Originally posted by Geoff_M
[ As for the hockey game, you don't have to look too hard to find examples of parents in the stands making less-than-nice comments about players on the other team in youth hockey leagues.
-We find that in American rinks too. I was in Detroit lately at the Joe Dumars arena. Parents in the stands were cutting our Canadian kids up left and right. Funny thing though, I didn't go home and ask for a press conference-
Originally posted by Geoff_M
That was a rumor used to motivate the Canadian team and wasn't supported one iota of proof or personal statement that it really happened. Please don't cite baseless rumors as fact.
-The American team says it was rumour, the Canadian team says it was fact. I guess you can believe who you want. It certainly worked to motivate the girls. You aren't denying the burning of the Canadian flag though?
Originally posted by Geoff_M
I agree that all such documented actions are childish, regardless of who does them. But that doesn't mean that you have to minimize it when it does take place.
-If there is only one side's viewpoint then it shouldn't be maximized. Have you read or seen anything by the other teams involved stating what the American kids and parents said? If not then you do not have the full story. When contacted, the coach of the accused Canadian team says he was unaware of such actions. So are you saying that the coach of the Canadian team was lying when he denied it?-
Look, all I am trying to say here is that this incident is an example of things that happen on both sides of the border and it ticks me off when some people act like the Americans would never do anything so dispicable. I am not condoning it, I think it is dreadful, but don't act like it is only happening over here
Canucks not welcome
By Trudi Beutel
tbeutel@richmond-news.com
Unwanted.
That's the way Charlaine Badock felt last Sunday during a shopping trip to Bellingham.
After leaving Cost Cutter Foods, Badock, her sister and their children made their way back to their minivan to find a note tucked under the windshield.
It read: "We in America are disappointed in Canadians and your government. You are not welcome in America. Go back to were(sic) you belong and stay there!"
"Getting this in black and white put a damper on our day," Badock said of the typed note, which served to cut the family's outing short.
"The kids said, 'Let's go home,'" and Badock and her sister agreed.
"I do think the anger is escalating between Canadians and Americans," she said.
Although Badock is angry she's been impacted by Ottawa's decision to stay out of the war, she doesn't endorse Canada fighting along side the coalition forces given the lack of evidence that Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction.
However, she's peeved fractured U.S.-Canadian relations are impacting citizens who have little say in what transpires at the international level. Badock said she won't be travelling south of the 49th again until the war is over.
According to Bellingham/Whatcom Chamber of Commerce development director Pat Rowe, the Badock incident is the first he's heard of hostilities aimed directly at Canadian visitors to the Bellingham area.
"I don't think it's a widespread feeling. My guess it's just an angry person whose gone overboard," he said.
"I believe it's not a people-to-people anger, but a government-to-government anger."
He hoped the anonymous note wouldn't harm the normally "good and friendly relationship" between residents of the Lower Mainland and Whatcom County even if the governments of both countries disagree over how to deal with Saddam Hussein and his regime in Iraq.
Les Perreaux
National Post
Tuesday, February 04, 2003
WINNIPEG - Canadian schoolchildren have been banned from a poster contest in the United States because of Canada's shaky support of the American position on Iraq.
The National Gang Crimes Research Center, a think-tank based in Chicago, has barred Canadian participation in its contest.
"It's subject to change if your leaders stop hedging. Germany's in the same boat," George Knox, director of the centre, told the Winnipeg Free Press. "This is a time in history when we need to be together."
While experts on international affairs have agreed that Canada's position on Iraq is confused and shifting, Mr. Knox declined to explain the connection to an anti-gang art campaign for schoolchildren.
Yesterday Mr. Knox declined to be interviewed.
Jeanette Jerome, a Winnipeg artist, teaches after-school programs at Winnipeg schools. She was searching for contests to enter artwork by her middle-school pupils when she found the Gang Crimes Research Center contest. Its Web site calls for submissions from students of all ages for posters and essays on the theme of preventing gang violence.
According to the Web site, "the purpose of this contest is to encourage youths in the United States and Canada, through creative and artistic expression, to have a voice in shaping social policy about gang prevention."
First prize is $500. The contest information even called for provincial co-ordinators to volunteer for the contest.
Ms. Jerome wrote an e-mail inquiring about the poster contest.
Mr. Knox replied on Jan. 29, telling Ms. Jerome that Canadians need not apply.
"We are a pro-law-enforcement group and support initiatives against gangs and terrorism. Recent national political statements from leaders in your country have, unfortunately, been non-supportive of American interests. Due to this unfortunate development we are no longer able to accept Canadian entries. I am sure this is not a reflection on your own patriotism and your own perspectives on the issue, but in the current climate -- that is the way Americans are going to react," he wrote.
Outraged, Ms. Jerome wrote back, telling Mr. Knox he was being narrow-minded.
"I don't want anyone to have anti-American sentiments out of this. It's a sign that there are some dopes out there and he is just one of them," Ms. Jerome said. "He's painting Americans with the same broad brush that he is using on Canadians. Don't be angry at Americans. Be angry at this man."
The National Gang Crimes Research Center conducts and publishes research in academic journals and offers training courses to law enforcement officials, according to its Internet site.