Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Mysore Mallege Blue Film Vedios

Three Questions about Québec interculturalism

1. Interculturalism Quebecois can exist if it is solidly framed in the Canadian Multiculturalism?

2. When the two principles are in conflict or contradiction, interculturalism in Quebec come out there always lose, knowing that Canadian multiculturalism is enshrined in the Constitution of 1982 (through the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms)?

3. And if we try to interculturalism exist without it becoming unconstitutional (and therefore illegal), he must necessarily be a subset of multiculturalism, in short, become "smaller" and store them wisely ?

Somehow, if multiculturalism is in the Canadian Constitution is that it is "basically good" according to the most basic Canadian values. What we put in a constitution is the basis of our society, the rationale of the state and what it undertakes to apply and defend. Therefore, any principle which would derogate from a value enshrined in the constitution would, by definition, bad.

If Quebecers (or Quebec, or the people of Quebec or French-speaking Quebecers) are recognized politically by the Canadian government, this recognition is limited by the Constitution Act 1982, which limits the scope of any recognition gender. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms acts as a watchdog morale and could bring down any interpretation interculturalism in Quebec would be in contradiction with the text, gasoline or application, Canadian multiculturalism and bilingualism status.

we can give an initial response to these three questions. To exist, interculturalism must be applied exactly as multiculturalism , lest our state and our institutions to the Supreme Court rejected. What, then, our flexibility?

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