It's gratifying to know that the president's speech writers have an awareness of Canadian history, but I think they might have skipped over these lines in the Wikipedia.com entry:
King hoped an outbreak of war in the 1930s could be avoided. He had met with Hermann Göring and Adolf Hitler, whom he said was a reasonable man who cared for his fellow man, working to improve his country in the midst of the Depression. He confided in his diary that he thought Hitler "might come to be thought of as one of the saviours of the world" and told a Jewish delegation that "Kristallnacht might turn out to be a blessing." *
His writers may also have missed the part where King consulted with the spirits of Leonardo DaVinci, his dead mother, and his dog.
But besides those particulars, the reference to King likely struck a chord with all patriotic Canadians, particularly those who channel the spirits of the dead. The art of public speaking, I think, is all about identifying with your audience.
Links:
CBC News: Canada urged to sign on to Bush's crusade
Wikipedia: William Lyon Mackenzie King

