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Canadian Secession: Then and Now


In November 1837, rebellion stirred in the British colonies of Upper and Lower Canada (modern-day Ontario and Quebec). In Lower Canada, the rebel group the Patriotes had just won the Battle of Saint-Denis against British forces and, with the news of rebel success, William Lyon Mackenzie called on rural Upper Canadians to follow suit. He distributed a handbill with the title
Independence!, which began with the following passage:
There have been Nineteen Strikes for Independence from European Tyranny on the Continent of America.
They were all successful!
BRAVE CANADIANS! Do you love freedom? I know you do. Do you hate oppression? Who dare deny it? Do you wish perpetual peace, and a government founded upon the eternal heaven-born principle of the Lord Jesus Christ? Then buckle on your armour, and put down the villains who oppress and enslave your country put them down in the name of that God who goes forth with the armies of his people. ....

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Kidnapping, Murder, Unrest: Quebec's 1970 October Crisis Explained


Kidnapping, Murder, Unrest: Quebec s 1970 October Crisis Explained
By Marina Manoukian/March 16, 2021 1:46 am EDT
In the 1960s, members of the Québécois separatist movement started a bombing campaign against the Canadian government. In 1970, this standoff escalated to a hostage situation. Overnight, people in Québec found themselves essentially living under martial law.
The October Crisis gripped the nation as a British diplomat and Québec s Minister of Labour and Immigration were kidnapped and held by the Front de libération du Québec. In response, soldiers and tanks rolled through the streets of Montreal while helicopters flew overhead. 
Thousands of homes were raided by the authorities and hundreds were arrested, but these actions did little to impede the crisis. Despite being called the October Crisis, the hostage situation lasted until November, and it wasn t until the end of December that most of the kidnappers were apprehended. And in the end, altho ....

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James Cross, British diplomat who survived FLQ kidnapping, dead at 99


By 1970, though, the group had been weakened by arrests and was frustrated at their lack of progress. The remaining members decided to change tactics.
A faction led by Lanctôt hoped to ignite support for the FLQ s cause by kidnapping a public figure. They settled on Cross after determining the U.S. consul was too well protected.
Cross was walking to the bathroom in his underpants early on the morning of Oct. 5 when the kidnappers forced their way into his stately home on Redpath Crescent.
Soldiers took over guard duty, Oct. 16, 1970 at the Montreal home of British Trade Commissioner James Cross, one of the two political hostages whose kidnapping by the FLQ has brought on the use of the War Measures Act in Canada, never before used during peace.(The Canadian Press) ....

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Claude Castonguay set the foundation of Quebec's medical-insurance and pension systems


The Globe and Mail
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JACQUES BOISSINOT/The Canadian Press
Claude Castonguay, who played a key role in establishing Quebec’s medicare, its network of community clinics and its pension plan, has died. He was 91.
Although he served as provincial cabinet minister for only three years during the first government of Liberal premier Robert Bourassa, he became so closely associated with the creation of Quebec’s medical-insurance plan that the device used to imprint a patient’s health card on the billing form became known as a “castonguette.” ....

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