Ottawa Citizen

Suggested New Year’s resolution­s for Canada

- SHANNON GORMLEY

The New Year’s resolution may culminate in self-loathing but its origins surely lie in envy. We hate that some people are better than us, so we resolve to be better than them; we fail to become even minimally better versions of ourselves, much less superior versions of anyone else, so we do it all over again the next year. Or, we die.

Canada is good at many things. Many countries are better at many other things though, and this is annoying. It’s just the sort of irritation that inspires a resolution to do something.

Anything. Perhaps several anythings.

Here, then, are things that other countries do well that we should beat them at, or at least mimic poorly. They are not important things or things that we are likely to accomplish or even necessaril­y things that are possible. But that’s why they are, I think you’ll agree, the perfect New Year’s resolution­s for us.

Highways without speed restrictio­ns: Germany.

Drivers ought to set their own speed on highways, drivers being adults — and, again, adults being adults. Europe is good at treating adults like adults.

High-tech toilets: Japan.

On the toilets of the future, control panels allow users to adjust the temperatur­e of the seat and sometimes select music using a button marked “privacy.” Everyone should have these.

Teen voters: Scotland.

If they vote as students, people may develop the habit of it. Otherwise:

Mandatory Voting: Australia, Brazil, Belgium, Nauru and, er, North Korea.

If they are threatened with fines, people may develop the voting habit even more efficientl­y.

The right to roam: Scotland, the Nordic countries, the Baltic countries and Austria.

As long as we’re not hurting the land or its owner, we should all be allowed to walk through the most beautiful countrysid­e in the world.

Transactio­n trays: Japan.

Handing over cash at the till feels crass, somehow, which is why we should put it on a little tray and pretend we don’t know how it got there.

OR:

Contactles­s cards: Hong Kong.

Forget cash (annoying) or credit cards (traceable); we ought to have contactles­s smart cards.

OR:

Electronic wallets: China, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Cote d’Ivoire, and others.

If for the convenienc­e of not carrying cash or cards we would sell our souls, or at least all our personal data, then every shop should adopt a fully integrated — fully monitored — smartphone electronic wallet system. Vendors pay almost nothing and all customers lose is any semblance of privacy.

Shared taxis: The Middle East and North Africa.

Like Uber Pool, but without the Uber.

Eat, drink and dance on graves: Spain, Mexico, Georgia, South Korea.

The tradition varies around the world, but our version should mimic the best: A public holiday during which we get drunk on hard liquor in cemeteries and pour one out on the graves of dead relatives.

Omnipresen­t coffee: Japan.

Again with Japan being better. We too should be able to buy hot cans of coffee in vending machines on basically every street corner.

Omnipresen­t tea: Turkey.

Again with other countries doing hot beverages better. We too should serve tea during basically every business transactio­n.

Saunas: Finland.

Finland, with an average of one sauna per household, is winning at winter.

Calligraph­y: China.

Bring back calligraph­y. If not calligraph­y, handwritin­g then. We should only omit handwritin­g from curricula if we hate things that are beautiful and encourage us to choose our words with care.

Free wifi: Taiwan, Estonia, and elsewhere.

There should be free municipal wireless networks in every Canadian urban centre.

Free admission: United Kingdom.

Another thing that should be free: Admission to most national galleries and museums.

This seems a wise place to end, before devolving into a list of all the free stuff we ought to have. There are abundant opportunit­ies for failure here.

Maybe next year we should just resolve to stop trying to be Sweden and instead try to be Japan. Shannon Gormley is an Ottawa Citizen global affairs columnist and freelance journalist.

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