For my Canadian friends

And that would be the end of the US housing industry, the auto industry, and others. Farmers need Canadian potash for fertilizer.

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This is exactly what many of us warned about.

When a U.S. president can openly threaten Canada with 100 percent tariffs for simply pursuing its own trade relationships, that is not partnership. It is economic coercion.

What makes this worse is the timing.

This threat did not come out of nowhere. It follows directly after Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Davos speech, where he urged smaller and mid sized countries to push back against economic bullying by major powers. The message from Washington is clear. Speak out and there will be consequences.

The numbers matter. About three quarters of all Canadian exports go to the United States. Roughly half of our imports come from there as well. No other advanced economy is this dependent on a single trading partner.

That imbalance gives Washington enormous leverage, and this threat shows how quickly it can be deployed when Canada steps out of line politically.

Let’s be honest about the China angle.

Canada trading with China is not radical or new. We already do it, just as the United States does. American companies manufacture there, source components there, and sell into that market every day. The outrage only appears when Canada asserts the same right. That hypocrisy tells you this is not about values or security. It is about power and control.

A 100 percent tariff would not just hurt Canada. It would hammer American consumers and businesses almost immediately. Auto manufacturing, energy, agriculture, construction materials, and food supply chains are deeply integrated across the border. Prices would rise fast, investment would stall, and jobs would be lost on both sides. Even as a threat, it injects instability into an already fragile global economy.

This is why trade diversification is no longer optional. Canada has already begun moving in that direction. Trade with the European Union has grown under CETA. Indo Pacific trade is expanding. New agreements and broader market access reduce the ability of any single country to dictate terms through fear.

Diversification is not anti American. It is pro Canadian resilience. We can value the U.S. relationship while acknowledging reality. When one partner holds most of the leverage, it will eventually use it.

The Davos backlash proves that dependence is not safety. It is risk.

SOURCE
 
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Trump is a predator and he won’t stop coming for Canada - we need to be on high alert about the dark money and MAGA interlopers involved in the Alberta Separation movement. Only a small % of Albertans want to leave Canada
🇨🇦
it’s a dangerous ruse - more here
🔗
youtu.be/lUzMM4u7Os4?si#Cndpoli #Alberta #forevercanadian #AlbertaIndependence

 
A secession campaign is the sneaky way to invade a country.
I am surprised Trump did not do something like that with Greenland instead of the blatant aggression comments he used instead.
 
A secession campaign is the sneaky way to invade a country.
I am surprised Trump did not do something like that with Greenland instead of the blatant aggression comments he used instead.
Trump isn't that smart - the only way he knows to "negotiate" is to bully the other side.
 
"Trump isn't that smart - the only way he knows to "negotiate" is to bully the other side." S2 #364
"I will build a great, great wall on our Southern border. And I will have Mexico pay for that wall, mark my words." Republican primary presidential candidate Donald J. Trump 15/06/16www.DonaldJTrump.com

"Nobody knows the system better than me." "Which is why I alone can fix it." presidential candidate Trump 16/07/21 from the campaign podium

“Nobody knew that healthcare could be so complicated.” President Trump acknowledging Trump's own "You're going to have such great healthcare at a tiny fraction of the cost" campaign promises were lies.
 
Look at the bright side - the Cons have just ensured they won't win an election for the foreseeable future

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Your prayers worked! 87.4% of Conservatives just drank the Pierre Poilievre Kool-Aid and asked for seconds. Dramatic entrance, emotional stories, endless slogans like “axe the tax” and “bring it home” but still no actual plan. It’s great political theatre, but when does the trailer turn into the movie?

Read Wilbur Turner's take and summary on his Substack channel here:

 
Funny how it was Trump who sabotaged the Canadian conservatives.

{...
Until last year Poilievre was seen as a shoo-in to become Canada's next prime minister and shepherd his Conservative Party back into power for the first time in a decade. Then, Trump declared economic war on the U.S.'s neighbor to the north and even threatened to make Canada the 51st state.

Trump has continued to threaten Canada, which has infuriated Canadians and led to a sharp decline in Canadian visiting the U.S.

Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University in Montreal, noted some political commentators and even former Conservative cabinet minister and Alberta premier Jason Kenney are already criticizing Poilievre "for not addressing the US presidential elephant in the room, which is currently such a key issue for so many Canadian voters of various partisan and ideological stripes."
...}
 
Funny how it was Trump who sabotaged the Canadian conservatives.
Not just Trump. PP managed to lose two elections. He went into the federal campaign with a massive lead and still managed to lose that. And then his own riding didn't want him and he lost that.

The party then parachuted him into what was probably the safest riding in the country (safe to say that he'd never set foot in it in his life). Otherwise he wouldn't even be in Parliament.
 
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I’ve had requests and questions surrounding Mark Carney and the claims from conspiracy fanatics that he’s benefiting from Brookfield while governing the country.

These accusations are misleading and not backed by any credible evidence. It’s important to separate political speculation from the facts.

Carney’s connection to Brookfield is entirely in his past. Before entering public service, he held leadership positions at the company and had financial interests like many executives in the private sector.

Once he became Prime Minister, Canadian law required him to put all his personal investments, including anything related to Brookfield, into a blind trust.

A blind trust is a legal arrangement where ......

MORE>

Meanwhile we're still waiting for PP to get a security clearance
 
This should alarm every Canadian.

While the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency carries out violent deportation raids, mass detentions, and fatal shootings inside the United States, we’re being told, almost casually, that ICE operates offices in five Canadian cities.

Toronto. Vancouver. Calgary. Montreal. Ottawa. Let that sink in.

Yes, the agency insists it’s only its investigative arm, Homeland Security Investigations. Yes, they say their agents don’t make arrests here or carry guns.

But this is still U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the same institution currently holding more than 73,000 people in detention, the same institution tied to fatal shootings in Minnesota, the same institution functioning as a blunt enforcement tool of the Trump administration.

And they’re operating on Canadian soil.

This isn’t a technical issue. It’s a sovereignty issue. It’s a values issue.

Canada cooperates with allies on transnational crime. Nobody disputes that.

We already have joint task forces, intelligence sharing, and long standing ....

SOURCE
 
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They’re trying to keep it respectable, but under the table they’re flirting like crazy. Danielle Smith changed the law to make separatist referendums easier and refuses to call out the separatists. That’s because many of them are her own supporters.
 
This should alarm every Canadian.

While the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency carries out violent deportation raids, mass detentions, and fatal shootings inside the United States, we’re being told, almost casually, that ICE operates offices in five Canadian cities.

Toronto. Vancouver. Calgary. Montreal. Ottawa. Let that sink in.

Yes, the agency insists it’s only its investigative arm, Homeland Security Investigations. Yes, they say their agents don’t make arrests here or carry guns.

But this is still U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the same institution currently holding more than 73,000 people in detention, the same institution tied to fatal shootings in Minnesota, the same institution functioning as a blunt enforcement tool of the Trump administration.

And they’re operating on Canadian soil.

This isn’t a technical issue. It’s a sovereignty issue. It’s a values issue.

Canada cooperates with allies on transnational crime. Nobody disputes that.

We already have joint task forces, intelligence sharing, and long standing ....

SOURCE

Since ICE has shown such blatant disregard for individual rights, its members either have to be fanatics or totally submissive, and either way their presence is dangerous.
 
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They’re trying to keep it respectable, but under the table they’re flirting like crazy. Danielle Smith changed the law to make separatist referendums easier and refuses to call out the separatists. That’s because many of them are her own supporters.

I knew of the French separatists in Quebec, but not of separatists in Alberta.

{..
The man who helped write the rules on separation votes in Canada says if Alberta’s premier is going to take her province down that “worrying” path, she has a duty to spell out to everyone how it will be triggered and what happens afterward.
Stéphane Dion says Danielle Smith must make it clear what she would do if Alberta votes to leave and whether she would also carry out the required negotiations with the federal government.
Dion also says it’s up to Smith to determine the clear majority threshold number for a successful referendum, as the federal law doesn’t specify.

“She owes that to the people of Alberta and the whole people of Canada,” Dion said in an interview Wednesday.
“She may say it’s very unlikely that there will be a yes vote (to leave Canada),” he added. “(I’d) agree with her, but in politics you’re supposed to prepare for the worst.”
Dion is a former Liberal cabinet minister and party leader. He tabled the Clarity Act in 1999 after the sovereignty referendum in Quebec held four years earlier failed by a razor-thin margin.
He was a central figure as the government turned a Supreme Court ruling on separation into legislation. That ruling said provinces didn’t have the right to secede unilaterally, meaning without federal input.

The Clarity Act says a vote with a clear majority in favour of separation creates an obligation for provincial and federal governments to enter negotiations that could, one day, lead to secession.
Dion said Alberta is heading down a “worrying” path toward its own separation referendum. Smith’s government twice last year changed the rules to make it easier to hold such a vote.
Smith has stressed that she doesn’t want to leave but instead supports a “sovereign Alberta within a united Canada.” Critics have dismissed that statement as nonsensical “word salad.”
The government’s legislation last year relaxed the rules for what types of questions can be spurred through citizen petitions while drastically reducing the signature threshold those petitions need to succeed.

In a statement, Heather Jenkins, press secretary for Alberta Justice Minister Mickey Amery, reiterated that the changes made to the referendum rules were to help Albertans have their voices heard.
“Alberta’s government will not speculate as to what citizen initiative petitions will or will not be successful or those that end up going forward to referendums,” she said.
Dion said it’s historically unusual for a government to simultaneously support unity while also helping clear the path for dismemberment.
“(Smith) decided to modify the rules for a referendum at a time where there is no separatist government in Alberta,” he said.
He pointed to Quebec and other international examples where governments committed to the cause were in place when the separation vote occurred.
“It’s pretty odd to go through this process without a majority of MLAs that are separatists willing to separate from Canada.”
...}
 
It's a lot more complicated than simply negotiating with the rest of Canada.

The treaties with the various First Nations are all with Canada, not Alberta so they've got to address that.
 
I can see where Canada may have about 4 different regions, like the west coast, east coast, middle wilderness, and French area, but I tend to think diversity is an improvement and you don't really want a country to be monolithic?
 
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