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'Dominion Day' is almost as wrong as 'Canada Day'
http://www.projectalberta.com/board/viewtopic.php?f=59&t=4930
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Author:  Knave [ Thu Jul 05, 2007 1:17 am ]
Post subject:  'Dominion Day' is almost as wrong as 'Canada Day'

From my email;

Quote:
July 4, 2007
Calling July 1 'Dominion Day' is almost as wrong as calling it 'Canada Day'
By Link Byfield

Another Canada Day has come and gone, allowing conservatives to lament for the thousandth time the eradication of the older term "Dominion Day."

Old-timers like me still wistfully recall when July 1 was "Dominion Day," named for what was known to us then (and is still called in the Constitution) the Dominion of Canada.

There is, after all, something silly about "Canada Day."

The English don’t have "England Day," nor the Americans "United States Day," nor the Danes Denmark Day. So why Canada Day?

At the risk of offending conservatives, I’m going to offer a whole new thought.

Maybe "Dominion Day" was wrong too. Maybe they’re both wrong.

Maybe July 1 should have been called Confederation Day all along.

After all, that’s what actually occurred on July 1, 1867. Three British colonies confederated into one nation of four provinces. Six others followed later.

The truth is, the term "dominion" itself was something of a humbug.

Canada became the first of the British "dominions," followed by Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Newfoundland and even, briefly, pre-republican Ireland. The term meant "self-governing under the British Crown." No word for such a thing having been coined, one had to be invented. "Republic" didn’t suit, because it means "no king."

Some ultra-Tory Canadians in 1867 favoured "Kingdom of Canada," but to most this seemed inappropriate in the New World.

Leonard Tilley, the premier of New Brunswick, suggested "dominion," a synonym for "realm" that sounded less monarchical than "kingdom." So that word was written into the second sentence of the Canadian Constitution, and a year or so later we got "Dominion Day."

By the 1960s, people of fashionable political tastes thought it anachronistic to go on referring to the "Dominion Government," and, like true liberals everywhere, they decided to erase the past by substituting something emotively vague and intellectually meaningless. The holiday officially became Canada Day in 1982.

A nothing name, to be sure. But I’d argue the real mistake was made long before – in 1879, when "Dominion Day" was enshrined in statute.

After all, if Dominion meant "owing allegiance to the British Crown," it was as true of us before 1867 as it was after. Confederation changed nothing in that regard.

What did change on July 1, 1867, was that we confederated.

An event is a fact, and facts endure. They don’t change with times and tastes.

That’s why Americans don’t have "Republic Day" (or "America Day") on July 4. They have "Independence Day;" just as the French have "Bastille Day." These refer to key historical events.

Our key event was Confederation.

We can only guess why the Liberals didn’t do the obvious and change the name of our holiday to Confederation Day.

Perhaps they considered it an unwelcome reminder that the provinces, not Ottawa, created Canada as we know it. The provinces invented Ottawa.

A "Confederation Day" would remind us that we are in fact a federal system of divided sovereignty, in which numerous important rights, powers and responsibilities remain entirely with the provinces, always did, always will, and always should.

Far better, to the Liberal mindset, to persuade people that Ottawa’s in charge of everything and the provinces are just glorified municipalities.

If we hope ever to restore responsible government and constitutional federalism, we should name our national holiday Confederation Day.

- Link Byfield
LinkByfield@ccfd.ca

Author:  T. Sawchuk [ Thu Jul 05, 2007 6:16 am ]
Post subject:  Re: 'Dominion Day' is almost as wrong as 'Canada Day'

Knave wrote:
From my email;

Quote:
July 4, 2007
Calling July 1 'Dominion Day' is almost as wrong as calling it 'Canada Day'
By Link Byfield
There is, after all, something silly about "Canada Day."

The English don’t have "England Day," nor the Americans "United States Day," nor the Danes Denmark Day. So why Canada Day?


But there is Australia Day. I've never quite figured out why some people have a problem with Canada Day. Every nation has a national festival this is ours and has been for a quarter century.

Author:  AltaInd [ Thu Jul 05, 2007 8:30 am ]
Post subject: 

The Dominion of Canada lives on

National Post


Thursday, July 05, 2007


Re: What Is Canadian?, June 30.

With respect to the title of "Dominion of Canada," it is still the official title for Canada under the Constitution Act of 1982. At the London Conference in 1866, the Fathers of Confederation wanted to call the new nation the "Kingdom of Canada," but the British government, anxious not to antagonize the Americans, insisted they find another title.

It was at that point that one of the Fathers, Sir Leonard Tilley, went back to his hotel room and pulled out his Bible, turning to King David's Psalm 72, verse 8, where he found what he believed to be the best description of Canada: "He shall have dominion from sea even unto sea [Atlantic to Pacific] and from the great river [the St. Lawrence] unto the ends of the Earth [the Arctic]."

In fact, the title of "Dominion" was one of the few specifically Canadian contributions to the meetings that led to the creation of Canada on July 1, 1867. It is entirely appropriate, I believe, that our multicultural nation's official title is taken from a prayer by a king of Israel.

Alexander Roman, Toronto.

Author:  wlyonmackenzie [ Thu Jul 05, 2007 9:53 am ]
Post subject: 

Because the change from Dominion day to Canada Day was done in a sneaky underhanded typically Liberal way.... at a time of parliamentary recess where there were less people in the house to make a quarrum....it was rushed through at the last minute with no forewarning ( like the flag act).....beyond that, it is part of the Liberal tactic to fabricate a new reality for Canada that strays from history or constitutional reality.....Canada is NOT a federal nation...it was, and is, constituted as a CONfederation ( and there is a lot of difference...I'll leave it to you to research this yourself so the differnce seems stark and is remembered)

I agree with Link..were our social engineering wannabe federalist masters in Ottawa totally truthful and true to historic fact, we should rightfully call this day "Confederation Day"...that would be the honest and patriotic thing to do....but when have I seen an honest or constitutionally patriotic Fed-Lib in the past 3 decades? :roll:

Author:  Knave [ Thu Jul 05, 2007 10:36 am ]
Post subject:  Re: 'Dominion Day' is almost as wrong as 'Canada Day'

T. Sawchuk wrote:
But there is Australia Day. I've never quite figured out why some people have a problem with Canada Day. Every nation has a national festival this is ours and has been for a quarter century.


But even Australia Day has its detractors; some want the date changed from January 26th to January 1st, to reflect the anniversary of Australian Federation.

Author:  T. Sawchuk [ Thu Jul 05, 2007 11:15 am ]
Post subject: 

wlyonmackenzie wrote:
Because the change from Dominion day to Canada Day was done in a sneaky underhanded typically Liberal way.... at a time of parliamentary recess where there were less people in the house to make a quarrum....it was rushed through at the last minute with no forewarning ( like the flag act)..... (snip)


I've read those stories, too. I haven't checked the details, but there is something a little wonky about that story. I assume that it is true there were only 13 in the house when the bill received third reading, but this will have been after there was first and second readings in both the Commons and the Senate, each of which will have involved committees, too. I suspect that is not much nefarious here.

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