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Hhshirt - I’m a bear and my blood type is positive shirt

Quebec is obviously predominately French speaking. They have shared cultural and historical references with the I’m a bear and my blood type is positive shirt also I will do this rest of Canada, but are by far the most distinct province. They have their own music, movie and television scene, which most English Canadians have never heard of (vice versa is true with most English Canadian content in Quebec). Many Quebeckers are bilingual, but most wish to live in a solely French speaking society. Ontario could almost be split into two provinces: north and south. Southern Ontario is the most urban part of Canada, albeit it’s still rural by US standards, with a lot of sprawling bedroom communities and mini-cities outside of Toronto. It’s politically moderate, socially liberal, painfully polite, and mostly quiet, albeit a Friday night in Toronto is a fun time. It’s also pretty culturally and racially diverse, particularly the City of Toronto. By comparison, Northern Ontario is extremely rustic, sparsely populated, heavy forests, popular camping and cottaging territory, and a lot less affluent than the South. Demographically, there is a much larger First Nations and French Canadian presence north of Lake Simcoe, and many First Nations communities (most infamously, Atawapiskat) live in third world conditions.



Manitoba and Saskatchewan are the I’m a bear and my blood type is positive shirt also I will do this Prairie provinces, Alberta is sometimes grouped in with them although it is politically very different and is also home to a stretch of the Rocky Mountains. Their political character is largely populist, that can turn either Left or Right. Historically, they’ve been a heartland for most of our successful populist movements (the NDP, CCF, Reform Party, Progressive Party, etc.). A lot of small towns, friendly people, tight-knight communities and LOTS of sky. Alberta is famously our most right of centre province, but this is a bit of a cliche. It’s viewed this way because prior to electing a left-leaning NDP government in 2015 they have been governed by the Progressive Conservative Association since 1971 and Social Credit Party before that after 1935. However, most of their PC premiers were actually pretty centrist aside from Ralph Klein, Edmonton is a typical government town with strong unions and the influx of outsiders is probably altering its previous socially conservative character. This idea that they “elect right-wing dynasties” is a bit of an historical myth. Albeit, federally they’ve almost exclusively voted for right of centre parties since 1935. Rural Alberta is small town, tight-knight farming communities while the city life is probably similar to city life anywhere else in Canada I would assume (or at least not radically different). Alberta has an identity routed in defiance of federal power, something they share with Quebec. Economically, oil is king in Alberta.


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