The future of the Parti Québécois | The duty

For two or three days, it has been fair game to strike at the resilient Parti Québécois. This is unfortunately what happens when an option bothers, irritates and reminds the adversaries that they are up against the wall, without a plan B, and unable to obtain the powers requested by Quebec.

Mr. Lucien Bouchard said that sovereignty is a dream. I tell him that dreams, without action to make them happen, become nightmares. I prefer to be taxed as a dreamer and unrealistic than resigned, defeatist, wait-and-see, chanting “I should have”.

Since the end of the Second World War, the two Canadian solitudes have traveled on different tangents, moving further and further away from each other. English Canada and Quebecers each define their ideal country.

Canadians dream of a unilingual English country with a strong central government. They adhere to values ​​such as multiculturalism and reject overly glaring differences. […] Quebecers want French as a common language and interculturalism as a societal value. For decades, they have made progress in all sectors of activity. They assert themselves and demand that this development be recognized. Independence is the logical outcome of the development of Quebec. It is increasingly vital that the Quebec nation possess all the means of modern states to survive and continue to progress. […]

Will the Parti Québécois materialize this project? I think so. Can he do it alone? Maybe not. When will Quebecers get tired of being snubbed and being told no? I can’t predict it. But I will continue to work for the development of Quebec and its independence.

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