There is no comparison in my opinion. There is no shortage of institutions. An anglophone in Quebec can get a post-secondary education in English, is entitled to better hospitals and so on. Furthermore there is a sea of English-speakers in Canada and, consequently an anglophone in Quebec doesn't feel like a minority as is the case for a francophone in Gravelbourg, where we are alone and isolated. They're two separate realities and we shouldn't compare them when we talk about funding and capacity. We shouldn't do that; it's a huge mistake that is made every year within the framework of the Canada-community agreements.
There are so many services. I am originally from Quebec. Whenever we met an anglophone, we did everything we could to speak English to him or her. When we were outside Quebec and we spoke in French, we were told to speak white. There is no comparison. I am talking about Radio-Canada. I don't agree when people say that anglophones can feel the same way in Quebec. It's not the same thing at all. In Quebec, there are choices, a wide range of television channels, radio stations and other types of media, among other things. In Saskatchewan, there is Radio-Canada, Radio-Canada and Radio-Canada, and we are told about traffic in Montreal. In terms of identity, it's hard.