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From http://www.cbc.ca/news/viewpoint/vp_burman/2008/01/is_canadian_a_racist_slur.html:
What does the word "Canadian" conjure up in your mind?

Polite? Peacekeeping? Harmless? Heroic? A weak-kneed, pot-smoking, sexually-permissive anti-American? Or, perhaps, cheap?

This is a question being debated this week with both intensity and some humour in a variety of internet blogs in the United States.

The trigger point occurred over the weekend on the popular American website The Huffington Post, quoting a brief Canadian newspaper story that revealed that the term "Canadian" is being used in parts of the U.S. as a euphemism — as code — for a racist characterization of black people.
The comments wander off into how much one should tip in a restaurant, but I guess that was inevitable given the last two sentences:
The most startling revelation for me is that many Americans apparently tip 20% when they go into a restaurant.

That’s quite odd.
Perhaps one is supposed to tip less in Canada.

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Date: 2008-02-01 02:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ketzl.livejournal.com
What redbird said would explain part of the difference in tipping, but I wonder if the economy at large plays into it. I understand we've had a growing wealth gap here in the States, along with some sort of weird combination of inflation and deflation, where gas and food cost more but wages haven't gone up. That would suggest to me that there are rewards/upwards wage pressure for those who serve the leisure class that could manifest itself in increased wages/tips/etc.

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