What makes Canadians cities different from USA cities?
>>75512549
>a more modern suburban sprawl, as many of our cities are newly gaining such population booms
>no real slums, outside of some sketchy neighbourhoods in vancouver and toronto known for drugs or violence
>the US has multiple cities on the top 50 gun murder cities in the world, we don't
>we have very little finance compared to american cities, outside of toronto
>most of our cities haven't seen the amount of industrial jobs/real estate abandoned like detroit and a lot of the rust belt (mostly due to us having very little industry outside of the GTHA and the west)
>very little hispanic and black population in our cities, but a lot more asians than the US
>>75512549
There aren't massive freeways cutting through every part of our cities. Fewer parking lots.
>>75512809
however we have some real shit tier traffic in some cities, toronto's gardiner is a hellhole except for a few hours here and there
>>75512549
Lots of Asian chicks in Canadian cities
Winnipeg here. We have violent, thieving natives instead of violent, thieving niggers.
>>75512549
Cleaner, less crime, little to no blacks etc. Montreal is especially nice imo.
>>75512549
Canadian cities are located in Canada, and American cities are located in the USA.
>>75512549
Not much. We have a lot of blacks though
>>75512549
US cities are more diverse in their nature. Seattle is nothing like Chicago is nothing like NY or Phoenix. The farther east you go the sketchier it gets.
Canada has a few siberian wasteland cities, Montreal, Toronto, and then Calgary and Vancouver. Not many good places to live here Imo.
Mostly an Ontarian perspective, but here goes:
>Less crime
>Often smaller and easier to navigate
>Expansive green spaces close at hand
>Generally better neighbourhoods
>Shitty public transit
>Awful gridlock during peak hours
>Roads often in poor condition from wear/winter
>Lack of interesting architecture
In addition, here are some interesting notes about population:
>Toronto is surrounded by several of the most heavily populated municipalities in the entire country, namely Hamilton (747,000), Markham (340,000), and Vaughan (300,000).
>If you were to tally together the population of the entire Windsor-Quebec corridor (roughly 1150 km) you would have about 18 million people, or over half the population of the entire country along this stretch of land.
>>75518557
Markham and Vaughan are effectively suburbs of Toronto. Hamilton is a city in it's own right, and an underrated one at that.
>>75512549
Outside of the "big three" (Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver), Canadian cities are usually smaller (in area and population), surrounded by wilderness, and feel like a weird mix of Russian and British. Transit exists almost everywhere, but it's never amazing. The appearance is "cleaner" than American cities, even if inside everything is rotting. Describes the people well too, though we're usually less creepy friendly.
>>75517162
>American cities are located in the USA.
false, american cities are located in every nation within north and south america
>>75519948
sudaca-tier post
>>75519975
just replying to a smartass statement with another
>>75512789
>very little hispanic and black population in our cities, but a lot more asians than the US
Don't forget three times the percentage of Muslims that we have.
>>75520058
yeah, roughly 3.2%
>>75517126
>little to no blacks etc. Montreal is especially nice imo.
Montreal has 9% blacks, that's a significant number.
nothing... except for based quebec
>>75520183
slightly, but nowhere close to many american cities
>>75520219
have you been to quebec?
>>75520247
no ;_____; but just sister just got back from quebec two days ago
>>75520222
I know but it's a lot more than little to none. It's almost 150,000 blacks in one city.
>>75519299
yeah the crack-addled and parking lot downtown and ghost town east end sure is overrated
>>75512549
They arent a literal warzone