Yeah, I do. I love them (How can you not love something that has yeti-foot as alt logo? =D). And I know. It's crap. They used to be so gold-worthy -.-Shapsters said:DO you actually root for them? What the hell happened this year? they have been consistently good for like 15 years, then this year WHAM last place.
Also, would you say Norway i like the European Canada or vice versa? We are both friendly and help everyone and all we get is crap.
I don't know about you, but I make fun of the people who think that, why would you honestly care about people of that level of intelligence? No really, if you don't like the way someone thinks of you, mock them for it, don't get offended by it. Exert your superiority. Sorry, it's just that I've gotten out a all boys boarding school with enough idiots to send me on a crusade against caring about what a bunch of twats think about you.Shapsters said:How is it a good stereotype? I'm not just talking about the niceness and the snow. We all ride around on horses with mounties and live in log cabins? I don't think so.Lonan said:Um, if it's a good stereotype, that's a good thing, and we should work to preserve it. Mostly because it is mostly true, and that's a good thing. I would hardly call it a stereotype anyway, it's the Canadian identity. My social studies teacher made us write about three essays on it throughout the year, and then most of us chose it as our essay topic for the end of year exam (three other options) because we had done it so much. Also, if you look at an image of North America in the winter, the snow does have an uncanny tendency to stop at the border. SNOW POWER! Also, having been to hot countries, I can tell you that it really is cold in Canada.Shapsters said:I hate the Canadian stereotype, we aren't actually like that! Sure we are nice, and in some places it snows, but come on!!
Lonan said:I think it would be awesome if we lived like they think we do, for the environment! We should dogsled to work in the winter and summer dog sled to work in the summer! And if someone who has the misfortune of not being from here thinks poorly of that, we shall laugh at them from our position of superiority, laugh like Santa Claus who now lives in Canada (moved to Ellesmere Island because the ice under his workshop melted, because of people who don't take horses and dogsleds to work!) HOHOHO COLD HATING NOOBS!Shapsters said:How is it a good stereotype? I'm not just talking about the niceness and the snow. We all ride around on horses with mounties and live in log cabins? I don't think so.Lonan said:Um, if it's a good stereotype, that's a good thing, and we should work to preserve it. Mostly because it is mostly true, and that's a good thing. I would hardly call it a stereotype anyway, it's the Canadian identity. My social studies teacher made us write about three essays on it throughout the year, and then most of us chose it as our essay topic for the end of year exam (three other options) because we had done it so much. Also, if you look at an image of North America in the winter, the snow does have an uncanny tendency to stop at the border. SNOW POWER! Also, having been to hot countries, I can tell you that it really is cold in Canada.Shapsters said:I hate the Canadian stereotype, we aren't actually like that! Sure we are nice, and in some places it snows, but come on!!
*EDIT* Sorry for second post, don't know what happened.
I second this.Urock said:Let's see... People who bash America without real reason, people who don't live up to their potential (one example are kids who decide to "go gangsta" when they could grow up into perfectly intelligent people if they tried), PC-extremists (as in "politically correct", not "personal computer"), people who don't research their argument before they submit them, then do so with absolute certainty... People who are anti-Semitic... Oh I'll stop here for now, but I could go on and on.