Start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel 🎉. Get up to 60% OFF your subscription ➡Here: go.babbel.com/t?bsc=1200m60-youtube-ravignon-oct-2023&btp=default&KZitem&Influencer..ravignon..USA..KZitem
@Maytrx
10 ай бұрын
Literally playing Genshin Impact at 29:02 when the "Quebec Constellation" appears on screen. LOL
@robertortiz-wilson1588
10 ай бұрын
27:26 like with most of the Indian residential schools, those are unsubstantiated allegations. Furthermore, politicians, media, activists and you don’t care about the lives of illegal migrants who violate American sovereignty. Enforcement of continued Obama era policies only used to demonize Trump is quite frankly sickening and tired at this point. Get a new stupid cliché.
@jaspern.7702
10 ай бұрын
Someone with "88" in their username ignoring mass graves. Why am I not surprised? @@robertortiz-wilson1588
@raphaeltazbaz2962
11 ай бұрын
I am a québécois myself,raised in french, and i can't begin to tell you how Deep tour understanding of our nation is. You did an incredible job, and i mean because i only ever posted 2 comment on video, I love the fact that people outside the borders of Canada know us and more importantly understand. Milles mercis pour ton travail exceptionnel. Kiss
@jamesgannon2136
11 ай бұрын
*province
@Junglersaredelusional
11 ай бұрын
@@jamesgannon2136tell me you don’t understand the concept of nation
@raphaeltazbaz2962
11 ай бұрын
@@jamesgannon2136 une nation sans état
@lanagro
11 ай бұрын
Quebec is a PROVINCE, and an extremally racist one at that. Having been born and raised in Quebec, I can safely say that Quebec nationalists are no different than the KKK, the Waffen SS, or the Gestapo. Canada needs to wake up and start calling them out for what they are. No other place in the word makes language illegal, and commits the crime of denying services to their citizens all because they speak a different language. Wanting to send your kids to school in English, or a cancer patient asking for a medical explanation of their diagnosis in English a crime in Quebec. Ordering food in English is a crime, having signs in English is a crime, the list goes on.. If Quebec were nation it would be no different that Afrikaans South Africa, North Korea, or some other shithole.
@TheNmecod
10 ай бұрын
@@jamesgannon2136 jesus you have no understanding of the word nation do you?
@Kraut_the_Parrot
11 ай бұрын
Watching you make this video and talk about it with us in private, has felt like anticipating a great old aged wine. I am going to sit back and relax, order a pizza, and enjoy this.
@PakBallandSami
11 ай бұрын
Hello parrot man
@Kraut_the_Parrot
11 ай бұрын
@@PakBallandSami hey man, hope you are well
@PakBallandSami
11 ай бұрын
@@Kraut_the_Parrot iam doing ok man
@siechamontillado
11 ай бұрын
So I have a confusion: you're in Austria but a parrot. Do you fly south for the winter or have you already acclimated from your Equatorial beginnings?
@InquisitorXarius
11 ай бұрын
@@Kraut_the_ParrotLord Kraut what a pleasure to see you here
@martinsto8190
11 ай бұрын
Would it be important to cover the history of Haiti since this series on Quebec was to answer the original question about francophone regions in the Americas as part of being considered Latin American?
@RavignonCh
11 ай бұрын
That's a good idea.
@Pyromat15
11 ай бұрын
And perhaps Louisiana after that.
@MegaGlupe
10 ай бұрын
@@Pyromat15or how Louisiana lost its french causing language insecurity in Quebec
@EmperorTigerstar
11 ай бұрын
Excellent work! Always interesting to learn about this history.
@josephstalin2829
10 ай бұрын
Hello tiger man
@kenevinparent2314
11 ай бұрын
I saw this video, so I binged the first 2 chapters. You understand Québec better than 99% of Anglophones who live there today.
@djgrumpygeezer1194
11 ай бұрын
Grew up 50 miles south of Montreal in New York State. Listened to CBC Montreal, made regular trips to Expo 67, and enrolled in McGill University (flunked out in spectacular fashion). With Expo, the new Metro, and the announcement that Montreal would host the ‘76 Olympics, the pride and excitement in the city and the province was palpable. And then there was the FLQ. Jarred awake in my dorm room by the blast of an exploding mailbox. Saw L’Hotel de Ville surrounded by Canadian Armed Forces jeeps mounting .50 cal machine guns. (Whoops, next episode.) I’m so grateful for this deep dive into the history, politics and sociology of those times when I experienced Quebec as an intimate outsider. I’ve watched your whole series and am enormously impressed by what you’re creating. Can’t wait for the final installment. I was trucking all over the province when the PQ came to power and Bill 101 became law. Yet more interesting times.
@friendofmaurice
11 ай бұрын
Always a privilege to be asked to channel one's inner De Gaulle. Congrats on the hard work for this video.
@PakBallandSami
11 ай бұрын
hello frog man
@jeralm
10 ай бұрын
You killed it.What an amazing character
@MONFLYINGSAUCER
11 ай бұрын
Amazing documentary, the trilogy is by far the best documentary of Québec on KZitem. A breath of fresh air that counterweight the usual Québec bashing of english canadians.
@carotteatomique
11 ай бұрын
From a Quebecoise, thank you so much for explaining what’s wrong with Vallière’s book. Usually Quebec sovereignists will avoid the topic (or worse, defend it) and even people who are critical of it often stop at the name. Thank you for this awesome series and I can’t wait to watch part II 🧡
@ThePacificWarChannel
11 ай бұрын
As a Québécois I am floored by your knowledge on the subject. Very refreshing =)!
@PakBallandSami
11 ай бұрын
Quebec feel like one of those places were to the outside world does not know much about but it has been a very interesting place if you live in Canada, i feel like Quebec will become something big in few years or so
@ericsimard4449
11 ай бұрын
Thank you! I hope so too. Wouldn’t it be great for there to be a new North American country?
@shijikori
11 ай бұрын
@@ericsimard4449 That would be terrible. Just in borders, that would split Canada in half. All the policies in place federally and in the provinces and all the trade makes it harder to leave the confederation than in the 50s and 60s. I would guess that it would give us somewhat of a Brexit situation. For now, the province feels like it's on the neutral gear but it has a lot going for it if it can get back into gear.
@lerocheheure1032
11 ай бұрын
@@shijikori Im pretty sure it's back into gear, I believe Quebec could become a thing in the next 10 years
@Lando-kx6so
11 ай бұрын
@@shijikoriit would be several times worse than Brexit since Quebec has been part of Canada since the beginning
@ericsimard4449
11 ай бұрын
No because we already have our own economical policy and different from brexit our main export and economic allies are the us and europ (not even Canada)… also different from btw it we wouldn’t separate from one day to then next, we just want to renegotiate our position within the Canadian federation….
@amedeg.4907
11 ай бұрын
Great video! As a québéquois, it's special to see our history being told from an outside perspective. I personally never heard of the take you have on the work of Pierre Valière and its controvertial name. A lot of people I know in the independance movement use it to try and connect with minorities like the first nations and others. But it can indeed lead to what you say because that's what happended in the end. The problem a lot of "indépendantistes" have with Pierre-Elliott Trudeau is his obsession with a uniform canadian identity. In the US, that was only possible because of a very brutal approche in unifying there morals and culture. The civil war is a good exemple of that. To abolish slavery, wich was more a moral and economic dilemma for the white elite, they had to brutally fight among themselves. The idea of unity of the country at all cost is engrain in the US mind. Less today, but I'm not where to start on that subject. Canada never had this sens of unified identity at all cost. We were all on our own sides dealing with our own problems and interacting when needed or when interests overlapse or diverged. So when Trudeau arrived and said we should all follow these principles and be simillar, the québéquois didn't see themselves has the same as english canadians and didn't want their sens of identity lost in the masses. The animosity comes from there. The canadian federation is one of the more loose federation in the world like you said. This will of unifying identity was bond to meet problems the moment it tried to be put in place, especially in that context. Albetains are not the same as Ontarians. People from New Brunswick are not the same has people from Québec. Trying to say otherwise will only bring discouse despite the similarity we might all have. It should have never been about unifying our identity, but about unifying our interests on how all of our futures should look like with the interaction we will undoubtedly have with eachother. Sorry for the ramble, and this is just a opinion of mine with my knowlwdge of everything.
@FormosaHistory
11 ай бұрын
I know it was more meant as a joke, but De Gaulle did not do it as a little trolling, far from it, nor did he actually do it only in compassion for Quebec's struggle, but he mainly did it for his vision of France's place in the world. De Gaulle wanted France to be a third player/pole(a policy of France that still somewhat continue to this day, now integrated into the EU idea of "Strategic Autonomy"), distinct and autonomous from the US and the USSR, and that went around with a lot of policies (promotion of French culture and values worldwide and why France is "unique", "leaving" NATO, francafrique neo-colonialism, french nuclear program, etc.). And "Quebec's resistance" to the largely dominated English speaking North American continent was a very big thorn in the side for the whole American idea of American culture dominance, and De Gaulle kinda used that to just remind the USA that "look! right next doors, there are a big group of French(so none-English) speakers resisting!". I know this wasn't the focus of the video and I didn't expect it to be developed in it, I just wanted to clarify a bit that it was more than just a "little troll to Canada". Very happy to finally see this third episode and was very much worth the wait!
@dougpetryk6864
11 ай бұрын
worth remembering this 'troll' was visiting a country that has 100k of its sons buried in his country to ensure he wouldn't have to deliver his speech in german. I'd go as far as saying that sort of trolling puts you into the heights of petulance not often seen on the world stage.
@bobseven310
11 ай бұрын
@@dougpetryk6864 Canada didn't enter WW2 "for France". And among the Canadians who fought and died were many French Canadians who were delighted by his support for their resistance. To posit his speech as "biting the hand that feeds you" is rather disingenuous. That said, he *was* prone to such things due to his extreme patriotism. But can you really blame him? He fought so France wouldn't be a puppet to the Germans, he wasn't going to accept to become another nation's puppet.
@JerryCuberton
11 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite series on yt as my mother is from Quebec and I speak Quebecois french and it is incredibly interesting to learn about my nation's most interesting area
@beacebrocess
11 ай бұрын
Genius essay, I'm proud of you son
@Flow86767
11 ай бұрын
Un jour on va l’avoir notre pays ❤
@ericsimard4449
11 ай бұрын
Vive le Québec libre tbnk
@TheWolverine01
10 ай бұрын
💪Oui
@platinumcaptain7762
11 ай бұрын
So excited! I’ve been waiting for a looong time for this haha. I know it’ll be great, thanks Ravignon!
@heartman194
11 ай бұрын
an incredibly funny part of de gaulle's peach that a lot of people forget is the part at the beginning where he says that his trip had the same energy than paris' liberation
@anonyme7024
11 ай бұрын
Amazing video!!! Merveilleuse vidéo Ravignon!!!
@hsdiamond2113
11 ай бұрын
I learnt a lot from this, thank you. The series is very well made and learning about the history of Quebec is really intriguing to me as a canadian in british columbia.
@EFO841
11 ай бұрын
Le Jour arrive finalement ! Merci pour tout votre travail!! More mexicans / mexican-americans should learn about quebec and canada !
@mcgiver6977
10 ай бұрын
Bah.....ils ont 50 États en sol américain ....à quoi bon s'intéresser au 51e État qui représente les 9 provinces canadiennes anglaises ? S'intéresser au Québec, oui ça d'accord. Le Canada anglais n'a pas d'identité, d'où la raison pourquoi il ne fait pas jaser hors de ses frontières.
@Awesomewithaz
11 ай бұрын
I can't wait to watch this after class tomorrow.
@115xXzombieXx115
11 ай бұрын
Seeing the views this got I realize that it may not encourage you to continue making more of these but, please continue producing this HQ art! To give my perspective, even though I would love to watch this rn, I simply don't have time and can only spare the time to write this comment. Likely a lot of the viewers of Quebec I and II feel the same way about clicking on this monster of a video and they will likely come at various points in the coming weeks and months. I'm sure you see the effects of this as a more level daily viewer count than non evergreen videos on youtube. In summary, keep creating this stellar stuff and we'll keep coming back for more!
@Mattattak
11 ай бұрын
Vive le Québec libre 💙🤍⚜️
@colinhannah3515
10 ай бұрын
Congrats! I'm so excited for the finale of the best Quebec series there is.
@saltysquid89
11 ай бұрын
I'm so excited for this, can't wait
@lucenukem
11 ай бұрын
ITS HERE ITS FINALLY HERE 🎉🎉🎉
@francoislatreille6068
11 ай бұрын
cette oeuvre est un cadeau. merci!
@TacticalAnt420
11 ай бұрын
26:27 so I’m in Secondary 5 (last year of school in Quebec) and did the ministry history exam last year. It is required to receive your diploma to pass secondary 4 history class. I got 99 out of 100 in the exam. So in the eyes of the ministry, I’m one of the best student. Yet I didn’t even hear once the mention of this. It’s mind boggling. Thank you. Thank you for this wonderful video about Quebec. Although I shouldn’t, I learned many things about my province’s history. I’m really looking forward to part IV!
@mcgiver6977
10 ай бұрын
Félicitation pour votre succès en histoire. Ce n'est pas légion au Québec d'avoir des succès académiques, encore moins en histoire. Vous nous honorez.
@TacticalAnt420
10 ай бұрын
@@mcgiver6977 Merci!
@bobseven310
11 ай бұрын
"La Grande Noirceur" is basically the simplification of history that is taught in school in Québec. With hindsight, really feels like the liberals, when they took education away from the clergy, set the curriculum in a way to glorify themselves and condemn their political rivals, and that this depiction of history was never revisited afterwards as the Union Nationale gradually died out. When you are taught this period of history, you just can't wrap your head around why the Union nationale ever got power, or how it persisted for a long time after Duplessis. Your video brings a refreshing amount of context that is typically lacking in accounts of Québec's history. Why different factions act how they do, and how they are influenced by events abroad, is usually missing.
@levillagedupc
11 ай бұрын
Oh yeah ! So excited to see it, I’ve been waiting for the sequel for weeks !
@experienceforge
11 ай бұрын
I can't wait to watch the next part, I've learned so much about Quebec in this series and am so excited to see your analysis of the 70s - present day Quebec (and maybe some future speculations)
@Darkdragon5544
11 ай бұрын
I looove your work but I dispute your analysis of Pierre Vallière's book: He was openly a communist just like a lot of the black liberation movements in the United States at the time and he actually had ties with them. He straight up asked, before publishing, asked the leader of the black panthers if it was okay to do so. One thing to note, in these days, is that the lifetime expentancy before the quiet revolution of a French speaking Québécois was below the average black person in North America. I know it's a book that is widely criticized for its title and the thesis it suggests, but that's more of a metaphore for a situation's assessment where he asks questions that would be the most progressive even today... For example he asked about language and how liberation would affect non-francophones, like the First Nations and the immigrants, as it would need to ne a liberation for them as well. However English and even some French language medias has "blacklisted" the book without reading it at all in recent years which may have affected your research... (By the way he says liberation and it's meant in a communist way, his support for independence was to make a communist state. However a lot of people back then understood it as political independence. And no, most people do not agree with his propositions, but we mostly agree with his assessment and the questions he asks).
@andreleclerc7231
10 ай бұрын
Ravignon did what a great many people do on the subject, trips on the title of the book and never gets up. For someone that pour so many hour into this "Well other people suffered more so they're not 100% legitimate" is a pretty crap take.
@NaviRyan
5 ай бұрын
I’m sorry saying the book is cool with the black panther. Is the same as saying I can’t be racist I have a black friend when being called out for being racist. Also the black panther party isn’t representative of the entire black population nor even the political left of the black population. The black panther’s themselves split between east and west while the cia turned the leadership against each other quite easily until it imploded. Ironically the women who were in charge of caring for the poor children and education could’ve had a much larger political impact on America so long as the leaders worked together. This isn’t an excuse for the incredibly racist cia whose goal was always to present the black panthers as a violent gang and so goaded the leadership into violence and self destruction.
@conradmarcotte6749
6 ай бұрын
Thank you for this series. As a Quebecois, Merci tellement!!!
@mittens8798
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for another excellent installment in this wonderful series. I only have a couple of quibbles: - You chide the neonationalists for overly focusing on English/French and not focusing on the treatment of other ethnic groups, but I think this is somewhat anachronistic. Québec in 1961 had a well over 99% white ethnically-European population. Most Québécois would likely have never seen a black person outside TV; those minorities just weren't large enough to be politically significant. And while that changed over the course of the 60s and 70s (thanks to Diefenbaker repealing racist immigration laws), it took decades for these communities to grow enough to enter the province's political consciousness. So it made sense to frame the political debate around French vs English. - I think that rather than compare the FLQ to the IRA, it makes more sense to compare them to the numerous marxist/left-wing terrorist organizations that popped-up around the same time, for many of the same reasons: the Symbionese Liberation Army, the Weather Underground, Action Directe, the Red Brigades, etc. Yes Quebec in the 70s was not a fertile spot for a marxist revolutionary endeavor, but the FLQ didn't pop up there by accident either. Like many disadvantaged people in other western countries, they saw themselves as part of an ongoing international liberation movement, galvanized by the fight in Algeria, the revolution in Cuba, the Tupamaros in Uruguay... The FLQ had ties with the Black Panthers, Weather Underground, Cuban and Palestinian revolutionaries. That aspect of FLQ ideology (revolutionary marxism) tends to be retrospectively ignored in favor of the ethno-nationalist aspect, but I think the former was a bigger part of the group's ideology.
@andreleclerc7231
10 ай бұрын
Ravignon has a revisionist view. Deschamps has a famous monolgue on racism suffered by blacks, vigneault was singing about 'Notre maison est votre maison', Freaking '70 Paul Piché was singing about treatment of disfranchised of all ilk (aboriginal, prisoners, women etc.) it was on the nationalist radar but jesus sorry an independent Quebec was not envisioned first and foremost into come kind of idyllic intersectorial woke heaven. That's a high standard to have, great many countries would have their legitimacy removed.
@banrave
11 ай бұрын
Leaving a comment because you said Montreal correctly, I am happy now.
@kevincronk7981
11 ай бұрын
So glad this funally came out
@eko2418
11 ай бұрын
Rav is the definition of quality over quantity!
@olivierdubreuil-gagnon2201
11 ай бұрын
Oh boy I can’t wait for the next video! I’m impatient to see what you’ll have to say about Jacques Parizeau’s comment. Which, to be fair, wasn’t completely wrong (many were threatened with deportation if they voted for separation, and that’s just on the latter part of the comment), but WOW was it bad!
@kevinvanmierlo-amezcua4977
10 ай бұрын
The worst part is: now i will have to wait. This is such rich and detailed work. Please keep this up, i greatly look up to your work.
@ArthuroQC
7 ай бұрын
Wow un travail remarquable. Venez nous voir au Québec. Et vive le Québec libre.
@excalibrrimcold9354
7 күн бұрын
I was hoping for Churchill falls to be mentioned in this video as it is one of Newfoundlands biggest blunders where the smallwood government gave quebec the majority of the power and profits from a dam in Newfoundland and how Newfoundland tried again with Muskrat falls.
@heiskanbuscadordelaverdad8709
11 ай бұрын
I really loved the FDR speech at the start feels really timeless wish more politicians did speeches like that
@ZontarDow
11 ай бұрын
Kind of sours it when you remember that the mentality behind the speech is why the Great Depression lasted 17 years rather then a handful.
@HW-sw5gb
11 ай бұрын
@@ZontarDowNo, the libertarian idea that the Depression would’ve lasted only a few more years without government intervention is wrong. What is correct is that it would’ve lasted shorter. However, the voters knew this. The Depression made people want a welfare state and safety net EVEN THOUGH it slows down the economy, because it made them want the living conditions during inevitable economic cycles to never be as terrible as they were. They figured it was letter for it to be mid-bad a for a longer time than extremely bad for a shorter time. History makes it clears. The people are willing to sacrifice some economic performance in exchange for some social democracy.
@ZontarDow
11 ай бұрын
@@HW-sw5gb Literally every western nation shows that the long observed correlation between larger scale government intervention resulting in recessions lasting longer was not in any way broken by the Great Depression, and we have the entire Western world to use for comparison with the US on this. Your attempt to pontificate against the facts will not warp reality into changing history, the observation that FDR and his failed policies are why the Depression lasted 17 years in the US is as much unchangeable fact as gravity is. You are right about one thing though, people are willing to be worst off if they think they're actually better off due to not thinking, which is why the same type of person who think FDR made America better off for anyone is the same who think the Nazis did the same for Germany despite they too having every year under their rule be worst for the general public as well. The meme of a burning house with the dog saying "this is fine" exits for a reason, you people actually exist.
@Lemon-pu5dx
11 ай бұрын
Merci Babbel!
@patrickblanchette4337
11 ай бұрын
Thank you Babbel!
@davidrousseau100
11 ай бұрын
Je parle déja francais, je n'utiliserai donc pas Babbel, désolé! Mais exellente vidéo sur le Québec!! C'est rare qu'on voit notre province avoir le "spotlight".
@mcgiver6977
10 ай бұрын
Ce l'est encore moinsi pour les 9 provinces anglophones tellement elles manquent d'identité.
@davidrousseau100
10 ай бұрын
@@mcgiver6977 Je serais d'accord avec l'exeption de l'Ontario et la Colombie Brittanique
@mcgiver6977
10 ай бұрын
@@davidrousseau100 La Colombie-Britannique a un côté, notamment sa géographie, qui pourrait m'attirer.....l'Ontario est sans âme...
@mcgiver6977
10 ай бұрын
Même si j'y apprécie mes balades occasionnelles, notamment demain
@davidrousseau100
10 ай бұрын
@@mcgiver6977 Toronto plus que l'Ontario honnetement.
@erikgustafson9319
11 ай бұрын
Something to relieve my midterm suffering on the train home
@mariaelenaruizrobles4865
11 ай бұрын
I love documentaries, this one is quite interesting.
@GrassesOn97
8 ай бұрын
I ain’t gonna lie, FDRs speech was fire.
@octocube3607
11 ай бұрын
Awesome video as always
@smexy_man
10 ай бұрын
Came here from Kraut!
@lolmenx4
11 ай бұрын
14:54 that's a redditor atheist moment ngl, like i didn't live in 1940 but not everything bad is god's fault because he didn't stop it...
@benisign
10 күн бұрын
This whole video reeks of reddit and a shallow understanding of postmodernism
@lolmenx4
10 күн бұрын
@@benisign I couldn't have described it better yeah
@qpdb840
10 ай бұрын
I am a Canadian French Canadian in Newfoundland and we speak an older dialect of French
@garash2000
11 ай бұрын
Love the "Ça doesn't work." at 27:19, perfect joual.
@andreleclerc7231
10 ай бұрын
Another piece of the puzzle to understand duplessism is that for generations Quebec had been bleeding french population for lack of economic prospects. These populations that settled in Ontatio and Northern USA were assimilating very quickly. Quebec didn't have much in access to capital nor a particularly tradition of capitalistic entrepreneur (well not post coureur des bois anyway!) so Duplessis turning to USA big money to invest here was seen by him as a matter of national survival.
@purplespeckledappleeater8738
10 ай бұрын
My family lived in Montreal for over 300 years and helped build infrastructure projects across early Canada and the early USA. My family moved to America because of politics. My ancestors were poorly educated and persecuted, not just poor.
@andreleclerc7231
10 ай бұрын
@@purplespeckledappleeater8738 Does your family still speak french? If not try to find a copy with sub-titles of Les Tisserands du pouvoir. It's a movie about french canadian families in the states circa 1920.
@TheCapnCanuck
10 ай бұрын
@38:00 The discussion about status is a very astute point in the video. This is one of the themes that Francis Fukuyama explores in "The end of History & the Last Man" which is a book worth reading. Fukuyama discusses Thumos in the book, which is Greek for spiritedness. In Québec you can see the struggle between isothumia and meglathumia, that is the desire to be on the same level as others on the one hand, and the desire to be better than others. People should read the book.
@IceFireTerry
11 ай бұрын
A year in the making let's go
@samueltremblay4864
10 ай бұрын
Vive le Québec libre
@ordinal2361
11 ай бұрын
The time has come
@swinehorde9118
11 ай бұрын
You know, it's never occurred to me just how much FDR sounded like Hank Hill, until now. lol
@xavierwedel4691
10 ай бұрын
1:08:27 As a Francontarien, I always hated when the Québécois complained about being treated as 'second class', here in Ontario we never got french education around my area of Simcoe County and Penetanguishene until 1979, and even that first "école de la résistance" was Illegal, the current school of Le Caron wasn’t built until 1980-1981, and opened on 23rd of April 1982. And still its one of the only public fully french schools in Ontario, most are Catholic. Also, my family had a hard time getting fair pay because we were french. We were also harassed, called "grenouilles" by the english and looked down upon by the Québécois for speaking differently. To this day I have had Québécois tell me to "speak it properly, or don't speak it at all". Personally, I just can't sympathise with the plights of the Québécois when they seem so much more privileged and when they talk to us the way the anglophones talked to us. The town Le Caron was built in, Penetanguishene, was discovered around the same time as Québec became a major settlement. Étienne Brûlé set foot some time between 1610 and 1614, before he was assassinated in 1633 across the bay from the modern day location. Sainte-Marie au pays des Hurons was a french Jesuit settlement. Established in 1634 it was the first European settlement in Ontario. It's not like we're small or insignificant either, Pope Pius XI canonized the 8 martyred missionaries (the Canadian martyrs) in 1930. Pope John Paul II visited the Martyr's shrine (right next to Sainte-Marie) in 1984 on his papal visit to Canada. Our history is as old as the ones of the Québécois and we deserve to be seen as equals to the Québécois, and obviously we french-canadians as a whole should be equal to eachother and to the english. Hand-in-hand with our French and English bretheren, we should all be equal together under these Canadian skies.
@andreleclerc7231
10 ай бұрын
We can't muster sympathy to those that after receiving too many lashes, side with their oppressor rather than their brethren because they were in a position to defend themselves from a certain amount of lashes. So what's the Franco-Ontarian take away? "Suffer with us, so we get less lashes" Sounds like a great plan.
@xavierwedel4691
10 ай бұрын
@@andreleclerc7231None of what you said made any sense whatsoever.
@opticalfred4
10 ай бұрын
@@xavierwedel4691il est en train de te dire qu'on a pas le goût de mourir avec vous
@andreleclerc7231
10 ай бұрын
@@xavierwedel4691 "My sister learned Karate and now her violent husband rarely dare to slap her, meanwhile I get sent to the hospital on a weekly basis by my own violent husband. Who is she to complaint about domestic abuse? I hate her." Nice Stockholm syndrome there buddy.
@xavierwedel4691
10 ай бұрын
@@andreleclerc7231 Fine, let's keep going with this metaphor: "The reason I hate my sister is that her husband is a 5'9 twink and can't really hurt her if she puts up a fight. On the other hand, my husband is a 6'10 behemoth strongman who could kill me at a moments notice. It doesn't matter if I learn Karate, I'm nothing to him. Now it'd be of great help if my sister could help me since she knows karate, is also a lot bigger than me and maybe he'd actually hear my pleas if you said something, too. But my sister, the oh so kind sister, decides that she hates me because I'm ugly or I don't speak the same way she does. She also just watches and decides to ignore, not even muttering a word of contention when my husband beats me senselessly."
@flightmaster999
11 ай бұрын
This series is very well documented and I had been waiting for some time for the next part to be published. Congratulations for your had work and great production quality. I'm a born and raised Québécois, bilingual, but mostly French speaking. The history that you present in this series should be taught in schools, both French and English. Before you release the next episode, I just want to mention that the FLQ were indeed a bunch of low level terrorists that did not speak for or represent the vast majority of Québécois. To this day, they are viewed by many as a shameful part of Québec's history.
@ryzziktrognesou1
10 ай бұрын
Finalement, je peux prendre le temps de regarder cette vidéo. J'ai vraiment apprécié les deux premiers chapitres, j'ai hâte de voir et écouter la suite ! (Big up from Switzerland !)
"from my political standpoint" *shows a picture of Marx* 🧐🧐🧐
@emilioi.valdez6680
11 ай бұрын
Hey Ravignon, what kinds of topics will you talk about when this series is done? Me personally, I'd like to see a video on Canada's railway history if it's up your alley. Mostly because I'm a train enthusiast.
@praxagora3618
11 ай бұрын
Did you know that to this day the CP still operates it's own autonomous private police force and because CP owns railways in the USA, they also operate there too. It's real fucked up.
@granyte
11 күн бұрын
First time I have to say something The streak of progressive was not broken in 2018 depending on how you see it, it was broken in 1996 with lucien bouchard or by Jean charest 2003. Also from the inside the PLQ is rarely looked at as progressist anymore
@bridgetkennedy3271
11 ай бұрын
YESSSSSS FINALLY!! BEEN WAITING SO LONG FOR THIS
@piegirl284
10 ай бұрын
Am late to seeing this! Agh God I should just start with rewatching the first ones and make a day out of it! Thank you so much for making these videos.
@uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753
11 ай бұрын
The GOAT returns!!! Would love a video on Acadiens
@tutulycordovadeleon9778
11 ай бұрын
Congrats \ ^^/🎉
@fredrikjonsson-bj5ru
11 ай бұрын
Fucking finally I’m gonna love this
@raulocampo5669
11 ай бұрын
A good information for all
@hailgiratinathetruegod7564
11 ай бұрын
I thought you gave up on the channel. Good to hear that you you still do work
@jeremygauthier3480
11 ай бұрын
assez importante débarque en qualité dans cette vidéo, plusieurs information erronées ou manquantes. des angles morts extrêmement critique ou des oublies qui semble au mieux maladroite au pire malhonnête.
@m.streicher8286
11 ай бұрын
Is this part 1 of Quebec part 3? Or am I misunderstanding? I mean, making your part three a three-parter is a boss move.
@RavignonCh
11 ай бұрын
Part three is a two-parter LOL you'll see in the video ^^
@poeleabois
11 ай бұрын
Part 1 of Chapter 3.
@chouinardfrancais
2 ай бұрын
@@RavignonChbro's pulling a harry potter move lol
@Grantonioful
11 ай бұрын
Classic 2 part finale. You're a blockbuster hack now! Haha love the videos keep it up!
@philipperousseau457
11 ай бұрын
excellent video! i doubt there is a better video on the subjects even in french!
@theculturedjinni
11 ай бұрын
This is gonna be interesting!
@ursulcx299
11 ай бұрын
There's a lot of stuff you are not discussing when it comes to Duplessis. The intimidation of union and political adversaries, gerrymandering, road/eletrification program in the countryside being tailored to favorise people voting for Duplessis...
@charleszp938
11 ай бұрын
Hey man, hicks are people too. 🤷
@raskltube
11 ай бұрын
that was awesome
@antoinegirard9838
9 ай бұрын
This video is incredible ! You understands perfectly our culture and our history. I'm very impressed !! PS: The city of Québec is not close to Tadoussac at all ;)
@riptidemonzarc3103
11 ай бұрын
If you have to split the next video into two, you'll have made a trilogy in five parts ;)
@Tailsmillion
11 ай бұрын
THE THIRD ONE IS HERE?! WHY DIDN’T THE ALGORITHM SHOW ME SOONER!
@ericsimard4449
11 ай бұрын
Though something to point out is that most French-Canadians at the time hated the flq there was sympathies to them when their manifesto was released in the October crisis, until the execution of Laporte of course…
@thedarkmasterthedarkmaster
11 ай бұрын
Huh nice to have seen this continued. I do wonder what you shall do when this series is done
@thecommonwealthsystem977
11 ай бұрын
Let’s go!
@necromater6656
11 ай бұрын
37:45 Really dragging the same old argument that has been proven wrong time and time again?
@colekopczynski45
11 ай бұрын
Bro, what is this cry for help? 37:10
@Happy_Smiles246
11 ай бұрын
15:00 I’m getting mad Ultrakill vibes 💀 (great video though)
@fritoss3437
11 ай бұрын
I think you could have talk about how and why duplessis implanted the Québec flag
@Jokkkkke
10 ай бұрын
Btw some genocidal Brit is running an ad on your video saying that proportionality by Israel would constitute the raping and mutalating of Gazans by Israeli soldiers. I don’t know what you can do about this but this extremely disturbing
@RavignonCh
10 ай бұрын
If you can post the link to this, I can block the ad from within AdSense. Please share it with me here.
@Jokkkkke
10 ай бұрын
@@RavignonCh I had clicked away pretty quickly because I was sickened and I thought that I could just get the link to this ad afterwards but I was mistaken. I'm terribly sorry 😞
@bobseven310
11 ай бұрын
I think your comparison to other minorities though is highly misleading. Often, you compare them to "elsewhere in the country", which is an important factor. Telling an oppressed group that they shouldn't be mad because, in other jurisdictions, other groups have it worse? Doesn't legitimize the oppression. There were native americans in Québec, and still are, but we should not be lumping them into the same phenomenon as minority migrant groups. They were here first, as their own nations, bartered and signed treaties with the colonial powers, and largely have maintained a desire to maintain distinctiveness. The fact that they have different rights as settlers' descendants isn't purely the fruit of discrimination, it's the fruit of a mixed history in which they have had a significant level of agency. As for the other immigrant groups, there were almost none in Québec. To simply state them as having been here for a long time is completely misleading. A very few racial minorities were here, yes, but not in levels in any way high enough to constitute a community. Most people born before the 90s had never seen more than one or two black people while growing up. The overwhelming majority of black people in Québec are second-generation immigrants, at most. Same with other ethnic groups, though they are far fewer, as our immigration has largely been a fruit of the decolonization of former French colonies in the Caribbean and Africa. "White Nig* of America" also has context, and was an expression of "white nig*" used abroad, including by black people such as the president of Haïti. Also important in the context of this expression is its reactionary nature to the defamatory "Speak White", as francophones' "whiteness" was very much being denied by the anglo majority. To simply take today's sensitivities towards banned "no-no" words to criticize its usage then is inadequate. Vallières was very much legitimized in calling his book the way he did.
@GdawgMomo
10 ай бұрын
Tarbarnaque... this is really good
@Franchko
9 ай бұрын
love from la mauricie. bonne video mon chum
@tonyjesus1657
6 ай бұрын
Trés bien, bœuf
@antoinemorin1816
10 ай бұрын
The part about birth rates at 45:00 made me realize something quite disturbing: most of us in Québec are the results of centuries of rape. I know we are not the only ones in the world like this, but to think the Duplessis administration was complicit of these rapes for so long and until less than a hundred years ago is mind-boggling and devastates me.
@linefrenette9116
10 ай бұрын
Centuries of Rape ? where did you learn history? Go study the story again and maybe you'll see that you're completely "dams l 'champ "
Пікірлер: 259