The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Hurray for all us brown people

- Brian Jones Brian Jones is a desk editor at The Telegram. He can be reached at brian.jones@thetelegra­m.com.

Wow Canada. You people definitive­ly showed the fascistic underside of social media.

Reminders arise almost daily that in ostensibly free and democratic Canada, freedom of speech is about as strong as a string of overcooked spaghetti — with apologies to the Italian side of my ancestry.

Speaking of which, you people cook pasta all wrong. You overcook it.

I’ll let you in on an ethnic secret Italian mothers pass along to their sons and daughters, so Italian-Canadians and Italian-Americans can enjoy the fine cuisine of the Old Country, even if they are a couple of generation­s and a few thousand miles removed from their beloved Boot: turn off the heat.

A minute before the eight or 10 or 12 minutes are up, turn off the burner. This allows the pasta to slowly reach perfection, without becoming overcooked, which is how too many of you people seem to like it. Try it. You can thank me later. I’ll pass your message on to Mama.

But I digress. I had intended to discuss whether I would be offended and demand the firing of an ignorant, obnoxious hockey commentato­r if he said on national TV, “All those wop players are ruining hockey.”

Really? How? Which ones? Is all that pasta preventing them from back-checking?

It could start an interestin­g, if pointless, discussion. But fire him? Nah. Go ahead and be ignorant and obnoxious, even racist. Somebody has to be, just to prove it is allowed in a free country.

Of course, in the real world, if you offend me, I can and must demand that you be fired.

This is especially so if I am one of you people who insist on using phrases such as “racialized Canadians,” “visible minorities” or “people of colour.”

Please, have the courage to just say “brown people.” It is concise, accurate and factual. It is only judgmental or derogatory if you make it so.

Freedom of speech has become so softened, it is now a firing offence to be “divisive” or “hurtful.”

“These wop guys, let me tell ya, these wop guys, ya drop the gloves with ’em and they extend an olive branch.”

Fired! You can’t refer to ethnicity. It is our strength, but if you talk about it in any way that is “divisive” or “hurtful,” never mind the 10-minute misconduct — you’re fired.

Fired on Remembranc­e Day for something he said. Ponder the irony.

It would have been more just to be turfed for historical ignorance. The poppy, despite what many people believe it symbolizes, was not meant to “support” the military or its personnel.

It was not intended as a “thank you” to soldiers, or even as a coat-lapel statement that the wearer “remembers” their sacrifice. (“Remembers” is nonsensica­l. “Recognizes” would be the correct word, in terms of syntax.)

The original intent of the poppy was to vow that never again would we let old men send millions of young men to a futile and pointless death.

You people who insist on twisting its meaning should stop, no matter where you’re from or how long you’ve been here or how much you get (got) paid to be a loudmouthe­d blowhard.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada