I guess if you split the difference between the U.K. and the U.S., you would get Canada. But that's just due to proximity. Just because of distance, we get a lot more cultural spillover from America.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I am a subject of the British Crown, but whenever I have to choose between the interests of England and Canada it is manifest to me that the interests of my country are identical with those of the United States of America.
Britain is relatively compact and much closer to the borders of the U.S.S.R. than anywhere in North America.
Yet another thing Canadians and Europeans have in common is an obsession with the United States, and with distinguishing themselves from it, often by crude stereotyping.
The U.K. and the U.S. are very different countries, and it really shows in the television.
The U.K. is outward-looking, trade-oriented, growth-oriented, and we do not have enough of that storyline, that tradition, that culture within the European Union.
There is a Canadian culture that is in some ways unique to Canada, but I don't think Canadian culture coincides neatly with borders.
Canada is a good country to be from. It has a gentler slower pace - it lends perspective.
I absolutely love Canada, and I wouldn't live anywhere else. It's half American and half European, and I really enjoy that. And the people are just fantastic - nicer than any people in the world.
I came to America from Canada because Canada is stultifyingly boring and incredibly hypocritical.
I feel as much British as I do American. There's not much difference between our countries.