Interesting indeed, both pro and con.
u know, i do agree with this..
hey, i talked to a customer from Larselle Quebec this morning.
i mean i could speak a little bid broken French as well, i joked with her if she knows Paul Martin, as Paul Martin is from Larsell... She was so surprised, as she told me that even people live in Quebec does not know this and I told her i am an immigrant lives in B.C and i only became PR less than 2 years.....she was even surprised, she thought we have Canadian courses for new PR in B.C.....
I said, no no no, i learn my french by myself and just watch news... and then i told her how old i am.
she told me i will be very successful in Quebec.. as i know so much about French culture... as i could speak little bid French, Chinese, English...
too bad nobody likes French here in my trailer town, most of people are boring...
I suspect that the relationship between Quebec and the rest of Canada is quite unique in the world. It is interesting. It is oft times problematic. Occasionally it is outright confrontational.
Of course, once landed, an immigrant can move to Quebec without restriction, no need to respect Quebec values. I am in no way advocating this. Just noting the . . . "loophole" some might say.
i personally think ,Quebec is the only reason why Canada is not going to be as conservative as U.S
All I can say it...it sounds very polarizing.
Quebec, when it comes to immigration, already has extra steps as is, but I dunno, it's gutsy. I understand it, yes, but it could also be troublesome, because people could be made to feel like they must give up their culture to live there. I know that's not the case, but it could make people feel defensive. Like RobsLuv said, pro and con.