That
there is a rhetorical question. I don’t need an answer, but I’d like you to think about it.
John Furlong’s speech at the closing of the games was bang on. Well… the English parts anyway. Canada put on a great show. We are and have always been a welcoming nation leading the world in hospitality and unsung natural majesty.
I think Neil Young said it best – SANG it best – when he said “long may you run.” Long may we know that Canada is an amazing place that is worth bragging about. We are the best at a lot of things, a lot of which we can share with the world. Are we afraid we’ll become too “American” if we begin to boast of ourselves more loudly?
It won’t happen, because being Canadian helps us understand that we are not responsible for our glorious wilderness. We are merely stewards and ambassadors for these features and the best is to preserve and showcase them for everybody in the world to share. Also, Canadians have learned that the true reward in victory is not the humiliation of our opponent, but how our opponent helps us to rise up and define ourselves through our determination and effort. In sport as in war, Canada has measured itself against the world’s greatest, most fearsome, and often the best available to prove that we are equal if not better. It took a great US team on Sunday to electrify our own nation.
Long may we run with this feeling of greatness which will never be confused with superiority. We don’t have to be better than anyone. We just have to be the best Canada there is. Numbers like 14, 87, 34 000 000+ should show us that we are.
