20 Replies to “N’Oublions Jamais”

  1. “5 things to know about Remembrance Day” is half-way down the scroll of the Montreal Journal.
    Beat out by “Pornhub getting sued in the US”.

    It isn’t that K-becers have forgotten that many K-becers served, but that they just don’t give a shit. This is best exemplified by the faux K-becer and faux human, Juthtin Trudeau.

  2. Figures, especially considering how much their ancêtres LOVED Franco, Balthazar, the Vichy, etc. A corporatist, fascistic state is what they’ve gotten in the end, after all. Just not a Catholic one.

  3. The quebec ‘zombies’ were those who refused to fight overseas in the liberation of France in WWII ‘because it was an English war’.

      1. Strictly speaking, as he was a 2LT, he did volunteer and was not a zombie. He was discharged as an asshole long before the end of the war. I’m betting his military file is MIA. I believe his shithead step-son Justin spent a short time as a 2LT in the Royal Canadian Hussars, an English speaking reserve regiment in Montreal.

        1. Scar: what is your source? From Wikipedia: Trudeau the First publicly opposed conscription for overseas service. As for his military service, it sounds like it was all part-time:

          “As a university student Trudeau joined the Canadian Officers’ Training Corps (COTC), which trained at the local armoury in Montreal during the school term and undertook further training at Camp Farnham each summer. Although the National Resources Mobilization Act, enacted in 1940, originally provided that conscripts could not be required to serve outside of Canada, in 1942 Parliament amended the act and removed that restriction. The Conscription Crisis of 1944 arose in response to the invasion of Normandy in June 1944.
          Trudeau continued his full-time studies in law at the Université de Montréal while in the COTC from 1940 until his graduation in 1943. Following his graduation, Trudeau articled for a year and, in the fall of 1944, began his master’s in political economy at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Public Administration (now the John F. Kennedy School of Government). ”

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Trudeau

          And, as for him “joining” the COTC, he had no choice. It was compulsory for university students.

          “Early in the Second World War, the COTC/CÉOC became compulsory for students, except for those holding important positions in the war effort, and those excused for health reasons. ”

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Officers%27_Training_Corps

  4. They don’t care! They proposed the strictest mandates and curfews in the country, known for their authoritarian dictates. Their population has been brainwashed with the government narrative, propagated by their extremist French media. They don’t care about Remembrance Day, because they’d rather forget what the vets were fighting for, because they don’t share that sentiment for freedom.

    They’ve been authoritarian all of my natural life. From draconian language laws, to bans on religious symbols… all to protect a weak, supposed French culture, that celebrates vile, degrading immorality rather than celebrate what makes us all human.

    I know all too well all about Quebec culture, having experienced first hand being on the wrong end of that stick, for as long as I can remember.

    It’s why I no longer live there, nor do I have any intention of returning there, even though it is still my home province.

    Rant ends

  5. Meanwhile, our French-Canadian Dear Leader has given the middle-finger salute to our veterans. He has forsaken the Remembrance Day ceremony to fly to Cambodia to wine and dine with other world elites.

    It is well past time to cut Quebec into two parts and throw out the smallest part with the separatists, and then revoke official bilingualism throughout the new Canada.

    1. Yes! The Czechs and Slovaks did it, and peaceably, too. The ROC should’ve taken our leave 50-60 years ago. I say that as a bilingual, largely francophile resident of the West. Everything about Quebec culture is foreign and anathema to me, culturally. The problem is, QC has a f***ing good deal and the smart ones there know it, which is why they don’t want REAL autonomy.

  6. Oh, at first glance I thought it was a menu from some sketchy Cambodian restaurant PM was visiting.
    My bad.

  7. If Justin’s dad can ride around wearing a German helmet and scaring Jews, then we can ALL forget!

    Way to forget your own veterans, Quebec.

  8. With my BC french, I always took “Je me souviens” to mean – “We have souvenirs (for sale)”.

    1. Despite bragging about their memory they don’t seem to remember the whooping General Wolfe laid on their sorry asses.

      1. While driving across Canada many years ago, while overnighting in Sherbrooke, I asked an older Quebec gent what “je me souviens” meant? His reply, “We will remember”, I said “remember what?” His reply……..I forget!

        He was not impressed with me laughing out loud.

  9. Having worked with a group of Quebekkers on a project in Southern Saskatchewan for a few years, I can attest to the fact that they “Do Not” respect Remembrance Day. The men were shocked that the whole site did respect it. They were equally shocked when they were informed that they were required to work “St Jean Baptiste Day”. Some of their wives and girlfriends actually cried when they found out they had to work that day.

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