That's really more of a federal government thing than an Ontario one.
Ontario would just require subtitles.
It's okay, though; as a Torontonian, I forgive you for not being able to make the distinction. It is the centre of the universe, after all.
I've actually found that a lot of devices just ignore an invalid (ie not from a trusted CA) certificate for this. Android in particular will happily continue with no prompt to the user that the cert is not trusted. I even had it somehow forget the CA that I specified with the network credentials. I'm not 100% certain on this, but I vaguely remember having an issue with Network Manager also not validating the server certificate with TTLS.
It's just too risky where a device could decide either for "convenience" or incompetence not to notify about an invalid server certificate and go on to divulge that device's login credentials to the MITM. Or a user not configuring a device properly. I don't have to worry about that with regular TLS, it's enforced on the server and if it's invalid it won't connect, period.
Many devices don't support VPNs (Chromecast for example), and the ones that do don't usually have openvpn as a built in option. Not to mention the increase in battery usage on mobile devices due to keepalives. This mostly restricts your wireless devices to laptops and select tablets or smartphones. If you really don't trust WPA then just make some LAN resources accessible by VPN only (over WPA), but allow internet access without it. Any sites with sensitive data should be using TLS anyway.
Also, WPA2-Enterprise is pretty secure if you only use TLS auth, not TTLS where you use a username/password combo (too easy for a MITM), but regular TLS auth that uses client certificates. It's less effort to setup than a VPN, and you get VPN level authentication, plus support on a much wider range of devices out of the box. This is what I use, and I have a second SSID that uses WPA2-PSK for the few devices that don't support WPA2-Enterprise.
More fun statistics, from Wikipedia:
...I was going somewhere with the Evangelicals stat, since they're generally the most fervent, but then I realised that there are plenty of insufferably stolid palaeoconservative Anglicans in the UK and it wasn't really a point worth making.
It really comes down to the fundamental collectivist-vs-individualist difference between the Canadian and American cultures, I think; despite Stephen Harper's best efforts to destroy the country, our charter of rights and freedoms was still a missive about how we were free from harassment by peers (thus sending the message "we are all siblings"), as contrasted with the American declaration of independence's emphasis on being free from harassment by authority (thus sending the message "you are free to do as you please"). Interestingly, a hundred years ago you would not really find this; Canada was just as much of a racist hellhole as the US at the time, although as there were practically no black people we could only complain about other European ethnicities. It was only as our population and economy fell behind, and we started accepting in huge numbers of immigrants following World War II, that this really started to take shape.
I'm sure the relatively weak levels of religious conviction help too (only 25% of Christians attend church regularly in Canada; above the rates of Northern Europe but far below the rate in the US) and that is doubtlessly a function of what flavour (can we call them 'distros' yet?) of Christianity is in question, too, since many Anglican ministers now preach actual biblical scholarship (my favourite quote, heavily paraphrased, is "Hell (as a threat) was invented in the Middle Ages") rather than what most think of as the typical naive system of "swallow-and-enjoy-your-life-textbook-with-no-critical-thinking" morality. Whatever the exact impact of each component is, it doesn't really jive with the idea of excluding us poor little minority atheists.
...except maybe in profoundly Catholic areas. I bet they care more in Newfoundland and Quebec. British Columbia is barely half Christian (54.9%) so you can bet they sure don't.
in 2009, a group of Chinese scientists created a viral strain of flu virus
a viral strain of flu virus
Well, at least it wasn't a... eukaryotic strain of flu virus?
Elliptic paraboloids for sale.