Does Gilles Duceppe's NATIONAL CULTURE really mean NAZI KULTUR?

Actualité québécoise - de la dépendance québécoise et du triomphalisme canadian


By Ken Tellis
When I read that caption in this mornings newspaper I for one was not one bit surprised, because the roots of both the Parti Quebecois and the Bloc Quebecois came from a single source in the province of Quebec. They were those who openly supported and sympathized with Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini in World War II.
Besides this, the Roman Catholic Church in Quebec was controlled by many priests that even prayed for a victory for the Axis. Among these were Abbe Lionel-Adolphe Groulx of Vaudreuil, Quebec and a few prominent Quebecois. Also the Mayor of Montreal, one Maximilian Houde who openly preached against conscription on RADIO, and who was arrested under the War Measures Act and interned for the duration of the war was convicted of this Nazi collaboration.
When Gilles Duceppe uses the word NATIONAL CULTURE he actually means KULTUR as in the Nazi theories of Adolf Hitler, and is more than likely based on Mein Kampf than anything else. But as usual Gilles Duceppe tries to pull a fast one by alluding to the Bloc Quebecois platform which erroneously refers to a section -"Quebec's national culture." If Quebec is not a NATION how can it have a NATIONAL CULTURE?
So in point of fact there is no such thing as Quebec's national culture. Having failed in 2008 to exempt Quebec from the Canadian Multicultural Act with a private members bill C-505 by bloquiste MP for Joliette, QC Pierre Paquette, Gilles Duceppe now attempts to bypass it, by going around it. Nice try Gilles; sorry but no CIGAR! The word 'Interculturalism' that Gilles Duceppe used is a code word for KULTUR, which was vogue during the Nazi ERA in Germany.
Of course as we can see, Gilles Duceppe is very adept in trying to pass off JOUAL or French patois, the colloquial spoken in Quebec as FRENCH, -which it is certainly NOT. And as for Quebecois culture, it is a MIXTURE of Native Indigenous culture and a little bit of French culture; a hold-over from the days of NEW FRANCE IN 1760. Ergo, if we were to go even further, the people who style themselves Quebecois are really METIS/ METISSE, not FRENCH.
(extrait)


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