Pubdate: Sun, 04 May 2003
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2003 Times Colonist
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Jack Knox

BUSTED: A CLASSIC CANADIAN CLICHE

OROVILLE, Wash. (AP) -- Two British Columbia residents await trial on 
charges they tried to smuggle $2.4 million worth of marijuana into the 
United States in a canoe.

Border Patrol agents were waiting in the bushes when the suspects landed 
their 18 1/2 -foot canoe on the American side of Lake Osoyoos. The craft 
was laden with 478 pounds of high-grade marijuana in 14 hockey bags.

- - - -

I swear on a stack of bilingual Bibles that I am not making this up. The 
story may have the all elements of the ultimate Canadian crime: B.C. Bud, 
hockey bags, a canoe.

Bob and Doug McKenzie turn bad, eh? All that's missing is an arrest by a 
Mountie in a red serge wetsuit. Or a grow-op fire that melts the igloo.

Y'r Honour, the Crown wishes to add another charge: Perpetuating a national 
stereotype. Or, at least, perpetuating the wrong stereotype.

There are, after all, some myths we would like to keep alive, even among 
ourselves. Like the one that says we're so much more peaceful and 
crime-free than the Americans.

Canadians enjoy the belief that we're kinder, more polite, more 
self-effacing, more modest than they are. Just ask us. We'll brag about it.

Alas, our niceness is a myth. Just look at the indicators: Don Cherry is 
the most popular man on television.

Our prime minister throttles a protester and his polls go through the roof.

Our favourite beer commercial depicts a Canadian pulling an American 
co-worker's jacket over his head and whupping on him like it's a hockey game.

Everyone -- except maybe Stephen Harper, an American trapped in a 
Canadian's body -- chortles when Rick Mercer skewers U.S. ignorance of the 
Great White North.

But how ignorant are we of ourselves?

A United Nations report says Canada's crime rate is not far behind that of 
the U.S. -- 8,117 crimes per 100,000 people here, as opposed to 8,517 south 
of the line.

Our murder rates are comparable, and we're waaay ahead in -- nudge-nudge, 
wink-wink -- hunting accidents.

Where we really trail is in gun crime. You're eight times more likely to be 
shot to death in the U.S., and 14.5 times as apt to be killed with a 
handgun. Canadians aren't less violent than Americans, we just have lousy aim.

Or maybe we've just confused being well-mannered with being out of ammo, a 
reflection of our respective governments' divergent approaches to gun control.

Every year, about 34,000 Americans are shot dead. Their solution to this 
tragedy was, naturally, to ban lawn darts.

In our country, we responded with a billion-dollar firearms registry, its 
purpose being to make Canadians so poor that no one can afford to buy a gun.

This actually validates one of those stereotypes, the old definition of a 
Canadian as being an unarmed American with good health insurance.

Ah, yes, our national yardstick measures everything about us in relation to 
the U.S. But how do we stack up against the rest of the planet?

On a per-capita basis, Canadians lead the world in life expectancy, regular 
Internet use, number of doughnut shops, consumption of Kraft Dinner and 
fighting majors.

We are No. 2 in consumption of fossil fuels, greenhouse gas emissions and 
water use, but lead the entire world -- No. 1, baby! -- in overall energy 
consumption.

I think it was Ed Bain who said something about celebrating Earth Day by 
getting polluted.

And, gosh darn it all, we grow massive quantities of the best damn dope in 
the world. Canadians aren't peaceful, they're just too stoned to respond to 
anything but the munchies (probably explains the doughnuts and Kraft Dinner).

No, no, no, that's an outrageous slur. Most of the dope grown in Canada is 
not smoked, but shipped directly to the States for the personal use of the 
National Basketball Association and Woody Harrelson. In hockey bags.

"It's almost a cliche," says Paul Jones, the U.S. Border Patrol's 
intelligence agent for the area in which the canoe-borne smugglers were caught.

"That's the standard packaging unit for Canadian marijuana now." (And you 
thought the inside of a hockey bag smelled funny before.)

Well, way to go, drug smugglers. Thanks for keeping our hoser image firmly 
fixed in the American mind.

What did these guys do when caught, cry "No doot aboot it, you'll never 
take me alive?"

Probably not. No point getting in a fight when they're armed with Smith and 
Wessons and all you have is a Victoriaville.

Which may be one reason those arrested in Oroville surrendered without a fight.

Almost, you might say, politely.
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MAP posted-by: Alex