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224 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2008
From 1914: "In our blind egotism we class our foreign people as ignorant people, if they do not know our ways and language. They may know many other languages, but if they have not yet mastered ours they are poor ignorant foreigners. We Anglo-Saxon people have a decided sense of our own superiority...We have no reason to be afraid of the foreign woman's vote. I wish we were as sure of the ladies of the Avenue." -- This was in response to the Conservative Party's ridiculing the suggestion that foreign women should be given the right to vote.
From 1915: "The time will come, we hope," she wrote, "when women will be economically free, and mentally and spiritually independent enough to refuse to have their food paid for by men; when women will receive equal pay for equal work and have all avenues of activity open to them; and will be free to choose their own mates, without shame or indelicacy...The new movement among women who are crying out for a larger humanity is going to bring it about."
From 1942 (a month after Pearl Harbour): "We have in this province of British Columbia 23,000 Japanese people, many of the natives of Canada and some of the second generation. We have an opportunity now of showing them that we do respect human rights and that democracy has a wide enough framework to give peace and security to all people of goodwill irrespective of race or colour...We must not sink into Hitler's ways of persecution. We must not punish innocent people. The Canadian Japanese are not to blame for the treacherous attack on Pearl Harbour, nor for the other misdeeds of their misled people."