And they are not alone. Even before the election, there were many people vowing that they would leave the country if President Bush was re-elected. In the aftermath of November's result, which many Democrats and progressives can still barely believe, large numbers of disgruntled, disaffected and simply fed-up Americans began focusing in earnest on a better, brighter life north of the border. Teller and Vesely have hired an immigration lawyer and sent off their applications.
The process of becoming a Canadian citizen takes at least two years, and at the moment the authorities in Ottawa say it is impossible to estimate how many US citizens are currently applying. What is certain is that the re-election of George W. Bush, along with what many perceive as an attendant shift to the right in America's cultural and political environment, has led many desperate Americans to enquire as to how they might get out of Dodge.
"It's a little early to say how many people have applied, but we do know there was a lot of interest in our internet site," says Maria Iadinardi of Canada's office of Citizenship and Immigration. "On 3 November, there were 115,628 visits from the US, and the day after there were half that number. We usually get 20,000 a day. It was three weeks before it went back down."
This isn't the first time Canada has emerged as a refuge for Americans who find themselves out of step with the direction their country is taking. Between 1970 and 1976, when the US was riven by disagreements over the Vietnam War, between 16,000 and 25,000 US citizens moved to Canada every year. The average, in more normal times, is between 5,000 and 6,000. Iadinardi points out that a click on a website is not the same as actually moving to Canada, and her office usually sees increased interest whenever a country undergoes a shift. "Now, after the tsunami in Asia, we have seen an increase in visits to our site," she says.
Still, there is certainly a feeling - if only based on anecdotal evidence - that a considerable northward migration is under way. Newspaper columnists in Canada are beckoning to disgruntled Americans; websites have been set up to help people thinking of moving; law firms are holding "Move to Canada" seminars in big cities; and even the smallest, dot-on-the-map places north of the border are anticipating an influx of US citizens. An advert placed in alternative US weekly newspapers by a development group based in the South Kootenay region of British Columbia is typical of the mood. It says: "Escape the Madness. Visit. Relocate. Immigrate."
People are heading north for different, often specific reasons. Teller and Vesely say the Bush administration's opposition to gay marriage, and the president's support of a constitutional amendment to ban formal recognition of such relationships, have made them feel like "outcasts." Also, they oppose the war in Iraq and don't support Bush's environmental policies, his go-it-alone approach to foreign affairs, and his snubbing of the United Nations.
Charles Key, a 56-year-old Vietnam veteran from Bellingham, whose ancestor Francis Scott Key wrote the lyrics to the US national anthem, "The Star-Spangled Banner," says he's leaving because his country is no longer tolerant. "The land of the free and the home of the brave always meant to me that America was supposed to stand for freedom and diversity and tolerance. I don't think it does that any more," he told a reporter.
Some of those planning to move highlight the increasing spread of Christianity in US society, eroding the traditional separation of church and state. Others are concerned about a general drift towards conservatism and away from liberal, progressive ideas. The one thing that appears to unite them is the shared belief that, in the second term of President George W. Bush, things are only going to get worse.
Another Seattle couple who won't celebrate today are Professor Frederick Neymeyer and his wife, Goebel. Neymeyer is the acting head of linguistics at the University of Washington, but this week he and his wife are househunting in Vancouver, a couple of hundred miles to the north in British Columbia. They, too, have spoken to lawyers, and are due to meet an accountant to find out how they can transfer their money to Canada.
"We are at the point of retirement and we want to move to a large, cosmopolitan city. Vancouver is more interesting than Seattle," says Neymeyer, 60. "Also, Canada appears to be moving in the opposite direction to the US. It is becoming more progressive, more tolerant. We're prepared to become Canadians."
Greg Pallas, 42, from Redwood City in California, has reasons other than politics to move north. His girlfriend Mariette is Canadian and the couple had always thought they would move to her home country. For Pallas, however, that desire greatly increased with Bush's re-election.
"It was 2 November that I decided," says Pallas, a financial analyst who has already sent off his paperwork to the Canadian authorities. "I can just see this country becoming more conservative. It's the religion thing. The country is moving to the right and becoming less tolerant."
For most people considering a life in Canada, the biggest uncertainty is whether they will find comparable jobs and lifestyles. Mike Teller is a zoologist at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle; whether he will be able to find such a position in Canada is unclear. Greg Pallas, a financial analyst, doubts that he will be able to find a similar post, with the same pay and benefits, in Canada. "The job is the main thing I think I will miss," he says. "My girlfriend is a teacher and should be able to get work. At the moment, we are saving money and I'm hoping it won't be so bad."
All this talk of a new future in Canada, a country which recognised gay marriage in December, and where there is a healthy suspicion of the Bush administration, implies that the good folk there are ready to welcome a flood of disgruntled Yanks. That might not be true - at least, not everywhere.
In November, when the talk of a mass migration to the north was at its height, disaffected Democrats who had just seen their man lose were given plenty to think about by Ian Robinson, a columnist with The Calgary Sun, who wrote: "I hope I'm not alone in gently suggesting to those considering coming to Canada: stay home, you pathetic whining maggots."
For the most part, however, the signs are more welcoming. Jason Mogus, director of a company called Communicopia, set up a website to help people considering the move and to point out that Canada has universal healthcare and no troops in Iraq, signed the Kyoto protocol on the environment and permits gay marriage - and that its senate recently recommended legalising cannabis.
The site, alternativecanada.com, adds: "We invite you to get to know Canada. Explore the richness and diversity of our regions. And find out why Canada is the perfect alternative for conscientious, forward-thinking Americans."
Most Americans who have already made the move to Canada - and there are up to one million now living there - appear to have only good things to say about their new home. The internet blogger Inspector Lohmann dedicates much of his website to details of his emigration from San Francisco to Toronto, a move he made last year. The inspector, who prefers to use his blog name, works in the film industry.
Lohmann, from New England, has no regrets. In one blog entry, he wrote: "When I crossed the border into Canada to begin a new life in a new country, I felt a tremendous weight lift from me. I felt free in a way I had never felt before. And I never looked back. I have not felt a single pang of regret, nor do I ever expect to. When I visit America now, I feel like a visitor in some alien land, and it's a great feeling."
Asked to sum up what is best about his new home, he says: "The best things about the move: leaving Murka [the US], loving Canada, loving Toronto, loving the change of seasons. No matter how bad my day is, I think to myself, 'I'm in Canada!' and suddenly I'm not so miserable anymore."
Of course, the road north isn't entirely straightforward. On top of the headaches of paperwork, as well as finding new homes, jobs, and friends, and all the rest, there is the sniping from proud red-state US citizens who cannot believe that any true American could conceive of leaving.
The vociferous, increasingly intolerant right-wing commentator Ann Coulter said recently on Fox News: "It's always the worst Americans who end up going [to Canada] - the Tories after the Revolutionary War, the Vietnam draft-dodgers after Vietnam. And now, after this election, you have the blue-state people moving up there. They better hope the United States doesn't roll over one night and crush them. They are lucky we allow them to exist on the same continent."
To many people planning their move, such comments are merely another reason to get packing. As soon as they can.
[Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on February 1, 2005]

Remember, as you sit beneath the umbrella of security provided by the US, we know who you are and what you have become...but love you anyway. Yes, as you root for US troops to be murdered, along with Iraqis-- we stand aware with the strength to forgive. As you cynically raise your voices to condemn our motives and character -- the same voices that were absent as Saddam murdered, raped and tortured (and that are silent on the oppression through-out the Mideast), we are well-composed. We sensed that you felt a sickness as old women with tears in their eyes voted for the first time. We feel the churning of reflection hidden beneath the exagerrated identity you have built for yourself. As we are rewarded once again for having faith in the power of freedom, we still call out to you as brothers -- hoping to impress upon you that it is not too late to become something more than cynics, cowards and antigonists of the human spirit.
Cannon Yonts
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"If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill
Cannon Yonts
You assume we cheer when somoeone dies in the service of their country. That's pretty cold.
For some reason you think we ally ourselves with insurgents (your terminology), and for some reason are happy when they kill women and children? That's pretty cold too.
You've called me a coward, a terrorist, irrelevant, pathetic, petty, sychophant and anti-American all in two posts. And you haven't taken the time to get to know me.
All you'd have to do to earn your bullet is call me a traitor.
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"If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill
You will note that Iraq's newfound freedom does not include the right of referenda such as many states have. So even if all Iraqi's voted for the americans to leave, it's not even plausible. Ah, to have such lovely rose coloured glasses!
Keep in mind also that although I've heard variants of this story before, often with the same people, I'm not expecting a torrent of americans. They will find a pretty short leash here in canada as well.
That's a subjective interpretation...but I'll just reassert that I have no hatred and respect your opinion on this issue.
"You assume we cheer when somoeone dies in the service of their country. That's pretty cold."
No, only a large segment of the Canadian Left when an American soldier is killed. Again, this is the perception.
"For some reason you think we ally ourselves with insurgents (your terminology), and for some reason are happy when they kill women and children? That's pretty cold too."
Many who have adopted the ideology of anti-Americanism in your country appear to root for insurgents...while demonstarting they value their political identity far more than the freedom and lives of Iraqis.
"You've called me a coward,"
When it comes to standing up for freedom of Iraqis or Arabs the word "courageous" cannot be used to describe Canada.
" a terrorist,"
Never said you were a terrorist. I only inferred that the goals of the Canadian Left are aligned with terrorist -- ie, American failure and the failure of Iraqis to attain freedom and a better life.
" irrelevant, pathetic, petty, sychophant and anti-American all in two posts. And you haven't taken the time to get to know me."
Once again a generalization of the Canadian Left that you chose to personalize. At any rate, I have nothing but love for Canada -- although I am joined with other Americans who have concerns.
Your second is due to the disinformation spread by the US Neocons that the Canadian political left are aligned with anything outside Canada that doesn't make Canada stronger. Terror doesn't do it for them. Peace is what they crave.
Canadians have nothing but respect and admiration for the American people, and it's military. It's your government we dislike, almost as much as we dislike our own government.
'Liberal' and 'Lefite' have been villified in the US media as bad words, almost a curse. 'Socalist' and 'Communist' have somehow been equated incorrectly as well. It's your lack of information that leads you and your Countrymen to have concerns about Canada, and is what is leading to your perception of us. Having to deflect these inaccuracies about ourselves time and again is what leads to the frustration Canadians feel with our southern cousins.
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"If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill
Are you forgeting are maybe not informed that the U.S allows American drug patents laws from stopping many suffering in other countries to get access to drugs. Any explenation as to why a country can bomb a country into freedom, but not make changes to patent laws so millions can be helped, and possibly cured. Lobbying is the reason why they can't. (Watch for an article on the WHO meetings that didn't turn out very positive for those suffering)
If you study the hypocrisy in history and today, you learn that there is always an agenda behind every action. It has nothing to do with what you are i are told the action is for. If it was for those reasons that are presented to the public then it would be consistent with every other action or words said. The truth is there is no consistency in government. We can dig up many things that contradict every action. If sincerity was the driving force behind freeing Iraquis you would find more consistency in the U.S government.
Oh and Anon please give up on the label 'anti-american' cause it doesn't describe someone who talks against your government. The true American's are those having a mind of their own to question their government.
Isn't it Ironic Irag was a country that people couldn't voice their views against Saddam. And now we have the U.S where if any other person from another country, or even an American for that matter is found questioning the Bush administration they are quickly labeled as 'anti-american'. Or if their on Bill O'Riley show they are ripped apart as if they are worth nothing just cause their against the Bush administration.
Kevin
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"War does not determine who is right - only who is left."
--Bertrand Russell
You know, someone might believe you outside of freeper land if you actually used fact and reasoning. You see, that is how the reality based community lives. You obviously hide behind talking points you learned elsewhere, and you have done nothing but exemplify that you are a consumate dittohead. You ditto'd everything you hear on talk radio.
Good job, now come back reality.
Everyone with half a brain for themselves - ignore the trolls, they bait because that's all they got.
Canada always ranks ahead of the United States. So where does that leave you troll?
This anon is living in an alternative reality. Hitler loved these useful idiots, just as the new fascists in Washington do. They simply repeat the same old same old. They do nothing for anyone, especially their own nation. The US is a nation in steep decline, and what makes that even sadder, is these clowns are only helping it along. Thankfully most Americans still form their own opinions. This anon has been infected with 'talk radioitis'. Vile, bile and hate, all smothered with a good dose of rightwing flag waving paranoia.
To all those that come to read this thread, use this far-right response as a clue to just where the once great nation of America is heading - right down the shitter.
--Bertrand Russell
Thanks for the positive views of Canada Janis.
Kevin
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"War does not determine who is right - only who is left."
--Bertrand Russell