Dan Christie
Two weeks ago I was on Vancouver Island -mostly to attend the Vancouver Island Music Festival halfway up-island near Courtnay/Comox. Comox of course is home to a large Canadian Forces Base. I also spent ten days in Victoria where just across the harbour is another military base, Esquimalt, the west coast headquarters of Canada's navy.
While there is a stretch of road called The Veteran's Memorial Highway just north of Victoria, there doesn't seem to be anything as openly promoted as Ontario's Highway Of Heroes. As a matter of fact almost nothing about the military seems as openly promoted in B.C. as it is in Ontario. Sure, because it happens to be the 100th Anniversary of the Canadian Navy, Wharf Street in Victoria is festooned with tasteful banners on lamp posts honouring the occassion.
But what I didn't see (and believe me by Day 3 I was actively looking) was a single "We Support The Troops" bumper sticker. Not a one.
Why is this? Does it have something to do with the euphamism 'The Left Coast'-the laid back attitude brought on by mountains, sea breezes and hehheh...good shit?
Or are we here in Ontario just more of a redneck persuasion -given to more overt displays of patriotism -especially really maudlin patriotism- than other parts of the country? And if so, how much of a role do small town newspapers play in pushing that patriotism?
Psychologically, I already live in a small two-bedroom in James Bay. All that remains is to sell everything -including two snowblowers- and move.