For most Anglophones or Allophones born & raised in Quebec, the moment when the local government would go full language Nazis on society was an agonizing, relentless, unwanted certainty.
It wasn’t a matter of will it happen. It was simply a question of when.
Well, that day has finally arrived.
You can mark down June 1, 2022 as the day when Quebec decided to forego all politeness, human rights concerns & basic civility and ram the French language down everyone’s medical throats, hearts and minds.
Bill 96, for all intended purposes is an add-on to Bill 101, which was an add-on to Bill 22 which was an add-on to Bill 63.
All these Bills / Laws had one common goal: to protect the French language.
But what does the data show? … is the French language in Quebec in 2022 actually in decline?
Absolutely not.
Over 85% of Quebec currently speak French as their 1st language (Francophones) while large swaths of the Province speak only French and most Montrealers are bi-lingual if not tri-lingual.
Bill 101 was the Gold Standard that addressed societal needs (maintaining & strengthening French as the predominant language) while balancing the rights & freedoms of non-French speaking Quebecers.
It forced immigrants coming to the Province to place their children in French schools thus solidifying that French would be the predominant language spoken in Quebec moving forward.
45 years after Bill 101 was passed, Quebec society has most definitely been transformed.
Besides French being made the official language of Quebec, it ensured that for just about every facet of life in the province: government, judicial system, education, advertising, business, contracts, etc., French had to be predominant.
In that time, Quebec and its residents have found a beautiful balance between maintaining French as the predominant language while affording younger generations to reach beyond their borders and be exposed and have the ability to benefit from speaking English as well.
The number of French-speaking kids choosing an English University is increasing – for obvious future employment reasons – and
IMO, that’s what Legault and his merry band of language purists are really worried about and what Bill 96 is really all about: for French to be the ONLY language spoken in Quebec.
The best way to ‘protect’ a language is by eliminating all others, I guess.
Legault claims that it’s his ‘duty to protect & promote the French language’ so, let’s dig a little deeper into Bill 96 and see if it helps to reach that goal or as it’s critiques claim is simply a punitive attack against ‘the English’.
*Video Below* shows Francois Legault reassuring people that he doesn’t want to come into their homes to see what language they’re speaking while REALLY wanting to know what language they’re speaking at home .. it’s a tight-rope act of nonsense speak.