International
Bear with me, folks, doing a little "wool gathering" here.
It is often said, regarding our British friends, that we are two peoples separated by a common language. But with Canada and the US so intimately bound with language, custom, economics and only a long line on a map dividing us, we Yanks often succumb to the benign ignorance of any majority. That is to say, ANY majority of a group tends to think that everyone else is satisfied with what the majority is comfortable with. The old problem of: "Why, we down here think this is fine and good for us...it should also be good for the land of the Maple Leaf. After all, they're practically Americans..right??"
(I cringe just writing that because I hear it all the time. I apologise for my countrymen.)
So is the heart of the issue one of:
A) the majority are US centered and cannot see others feelings?
B) can that thin border really be made transparent enough to solve things viz Canada? And if so,
C) would the non-North American membership feel TRULY alienated by the larger majority thus formed?
In practical terms Canada is even more thinly stretched, east to west, than the US. (Would there be a North/South issue within Canada?) Can a Canadian Region solve this? (No, not for our border neighbors, I guess.)
And what of other countries? There is no realistic way to participate in a Fly-In across the pond. (Hmm, someone educate me, do we have members in Mexico? Or just the Southwest version of what we call "Snowbirds" on the east coast?)
There are many examples of interest groups (scientific, religious, philosophical, and collectors) who, separated by vast distance, maintain warm and mutually useful correspondence. And can, eventually, meet face to face.
And is that enough "value" for Tony, Allan, and others "over there", "down under", or otherwise distant from the US?
OK, I'll shut up. But I feel that perhaps the simplest method is to let the
"Internationals" offer a plan they, themselves, feel comfortable with.
Steve Cote,
The Northeast Region of The Greater Whole
And that's it for me tonight. I am exhausted from selling Christmas trees all weekend...Canadian trees, I might add!