Bill Maher roasts Canada, calls the country a  'cautionary tale' of what the US could be
  Comedian Bill Maher spent  nearly ten minutes of his HBO show Real Time skewering Canada for being  more dysfunctional than the United States
  Author of the article:   Ari Blaff    279 Comments
 
  
  A screenshot from Bill Maher's segment on Canada,showing Ryan Reynolds as Ken working at Tim Hortons. PHOTO BY HBO
  Comedian  Bill Maher spent nearly 10 minutes of his HBO show Real Time skewering  Canada for being more dysfunctional than the United States and a lesson  in what America should avoid.
  “If you want to save our country,  we should follow the advice good liberals have given for decades and  learn from other countries, especially those beacons of progressivism  like Canada, England and Scandinavia,” the comedian said as he opened  the segment.
  Maher highlighted the lower employment rate in the  United States, and Canada having more major cities with air pollution,  to launch into a broader critique of how the latter was falsely seen as a  liberal paradise for frustrated Americans in recent years.
  “I’m  not citing these stats because I have it out for Canada — I love Canada,  its people, and always have — but I hate zombie lies,” Maher continued.  “That’s when things change, but what people say about them doesn’t.  Yes, for decades, places like Vancounver and Amsterdam and Stockholm  seemed idyllic because everything was free and all the energy we needed  was produced by riding a bike to your job at the windmill,” he joked.
  “Canada  was the Statue of Liberty with a low-maintenance haircut and  cross-country skis, a giant idealized blue state with single-payer  health care, gun control, and abortion on polite demand. Canada was  where every woke White college kid wearing pyjama pants outdoors who had  it up to here with America’s racist patriarchy dreamt of living  someday. I mean, besides Gaza,” he said to audience applause and  laughter.
  “There’s only one problem with thinking everything’s  better in Canada: It’s not. Not anymore, anyway. Last year, Canada added  1.3 million people, which is a lot in one year — the equivalent of the  U.S. adding 11 million migrants in one year. And now, they’re  experiencing a housing crisis even worse than ours — and we’re sleeping  in tents,” Maher said as a picture of a homeless encampment on a  sidewalk was beamed beside him.
  “The median price of a home here  is $346,000. In Canada, converted to U.S. dollars, it’s 487,000. If  Barbie moved to Winnipeg, she wouldn’t be able to afford her dream  house, and Ken would be working at Tim Hortons,” he teased.
  Maher  continued by exploring how Canada has become the G7 country with the  highest debt-to-GDP ratio while its “vaunted health care system…(now)  ranks dead last among high-income countries.”
  “And it’s not for  lack of spending. Of the 30 countries with universal coverage, Canada  spends over 13 per cent of its economy on it — which is a lot of money —  for free health care. Look, I’m not saying Canada still isn’t a great  country — it is — but those aren’t paradise numbers.”
  The  comedian then pivoted to directly addressing Canadians, explaining that  the segment wasn’t done out of joy but “as a cautionary tale to help my  country.”
  “The moral of that tale is, yes, you can move too far  left and when you do, you wind up pushing the people in the middle to  the right. At its worst, Canada is what American voters think happens  when there’s no one putting a check on extreme wokeness,” Maher  continued, citing transgender Ontario public school teacher Kayla  Lemieux, who went viral after images circulated of the educator wearing  massive prosthetic breasts in class.
  “They say in politics,  liberals are the gas pedal, and conservatives are the brakes, and I’m  generally with the gas pedal, but not if we’re driving off a cliff,” he  said near the end of his monologue.
  In 2015, Maher invited   then-Minister for International Trade Chrystia Freeland to discuss the growing public backlash against Syrian refugees.
  “This  idea that somehow we do share values that all religions are alike is  bullshit, and we need to call it bullshit,” the comedian said during the  conversation. Maher’s remarks triggered Freeland to underscore how,  “now more than ever,” countries need to show respect for “diversity,”  and pointed to everyday Canadians as a beacon of tolerance different  from the United States.
  “We in Canada are not going to say  Muslims are worse than Christians, or are worse than Jews, or worse than  atheists,” the Liberal Party cabinet member said at the time.
  “Not as people, the ideas are worse,” Maher responded. |