Word: maccormac
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...fear had been sharpened anew last week by such varied signs of Russian aggressiveness as her pressure on Iran, and Manchuria (see FOREIGN NEWS), her continued use of Communists in other countries for Russian ends, and a strongly documented report from Vienna by New York Timesman John MacCormac on Russian tactics that had killed any early hope of restoring Austria's independence...
...Canada's strong emotional urge to the mother country (which New York Timesman John MacCormac in his recent book on Canada* called "an Oedipus complex" which Canada has never outgrown) is to be found in the series of definitions of Canada's position in the Empire. Beginning with the colonial letters-patent and running past many milestones to the British North America Act (1867) and finally to the Statute of Westminster (1931), the Empire has gradually loosed every hold over Canada - except one. The most recent definition: "The self-governing Dominions are autonomous Communities within the British Empire...
isolationists have never faced, as MacCormac sees it, is that modern Canada makes U. S. neutrality a fiction. What is modern Canada? Not merely a source of wheat and man power to Britain, as it was in World War I, but strategically and industrially the Empire's second line of defense, potentially the keystone of the British Commonwealth of Nations. Facts: >Canada is a more logical shipping centre than the United Kingdom. About 50% of Britain's foreign trade is with countries that could be as well or better served, even in peacetime, from Canadian ports. London...
...explain what he calls Canada's "Oedipus complex" toward her mother country, Correspondent MacCormac writes a clearrunning story of the Canadian past which U. S. citizens know so little about (e.g., that in the War of 1812 all the burning was not done by the British; U. S. invaders burned Government buildings at York, now Toronto). Incidentally drawing an entertaining portrait of Canada's vague, unsinkable Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, he shows how Canada's "no commitments" policy between wars weakened British foreign policy at certain crucial moments: the Manchurian and Ethiopian crises particularly...
...Canada's failure to give her destiny a rush, MacCormac finds other reasons in the old-fashioned solidarity of her 3,500,-ooo French-speaking people, the magnet of her powerful neighbor (10% of Canadian university graduates make their living in the U. S.). For her greatest domestic problem, the French minority, he sees a solution in the close union of England and France officially announced as a war aim and whichever way the war breaks, John MacCormac believes Canada is on her way to becoming a first-class power-either as the refuge of a beaten Britain...