Let's take our mind off the USA for just a little while and focus on Tim Hortons land. We included as much of Canada as we possibly could, this was another massive area that we had to reduce to make manageable. Bit of info I get wrong in this video too, we've traced my family tree back close to 400 years and it's not 400 years on the island itself. Still cool though! Watch the previous part of this project here where we build Russia! th-cam.com/video/UuFzdy3Kk5w/w-d-xo.html If anyone is looking for server information or login information, you can find all of it in the description of the video. The server is open 24/7 for Twitch Subscribers. And thank you to everyone who took part in this session!
Fun Canada fact: The reason Canadians are nice is that every year on thanksgiving we channel all of our hate into those geese, making us nice and the geese into hellspawn
This tactic is not without its downsides, however. It results in a deep hatred in the geese to the ones who made them like this, to the extent that they can and will attack Canadians on sight.
Fun fact: Every year Nova Scotia, Canada sends a huge christmas tree to Boston, U.S to thank them for their help during the Halifax explosion, which was the biggest non-nuclear explosion to happen. Im Nova Scotian so I hear about this fact a lot
Canada Facts: - Canada apparently apologizes so profusely that we had to create an "Apology Act," which means that in court an apology can be regarded as empathy rather than admission of guilt. - We also have a strategic maple syrup reserve in case the market runs out. - In 2011, a group committed the Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist, in which they stole nearly 19 million dollars worth of maple syrup. I'm not making this stuff up - I love my country.
Another fact: the Natives and POC are highly ostracized but everyone pretends Canada is a perfect dreamworld with no problems so it doesn't get addressed
Fun fact: Despite Canadian reputation for being generally nice and friendly people, we have a very impressive war history, especially in the two World Wars. In World War 1, Canadian troops performed well enough that when the Germans noticed Canadian Divisions moving, they prepared for immediate attack. An offensive that came to be known as "Canada's Hundred Days" is a good example. In World War 2, during the Normandy Landings, Juno Beach was primarily attacked by Canadian forces. Juno Beach was the second most fortified beach behind Omaha, but despite the resistance the Canadian forces not only took the beach, but were also the forces that pushed the farthest and came closest to completing their objectives. I wouldn't take this at face value, since I am not a historian, but it's interesting stuff. Speaking of war, Pineapple Pizza was first invented in Canada.
Among the soldiers who stormed those was James Doohan aka. James Montgomery Scott, Chief Engineer of the Starship Enterprise. He was only wounded after the beach was taken by a sniper.
In WW2, there was a port city in Italy (I can't recall the name) that Canadian forces took. The streets were a kill zone, so the Canadians had to fight building to building, room to room. And they won. So if you're an Italian, and the living room says "Sorry", start running
My family once saw the road sign for Saint-Louis du Ha! Ha! during a roadtrip to Nova Scotia, we were all very tired and bored, and for at least 10 minutes that sign was the funniest thing in the world to us.
I'm glad to know that after playing that game and sympathizing with the characters, RT just fuckin ruins the Celeste monument. It was still pretty funny tho
Canadian here: It's honestly refreshing to have an international streamer know Canadian places and names. And yeah, Timmies has been in and out of Canadian ownership several times. I think they're Brazilian now? Owned by the same company that runs Burger King. The air of togetherness and Canadian identity they used to put in their marketing has really been lost.
Does tesco even exist in Canada? I mean I live here and stuff but until now I have never heard of such a place existing Also apparently toys r us is something that most country’s don’t have anymore?- Is that really the case? There’s one like right downtown from my house and it’s huge as can be-
@@spiritsarise4665 im from canada too, living in the toronto ontario area and ive seen 0 tescos my entire life, and i was also suprised when i learned toys r us was a shut down business because there are tons of them in shopping malls
Fun Canada fact: The French word "crosse", depending on the dialect can mean any of the following: -A stick used in sports, like a hockey stick; -The butt of a rifle; -A crozier, an ecclesiastical staff used by bishops; -A scam; -A wank; -The actual sport. Nothing to do with actual crosses. But everything to do with wankers. EDIT: Source: I speak French.
Fun fact about 6:33: the was the first canadian driver who won on that circuit, 1 year later he died in a crash, so they decided to name the circuit after him
Seeing as how everyone is doing it figured I might add to it. Fun fact: the island that people thought was french is actually Anticosti island, which is part of Quebec and forms it's own administrative region. The island or rather islands that people were thinking of were St. Pierre and Miquelon which are located south of Newfoundland and are all that remains of New France.
Yup! And funny fact with it, St. Pierre et Miquelon islands were the economical pivot point for illegal alcohol importations to the US in the period of the prohibition. Quebec also profited of it, considering it was the only province of Canada that didn't banned alcohol in that time.
The view is basically the only reason to go, but even that’s not all that great (it’s a major city, so the smog is awful). I’d much rather go to the Ripley’s aquarium or the ROM or something.
We've talked a bit about how the native people of our country have, and continue to be, mistreated, as a side note I want to take a moment to remember that thousands of Indigenous volunteers joined the military during the world wars and were quite accomplished. In WW1 they were present in every major canadian battle. Some individuals are famous even. Yet when they returned home they usually did not receive the same honours as other veterans and continued to be mistreated. This led to mistrust in the government and is speculated to have perhaps caused lower enlistment rates in WW2, though there were still a great many volunteers that played an important role in our victory. Not to mention Indigenous people on the homefront. A lot of canadian history curriculums focus on the world wars, though it wasn't until relatively recently that these things were included in history books, and it is often still glazed over.
Brooke Corbyn a lot of history is just 'white people are racist. and then they're racist again. And then,, they sorta say sorry? and nothing changes :)'
Thanks for spreading the word. I grew up in America and I know nothing about Canadian history except what I've learned in educational TH-cam videos. Like how the White House used to be pink marble! Until manifest destiny saw the country make an enemy of their northern neighbour. Which we were told in school was only "the idea that we were meant to expand West to own the land from coast to coast." They say with Thermopylae, history shifted from myth to documentation, but every country still wants to shape their own myth.
@@SocktheWorm yes we briefly touched on that part of our shared history in school. I find it interesting how each region prioritizes its history and for what purpose it is taught.
Thank you, as a native person living in canada, while I appreciate the memes and jokes, there's a lot of darkness in our past and still ongoing that's often glossed over because 'canadians are so nice!' btw, just so you know, 'aboriginal' is sometimes considered a slur/offensive term! It literally translates to 'not original'. Indigenous is the preferred term.
6:22 To whoever decided to build Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (The site of the Canadian Grand Prix on the Formula 1 calendar and of my top 5 favorite race tracks) Thank you
The Americans gotta remember we live with moose and polar bears(one of the most dangerous bears) in our backyards. I see at least 2 moose every week. We can take a beating
Fun fact: Tim Hortons doesn’t have an apostrophe before the s because in Quebec it became illegal for business to advertise with English signs, and since the apostrophe is an English thing in that context, they just got rid of it
@@spoiltmilk6511 Yes! French people do use apostrophes, but not in the same way as English people do. In French apostrophes are used to connect two words, for example: je aime turns into j’aime.
@@spoiltmilk6511 basically Quebec has many laws concerning language in order to preserve French as the dominant language so even things like road signs are only allowed to be posted in French. This is because Quebec is very distinctly French so it has fuelled a sense of nationalism in the province that very nearly resulted in it becoming an independent country in the 90s. The vote to leave Canada was lost by an extremely small margin.
If you didn’t see the end of the stream, they were actually gathering on the Fredericton water tower, which is also the only noteworthy thing in all of Fredericton lol
As someone who lives in Fredericton, despite us being the capital of New Brunswick, this is very true, We don't have anything really noteworthy to take memory of.
@@pseudogamer6685 basically a popular store like Wal-Mart i guess is how I'd describe it, possibly more like safe-way but we don't have those in southern Ontario either from what I know
The Tim hortons fact isn’t entirely true. Tim was still alive when he founded it with Ron Joyce. In fact he died nearly 10 years after the founding of Tim Hortons.
@@jackthomas1448 their coffee is basically water now. Where I live, there's a McDonalds and a Tim Horton's within walking distance of each McDonalds and the difference in breakfast foods is very noticeable. McDonalds uses Tim Horton's old supplier, which is why their coffee is noticeably better. Since Burger King bought them Tim's focus isn't on making good food anymore, they're only selling their appeal as a Canadian brand and they're diversifying their menu to distract from their now-shit coffee and donuts
@@andrewduong2740 ikr, plus the fact that they just released a cereal that is so clearly only for money. Every once in a while I would go to Tim’s and realize that I essentially just bought piss.
well i mean.. after that you have to boil it a lot because the sap is extremely dilute.. and remove impurities while boiling.. maybe i really am canadian holy shit
@Punished Aniquin yeah i know about birch sap being drinkable straight out of the tree but if maple syrup came out the same way maple trees would probably be eaten alive by bugs and fungi lol
@Punished Aniquin I wouldn't drink pure maple sap, it'll give you the shits like no one's business. Don't ask me why, but for some reason that sugar water is basically a laxative. And yes, you literally just ram a tap into the tree.
Hey RT, just to let you know that my grandfather was a firefighter and he actually went to the crash site of Tim Horton's vehicle... oh and a little bit of a back story, Tim Horton was a Toronto Maple Leaf player and he and his team won a game and were going out to celebrate, but instead of taking the team's bus, he took his convertible and sadly died in a car crash meaning that if he went with his team he could have been ok, but other than that Tim Horton was a good player, and my grandfather went to the crash site which is really amazing to think about... Anyway sorry for taking up your time! Have a good day! Bye!
@@maniram5089 tim horton was driving at high speeds down the freeway, blood alcohol level was twice the legal limit and he had traces of some form of stimulant drug. Yes it’s sad, but two people even tried stopping him from driving.
@@finnegan728 No, because he died before Tim Hortons was made into a restaurant because his wife made their dream of a Tim Hortons coffee shop into reality after he died. That is why he made no money...
When I was around 8-9, my family went to Canada for the holidays. On the first week, no joke, out of no where a fekin goose attacked me. Long story short, I’m terrified of geese
I would have liked to see more things about residential schools. That is a huge part of our history and was a big mistake on our part. For anyone who doesn’t know, Canadians would round up aboriginal children and send them to a schools where the would get punished for doing things that represent their culture and force them to be less « savage ». There were graveyards next to the schools because so many kids would die. The last one only closed in 1996.
me too.. I have been trying to incorporate some indigenous stuff into the build, but have been hesitant about representing them tbh. i feel like people would whine about it being "too morbid" or something :/
It wasn’t only aboriginal children, it was any children that wasn’t deemed “fit” in society, like Slavic children and Irish children when they came to Canada. Schools don’t teach to this but I can speak for myself since my great grandmother was in a residential school and she’s Slavic, horrible stuff really and I hate how they just forced everyone they didn’t think was “normal” in there. I feel bad for any person who had to go through that, I pay my respects to them and what they went through.
The geese part is true, in fall and spring you would have to watch out for fees on your way to school because multiple people were attacked. Someone broke their arm falling while a goose attacked them.
is it french or a french/spanish hybrid or what? i get the ville part as 'town' but nueve?, nueve isn't french as the word for new is "Neuveau/Nouvelle" and town is spanish is villa but new is nuev/e/a so how are you meant to pronounce it?
1:06 alright I know you will never see this but I still want to say it, I am Irish, Canadian as well I was born in Galway and moved to southern Ontario. Hearing you say this was amazing. Thank you to all of you who read this and I hope you stay safe.
@@yuukasta1364 that’s really cool, a lot of towns down in southern Ontario have Irish roots as well, lots of Irish settled down here. You stay safe as well
"Its like you enter Canada and there's just an angry flock of geese". I really wish TH-cam allowed photo comments so I could show you how many geese live in my town. There are thousands. And I'm about 10 mins from the US border so they pretty much do greet you when you enter Canada.
I live in Iowa and we get the geese in the winter. There is a big field near my house and about January you can see about 200 of them flying over my house and landing in the field. I have seen about 500 of them in the field all at once. They are pretty loud.
They forgot about the lion's gate suspension bridge. Upon completion in November 1938, the Lions Gate Bridge was recognized as the longest suspension bridge in the British Empire and one of the biggest construction projects undertaken in Canada during the 1930s.
I pity people who haven't been blessed with the superior packaging technique that is bagged milk. Pours better then a jug, tastes better then cardboard.
When RT said he was Irish-Canadian I was half expecting him to say some of his family were Newfoundland because that's basically Ireland lmao Edit: also as somebody from Newfoundland I used to visit a park near the confederation building to go sledding in the winter. From what I remember you could get a good view of the building from there. Seeing it on a channel I have watched for over a year showcase this as basically the entirety of the island I couldn't help but smile.
The seal thing is important, but the problem is that the Inuit people make their living off seal pelts. The way Europe reacted to seal clubbing was far too broad and not only banned the sport, but almost eliminated the Inuit livelihood. Just good to keep in mind.
Also, apart from tradition, my grandfather used to be a seal clubber on a small island town ( ile- de-la-madelaine) and it was a nessecary job since the overpopulation of seals was significantly harming the fishing industry, which is more than 50% of the economy on that island
@@wariolandshakeit-wiiawaren6102 This is why it’s all so confusing. You can’t have a holistic view on a situation without understanding all sides of it.
@@Kitsaline you’re not wrong, we treated the First Nations like shiiiiiit. And it took like a few hundred years for them to get an apology from the government
another fun fact about NB: the bay of fundy has the highest tides in the world, and has a massive potential for green energy, being able to possibly power the entirety of canada!
I never knew he actually came here once until this video. I've always joked that you need a microscope to see PEI on a globe because of how small we are
@@Nova_Astral I hold a pointless grudge against PEI because my Ex came from there and I'm Albertan so I have a predispositional hate towards any province that isn't Saskatchewan or Manatoba. Never been though, definitely gotta check it out.
Lt Col John McCrae, who wrote In Flanders Fields, went to the high school I'm currently attending. One of his descendants reads the poem every year for remembrance day. It's very nice.
Just want to comment on the seal hunt statue: I think it's important to clear up that seal hunting isn't a bad thing. It's no less humane than hunting any other animal. Inuit communities have really suffered because of the "clubbing baby seals" thing that gets spread around; anti-sealing activism directly has a negative impact on their lives. There are some issues in commercial sealing, but even that as a whole is fine. It is closely monitored to ensure such. The only glaring issue in commercial sealing is that much of the meat gets wasted because the demand for it has gone down, while the demand for the fur has remained the same. Regardless, the animals are killed swiftly. Often with a bullet to the head. No "brutal clubbing", I promise! Some still use the hakapik ("club,") but that too is a quick death. One hit on the head, and it's gone. (Also... The statue appears to be a sea lion, not a seal. )
Yea I was going to stay, there's a lack of Inuit representation that wasn't super stereotyped already, they need to survive off them, since they can't just go to a store a lot of times.
You got that right. Native tribe members on the West coast are currently getting paid by the government to club/shoot seals and document/sample the contents of their stomachs for research purposes. It's an effort to reduce the seal population, to hopefully raise the salmon population, in order to give whales more food to eat. It's a deadly world outside of city life, some people can't stand the thought of that.
Yes thank you for saying this! I was going to make a similar comment. From my understanding Inuit communities rely on hunting, and efforts to restrict or straight up outlaw indigenous practices when the price of food in the north is already impossibly high, is inhumane
So just like pretty much everything humans have ever touched, the issue wasn't the act but how commercialization/industrialization magnified the impact to extreme levels? Can't say I'm surprised. The part that surprises me was that it never reached unsustainable levels from what you're saying. And of course when a "solution" is proposed by people who obviously know better, it's a broad generalization, because there is never any nuances on the small scale, and one size fits all policies always work perfectly when applied to diverse circumstances. (This is sarcasm, hard to tell w/ text sometimes.) But seriously, of course the tradition results in a quick, clean kill. If that's what the tradition (hunting with clubs) was, it became tradition because it's quick and efficient. When people have to do something to survive, they will very rapidly make it as efficient and consistent as possible. Man, it's almost like the people who have been living in a certain location for hundreds, if not thousands of years started doing things a certain way because they worked or something, and that if it wasn't sustainable they wouldn't have been able to.
@@notcatisa rejecting cheese is directly equivalent if not more so blasphemous than rejecting ambrosia from the gods, choosing to go into hell rather than heaven.
1:15 Oooo, that's pretty neat. My ancestors were some of the first Scottish settlers, but they ended up in Quebec (made their way to Ontario) rather than P.E.I.
@@garrotter I've never heard about someone painting a ladder before and I still can't see what's so dangerous about it, excepted if you use lead based paints of course.
I thought this was going to just be the typical stereotypical crap, but I was pleasantly surprised to see my country represented in an amazing way, great video!
I can't believe people aren't aware of bagged milk outside of canada. Like, I live in the UK and I've bever bought it but coffeeshops often use bagged milk.
Yup, a consequence that is not discussed and showed much in history class. Something a lot of people forgets to acknowledge. Thought there did was a compensation, but a lot of Cree communities did not considered it was sufficient, and not for no reason.
So in my modern history class (post WWII), one article we read was talking about dams being built in India in the late 90s/early 2000s. Basically, these dams were often causing more harm than good, because they were ridiculously expensive, didn't actually help provide more drinking water to that many villages, in some cases made farming more difficult, and all the dams that had been built resulted in 50 MILLION people being relocated. And of course, 57% of the people relocated were various small tribes. So I doubt it makes you feel any better, but at least know that your tribe's situation isn't because of "bad luck" or some other bs. It's because dams are big, flashy ways for governments showing that "we are helping our country develop!!1!1" and "spreading civilization" even when they don't actually work. When well though out/planned, yes, they can be very beneficial to the surrounding area. However, because most people don't understand the consequences of poorly/irresponsibly built dams, they are overbuilt in places where governments can get away with forcing minority groups to relocate, under the guise of "it's for the greater good."
@@gunnarschlichting9886 calm down a bit buddy, in Quebec, it's hydroelectric dams that we have, not water retainment dams. Yes, the majority of them have reservoirs, like the Manic and Outarde, but they do what they are ment to do. We have a important ressource: flowing water, and since the 1940's we put all of the effort on this source of energy. Right now, 98% of all electricity consommation comes from these hydroelectric dams, in fact, we're in overproduction... but as it is said, “nothing is white, nothing is black, everything is just shades of gray”, theses dams come at a cost: the land loss in the autochthonous communities.
@@FredGlt Yeah, sorry overgeneralized a bit there. I just learned about this a couple days ago, so it kinda hit a nerve. That plus being tired lol. Probably shouldn't have gone on a rant. I just suddenly became disillusioned about something that I always thought was one of those pretty much always positive things and kinda swung too far in the other direction, ya know? Glad to hear that the Canadian government is being responsible though. Like you said, nothing is black and white, but at least I can count on Canada to be pretty much a better US still, on the national level if nothing else.
@@Laura-qf7mo bagged milk is faster to produce, cheaper, and less wasteful than the cartons or plastic jugs (the bags have less plastic than cartons or jugs). Because the bagged version is easier to produce they often get to store shelves quicker and are usually fresher. However, the only problem is that some cities only recycle hard plastics so the bags aren't getting recycled like they should... which is weird because shopping bags are a huge waste-producer so you'd think soft plastics would be a more common recyclable.
Let's take our mind off the USA for just a little while and focus on Tim Hortons land. We included as much of Canada as we possibly could, this was another massive area that we had to reduce to make manageable. Bit of info I get wrong in this video too, we've traced my family tree back close to 400 years and it's not 400 years on the island itself. Still cool though!
Watch the previous part of this project here where we build Russia! th-cam.com/video/UuFzdy3Kk5w/w-d-xo.html
If anyone is looking for server information or login information, you can find all of it in the description of the video. The server is open 24/7 for Twitch Subscribers. And thank you to everyone who took part in this session!
Dan the man with the plan for Canadian land
So cool💕💕💕
Ok thanks
Hii whats up
as a canadien i can say this stream is super accurate
Fun Canada fact: The reason Canadians are nice is that every year on thanksgiving we channel all of our hate into those geese, making us nice and the geese into hellspawn
This tactic is not without its downsides, however. It results in a deep hatred in the geese to the ones who made them like this, to the extent that they can and will attack Canadians on sight.
as a canadian i back this up
justin bieber accidentally got mixed in with the early geese experiments
This is one of my existential questions now answered
When it comes time to fight, Canadians will draw upon the reserves of hate and rage stored in the geese to fuel their combat skills.
Fun fact: in Quebec every year people build a castle out of ice, you can stay in it
Yeah! Hôtel de glace, right?
That sounds amazing
@@RedFireRex Exactly! I think.
Ah yes, Canada, the place that has a festival dedicated to snow
Yeah I was there for a school trip
Fun fact: Every year Nova Scotia, Canada sends a huge christmas tree to Boston, U.S to thank them for their help during the Halifax explosion, which was the biggest non-nuclear explosion to happen. Im Nova Scotian so I hear about this fact a lot
Nova Scotian here, Its one of our traditions in my family to watch the stream of it being delivered
@@hornlessgoat4945 thats really cool!
It actually is THE biggest non nuclear explosion
@@HariboStarms thats what he said
Awsome
'you just pop a tap in the tree'
I don't think RT realizes that is actually how it works.
What’d you mean, that’s exactly what you do LMAO
As a canadian who has 2 neighbours that make maple syrup yes that's exactly what you do
as someone who works with maple syrup, yes, this is spot on for what you do
Idk about real life, but it's what you do in stardew valley
@@diggitydigg6905 I saw some people doing this with ice cream buckets. I don't even think they knew if it was maple trees or not.
Canada Facts:
- Canada apparently apologizes so profusely that we had to create an "Apology Act," which means that in court an apology can be regarded as empathy rather than admission of guilt.
- We also have a strategic maple syrup reserve in case the market runs out.
- In 2011, a group committed the Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist, in which they stole nearly 19 million dollars worth of maple syrup.
I'm not making this stuff up - I love my country.
I wish I lived in Canada, USA is hell on earth
wow, i want to move to canada
Cool. How hot does Canada get? Like, what is the hottest that a place can usually get in summer.
In court: I'm sorry for stealing the maple syrup. Here, have it back.
Another fact: the Natives and POC are highly ostracized but everyone pretends Canada is a perfect dreamworld with no problems so it doesn't get addressed
Me being Canadian, seeing the entirety of Canada be filled with great detail, care, and memes brings a massive smile to my face!
Same here man🇨🇦
Same my guy
BROTHERS!
Let go Canada gang 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
Hell yeah, your Canadian and you play tf2
As a Canadian I really loved the diversity of the builds and the Historic Monuments that were built that even I didn’t know about.
Herocanadian
Canabrine
oot n aboot
right, i am from NB and was proud to see the representation of the worlds largest axe. need to know who did that n give em props.
CANADIAN GANG
I half expected a completely flat section with a sign "Saskatchewan"
I wanted a chunk error where Manitoba should have been
The prairie provinces should be just wheat fields.
That would’ve been amazing XD
as a saskatchewan resident thats 100% what I was expecting lmao
Saskatchewan is the Ohio of Canada
Fun fact: Despite Canadian reputation for being generally nice and friendly people, we have a very impressive war history, especially in the two World Wars. In World War 1, Canadian troops performed well enough that when the Germans noticed Canadian Divisions moving, they prepared for immediate attack. An offensive that came to be known as "Canada's Hundred Days" is a good example. In World War 2, during the Normandy Landings, Juno Beach was primarily attacked by Canadian forces. Juno Beach was the second most fortified beach behind Omaha, but despite the resistance the Canadian forces not only took the beach, but were also the forces that pushed the farthest and came closest to completing their objectives. I wouldn't take this at face value, since I am not a historian, but it's interesting stuff.
Speaking of war, Pineapple Pizza was first invented in Canada.
Also we helped found the peace keeping forces in the United Nations. You see those blue hats, Canada is helped spark that initiative
Among the soldiers who stormed those was James Doohan aka. James Montgomery Scott, Chief Engineer of the Starship Enterprise. He was only wounded after the beach was taken by a sniper.
There was also Vimy ridge during WW1
IT WAS YOU!!! You needed something else to channel your hatred into, so you created JUSTIN BIEBER AND PINEAPPLE PIZZA?
In WW2, there was a port city in Italy (I can't recall the name) that Canadian forces took. The streets were a kill zone, so the Canadians had to fight building to building, room to room. And they won. So if you're an Italian, and the living room says "Sorry", start running
Word of advice:
NEVER drive into a moose. Your vehicle will literally disintegrate.
A moose is a refrigerator on stilts
@@variableaxis9652 it’s more like a living breathing brick wall.
RIP to the mirror on my old truck
Worst part is they are like, the perfect height as to fall through your windshield, making them VERY lethal.
You can buy whistles that attach to the car to scare them away when driving. Can highly recommend! Stopped a deer taking out my car
Fun fact: Canadian Geese are the rulers of Canada. We can’t contest them. We’re trapped here, this is a cry for help.
I made a mistake, man... I shot a goose in a hunting trip, I can hear them breaking the door down.. no.. I have to get the 4/10.
@@ChickenLiver911 This is the UK we have heard your pleas we are sending an evacuation team & extermination team for the geese
My cousin chased a group of them and they ran away like bitches
@@oblivionsghost7430 your cousin is a force to be reckoned with
@@planterbox yeah-- I'm pretty sure he was pretty short/small at the time-- XD
Fun fact: there's a town in Quebec called Saint-Louis-du-Ha!-Ha!, and it's the only place in the world with _two_ exclamation marks in the name!
There's also a bay called La baie des Ha! Ha!, that transforms into the Ha! Ha! river
Did they just start laughing at the river or
i think they did
My family once saw the road sign for Saint-Louis du Ha! Ha! during a roadtrip to Nova Scotia, we were all very tired and bored, and for at least 10 minutes that sign was the funniest thing in the world to us.
@@fanatica1338 Omg same, from Ontario but take that road to Halifax every summer
I love how it's so rare to find another Canadian on the internet and this video has been a place where they can all gather and talk about our country
Ya
Azzyland, gloom and Lily Singh are some canadian youtube channels i recommend 😁
@@zetora8469 ..no.
@@zetora8469 you just said some terrible youtubes not making canada look good
Yes sir. I wish rt showed more of Calgary, its part of Alberta but still a very good stream
“From those suffering from anxiety and depression, know you aren’t stone”-RumbleTumble Games
I'm glad to know that after playing that game and sympathizing with the characters, RT just fuckin ruins the Celeste monument. It was still pretty funny tho
Canadian here: It's honestly refreshing to have an international streamer know Canadian places and names. And yeah, Timmies has been in and out of Canadian ownership several times. I think they're Brazilian now? Owned by the same company that runs Burger King. The air of togetherness and Canadian identity they used to put in their marketing has really been lost.
To non Canadians, Canada is basically Vancouver, Toronto, and Quebec. No surprises here.
And halifax, yea, thats basically all it.
I wouldnt even count quebec, the rest of ontario/the gta is way more interesting.
I'm brazilian and idk wtf are you talking about jkvyivunkif
I thought Burger King patriated to Canada for tax reasons and merged with Tim Hortons? it's very confusing
@@Blakbox92 I don’t remember the last time I saw a Burger King, honestly. There used to be some in my area but they’re all gone.
“Guys please build something other than a tesco”
“No.”
Another good anwser
"Moose and Goose"
Does tesco even exist in Canada?
I mean I live here and stuff but until now I have never heard of such a place existing
Also apparently toys r us is something that most country’s don’t have anymore?-
Is that really the case? There’s one like right downtown from my house and it’s huge as can be-
@@spiritsarise4665 Yeah I have never seen a tesco.
@@spiritsarise4665 im from canada too, living in the toronto ontario area and ive seen 0 tescos my entire life, and i was also suprised when i learned toys r us was a shut down business because there are tons of them in shopping malls
I have never been out of Canada, and I have never heard of Tesco until now.
Dan: *doesn't like cheese*
Everybody: *Holy music stops*
Seriously doe
I bet he loves pizza
Im half french and i dislike cheese too
@@Bruh-hq1hx you monster
But he'll fight to the death about pineapples on pizza!
Fun Canada fact: The French word "crosse", depending on the dialect can mean any of the following:
-A stick used in sports, like a hockey stick;
-The butt of a rifle;
-A crozier, an ecclesiastical staff used by bishops;
-A scam;
-A wank;
-The actual sport.
Nothing to do with actual crosses. But everything to do with wankers.
EDIT: Source: I speak French.
québecois/québecoise?
Fun Canada fact: no one cares about canada
@@nathanbouchard8241 Lole no
@@oOclonOo where then? I would like to know who hates canada. Also why are you here if you don't care about canada lmao.
bien dit calis
Fun fact about 6:33: the was the first canadian driver who won on that circuit, 1 year later he died in a crash, so they decided to name the circuit after him
Fun fact: the creators of Cuphead are Canadian! The two brothers lived in Regina, Saskatchewan. All the music was recorded by a Canadian band aswell
Regina, the town that rhymes with fun!
Seeing as how everyone is doing it figured I might add to it. Fun fact: the island that people thought was french is actually Anticosti island, which is part of Quebec and forms it's own administrative region. The island or rather islands that people were thinking of were St. Pierre and Miquelon which are located south of Newfoundland and are all that remains of New France.
Yup! And funny fact with it, St. Pierre et Miquelon islands were the economical pivot point for illegal alcohol importations to the US in the period of the prohibition. Quebec also profited of it, considering it was the only province of Canada that didn't banned alcohol in that time.
ooooh I thought it might have been The Maggies- Unless Miquelon is that and I never saw it written only heard in the marine forecasts..
Thanks for correcting this!
As a Canadian, I feel attacked that the CN Tower wasn't there. But as a Canadian, I'm also sorry for feeling attacked.
The CN tower was in a different stream I believe, the America stream, cuz they accidentally zoned in Toronto with the USA
Toronto was accidentally made in the USA stream, because the build plot overlapped with lower Ontario
@@definitelynotcris oh thank god, I was really worried
Omg I was thinking the exact same thing
The view is basically the only reason to go, but even that’s not all that great (it’s a major city, so the smog is awful). I’d much rather go to the Ripley’s aquarium or the ROM or something.
I love Canadian recognition from people outside Canada, I feel like we always get overshadowed by our brother south of us
To be fair, I think America overshadows every country.
[Content is not available in your country]
Dont worry americans wish we were you
@@timekeeper2738 sorry but no we don't
Edit: Wait the way that is spelt cunfuses me
at least in scotland canada is seen as much better usa
We've talked a bit about how the native people of our country have, and continue to be, mistreated, as a side note I want to take a moment to remember that thousands of Indigenous volunteers joined the military during the world wars and were quite accomplished. In WW1 they were present in every major canadian battle. Some individuals are famous even. Yet when they returned home they usually did not receive the same honours as other veterans and continued to be mistreated. This led to mistrust in the government and is speculated to have perhaps caused lower enlistment rates in WW2, though there were still a great many volunteers that played an important role in our victory. Not to mention Indigenous people on the homefront.
A lot of canadian history curriculums focus on the world wars, though it wasn't until relatively recently that these things were included in history books, and it is often still glazed over.
Brooke Corbyn a lot of history is just 'white people are racist. and then they're racist again. And then,, they sorta say sorry? and nothing changes :)'
Thanks for spreading the word. I grew up in America and I know nothing about Canadian history except what I've learned in educational TH-cam videos. Like how the White House used to be pink marble! Until manifest destiny saw the country make an enemy of their northern neighbour. Which we were told in school was only "the idea that we were meant to expand West to own the land from coast to coast." They say with Thermopylae, history shifted from myth to documentation, but every country still wants to shape their own myth.
@@SocktheWorm yes we briefly touched on that part of our shared history in school. I find it interesting how each region prioritizes its history and for what purpose it is taught.
Thank you, as a native person living in canada, while I appreciate the memes and jokes, there's a lot of darkness in our past and still ongoing that's often glossed over because 'canadians are so nice!' btw, just so you know, 'aboriginal' is sometimes considered a slur/offensive term! It literally translates to 'not original'. Indigenous is the preferred term.
@@qtfoxe oh sorry! I'll change it I had no idea, thank you
RT: “I don’t like cheese”
Chat: “your living license has *just been revoked”*
**lactose intolerance entered the chat**
After he said that someone in the in game chat said "go eat mozzarella you coward"
HE DISSED POUTINE HE MUST DIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE
@Walker Ford you don’t even exist
I mean, they don't stand much of a chance really. The guy has destroyed city's he built for fun.
6:22
To whoever decided to build Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (The site of the Canadian Grand Prix on the Formula 1 calendar and of my top 5 favorite race tracks)
Thank you
It was hilarious watching Daniel try to pronounce it
"Circuit Gils Vilnev"
-Murray Walker in every Canadian GP in the 90s
I was literally just thinking about "what if somebody build a f1 track on this" lol
Fun Fact: my home town of Bathurst, NB is the town where the mcflurry was invented and every year there is a day where we get a free mcflurry
McFlurry Day
Nathaniel bandy invented the Mcflurry.
"i don't really like poutine"
every Canadian watching this video: *i am no longer mister nice guy*
Outside of Quebec poutine isnt that good tho
As a Canadian I disagree
You mean all of Quebec? It's really more a Quebec thing, but Quebec has the best poutine.
@@elirewasout youre spitting straight facts
*I am now slightly irritated guy*
When RT said he didn't like cheese I almost dropped my charcuterie board
I almost dropped my cheeseburger, gun, medical bills, and American flag
I almost dropped my pizza and garlic bread
I almost didn't drop my reply.
@@gnarly.bulblax I almost dropped my bomb vest
I dropped my sister down the stairs
Canada stereotype most the time: *friendly, nice, says "sorry" and "eh"*
Canada stereotype during war:
*I was born to take your life*
Our stereotype is that we’re nice when the truth is we just know when to shut our mouths lmaoo
We’ve never lost a war
“If God had wanted you to live, he would not have created me”
-Soldier (TF2)
Ghost in the trenches starts playing in the distance
The Americans gotta remember we live with moose and polar bears(one of the most dangerous bears) in our backyards. I see at least 2 moose every week. We can take a beating
Fun fact: Tim Hortons doesn’t have an apostrophe before the s because in Quebec it became illegal for business to advertise with English signs, and since the apostrophe is an English thing in that context, they just got rid of it
why, like why does quebec not like english
donde french ppl use apostrophes too???? confusion
@@spoiltmilk6511 Yes! French people do use apostrophes, but not in the same way as English people do. In French apostrophes are used to connect two words, for example: je aime turns into j’aime.
@@spoiltmilk6511 history of Canada is basically "french bad, assimilate french"
@@spoiltmilk6511 basically Quebec has many laws concerning language in order to preserve French as the dominant language so even things like road signs are only allowed to be posted in French. This is because Quebec is very distinctly French so it has fuelled a sense of nationalism in the province that very nearly resulted in it becoming an independent country in the 90s. The vote to leave Canada was lost by an extremely small margin.
If you didn’t see the end of the stream, they were actually gathering on the Fredericton water tower, which is also the only noteworthy thing in all of Fredericton lol
As someone who lives in Fredericton, despite us being the capital of New Brunswick, this is very true, We don't have anything really noteworthy to take memory of.
@@steelwolf1745 look on the bright side, at least you don't live in Newfoundland!
That's so accurate to Fredericton. Water tower, harvest or schools
Okay how do you get on the aerver
Server??
WHY IS THERE TESCO IN CANADA.
TESCO DOESN'T EXIST IN CANADA.
I was going to say, I don't think Tesco is in North America at all at least not anymore
There are actually some Tesco's in Canada, but they are rare...
Tesco is everywhere
Tesco is love
Tesco is life
I dont even know what tesco is
@@pseudogamer6685 basically a popular store like Wal-Mart i guess is how I'd describe it, possibly more like safe-way but we don't have those in southern Ontario either from what I know
The Tim hortons fact isn’t entirely true. Tim was still alive when he founded it with Ron Joyce. In fact he died nearly 10 years after the founding of Tim Hortons.
Also the fact that it’s gone way downhill and it sucks ass.
@@jackthomas1448 their coffee is basically water now. Where I live, there's a McDonalds and a Tim Horton's within walking distance of each McDonalds and the difference in breakfast foods is very noticeable. McDonalds uses Tim Horton's old supplier, which is why their coffee is noticeably better. Since Burger King bought them Tim's focus isn't on making good food anymore, they're only selling their appeal as a Canadian brand and they're diversifying their menu to distract from their now-shit coffee and donuts
First one was built in my city :)
@@andrewduong2740 ikr, plus the fact that they just released a cereal that is so clearly only for money. Every once in a while I would go to Tim’s and realize that I essentially just bought piss.
@@dc619 cool, where?
2:22 for one moment Dan looks over at Terrence and Phillip and then decides, out of knowing or not knowing, it’s not worth it
He talked about it on stream he just didn’t put it in the vid
RT: "I am actually half Canadian"
Me: "oh that explains why I like him so much"
I, a Wisconsin native, am PERSONALLY offended that Rt doesn’t like cheese. The audacity
As a fellow Wisconsin native I can say I'm disgusted at Rt's behavior to not like cheese.
lmao just as I scroll down looking for the cheese
I am also offended by this
C h e e s e
As a Wisconsinite I consume 20+ lbs. of cheese a day
I know he says “just stick a tap on the tree as a joke, but that’s actually how it works 😂
well i mean.. after that you have to boil it a lot because the sap is extremely dilute.. and remove impurities while boiling.. maybe i really am canadian holy shit
Is it really? I thought that was maybe an expression, but I didn’t know that’s actually what they did.
@Punished Aniquin yeah i know about birch sap being drinkable straight out of the tree but if maple syrup came out the same way maple trees would probably be eaten alive by bugs and fungi lol
@Punished Aniquin I wouldn't drink pure maple sap, it'll give you the shits like no one's business. Don't ask me why, but for some reason that sugar water is basically a laxative.
And yes, you literally just ram a tap into the tree.
Yeah I remember my family made home made maple syrup once.
"I don't like cheese"
It's fine honestly, I can accept people having no soul.
Honestly, with the amount of murder he's committed, he's probably rich in souls that aren't his
@@dgamer5075 lol
I will be honest, I DON'T LIKE CHEESE.
Oh no please don't kill me.
I only like cream cheese. And edam cheese with shortbread. It's a thing we do at hogmanay
@@faiazirfan1262 we must stand together strong
RT: "I'm not a cheese man"
The entire world: "blasphemy!"
someone get this man some cheese
Nah, RT's right
@Darling Vexa Art How can someone _dare_ to have different tastes, am I right?
I'm lactose intolerant and I still eat cheese. Because it's worth it.
@Darling Vexa Art Um... no? Other people in my family ate the same cheese, it was fine. Cheese isn't a universal taste.
Hey RT, just to let you know that my grandfather was a firefighter and he actually went to the crash site of Tim Horton's vehicle... oh and a little bit of a back story, Tim Horton was a Toronto Maple Leaf player and he and his team won a game and were going out to celebrate, but instead of taking the team's bus, he took his convertible and sadly died in a car crash meaning that if he went with his team he could have been ok, but other than that Tim Horton was a good player, and my grandfather went to the crash site which is really amazing to think about... Anyway sorry for taking up your time! Have a good day! Bye!
didnt tim horton also make like, no money even though he name was the name of the brand?
shut up the day of the Rake will come
@Jack Jones that is really interesting and an incredibly sad fact
@@maniram5089 tim horton was driving at high speeds down the freeway, blood alcohol level was twice the legal limit and he had traces of some form of stimulant drug. Yes it’s sad, but two people even tried stopping him from driving.
@@finnegan728 No, because he died before Tim Hortons was made into a restaurant because his wife made their dream of a Tim Hortons coffee shop into reality after he died. That is why he made no money...
When I was around 8-9, my family went to Canada for the holidays. On the first week, no joke, out of no where a fekin goose attacked me.
Long story short, I’m terrified of geese
Canadian geese are hellspawn
Were all terrified of geese in this country don't worry
One time I saw a goose utterly wreck a great dane (as in the dog)
got bit by One Once
I would have liked to see more things about residential schools. That is a huge part of our history and was a big mistake on our part.
For anyone who doesn’t know, Canadians would round up aboriginal children and send them to a schools where the would get punished for doing things that represent their culture and force them to be less « savage ». There were graveyards next to the schools because so many kids would die. The last one only closed in 1996.
me too.. I have been trying to incorporate some indigenous stuff into the build, but have been hesitant about representing them tbh. i feel like people would whine about it being "too morbid" or something :/
Indeed sadly it's not something we discuss often. Especially consider ing all the screwing over the natives the canadian govt still is going
It wasn’t only aboriginal children, it was any children that wasn’t deemed “fit” in society, like Slavic children and Irish children when they came to Canada. Schools don’t teach to this but I can speak for myself since my great grandmother was in a residential school and she’s Slavic, horrible stuff really and I hate how they just forced everyone they didn’t think was “normal” in there. I feel bad for any person who had to go through that, I pay my respects to them and what they went through.
It was a part of Canadian history, that never should have happened.
Agreed, it’s terrible but it’s an important part of Canada’s history that needs to be remembered. Nice profile pic btw.
Rt: I don't like cheese
Wallace: Gromit get the shotgun.
Not even Wensleydale?
I FORGOT THE CRACKERS FOR YOUR SOUL!
*evening grommit*
Cheese bad, RT good
"It's no use prevaricating about the bush..."
“It’s all Canada.”
_Just as God intended_
_God Keep Our Land..._
“It’s all Canada.”
Just as God intended Hell
@@oOclonOo no thats USA
Fun fact about Canada: Every year people race in giant pumpkins the size of bathtubs in a river
Damn I wish I lived in a country of mad lads
Canadian I tell tou
Usa does weirder shit trusst
IM SORRY? Which part of Canada is this and how have I missed this
@@danieloregan3412 the bathtub races happen in Nanaimo, BC on Vancouver island.
The geese part is true, in fall and spring you would have to watch out for fees on your way to school because multiple people were attacked. Someone broke their arm falling while a goose attacked them.
Was kinda hoping for a Vancouver Science World, since it basically makes up 90% of my childhood, but other than that yeah this is Canada.
Science world is the best
Yeah there wasn't a lot of Vancouver, just EA burning
Straight up. There were so many crazy contraption to use when I used to go, it was sick
That place was my childhood I remember when they brought the dinosaur section and the human body section.
Only been there once but it was amazing
“It’s all Canada”
“Oh wait you knew?”
“Always did”
Hey everyone i hope you stay safe in this annoying pandemic, Im so close to 1640 subs all i ask for is a sub, it's so hard to grow! 🥺💖 Help please
@@Byzantia lemen I swear to god
How did you miss spell always
@@barackobama6858 How did you misspell misspell?
@@Byzantia shut
As a Canadian who’s been everywhere within the border, this chaos that is your server, represents it perfectly
Only thing missing was a huge coal brick where winnipeg should be.
Watching Daniel try to pronounce Villeneuve was hilarious, and I can't be the only one who thinks so
Wait when was that?
@@ChevyYenko 6:30
@@MysticIceFire thanks
Ville
Vill
Vil
Ville
Vil
Ville
is it french or a french/spanish hybrid or what?
i get the ville part as 'town' but nueve?, nueve isn't french as the word for new is "Neuveau/Nouvelle" and town is spanish is villa but new is nuev/e/a so how are you meant to pronounce it?
Fun Fact: The wreck of the RMS Titanic is just off the coast of Newfoundland
Ps: I am a massive titanic buff
What was the name of the Mystery writer that died on Titanic?
Do you only research about the Titanic or do you it with other ships / ocean liners?
@@silverdays2909 idk
@@papajohn5279 mostly the titanic but I do it with other sunken ships too
OK sans
1:06 alright I know you will never see this but I still want to say it, I am Irish, Canadian as well I was born in Galway and moved to southern Ontario. Hearing you say this was amazing. Thank you to all of you who read this and I hope you stay safe.
That's really cool!
@@blob9645 thank you for thinking that, stay safe during this time
@@Sailor-jx6zf will do 🙂
I'm Canadian and my grandmother's side of the family is just Irish immigrants. Apparently a lot of families in my city seem to have Irish origins.
@@yuukasta1364 that’s really cool, a lot of towns down in southern Ontario have Irish roots as well, lots of Irish settled down here. You stay safe as well
"Its like you enter Canada and there's just an angry flock of geese". I really wish TH-cam allowed photo comments so I could show you how many geese live in my town. There are thousands.
And I'm about 10 mins from the US border so they pretty much do greet you when you enter Canada.
I live in Iowa and we get the geese in the winter. There is a big field near my house and about January you can see about 200 of them flying over my house and landing in the field. I have seen about 500 of them in the field all at once. They are pretty loud.
And the POOP omg
Oh I’m like 2 minutes from the American border, no geese tho
Ayyy us border gang
Fun fact: The biggest costco in Canada is in Newfoundland. Every bayman from the area goes there all the time. It's a mess.
My mom goes there and it is very boring and the size makes it last longer then it has to
I have lived in Canada my whole life, and this is simultaneously hilarious and incredibly heart warming
WHY
@@owensks don't interact with him, (he is canadian) be careful
They forgot about the lion's gate suspension bridge. Upon completion in November 1938, the Lions Gate Bridge was recognized as the longest suspension bridge in the British Empire and one of the biggest construction projects undertaken in Canada during the 1930s.
I'm suprised Terry Fox never came up. A true Canadian hero.
He did come up on stream
There is a number of things brought up on stream but for these compilations it needs to be edited done.
I pity people who haven't been blessed with the superior packaging technique that is bagged milk. Pours better then a jug, tastes better then cardboard.
no
no
Yes
When RT said he was Irish-Canadian I was half expecting him to say some of his family were Newfoundland because that's basically Ireland lmao
Edit: also as somebody from Newfoundland I used to visit a park near the confederation building to go sledding in the winter. From what I remember you could get a good view of the building from there. Seeing it on a channel I have watched for over a year showcase this as basically the entirety of the island I couldn't help but smile.
NL gang baby but God I wish corner brook had anything interesting
@@caleblee8492 Gang.
i actually cant tell the difference between newfie accents and irish accents. i might be deaf though
@@notcatisa they are both the same tbh
The seal thing is important, but the problem is that the Inuit people make their living off seal pelts. The way Europe reacted to seal clubbing was far too broad and not only banned the sport, but almost eliminated the Inuit livelihood. Just good to keep in mind.
Seal clubbing is apart of their tradition of Inuit and I’d say that all non indigenous/Inuit peoples shouldn’t be allowed for seal clubbing
@@mig9941 You’re right. Sport is different from tradition/culture.
Also, apart from tradition, my grandfather used to be a seal clubber on a small island town ( ile- de-la-madelaine) and it was a nessecary job since the overpopulation of seals was significantly harming the fishing industry, which is more than 50% of the economy on that island
@@wariolandshakeit-wiiawaren6102 This is why it’s all so confusing. You can’t have a holistic view on a situation without understanding all sides of it.
As a resident of the US this type of response to an issue is far too familiar...
Canada is like that one roommate that makes you feel bad about yourself by being actually competent at things
Then turns out they’ve committed violent genocide behind your back
@@Kitsaline ha ha yeah that’s funny ha... *hides the bodies inside moose*
@@Tam-Ezrac *dunks the moose in maple syrup and passes it to the lumberjack*
@@Kitsaline I mean you're not wrong, but who hasn't, am I right?
@@Kitsaline you’re not wrong, we treated the First Nations like shiiiiiit. And it took like a few hundred years for them to get an apology from the government
“It’s all Canada?”
“Always has been”
"It all has fleshy interior?"
"It always had"
Therapist: Ogo Pogo goose isn’t real, he can’t hurt you.
Ogo Pogo goose:
I was hoping that’s what it was supposed to look like
I was waiting for actual ogo pogo but the goose was cool
FUN FACT (i guess) : Did you know the McFlurry was invented in New Brunswick? And if you really want to be accurate, in Bathurst where I live.
yoo I LOVE new brunswick! Im from Nova Scotia and summer vacations there are Highkey the best
This makes the shitty New Brunswick winter worth it.
another fun fact about NB: the bay of fundy has the highest tides in the world, and has a massive potential for green energy, being able to possibly power the entirety of canada!
Bathurst?
As in Race Track with Gran Turismo RD. Bathurst?
@@demioxdtouring No, Bathurst as in the town in New Brunswick. Don't forget we're talking about Canada here, not Australia lol.
Switzerland when they hear Daniel doesn’t like cheese:
*Angry cheese noises*
Me, a Swiss who doesn’t like cheese:
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
As a wisconsinite I feel ya.
I am also an Irish person who doesn't like cheese
I'm Canadian and I don't like cheese.
*so you have chosen death*
RT: I'm not a cheese man
His fanbase:
are you sure about that?
Hey RT its nice for someone to finally acknowledge Prince Edward Islands existence
-every islander in existence
_What's that, who's he?_
I never knew he actually came here once until this video. I've always joked that you need a microscope to see PEI on a globe because of how small we are
@@Nova_Astral I hold a pointless grudge against PEI because my Ex came from there and I'm Albertan so I have a predispositional hate towards any province that isn't Saskatchewan or Manatoba. Never been though, definitely gotta check it out.
How do you get on server??
Yeah its so underrated. But one question. West side or East Pei?
Fun fact: the California sushi roll was invented in Vancouver, Canada
So a Canadian variation of a Japanese food was named after an American state.
Wait until you hear about Hawaiian pizza
@@nickrudin1656 Yes, I already know.
@@superlowdgamer101 As someone from Hawaii I can say that we strongly disown that abomination
@@jwaj It's okay, it wasn't your fault
Lt Col John McCrae, who wrote In Flanders Fields, went to the high school I'm currently attending. One of his descendants reads the poem every year for remembrance day. It's very nice.
That’s my high school as well! Didn’t think I’d find another of us here
@@trashturtle6366 every time I've mentioned the school on the internet, someone has recognized it. It's kinda funny
Aye i go there too. Very nice school
Fun fact, whole milk in Canada is called “homo milk.”
I try to ignore being called out by milk in the grocery store on my weekly visits.
It’s weird to see RT use more than one or two effect edits. Seems like he’s feeling a lot better these days. Love your stuff RT! Keep at it lad.
Just want to comment on the seal hunt statue: I think it's important to clear up that seal hunting isn't a bad thing. It's no less humane than hunting any other animal. Inuit communities have really suffered because of the "clubbing baby seals" thing that gets spread around; anti-sealing activism directly has a negative impact on their lives. There are some issues in commercial sealing, but even that as a whole is fine. It is closely monitored to ensure such. The only glaring issue in commercial sealing is that much of the meat gets wasted because the demand for it has gone down, while the demand for the fur has remained the same. Regardless, the animals are killed swiftly. Often with a bullet to the head. No "brutal clubbing", I promise! Some still use the hakapik ("club,") but that too is a quick death. One hit on the head, and it's gone.
(Also... The statue appears to be a sea lion, not a seal. )
Yea I was going to stay, there's a lack of Inuit representation that wasn't super stereotyped already, they need to survive off them, since they can't just go to a store a lot of times.
Also also sealz are kinda like cockroaches they breed quickly and their numbers destroy most fish economies :(
You got that right. Native tribe members on the West coast are currently getting paid by the government to club/shoot seals and document/sample the contents of their stomachs for research purposes. It's an effort to reduce the seal population, to hopefully raise the salmon population, in order to give whales more food to eat. It's a deadly world outside of city life, some people can't stand the thought of that.
Yes thank you for saying this! I was going to make a similar comment. From my understanding Inuit communities rely on hunting, and efforts to restrict or straight up outlaw indigenous practices when the price of food in the north is already impossibly high, is inhumane
So just like pretty much everything humans have ever touched, the issue wasn't the act but how commercialization/industrialization magnified the impact to extreme levels? Can't say I'm surprised. The part that surprises me was that it never reached unsustainable levels from what you're saying.
And of course when a "solution" is proposed by people who obviously know better, it's a broad generalization, because there is never any nuances on the small scale, and one size fits all policies always work perfectly when applied to diverse circumstances. (This is sarcasm, hard to tell w/ text sometimes.)
But seriously, of course the tradition results in a quick, clean kill. If that's what the tradition (hunting with clubs) was, it became tradition because it's quick and efficient. When people have to do something to survive, they will very rapidly make it as efficient and consistent as possible. Man, it's almost like the people who have been living in a certain location for hundreds, if not thousands of years started doing things a certain way because they worked or something, and that if it wasn't sustainable they wouldn't have been able to.
this is directed to y'all telling us canada facts
thank you, these are really informative
My favorite part is the end with everyone who was building. RT has a pretty solid community
When RT said he didnt like cheese: Cooleney off with his baloney
I'm outraged be don't like it honestly
why do us cheese dislikers always get hated for disliking cheese? its just what we do
@@notcatisa rejecting cheese is directly equivalent if not more so blasphemous than rejecting ambrosia from the gods, choosing to go into hell rather than heaven.
I love how I got a cheese ad when RT was talking about cheese
What about the crackers?
@@jaimelopez9859 I got cheese cracker ads lol
Not me freaking out because Newfoundland was ACTUALLY INCLUDED for once. I wasn’t expecting the confederation building.
1:15
Oooo, that's pretty neat. My ancestors were some of the first Scottish settlers, but they ended up in Quebec (made their way to Ontario) rather than P.E.I.
Fun fact: in Alberta it’s illegal to set fire to a wooden legged person’s wooden leg(s).
Fun Fact: This is illegal everywhere arson and assault are illegal
Well, I’m not gonna ask questions about how did this got specificity name in a law...
Arson bad because it's all dry, wild fires are very common. Its Wetn't
@@garrotter I've never heard about someone painting a ladder before and I still can't see what's so dangerous about it, excepted if you use lead based paints of course.
Well I sure hope it is
Canada: “the country that apologizes too much, and for that we’re sorry.”
"Welcome to the Death Road" - I've PLAYED Death Road to Canada and my first thought was still "that's way too narrow for the 401"
Not enough car crashes either lol
@@swsamp8397 The road's in way too good of a shape, too.
Is it the 401, I thought it was the Coquhalla highway in BC
not nearly icy enough
@@ethansutherland3786 Coquihalla literally gets so snowed in it becomes impassible.
Fun fact: there is no bagged milk in Alberta
L for alberta, ontario gang where its at
or BC
Or Britsh Colombia
@@darthjuan1387 Ontario gang
@@darthjuan1387 ayo ontario gang💯‼️
Thumbnail highlighting US wow thinking us snow Mexicans wouldnt notice
We desert Canadians always notice
Mexican snow is considered illegal and is a drug
SNOW MEXICANS LMAOOOOO
Uruguay: Uses mostly carton and bagged milk
Me: Uses that since i live in uruguay
Me: *chuckles* i'm in danger
Y'know I don't think it helps our cases for bagged milk when both of our countries were the first to officially legalize weed.
Rt"I'm not a fan of Poutine"
Me 'shocked pikachu'
But as a Canadian born and raised I appreciate this RT.
Ontarian here with support
yeahhhh but Ontarian poutine is just kinda meh.
@@elirewasout Depends if you use cheese curds or not
Love cheese curds and fries, but the gravy bit is not for me. Gotta get the GOOD curds though - the kind that squeak on your teeth.
I can kinda agree with RT I like poutine but it can get old
@@MumkeyDealer
You have been banned from Canada.
Canada fact: Most provinces don't have bagged milk; it's only the weird ones,
I like the way you describe the east
ontarian noises
Sad Ontario noises
@@TheBananaOverlord i know how you feel
Oh, so _that's_ why I've never seen bagged milk.
I'm glad I don't live in one of those provinces.
2:20
Nobody gonna talk about Philip and Terrence from South Park?
They like the tims hortons i built more
You have no idea how excited I was to see you’d done Canada! ...being a Canadian citizen myself, appreciate you RT!
As a Canadian I've only ever seen Costco. No Tesco
As a Canadian, I only know about Tesco through these videos
Same
@Inteleon Entertainment I have no Idea. I think its an inferior version of Costco
@Inteleon Entertainment You see them in the UK, not sure outside of the UK though.
They’re just being put there as a channel meme, everyone knows it isn’t in canada lol
I thought this was going to just be the typical stereotypical crap, but I was pleasantly surprised to see my country represented in an amazing way, great video!
I’ve never seen a Tesco in Canada.
Why do we have No Frills when we can have Tesco?
We have Tesco?
@@plutonix5792 Fun fact: No Frills released an album on Itunes, I was watching a Jays game and the add came up. I looked it up, it's real
@@broccoflower6239 Cursed information.
17:40 "Observation: This is a great opportunity for slaughter."
7:17 This is what lives in the Great Lakes, I’ve seen it with my own eyes
I can’t believe people still think all of Canada has bagged milk
I can't believe people aren't aware of bagged milk outside of canada. Like, I live in the UK and I've bever bought it but coffeeshops often use bagged milk.
ontario does and we have the most people
I know right, I never knew what that was until today.
bruh we have cartons too.
I just find it sad people will never understand the goodness that is bagged milk
canada fact: the cree tribe (my tribe) lost much of our land when dams were built in the james bay area
Yup, a consequence that is not discussed and showed much in history class. Something a lot of people forgets to acknowledge. Thought there did was a compensation, but a lot of Cree communities did not considered it was sufficient, and not for no reason.
So in my modern history class (post WWII), one article we read was talking about dams being built in India in the late 90s/early 2000s. Basically, these dams were often causing more harm than good, because they were ridiculously expensive, didn't actually help provide more drinking water to that many villages, in some cases made farming more difficult, and all the dams that had been built resulted in 50 MILLION people being relocated. And of course, 57% of the people relocated were various small tribes.
So I doubt it makes you feel any better, but at least know that your tribe's situation isn't because of "bad luck" or some other bs. It's because dams are big, flashy ways for governments showing that "we are helping our country develop!!1!1" and "spreading civilization" even when they don't actually work. When well though out/planned, yes, they can be very beneficial to the surrounding area. However, because most people don't understand the consequences of poorly/irresponsibly built dams, they are overbuilt in places where governments can get away with forcing minority groups to relocate, under the guise of "it's for the greater good."
arent you the guys from civ 6 (jk)
@@gunnarschlichting9886 calm down a bit buddy, in Quebec, it's hydroelectric dams that we have, not water retainment dams. Yes, the majority of them have reservoirs, like the Manic and Outarde, but they do what they are ment to do. We have a important ressource: flowing water, and since the 1940's we put all of the effort on this source of energy. Right now, 98% of all electricity consommation comes from these hydroelectric dams, in fact, we're in overproduction... but as it is said, “nothing is white, nothing is black, everything is just shades of gray”, theses dams come at a cost: the land loss in the autochthonous communities.
@@FredGlt Yeah, sorry overgeneralized a bit there. I just learned about this a couple days ago, so it kinda hit a nerve. That plus being tired lol. Probably shouldn't have gone on a rant. I just suddenly became disillusioned about something that I always thought was one of those pretty much always positive things and kinda swung too far in the other direction, ya know?
Glad to hear that the Canadian government is being responsible though. Like you said, nothing is black and white, but at least I can count on Canada to be pretty much a better US still, on the national level if nothing else.
Fun fact: Nova Scotia means New Scotland
Also the large moose statue is because Canada has the largest moose statue in the world!
When I saw bagged milk I died laughing because it's so true.
What is the purpose of bagged milk?
Idk just milk in a bag
And it actually works well lol
@@Laura-qf7mo bagged milk is faster to produce, cheaper, and less wasteful than the cartons or plastic jugs (the bags have less plastic than cartons or jugs). Because the bagged version is easier to produce they often get to store shelves quicker and are usually fresher. However, the only problem is that some cities only recycle hard plastics so the bags aren't getting recycled like they should... which is weird because shopping bags are a huge waste-producer so you'd think soft plastics would be a more common recyclable.
Only in some parts of Canada is bagged milk a common thing, I live in Western Canada and our milk comes in jugs
I like how people aren't griefing. They're just trying to make nice things. I love it.