North and South Divide.
U.S.-Canada: Just Who's the Docile One?
By Michael Adams | Tuesday, November 30, 2004
Canadians have long been considered more docile than Americans. But as President Bush visits Canada on November 30, 2004, does this stereotype still hold true? Michael Adams author of "Fire and Ice" argues that Canadians are emerging as the more liberal and pluralist people. In contrast, Americans are increasingly becoming deferent to authority.
n 1867, Canadas Fathers of Confederation dedicated their country to peace, order and good government. Meanwhile, the ideals set out in Thomas Jeffersons Declaration of Independence were life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Opposing ideals
Back then, it was Americans who were the revolutionaries, putting in place institutions that were designed to frustrate the authority of governments. Surprisingly, I have found Canadians to be a more autonomous people than Americans, less outer-directed and less conformist. In contrast, counter-revolutionary Canadians saw the authority of political institutions as central to the well-being of their country.
America has long honored the individual fighting for truth and justice. Canadians, for their part, have tended to defer to elites who broker compromises between competing social groups. And while Americas motto is E Pluribus Unum, out of many one, Canada started as two founding European cultures French and English.
Since that time, this biculturalism has been expanded to include a multiculturalism that encompasses not only more recent immigrants, but also the aboriginal First Nations that were here long before Europeans arrived.
The Old World lives on
The Americans separated church and state, while we Canadians embedded state sponsorship of parochial education in our constitution. All in all, Canada never renounced its European political heritage at least not as emphatically as the American revolutionaries did.
The Old World ideal of noblesse oblige has survived here even into this century, shaping our social assistance and public housing programs. In contrast, in the United States, the primary public expenditure has been mass education in the service of individual achievement.
Who are the real revolutionaries?
>From distinct roots, Canada and the United States have thus grown up with substantially different characters. Americans are motivated by the notion of individual achievement. Canadians, in contrast, stand out by balancing individual autonomy with a sense of collective responsibility.
Group rights, public institutions and deference to authority have abided north of the border while individualism, private interests and mistrust of authority have remained strong to the south. So much for the officially sanctioned saga. In the last quarter century, some counterintuitive developments have occurred on both sides of the 49th parallel.
Canadians have distanced themselves from traditional authority organized religion, the patriarchal family and political elites. Peter C. Newman has characterized recent social change in Canada as the movement from deference to defiance.
American nightmare?
Meanwhile, an ever greater proportion of America is clinging to old institutions family, church, state and a myriad of clubs, voluntary associations, even gangs as anchors in an increasingly chaotic world.
After all, the United States is a country where the price of untrammeled individualism is that, in an instant, illness, crime or an injudicious investment portfolio can turn the proverbial American Dream into an outright nightmare. As a result, many Americans are seeking refuge in the church, with family or in gated communities.
Social innovation
In many ways, it is Canadians who have become the true revolutionaries, at least when it comes to social life. In fact, it has become apparent to me that Canadians are at the forefront of a fascinating and important social experiment. In many ways, it is Canadians who have become the true revolutionaries at least when it comes to social life.
We Canadians are coming to define a new sociological post-modernity, characterized by multiple, flexible roles and identities. In contrast, Americans weaned for generations on ideals of freedom and independence have in general not found adequate security and stability in their social environment.
That makes them hesitant when it comes to asserting the personal autonomy needed to enact the kind of individual explorations spiritual, familial, sexual that are taking place north of the border.
Flocking to religion
The increase in religiosity in the United States is perhaps the characteristic that best distinguishes America from other advanced industrial societies in terms of social change.
Whereas in Canada and Europe the church has been linked with the state (and, thus, over time has become subject to the distrust and questioning to which the state has been exposed), in America religion has long been decentralized and congregationally-based.
Marketing religion
The diverse and populist system of American sectarianism has proved much more resilient, in the long run, than the more hierarchical, institutional, state-sanctioned church models of the Old World.
Churches are some of the few places if not the only one where many Americans feel truly safe, where guns are left at home, under the seat in the 4X4, or checked at the door.
The claim that Americans high levels of religious affiliation can be attributed to U.S. churches particularly the Protestant sects having been forced to market themselves effectively over the years in order to survive may well be true. In my records, however, we found an extremely strong correlation between deference to authority and religiosity among Americans.
Those Americans who describe themselves as very religious are far more likely to embrace trends associated with deference to authority not only Obedience to Authority, but also values such as Patriarchy, Traditional Family, Duty and Propriety.
Seeking refuge
These people are looking for definitive answers and rules to live by, unlike many of those strong on the Spiritual Quest trend, who are looking to ask the right questions and wish to arrive at their own albeit often tentative conclusions.
Religion is fulfilling a role for Americans that secular institutions do in other countries: Safe haven, community, a place to be with people like me, a refuge from Darwinistic competition and conflict in an increasingly dangerous world.
High standards, high quality
Churches are some of the few places, if not the only one, where many Americans feel truly safe where guns are left at home or under the seat in the 4X4 or checked at the door.
Religion is fulfilling a role for Americans that secular institutions do in other countries: Safe haven, community, a place to be with people like me," a refuge from Darwinistic competition and conflict.
Besides what separates Americans and Canadians on the church front, it is interesting to note that these two New World nations have each won the sweepstakes in two international competitions. The Americans in the category for the highest standard of living on the planet and the Canadians win for the best quality of life.
The Americans have done this by being motivated by the notion of individual achievement. The Canadians, in contrast, stand out by balancing individual autonomy with a sense of collective responsibility.
Ancestral qualities
We Americans and Canadians are thus each 21st century expressions of the ideas of our ancestors and the institutions they built. America honors traditionally masculine qualities. Canada honors qualities that are more traditionally feminine.
America honors the lone warrior fighting for truth and justice, the father who is master of his lonely house on the prairie or a few good men planting the Stars and Stripes on a distant planet. Canada honors compromise, harmony and equality. Americans go where no man has gone before. Canadians follow hoping to make that new place livable.
Complementary world roles
What does this all mean for the global community? If American historian Samuel P. Huntington is right and the 21st century will be an often violent clash of civilizations we will all be grateful for U.S. economic and military leadership.
Americans go where no man has gone before. Canadians follow hoping to make that new place livable.
If, however, the challenges of the 21st century will be addressing the growing disparities between rich and poor and the degradation of the Earths ecology, then let us hope Canada and kindred nations can muster the courage to show us another path into the future.
The key to these apparent anomalies, I believe, is the consequence of Americas single-minded pursuit of individual achievement in the absence of peace, order and good government. By adolescence and often earlier in life, Americans find themselves in an intense, often dangerous struggle for survival or a winner take all quest for success.
Winners and losers
In such a context, traditional authorities serve as anchors: A strong father, a strong police force, a strong military, a strong nation, the President and Commander-in-Chief. In such a world, there is little tolerance for subtlety, nuance or shades of gray.
Life is a Manichean struggle between good and evil, winners and losers and the only way good will prevail is by being the strongest, vanquishing the evil empire or the axis of evil or the next incarnation of the forces of evil.
The Boss got it right
Bruce Springsteen, American icon and perpetual valedictorian of the school of hard knocks, summed it up in his aptly named tune, Atlantic City: Down here, its just winners and losers and dont get caught on the wrong side of that line.
The Americans win the category for the highest standard of living on the planet and the Canadians win for the best quality of life.
In that world, individuals must choose their side, fall into line and follow their leader into battle. There is little room for individual autonomy in such a scenario.
That Americans are more deferential to institutions than Canadians is counter-intuitive. And perhaps most surprising, I have found Canadians to be a more autonomous people than Americans, less outer-directed and less conformist. This, too, is contrary to the stereotype of Americans as a nation of individuals.
Adapted from "Fire and Ice. The United States, Canada and the Myth of Converging Values" (Penguin, Canada) by Michael Adams. Copyright 2003 by Michael Adams. Used by permission of the author.
Canadians have long been considered more docile than Americans. But as President Bush visits Canada on November 30, 2004, does this stereotype still hold true? Michael Adams author of "Fire and Ice" argues that Canadians are emerging as the more liberal and pluralist people. In contrast, Americans are increasingly becoming deferent to authority.
n 1867, Canadas Fathers of Confederation dedicated their country to peace, order and good government. Meanwhile, the ideals set out in Thomas Jeffersons Declaration of Independence were life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Opposing ideals
Back then, it was Americans who were the revolutionaries, putting in place institutions that were designed to frustrate the authority of governments. Surprisingly, I have found Canadians to be a more autonomous people than Americans, less outer-directed and less conformist. In contrast, counter-revolutionary Canadians saw the authority of political institutions as central to the well-being of their country.
America has long honored the individual fighting for truth and justice. Canadians, for their part, have tended to defer to elites who broker compromises between competing social groups. And while Americas motto is E Pluribus Unum, out of many one, Canada started as two founding European cultures French and English.
Since that time, this biculturalism has been expanded to include a multiculturalism that encompasses not only more recent immigrants, but also the aboriginal First Nations that were here long before Europeans arrived.
The Old World lives on
The Americans separated church and state, while we Canadians embedded state sponsorship of parochial education in our constitution. All in all, Canada never renounced its European political heritage at least not as emphatically as the American revolutionaries did.
The Old World ideal of noblesse oblige has survived here even into this century, shaping our social assistance and public housing programs. In contrast, in the United States, the primary public expenditure has been mass education in the service of individual achievement.
Who are the real revolutionaries?
>From distinct roots, Canada and the United States have thus grown up with substantially different characters. Americans are motivated by the notion of individual achievement. Canadians, in contrast, stand out by balancing individual autonomy with a sense of collective responsibility.
Group rights, public institutions and deference to authority have abided north of the border while individualism, private interests and mistrust of authority have remained strong to the south. So much for the officially sanctioned saga. In the last quarter century, some counterintuitive developments have occurred on both sides of the 49th parallel.
Canadians have distanced themselves from traditional authority organized religion, the patriarchal family and political elites. Peter C. Newman has characterized recent social change in Canada as the movement from deference to defiance.
American nightmare?
Meanwhile, an ever greater proportion of America is clinging to old institutions family, church, state and a myriad of clubs, voluntary associations, even gangs as anchors in an increasingly chaotic world.
After all, the United States is a country where the price of untrammeled individualism is that, in an instant, illness, crime or an injudicious investment portfolio can turn the proverbial American Dream into an outright nightmare. As a result, many Americans are seeking refuge in the church, with family or in gated communities.
Social innovation
In many ways, it is Canadians who have become the true revolutionaries, at least when it comes to social life. In fact, it has become apparent to me that Canadians are at the forefront of a fascinating and important social experiment. In many ways, it is Canadians who have become the true revolutionaries at least when it comes to social life.
We Canadians are coming to define a new sociological post-modernity, characterized by multiple, flexible roles and identities. In contrast, Americans weaned for generations on ideals of freedom and independence have in general not found adequate security and stability in their social environment.
That makes them hesitant when it comes to asserting the personal autonomy needed to enact the kind of individual explorations spiritual, familial, sexual that are taking place north of the border.
Flocking to religion
The increase in religiosity in the United States is perhaps the characteristic that best distinguishes America from other advanced industrial societies in terms of social change.
Whereas in Canada and Europe the church has been linked with the state (and, thus, over time has become subject to the distrust and questioning to which the state has been exposed), in America religion has long been decentralized and congregationally-based.
Marketing religion
The diverse and populist system of American sectarianism has proved much more resilient, in the long run, than the more hierarchical, institutional, state-sanctioned church models of the Old World.
Churches are some of the few places if not the only one where many Americans feel truly safe, where guns are left at home, under the seat in the 4X4, or checked at the door.
The claim that Americans high levels of religious affiliation can be attributed to U.S. churches particularly the Protestant sects having been forced to market themselves effectively over the years in order to survive may well be true. In my records, however, we found an extremely strong correlation between deference to authority and religiosity among Americans.
Those Americans who describe themselves as very religious are far more likely to embrace trends associated with deference to authority not only Obedience to Authority, but also values such as Patriarchy, Traditional Family, Duty and Propriety.
Seeking refuge
These people are looking for definitive answers and rules to live by, unlike many of those strong on the Spiritual Quest trend, who are looking to ask the right questions and wish to arrive at their own albeit often tentative conclusions.
Religion is fulfilling a role for Americans that secular institutions do in other countries: Safe haven, community, a place to be with people like me, a refuge from Darwinistic competition and conflict in an increasingly dangerous world.
High standards, high quality
Churches are some of the few places, if not the only one, where many Americans feel truly safe where guns are left at home or under the seat in the 4X4 or checked at the door.
Religion is fulfilling a role for Americans that secular institutions do in other countries: Safe haven, community, a place to be with people like me," a refuge from Darwinistic competition and conflict.
Besides what separates Americans and Canadians on the church front, it is interesting to note that these two New World nations have each won the sweepstakes in two international competitions. The Americans in the category for the highest standard of living on the planet and the Canadians win for the best quality of life.
The Americans have done this by being motivated by the notion of individual achievement. The Canadians, in contrast, stand out by balancing individual autonomy with a sense of collective responsibility.
Ancestral qualities
We Americans and Canadians are thus each 21st century expressions of the ideas of our ancestors and the institutions they built. America honors traditionally masculine qualities. Canada honors qualities that are more traditionally feminine.
America honors the lone warrior fighting for truth and justice, the father who is master of his lonely house on the prairie or a few good men planting the Stars and Stripes on a distant planet. Canada honors compromise, harmony and equality. Americans go where no man has gone before. Canadians follow hoping to make that new place livable.
Complementary world roles
What does this all mean for the global community? If American historian Samuel P. Huntington is right and the 21st century will be an often violent clash of civilizations we will all be grateful for U.S. economic and military leadership.
Americans go where no man has gone before. Canadians follow hoping to make that new place livable.
If, however, the challenges of the 21st century will be addressing the growing disparities between rich and poor and the degradation of the Earths ecology, then let us hope Canada and kindred nations can muster the courage to show us another path into the future.
The key to these apparent anomalies, I believe, is the consequence of Americas single-minded pursuit of individual achievement in the absence of peace, order and good government. By adolescence and often earlier in life, Americans find themselves in an intense, often dangerous struggle for survival or a winner take all quest for success.
Winners and losers
In such a context, traditional authorities serve as anchors: A strong father, a strong police force, a strong military, a strong nation, the President and Commander-in-Chief. In such a world, there is little tolerance for subtlety, nuance or shades of gray.
Life is a Manichean struggle between good and evil, winners and losers and the only way good will prevail is by being the strongest, vanquishing the evil empire or the axis of evil or the next incarnation of the forces of evil.
The Boss got it right
Bruce Springsteen, American icon and perpetual valedictorian of the school of hard knocks, summed it up in his aptly named tune, Atlantic City: Down here, its just winners and losers and dont get caught on the wrong side of that line.
The Americans win the category for the highest standard of living on the planet and the Canadians win for the best quality of life.
In that world, individuals must choose their side, fall into line and follow their leader into battle. There is little room for individual autonomy in such a scenario.
That Americans are more deferential to institutions than Canadians is counter-intuitive. And perhaps most surprising, I have found Canadians to be a more autonomous people than Americans, less outer-directed and less conformist. This, too, is contrary to the stereotype of Americans as a nation of individuals.
Adapted from "Fire and Ice. The United States, Canada and the Myth of Converging Values" (Penguin, Canada) by Michael Adams. Copyright 2003 by Michael Adams. Used by permission of the author.
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