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My Outlook - Something worth celebrating

I have spent July 1 in some interesting places over the years; a community park in Mission BC, on the interstate in Nevada, a lake in Alberta, an aquarium in southern California, but primarily in the towns or cities where I was living at the time.

I have spent July 1 in some interesting places over the years; a community park in Mission BC, on the interstate in Nevada, a lake in Alberta, an aquarium in southern California, but primarily in the towns or cities where I was living at the time. Summer holidays have taken us to different locations, but no matter where we might be, we took time to acknowledge Canada Day.聽

I have helped build floats, sung with choirs, served cake, organized crafts, walked in parades, worn special t-shirts, gone to a football game, been entertained, attended a Canadian author book reading, and watched fireworks as part of various Canada Day celebrations. Even heading down that interstate we had a version of 鈥淥 Canada鈥 cued up ready to play.

Two months ago, the results of the 鈥2021 Best Countries Report鈥 were released. The study, undertaken by a news agency, marketing group and an American university, looked at cultural, economic, political and technological factors, as well as social purpose and agility. They studied 78 countries and ranked them top to bottom. Where was Canada? #1.

This is the first year Canada has claimed top spot, but it鈥檚 notable that in previous rankings our nation sat at #2 or #3. But this is how we are perceived globally. It鈥檚 how others see us. We need to acknowledge that it matters how we see ourselves.

Canada is a nation of people who have contributed to the health, safety, security, academia, beauty and political structure of the country鈥攁 country that is facing a reckoning. Depending upon the perspective of those involved in the conversation, we are either a nation on the rise or one in decline. Then again, perhaps both are true, because while we can rightly claim a standard of excellence in some areas, we also need to accept responsibility in others. There is much that will require citizens to think soberly about because we can鈥檛 envision where we are heading until we come to terms with where we have been.

No nation on the planet can claim a history of flawless leaders, foolproof agendas or ideal practices and policies. No nation鈥檚 history is without its painful chapters for some living within its borders. No nation is blameless in making bad decisions and regrettable mistakes. But what sets apart those that rise from those that fall is how its people confront the past鈥nd then shape the future.

Some are telling us that on Canada Day there is nothing to celebrate. I disagree. There is a lot worthy of the festivities. Yet make no mistake, just because there are reasons to celebrate doesn鈥檛 mean there isn鈥檛 history to be addressed. But where is the incentive to more fully uncover our past if we are constantly told how awful we are as a nation? How can we aspire to anything better if we aren鈥檛 encouraged to understand where we could possibly go? We seldom put effort into things we are told is a lost cause, but we will work tremendously hard when we believe there is a better outcome in front of us. Cancelling anything shuts down opportunities for conversation when the very thing we need to be doing is digging deeper into understanding how we got here and what that means for tomorrow.

We are hearing that typical Canada Day events leave no room for reflection. Well then, let鈥檚 change that. Let鈥檚 reflect on Indigenous history and contemporary challenges. Let鈥檚 get our heads around treatment of our veterans. Let鈥檚 stop taking clean water, adequate health care and access to mental health supports for granted and instead be louder advocates for neighbors that are lacking. Let鈥檚 talk about racism, discrimination, bigotry and whatever else is tearing at the fabric of our nation, but let鈥檚 do it with the intent of trying to fix what is wrong, not continuing to tear away at the frayed edges in the hopes it will unravel.

We can and will continue to disagree on much. We can and will continue to elect different governments in hopes of different outcomes. We can and will continue to wonder about the future of natural resources, social issues, immigration and freedom of speech. But we can and will continue to do so because Canada is a place where those conversations can happen.

So yes, I will celebrate Canada Day, not because this nation is perfect but because it鈥檚 worth fighting for. That鈥檚 my outlook.

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