I'm Canadian. I think that's it. When you're a Canadian, you're always watching America from the outside, from afar.
Canadian pride may not rest on our sleeves, but it resides deeply in our hearts.
It's never felt more Canadian to be Canadian than it does now.
We would much prefer to see ownership in the hands of the Maple Group, if only because we would much rather see Canadian ownership of our stock exchange. What we are first of all interested in is making sure that Montreal is able to preserve that niche or expertise.
So without that Canadian invention we were grounded. And so that was a really important and key part of the mission and Canadians should take real pride in it.
The Canadian voice is still too rustic.
The old boy network is still too strong in Canadian business. A visit to the Toronto clubs at lunch stands in about as great a contrast to the multicultural, multiracial subway underneath as can be humanly imagined. This is not healthy.
Why not learn from the positive aspect of Canadian populism, which is the way to deal with it? Learn from the negative side, but it's more important to learn from the positive side, because it's an enormous amount of energy.
My name is William Shatner, and I am Canadian!
Canadian girls are so pretty it's a relief now and then to see a plain one.
There are two miracles in Canadian history. The first is the survival of French Canada, and the second is the survival of Canada.
I love Canada. I am from Canada. I will bash the Canadian government but never Canada.
The one good thing to be said about announcing yourself as a writer in the colonial Canadian fifties is that nobody told me I couldn't do it because I was a girl. They simply found the entire proposition ridiculous. Writers were dead and English, or else extremely elderly and American; they were not sixteen years old and Canadian.
It is much more easy for a Spanish person to love themselves than a Canadian person.
I'm very proud to be Canadian, but I would move to New York in a heartbeat.
My art collection is dominated by tribal art from Nigeria where I taught school, from New Guinea where we've travelled, and by Canadian Haida pieces. My own art is either on exhibition or owned by other people!
When I won the belt, it was kind of a precedent. . . The only Canadian to have ever held it.
One of the things that could be exciting about this next phase of Canadian politics is if we could maybe have co-leaders.
I was proud to have been the anti-establishment candidate after more than twenty years in politics, a small town guy fighting for the ordinary Canadian.
To be Canadian is to live in relative calm and with great dignity.