Comments by "Roger Dodger" (@rogerdodger8415) on "Trump Publicly Says He Will Punish "the People of Canada"" video.
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This is the man in a skirt that us Americans have to deal with........................................................Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called for "Bro culture" to come to an end and said all men need to become feminists and "shut down" one another's "negative conversations" in locker rooms.
"It's not only that men can be feminists, it's that men should be feminists as well," Trudeau said with a lisp Wednesday at a United Nations youth empowerment meeting in New York.
"'He for She' is a movement I hope you all of you go up and sign up for of men standing up for women, men shutting down some of those negative conversations that we get in locker rooms, in bro culture," he said.
"We need to know that we are better than that," Trudeau said. "How we treat our sisters, our girlfriends, our cousins, our mothers and the world around us matters. We need to take back what it is to be a man and that means being open, compassionate, respectful and brave about standing up for it." WANT A LAUGH???? https://youtu.be/XSe3vQCRXvI
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Robin Lillian Now, before I waste ANOTHER MINUTE ON YOUR BS PROPOGANDA, Let's take a look at your FIRST LIE..... The language policies of Canada's province and territories vary substantially between different regions and also between different eras.
From the 1890s until the 1960s, English was the only language in which most government services were provided outside of Quebec (which was functionally bilingual) and using French in the courts or in schools was often illegal. These developments led to fears by French-Canadian nationalists that French speakers would be assimilated into the increasingly Anglophone culture of Ontario, leading the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism (1963–1969) to recommend that the Government of Canada and all provinces offer more services in French.
Since that time, Quebec has used provincial law to encourage the use of French (see Charter of the French Language) at the expense of other languages, while the other provinces have begun to offer more and more services in French and in other languages besides English, including Aboriginal languages and immigrant languages.[1] The 1982 amendments to the Constitution of Canada included a right of minority-language education that has forced policy changes in all of the provinces. Quebec is unique in requiring private businesses to use French and requiring immigrants to send their children to French-language schools. In other provinces there is no requirement that businesses use a particular language, but English predominates, and immigrants may send their children to English, French or third-language schools.[2]
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