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Over-sensitivity is making it pretty goddamn tough to live in Canada

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  • Over-sensitivity is making it pretty goddamn tough to live in Canada

    The Gateway, University of Alberta, Canada
    Jan 20 2005

    Over-sensitivity is making it pretty goddamn tough to live in Canada

    Josh Kjenner

    I hate shoveling my sidewalk. Whether my roomies agree with me on
    that issue or are just a bunch of lazy pieces of shit, I'm not
    sure - either way, our walk seldom gets shoveled.

    When I say seldom, I mean about once a year, when the tickets or
    ticket threats start coming. Other than that, no way. In fact, right
    now our walk is at the point where one would have to take an
    approximately six-inch step from either neighbour's concrete-exposed
    perfection to have the privilege of standing on The Josh's sidewalk.

    I'll be the first to agree that, like me, this is both ugly and
    slothful. But the good people at City Hall and Canada Post have come
    to the conclusion that this is also dangerous, and now I can get a
    ticket for it.

    This threat of a ticket is not based on logic or research or anything
    like that; it's predicated upon a crippling fear, likely of being
    sued. The packed snow that makes up our front walk is about as slick
    as my lonely, late-night-party-line-commercial-watching ass, but
    that's irrelevant - at some point in history, some asshole has
    successfully sued a homeowner on the basis that said suer doesn't
    know how to goddamn walk, and now the rest of us are fucked.

    This is why I had to sign a waiver to go roller skating the other
    night, and why the insurance I've taken out on my ass has doubled in
    cost, and why frigging Cram Dunk is probably thinking about forming a
    risk management department. It's ridiculous.

    Also, it seems that if one has lived his or her life and successfully
    avoided getting sued, he or she has likely pissed someone off in the
    process. Pretty much every action that would have been viewed as
    mildly controversial ten years ago will now cause some random,
    marginalized group to react in `outrage.'

    Take, for instance, the issues that arose when Conan O'Brien had a
    few shows in Canada and Triumph the Insult Dog called the Québécois
    `dull and obnoxious.' Legions of people across Québec and Canada
    alike reacted as if O'Brien had sodomized Lucien Bouchard on Saint
    Jean Baptiste Day and wiped himself off with the Fleur-de-Lys. And
    for what? An insult that wouldn't elicit a response at a Mormon
    Jesus-fish convention. Political correctness has become so overblown
    in Canada that we are starting to lose sight of reasonability.

    Although it seems by the randomness of this article that I likely
    substituted a Vicaden/Wild Turkey colada for my porridge this
    morning, I'm actually driving towards something here: Canada, because
    of these trends, is becoming increasingly difficult to exist in. More
    and more, we barely live; we basically just eat, breathe, shit, sleep
    and occasionally masturbate while trying to avoid getting sued or
    hurting someone's feelings.

    This drives me crazy. I want to go back to the `80s, when it was
    still okay to paddle high-school freshman without getting the fuzz on
    your tail, or make a joke about an Italian, or wear cut-off jean
    shorts without making babies cry. I'm so sick of signing waivers and
    paying insurance and tiptoeing around people who don't share my exact
    sex/ethnic/physical ability/sexual orientation/hair colour/blood type
    composition that I could seriously just pack up and move to Armenia.

    In fact, I just might do that. Frankly, the world deserves to see my
    thighs covered only with six inches of frayed denim and a thin coat
    of sweat.
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