians readers MAY mostly refer to the Province page, students MAY refer to either, internationals will refer to either, and it especially will clarify things to foreigners who deserve to gain a clearer understanding, which is impossible if the page changes everyday because of endless arguments.--Tallard 22:42, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
That would also sound acceptable to me, as the "geography" page could go back to being only a "geography" page, and it would provide a solution to the current problem, which is now in a deadlock, and must be resolved one way or another.--Ramdrake 12:10, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
As I wrote above and in some other places, it seems futile to try to settle the question of Quebec's nationhood here and now in Wikipedia especially when articles treating with the history of Quebec and Quebec nationalism are so poor. As these articles and many others on Quebec and Canada improve, the whole body of historical, social, cutural, political and legal evidence on what Quebec was before and is today will take shape and the reasons why Quebecers gave themselves national institutions within a state that is a province of Canada since 1867 will speak for themselves. I do not expect these articles to improve much inside the English language Wikipedia: we are far too few. Rather, quality articles, neutral and well referenced, will emerge in the French language Wikipedia and will be translated to English, probably by bilingual Quebecers or Canadians and Americans who are friends. Hopefully, within 5 years, many of the core myths (those of Quebecers and those of Canadians) entertained by the current political climat, partisanship and all, will be dispelled. Canadians and Quebecers will understand and respect each other more than ever before. This is unlikely to result in greater Canadian unity, but something much better called human solidarity. May God bless America, save the Queen and remeber Quebecers! ;-) -- Mathieugp 12:27, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
I refuse this " Historical Nation", it's not accurate. Quebec is a nation, not a cultural nation, not a historical nation, not a call-it-the-name-you-want nation. All these pages of debate for one single word ! Pgsylv 15:32, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
Dear Pgsylv, I so agree with you on the primordial importance of Nationhood, but it's not a battle that we are able to win in this linguistic and political context. Amicalement--Tallard 18:42, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
"Quebec is a nation" is of "primordial importance" only to a subset of particularly ardent Quebec nationalists. Wikipedia is not supposed to be used for the declaration of ideological manifestos as objective facts; such claims need to be attributed to those making them in order to be neutral. Otherwise, we'd get statements like "Jesus Christ was the only Son of God" rather than "Christians believe that Jesus Christ was the only Son of God". --Soulscanner 05:19, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
Dear Mathieu, you are blessed with the gift of neutral tone :)
This is what you get when you search for Tibet:
Tibet. This article is about historical/cultural Tibet. For the administrative region of the People's Republic of China, see Tibet Autonomous Region. For other uses, see Tibet (disambiguation).
As Québec has never officially joined Canada and is not signatory to the constitution and has administrative jurisdictions that other provinces don't have (immigration, education, civil law, etc.) It is quite similar to the Tibet and Basque Country situations
I think the best we can do is agree to disagree :)--Tallard 18:50, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
Very incorrect! Quebec joined Confederation in 1867 but was not a signatory on the constitution (for reasons I agree with). Andrew647 19:17, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
Dear Andrew, I'm saddened that you have not even read this page's own paragraph on this... :( Quebec the province did not exist before 1867, France lost its hold on the territory through war and Lower Canada was joined by England to Upper Canada to form «Canada», the frenchies living there had no say in this. In 1867, Canada English was joined by other territories to form a confederation. The only frenchy influence here was to gain provincial status, NOT being part of Canada was not an option. The province of Québec is as it is now since that date because it was considered a nice gesture to the frenchies to have some administrative say in their future. But that is different from «Québec joining Canada» Québec never joined Canada. It is the only province not to.--Tallard 19:02, 10 October 2007 (UTC)
You're absolutely right, my bad. And I'm a history major too... That was what I was told enough times in secondary that it's hard to get it out of my head. Andrew647 22:35, 10 October 2007 (UTC)
Cheers mate, no hard feelings.--Tallard 06:36, 11 October 2007 (UTC)
Quebec is still bound by the Constitution, and of corse by all laws of Parliament, and the Clarity Act. Quebec is part of Canada by the British North America Act 1867 as passed by the UK Parliament: It shall be lawful for the Queen...to declare by Proclamation that...the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick shall form and be One Dominion under the Name of Canada ws. Lower Canada (Quebec) as part of the Province of Canada is part of this dominion, and therefore part of Canada from the BNA Act. That's official. -Royalguard11(T·R!) 21:21, 10 October 2007 (UTC)
Royalguard, all that you say is true, yet Tallard's point (if I may presume) was that Quebec did not wilfully join Canada (it was joined by what amounts to British Royal decree), nor was it a signatory of the patriation of the Constitution. I would even go so far as to say that, had the tideds of war turned differently in North America two hundred and fiftyish years ago, the territory that is now Canada today would probably be consisting of at least two, possibly more sovereign states.--Ramdrake 22:00, 10 October 2007 (UTC)
Oooooh Royalguard, I just love it when you talk like that «Quebec is still bound» I can just visualise the ropes and knots. You expressed in so few words exactly the state of affairs in Canada bound, just as Tibet is bound to Chinese law and Basque Country is bound to Spain. Binding nations of people against their will and under threat of duress is certainly no way to run a country, try putting yourself in someone else's shoes :). All the facts show Quebec to be distinct, everyone agrees on that, it's a matter of how things are presented, the word nation is not a backburner type of word. My proposal is to say Quebec is the only Canadian province whose people have been declared a nation within Canada by both levels of government. The nation Harper used was not bogged down by a bunch of extra little definitions--Tallard 06:36, 11 October 2007 (UTC)
According to pure facts, Quebecers have rejected sovereignty twice. That doesn't sound like against their will. -Royalguard11(T·R!) 18:11, 11 October 2007 (UTC)

ùTallard, what do you mean "willfully"? I don't think anyone knows whether or not the entry of Quebec into the Province of Canada was opposed to the wishes of Quebecers generally. They've certainly had two opportunities to leave confederation, and have chosen not to. Is your argument that Quebec isn't a province? That seems to rebel against common sense and law. fishhead64 06:49, 14 October 2007 (UTC)

Fishead64, I believe all your questions will be answered if you read the entire debate on this page.--Ramdrake 11:21, 14 October 2007 (UTC)
We're digressing more and more, but not wanting to separate once a part of Canada isn't the same as wilfully joining. Quebec became part of Canada through the BNAA, and Quebecers had no say in it. Over a century later, Quebecers twice decided not to secede. That still doesn't mean Quebec joined Canada wilfully. However, I fail to see that any of this has any import on the question whether or not Quebec or Quebecers can be considered a nation.--Ramdrake 18:34, 11 October 2007 (UTC)
I actually think it's a fine idea to use the Tibet article as a model in some ways. The political controversy over Tibet's status is fully accounted for in the lead, and those making the conflicting political claims are identified. It is clearly identified as a question of political autonomy, and vague terms like "nation" are not used to avoid confusion. Why not do that here? Moreover, there is a separate article on the Tibetan people which includes a large the diaspora, and it's made clear that Tibet serves as a homeland for these people just as Quebec serves as a homeland for French Canadians, or if your wish, the Quebecois. Similar pages exist for Basque region/Basque people, Catalonia/Catalans,Serbia/Serbs, Acadia/Acadians, etc. Which page refers to the "nation"; the people or the territory? Or do they avoid vague terminology? --Soulscanner 05:19, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
I disagree about the inclusion of Quebec's, Quebeckers', or Quebecoises' national status in the lead and comparing Quebec to Tibet. There are already articles that deal with Quebec Nationalism and the History of Quebec and there already are links to these articles withing the Quebec article in the section that introduces this debate.
Tibet is a completely different situation, having had about 1400 years of autonomy, mixed with interference from China, ending about 50 years ago when China invaded. Quebec, on the other hand, was never it's own country. It belonged to several native nations, then it was a colony of France. By signing the Treaty of Paris, France ceded Quebec along with all of France's North American territories to the British. The French and British had been engaged in a global conflict over territory. Then 1867 happened along and Quebec became a province of Canada. Whether the people of Quebec had a say in this is irrelevant...they were already part of the Province of Canada. Similarly, the Quebec government forced the merger of the Island-of-Montreal suburbs into the City of Montreal. There was no referendum, just a proclaimation from a higher authority. CWPappas 07:01, 11 October 2007 (UTC)

I was involved in discussing this for a while, and disengaged because it's patently obvious that there will never be a consensus on this topic without formal mediation. The political aspect of that "one word" mentioned above will never let this article move forward at the present time, and with the present participants. Pgsylv is intent on his answer to the situation being the only answer to the situation; this is not how consensus works. Attempts to find a middle ground have been shot down repeatedly. My suggestion here is to take a mediation request to the Mediation Committee and have one of the mediators there guide a formal process, because otherwise this is going to continue to eat up talk page space and get nowhere. Tony Fox (arf!) 18:53, 7 October 2007 (UTC)

I'm in the same situation as Tony Fox is and I support his request to start a Request for Meditation. Tomj 20:37, 7 October 2007 (UTC)

I'm against the idea of creating the Quebec, Historical Nation article. There are already articles that deal with Quebec Nationalism and the History of Quebec. The readers don't deserve to have yet another page to confuse their understanding of the issues. Creating a new page will not rid us of the bickering, nagging, and arguing—it will only mean that discussion will move to that new talk page. Furthermore, naming the page Historical Nation would imply that Quebec is, indeed, a nation and that assertion is far from having been clearly established as fact.
As a political or territorial nation, Quebec doesn't fit the bill. There is no border control on the frontiers with her neighbouring provinces, no passports, and even the drivers' licences include a graphic of Labrabor, part of another province. The "national institutions" are subject to Canadian regulation and law. For example, no-one gets near Immigration Quebec without first having been cleared by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada...Immigration Quebec simply cannot grant admittance on its own.
In terms of the population, perhaps a segment of Quebec society constitutes a ethno-cultural nation but I do not believe that this nation is inclusive of all Quebecers. Surely a population that supports efforts to control the numbers of the province's largest minority does not see minorities as being full members of its society. The second sentence in this section states that this discussion is "Englishsmen [sic] arguing a futile debate with a couple of Québécois [sic]" and is a testiment to this if the editor included Anglo-Quebeckers when he wrote the word Englishmen as distict from Quebecoises.
I, too, support his request to start a Request for Meditation. CWPappas 06:26, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
You quoted me out of context, those words were preceded by: "appears to be a couple of", As far as I know, appears means appears... and a couple is referring to the very few people even bothering to take part, largely I assume due to the futility of it all. I used "Englishmen" as a metaphor of a "dialogue de sourds" between the extreme anglo style and the extreme Québécois style. OK? I'm an anglo born Québécois, mom married a Quebecer, my family speaks English to each other and we have relatives in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. The point is there are two solitudes, most anglos within Quebec are Anti «nation» no matter what the facts say and an even higher of percentage of anglos outside of Quebec are Anti «nation». The negative I see with mediation is that I suspect it will end up being a biased process, being that a majority of participants will be from outside of Quebec. It seems very unethical to me to allow the opinion of a large and vocal group of biased outsiders to be able to determine a population's self description because not enough participants from here even visit WP:EN, because is not even an official language here, the only such province, so there could never be a proper representation.
For those with linguistics issues, what if we just call them:
  • Quebec, province and «nation within Canada» (outsider approved version)(then nation need not be in the first paragraph)
  • Québec, self described nation (the Quebec nationalism articles would be transfered here)
How does that seem?
I still have not read any justification why describing Quebec in the same terms as Tibet and Basque country would be wrong. Are those against splitting Quebec nation/province against the present split status of Tibet and Basque Country as well?--Tallard 08:47, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia is built on consensus, which means that articles are determined through a community process. A mediator would provide a fully neutral party to attempt and shape that consensus. There is no "outsider" or "insider" involved in mediation; the mediator guides all participants to find middle ground. Tony Fox (arf!) 23:54, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
Looking over this page, it seems the request for mediation is the best move at this time. This article needs to have its problems resolved, and as a consensus is not forthcoming, mediation is the sensible alternative.Cromdog 02:11, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
I recommend mediation as well. Andrew647 03:24, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
Yes. Splitting into two articles sounds like it would be a POV fork anyway.Professor marginalia 16:09, 14 October 2007 (UTC)

Quebec nation essay

Request for Mediation?

Insisting that Nation have equal footing is NOT a POV

Summary of facts

Intro Modifications

2nd paragraph (so large and reads badly)

Quebec Referendum

Returning to the "Quebecois nation" issue.

Montreal

Flag

Quebec Fertility

Official language (fair compromise)

French (the only official language in Québec)

Quebec or "Province of Quebec"?

Long-form name of "Province of Quebec", ou "Province du Quebec" en francais

About the accent

POV in lead

Removal of Etymology and Territorial Expansion

A hint 2

A hint

Rating and GA

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