since you dont care about the language or the culture of the place you want to immigrate to, why should we care about having you as a immigrant at all. everyone can learn french, English is much harder
Tu dois apprendre le français et arrêter de pleurnicher. La langue de Molière est la seule langue officielle de la Belle Province. Et tout le monde peut apprendre le français. Vive le Quebec et vive la langue française.
If he and QUebec wanted people to speak French I would expect them to provide free French language classes to anyone in Quebec. I love the French Canadian culture but shoving it down peoples throats is no way to make people participate in it.
@@TheAnnez0r Well that is the first great news that I have heard about this. I absolutely love the french canadian culture. I lived in it for seven years. The people are happy friendly and welcoming. It always angered me that the government beat people with it in an attempt to get them to comply. This is the first sign that I have seen where the government tries to nurture its culture in others.
@@bobcrane9945 I think this has been available for a few years but they are definitely putting a lot more emphasis on this service to respond to the greater need due to immigrant workers. I live in the country side in Chaudière Appalaches and classes are available locally.
@@TheAnnez0r Thanks for responding Anne. I never lived in Quebec but have visited there uncountable times. The ony place that was n't welcoming was in the Gaspe' penisula. I lived for seven year in the Ontario town of Rockland-Clarence. It is east of Ottawa on the river. When I moved there I was one of a very small number of anglophones in a population of 14,000. We lived on a country road but were not from the area, strike one even in anglophone Ontario. We lived on LaCasse road where every other family on the road were members of the Lacasse family. Strike two. We spoke very little, practically no French. Strike three. We were 'tolerated' while they tried to figure us out. We greated them with bonjour every time we could. We asked them for help with French words and even tho they laughed they did help. We accepted by the community in less than six months. My wife did day care for their kids and one neighbour plowed our driveway when it snowed. My happiest memory is the culture. Such happy party going friendly people. St Nicholis used too walk up and down the road on new years ringing a bell. Anyone that doesn't like the French Canadian culture either doesn't know them or hasn't tried to.
There are between 200 and 300 million francophones in the world (depending on how you define them), as well as another 700 to 800 million people who speak Latin languages other than French, so it should not be too difficult to find francophone immigrants, or immigrants who can learn French fairly easily because they already speak a Latin language.
@@tarik6990 Bonjour / Hi / Ney Ho / Chào, if you force me to speak in French, I won’t speak to people at shopping centre anymore, it’s over, forever. 以後完. Won’t speak to people anymore, over. 以後完. Đừng Có Nói Tiếng Pháp / Đừng Có Nói Tiếng Anh, yi hao yune, bye-bye 👋👍👏. Merci / thanks / thank you / 謝謝 / cảm ơn.
Just the fact that he has to talk in English shows how huge is the pressure, for the Quebecers. They must absolutely defend, otherwise they will fast be wiped out.
Yeah even as an Anglo Québecois I get it. It sucks for me personally (my spoken French is pretty good, but my written French is awful) - but I get it. And if the Québec pride in heritage and language is the reason we're mercifully spared from the massive onslaught of foreign migrants that much of North America is being subjected to; then vive le Québec libre, I say!
I know I did, no choice when you're put in french school from kindergarten to graduating high school, learning English was a breezelol you can get by with a few sentences unless your job is french only,.
Applying for PR in Quebec is unnecessary painful, make it fast for French people and maybe, maybe more French would come. What you read/hear on work conference abroad is very different to the hard reality you face when arriving (barring real estate, difficulty to connect with the job market, feeling like being a cash cow, locked housing market in summer... "maybe" health care ramq, having few doctor is not that different from Fr though) and finally even if you are a skilled worker who paid tuition outside of Quebec you have to become second class citizen CSQ for a few years... Instead you get anywhere else in Canada, and get PR upon arrival with the right passport. I literally came with my own engineering company but had to close it failing to find clients, probably bcs of me though, and probably would have to close it again with CSQ...
We, French descendants, have survived 300 years under British rules and Legault is worried that our culture will not survive! He doesn't believe on our resiliency. Meanwhile he's weakening us by limiting immigration.
that's it. the mother culture of a land always resist. we immigrants are complying with the language: learning french, respecting. we are not forcing down anything to the quebecoirs and also wants to commit to join them, yet the far right side of them have this fear of the strange, and force down things in a unpolite, unnatural and totalitarian way! Brazil (as example) has a beautiful culture thanks to the continual mixing and/or acceptance of the different cultures!
@@Kevin-ex9vr Bonjour / Hi / Ney Ho / Chào, if you force me to speak in French, I won’t speak to people at shopping centre anymore, it’s over, forever. 以後完. Won’t speak to people anymore, over. 以後完. Đừng Có Nói Tiếng Pháp / Đừng Có Nói Tiếng Anh, yi hao yune, bye-bye 👋👍👏. Merci / thanks / thank you / 謝謝 / cảm ơn.
@@louisecote3542 It's normal for immigrants to adapt to the language and culture of the new country. You don't have to shove it down their throat. Respect goes both ways.
You can’t in most provinces a pair shoes start at 50 in most stores and that low quality if need a good pair your looking 100 plus dollars to get in the ballpark First place to blame is all the taxes
Bonjour / Hi / Ney Ho / Chào, if you force me to speak in French, I won’t speak to people at shopping centre anymore, it’s over, forever. 以後完. Won’t speak to people anymore, over. 以後完. If you don't want to speak French, you just have to move out of QC. Đừng Có Nói Tiếng Pháp / Đừng Có Nói Tiếng Anh, yi hao yune, bye-bye 👋👍👏. Merci / thanks / thank you / 謝謝 / cảm ơn.
What his talking about? In NDG, Montreal , there’s no more English or French. There’s only Farsi ,African snd Spanish language. He want to control it! Good luck on that!…. We all speak Fr & E n, what else more he wants? He’s dreaming! My advice;put lock on people’s mouth
Et dans un autre de tes commentaires, tu dis avoir de la difficulté à parler français malgré le fait que ça fait 78 ans que tu habites ici. Ensuite tu dis qu'on est bilingue ici 🤦♂️
@@sharonperry5213 Hello, Chinese people speak French to me, I answer in Chinese anyway, and I won’t say sorry, also, I never listen to my parents. I wanna move to Ontario. ❤
@@sharonperry5213 Dit celui qui affirme dans un autre commentaire qui a de la difficulté à parler français et qu'il vit ici depuis 78 ans 🤷♂️ Tu viens de te mélanger dans tes menteries champion 😂
Looking at whats going on in toronto and the rest of canada. Quebec seems to get it right, no tent cities with homeless refugees and opiod addicts .. enjoy your crackville buddy and good luck. You will need it
Dit celui qui affirme dans un autre commentaire qu'il a de la difficulté à parler français alors qu'il vit ici depuis 78 ans 🤷♂️ Tu viens de te mélanger dans tes menteries champion 😂
@@derrindouglas1936 The whole world speaks English. Alberta doesn't need to go anywhere. It is the few angry children throwing tantrums by making life difficult for no reason that needs to go back to their language utopia in France.