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Originally Posted by Triumph36
from reading tsn i have always gotten the sense that this is true. am i wrong?
It's true and it's not unfounded.
There are a lot of overarching themes that get tied into these discussions, ones which I wouldn't expect Americans itt to understand. And it's not entirely sour grapes, believe me, but during the peak of the technical and corporate Brain Drain in the late 20th century, it got really old to hear the rhetoric that in order to "make it" - whether as an individual or a franchise - you needed to establish yourself in the States. It touches a sensitive nerve up here, for sure.
There's a fair share of unfounded and ridiculous anti-American sentiment in our country, but we're also proud and not ignorant to the patronizing perception of us from a reasonable segment of Americans. I mean, Christ, look at it on this forum. It's a big joke for a bunch of posters and they can insist they don't mean anything by it and don't care one way or another (which I'm sure is true), but it gets really, really old.
And that patronizing perception is no more prevalent than in business. It's seen all the time in industries where Canadian subsidiaries exist for American parent corporations. My dad's company in the transportation industry almost went under about a decade ago due to American parent company insistence that they knew how to run the Canadian business better than Canadians. They were wrong. And it's not an isolated incident; this type of misguided jingoistic intervention was far too common when the economic climate was less favourable for us, and it's as insulting as it is frustrating.
We're not a third world country, we're not second class citizens and we have a pretty good grasp of our economic situation. So when we know there are markets that would succeed, we don't like being told we're wrong because "lol Canada." In that respect, Atlanta to Winnipeg was vindication for a lot of us. The Canadian dollar was out of our control during the 90's but with that major stumbling block out of the way - for now and in the foreseeable future - there are very few arguments left for avoiding Canadian markets that will be far more sustainable long-term than their American counterparts.
That's the short version. I could write an essay.