they are mostly French and hard to find English
Very interesting
@Jadeofspades . I lived in Canada all my life. Being in Toronto and as an Anglophone ( an English speaker ) there was little reason for me to visit Quebec as I felt my French was not strong enough. Over the years through school and through the CBC (our national news), I learned that there has always been a segment of the population that spoke French in Quebec but that was not always the case. Probably after General Wolfe defeated General Montcalm during the Plains of Abraham battle which the French Quebecers hate to this very day ( because if Montcalm won there would have been an excellent chance North America would have been a predominantly French-speaking continent this very day )( also for any visiting Quebec do not dare speak of General Wolfe as it is worse speaking of his memory in Quebec than trying to defend Trump in America today as the French in Quebec hate him with a passion and they will make your life Hell during your visit ), places like Montreal and quite possibly even Quebec City were predominantly English speaking cities over 100 years ago. Then the Anglophones thrived. However, during a period during the last century Francophones had their Quiet Revolution since the 1950s where they planned to overthrow the popularity of the English literally through the breeding of more French c.hildren than English c.hildren through the "Revenge of the Cradle" or as you might have heard over there as "La Revanche des berceaux" (same thing in French).
archive.macleans.ca
en.wikipedia.org
Since then within my lifetime, you had the FLQ that was a terrorist movement that created a ruckus with the intention of overthrowing the province and they killed a government official, a failed vote for independence in 1995 where the French nearly won the right to take Quebec out of Canada but when they lost I remember the then Premier of Quebec depressed and ******* on the CBC News that evening / early morning ( Jacques Parizeau ) cursing the ethnic vote ( being all of the new immigrants like Muslims and Chinese and others who neither spoke French nor English who naturally thought it was better to stay in Canada ) because they lost, Bill 101 that criminalizes the use of English words on any signs on businesses in Quebec, and undoubtedly other things that I might have missed because I don't live in Quebec.
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Wondering about the history of language in Quebec? Here's a quick look at the province's Charter of French Language, Bill 101.
globalnews.ca
en.wikipedia.org
Being a nerdy kind of kid when I grew up, I even recall a now-defunct Canadian nationwide all-news radio network called CKO. And I loved it and I found it greatly informative and it filled in lots of gaps in history that were never taught in school. I loved hearing Pat Burns, not to be confused with one of the Maple Leaf's Hockey coaches. He had the exact same name and he was a journalist who was born in Quebec. He is now deceased but I always remembered how he said that he was from Quebec and how he fled to Vancouver, British Columbia because he was scared for his life as an English speaker. It was because being as pointed and controversial a journalist that he was those years, the FLQ did not like his antics one bit and they made flyers with silhouettes of his face with crosshairs of a sniper rifle suggesting he would be a target. Naturally, that made him want to run as well never to desire to never take a second look at Quebec ever again!
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
With all that strife and frustration many Anglophones picked up and left Quebec so it is miraculous that you are still able to conduct affairs in Quebec like renewing your driver's license as it has to be done in French, doing your shopping and getting groceries in Quebec as it has to be done in French, and working in any jobs in Quebec as it too has to be done in French? Would it not be easier to pick up and leave just as so many other Anglophones, or English speakers, have done
@Jadeofspades ? After all, there are loads of single unattached English speaking Black guys in Toronto? All you need to do is move and I will guarantee the only French you will see is on your kid's schoolbooks, provided you have ******* and they choose to study it after grade 8 or so? And the only French you will hear is on the occasional menu if you ever call a business where you are given options to hear it in English as well or on any of the French TV cable stations where you can also freely able to turn the channel.