I personally don't think it is that deep. Hope and freedom have always been most used because America has always been the epitome of both. And I say that as a Canadian lol
Despite the privileged life we have here, we have dealt with our fair share of censorship. We don't even have the privilege of defending ourselves, you'll be charged for defending yourself. Public healthcare sucks and there have been countless times where I happily would have paid for private.
Uhhhh aside from that, crisis is absolutely warranted lol again, as a Canadian I have never been more fearful of inevitable societal collapse, to the point where my husband and I have purchased an RV so we can be as far away from everybody when it happens.
And if people do not live in reality or refuse to see truth, that's fine. For those of us who do, we recognize that the tide is changing. I definitely feel for the better, but that doesn't mean it will be a road hump-free journey
Hello @borderline.babe,
Thanks for reading that long blog and responding with such an interesting comment. I don't know what you mean by this:
What is not that deep?
Anyway, as for the RV and getting ready to leave in a disaster, I think there is a general air of impending doom, or catastrophe, that many feel. I think this explains the popularity of post-apocalyptic books/media. People are working out their fears.
My daughter has an RV, and she always says it is a place to go to in case of emergency or hard times.
As for healthcare, while many in my country are deprived of first-class healthcare, many are bankrupted when they use first-class healthcare, One study revealed that 66.5% of bankruptcy filings in the U. S. are essentially caused by medical bills. There is something wrong with that. I'm sure there are deficiencies in the Canadian system (because you say there are ) but there is something dramatically, critically wrong with a healtcare system that bankrupts so many people.