Tewder
Senior Member
I used to live in New York and was actually surprised how many of my friends there liked the city -being from Toronto you often get surprised by anyone liking it -and it wasn't because Toronto felt like a home away from home but because it felt different and interesting to them. Sometimes I wish we in Toronto and Canada could appreciate the same view
... as with most places Canada is easier to love and appreciate from without than from within.
The criticisms Toronto receives from the ROC I think have less to do with it being too much like "an American city" or trying too hard to be this "city" and more to do with it being rather unique and unfamiliar to to other Canadians. No one feels a need to compare Montreal to other cities (well except maybe me to Boston) but it's because it's instantly recognizable as a Canadian city and feels instantly familiar. Toronto feels foreign and it's just not its ethnic make-up that makes it feel this way. It doesn't feel connected to the country in the same way Montreal, Halifax or Vancouver etc. do.
You cannot overlook the fact that at heart Canada is an enormously regional place and there is very little that thinly unites us from one end of our huge land mass to the other... and perhaps not surprisingly one of the few things that hosers do share is a core provincialism, and even in the larger cities, as witnessed by your comments regarding Montreal. In some ways I suspect that if this scenario is changing anywhere in Canada at all it is likely in Toronto which in the end only serves to wedge it apart all the more as it starts to feel less and less 'Canadian' in this sense, taking its place on a wider international stage.
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