except Trudeau told them to bugger offFrom what I'm reading the feelers have been out for a while for diversification. One of the oil rumours for example is the Germans looking to invest heavily in refining capacity here.
except Trudeau told them to bugger offFrom what I'm reading the feelers have been out for a while for diversification. One of the oil rumours for example is the Germans looking to invest heavily in refining capacity here.
if Glenora were distilled on Islay it would be called Scotch, or so I have heardGlenora Inn & Distillery - Single Malt Whisky Distillery, Cape Breton
Home of Canada's Oldest Single Malt Whisky, Glen Breton Rarewww.glenoradistillery.com
Bourbon vs Tennessee Whiskey. A lot of their liquor laws are more internally protected than ours.
Now that's good stuff (a friend lives in The Valley). I prefer the Night Owl Coffee.
Teddy Roosevelt on steroids.For those who have lost the plot and are trying to bury this problem in the pages of an economics textbook, here’s Trump’s latest as of this morning:
I will keep saying this: this is not a conventional problem of economics between rational actors. This is a facade sitting in front of the ‘will to power’ psychology of an 1800s style robber baron who unfortunately leads the most powerful country in the world and who would see it as a feather in his cap if he were to succesfully annex us during his time in power.
Are people getting it yet?
Is that what they call terroir in your part of the world?And the best part, unpaid forced youth labour was involved in the making and processing of said wine/swill. You can taste the complaints from my sons in each cup.
"Rational" is doing a lot of heavy lifting...For those who have lost the plot and are trying to bury this problem in the pages of an economics textbook, here’s Trump’s latest as of this morning:
I will keep saying this: this is not a conventional problem of economics between rational actors. This is a facade sitting in front of the ‘will to power’ psychology of an 1800s style robber baron who unfortunately leads the most powerful country in the world and who would see it as a feather in his cap if he were to succesfully annex us during his time in power.
Are people getting it yet?
Annexation isn't a serious concern. People talking about it are wasting their time and unnecessarily aggravating their blood pressure.For those who have lost the plot and are trying to bury this problem in the pages of an economics textbook, here’s Trump’s latest as of this morning:
I will keep saying this: this is not a conventional problem of economics between rational actors. This is a facade sitting in front of the ‘will to power’ psychology of an 1800s style robber baron who unfortunately leads the most powerful country in the world and who would see it as a feather in his cap if he were to succesfully annex us during his time in power.
"They don't respect us". Sorry, you don't get a pass on that one: You keep saying it but have yet to provide a single instance. Trump not liking our PM, or perhaps having been bested by a Canadian company in the past (unsurprising since he is such a lousy businessman or negotiator), or not liking that we were tougher negotiators than he thought does not equate to Canada as a nation not respecting the US as a nation. I, and most Canadians I know of, have great respect for the USA, the American people generally, and, at least until Trump in my personal case, great respect for the office of the President of the United States. That doesn't mean that on an individual basis, some Canadians have no respect for some Americans, and I am sure, vice-versa.
Anyway, that's now off my chest.
/RANT OFF
Annexation isn't a serious concern. People talking about it are wasting their time and unnecessarily aggravating their blood pressure.
If we do almost nothing right now and take the forecasted recession ("2% of GDP") on the chin, we'll still be OK. If one aspect that seems to be overlooked here - that Trump might increase tariff rates, and "Red States" might add their own in response to Canadian state-targeted tariffs/embargoes - transpires, the recessionary hit will be larger, but we'll still be OK.
If we avoid antagonizing irrational people into even worse (for us) actions and instead take other pro-growth measures to offset the anticipated recession, our outcome is better than either the CoAs "do nothing" or "escalate and antagonize". Meanwhile, the impact of tariffs on US consumers will work in our favour. On that last, a point of economics:
"To better understand the full extent of a tariff’s cost, we need to realize that it leads competing US producers to raise their own prices. As the quantity demanded for the domestic product increases, its price is bid up by consumers until the domestic price reaches the taxed price of the foreign good. Imports will have decreased, domestic production increased, and domestic purchasers will be paying the same price for both the imported good and its domestically produced equivalent - for example, two cars of the same brand or quality produced in Germany and in the United States. This is what “protection” means: Domestic producers are protected from the lower prices of foreign competitors; the tariff is a discriminatory tax that allows them - and even pushes them - to increase their own prices to the level of the now-tariffed imported goods." (Article here)
US consumers will feel pain without us doing anything which adds harm to both countries. Eventually they will act on that pain. All we need to do is empower political leadership that isn't reflexively anti-American in its party roots, can keep calm in the face of adversity, is economically rational, and isn't ideologically committed to maintaining irrational policies in Canada to favour small selected interest groups over the general interests of Canadian entrepreneurs and consumers.
I’d actually be content to pay some more taxes to support a deficit that compensated BC, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec businesses and enact a 30-day shutdown of ALL energy to the US….oil, gas, electricity…so how fragile the U.S. really is. They simply couldn’t pivot their west Texas intermediate up into idled northern and mid-west refineries fast enough…and eastern seaboard US cities would have rolling blackouts…Well fuck that and fuck him. Hit back in ways that cause the most harm to American business for the least harm to Canadian consumers, and let constituencies he’s politically dependent on feel pain from it. Let his pet congressmen and senators hear from constituents who lost their job and no longer have healthcare or prescription coverage for their sick wife or kid. Let them hear from the guy living paycheck to paycheck whose car just broke and now it’s gonna cost him a lot more for replacement parts so he can drive to work and feed his family. Let them hear from people who’be scraped to pay for a house but now the cost for a new build has gone up. Let him hear from assemblers, distillers, and manufacturers who have to cancel shifts or close planes because their export customers are drying up. Some of this he’s going to do to them himself, and some of it we can give a good hard nudge to with proportionate and reasonable trade measures. Show them that it won’t work so that the pressure from within forces a policy change. Remember that we’re less than two years from the midterms.
True, to a point. Export checks are a thing. If we know a particular commodity is regulated we can impose export controls on it under the Export and Import Permits Act. But that only works if it's being legally exported. Otherwise, it's smuggling."Canada has to do better at its border to stop illegal immigrants and fentanyl from coming into the US". The border services responsible for stopping immigrants and products from coming over a border are the services of the country the immigrants or product tries to enter - not the one they are coming from. It is the US border services job to stop immigrants and fentanyl from entering the US. This simple fact is plainly evident to anyone who has ever crossed a land border by car: there is no border check point of the country you are leaving to stop you from going over the border, only a check point from the country you are about to enter.
That would be spicy, but would need all premiers on board and a federal centre tough enough to 1) herd said premiers, and 2) grit their teeth and do it.I’d actually be content to pay some more taxes to support a deficit that compensated BC, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec businesses and enact a 30-day shutdown of ALL energy to the US….oil, gas, electricity…so how fragile the U.S. really is. They simply couldn’t pivot their west Texas intermediate up into idled northern and mid-west refineries fast enough…and eastern seaboard US cities would have rolling blackouts…
My concern with this is that would be an exceptionally grave provocation that would credibly threaten their national interests in a way that they wouldn’t hear us out on. It’s fun to think of shutting down all energy exports and cutting off electricity on Super Bowl Sunday, or making gas more expensive for nascar races and such.I’d actually be content to pay some more taxes to support a deficit that compensated BC, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec businesses and enact a 30-day shutdown of ALL energy to the US….oil, gas, electricity…so how fragile the U.S. really is. They simply couldn’t pivot their west Texas intermediate up into idled northern and mid-west refineries fast enough…and eastern seaboard US cities would have rolling blackouts…
As I've written, we need calm people calling the shots. Canada's sovereignty isn't in imminent danger - we choose how to respond. The US isn't in imminent danger of becoming some authoritarian playground. People who didn't and don't support Trump don't deserve to be dragged into this, and that's a large number of people even in states whose EC votes went to Trump. Nor does everyone who voted for Trump necessarily support this particular thing right now - it's unavoidably part of the package they voted for because they could only choose between two packages, but that doesn't mean that their support in favour of us on this issue has to be yielded unfought due to ham-fisted emotionally-driven lackwit unimaginative economically ruinous self-destructive responses by people who can't hear Trump talk nonsense about 51st states without their hind brains taking over and who think that a prospective recession on par with recessions we've previously endured is suddenly an existential crisis. I can see our future US licence plate : Canada, the Chicken Little State.Annexation as a result isn’t a serious concern because Canadians will utterly reject it. But, Trump’s explicit and repeatedly expressed desire for annexation is a serious concern becuse it tells us why he‘a actually doing this, and why playing the role of Neville Chamberlain with an orange stain on his chin isn’t going to make this go away. There are already a modest number of shameless Canadians lining up to do that.
Trump is a belligerent bully who sees something through the shop window that he wants but can’t have. He’s used to being able to bully and buy what he wants. He wants but cannot buy or have Canada, but he will not take that gracefully. We’re already seeing the tantrum.
This is not in isolation! Thisnis happening as he levies tariffs at the world. It’s happening as he shifts towards mercantilism and isolationism. It’s happening as he is purging not only the senior ranks but the government executive across all levels to cement his power. It’s happening as a group of hard right manifestations destiny types asrmble around him, and they will live and wield influence much longer than he will.
He wants a more isolationist America that he has more personal control over. He looks at a map and sees a big island called “North America”, 60% of which isn’t the same name or colour as his chunk. He’s eyeballing that map with all the subtelty of a kid on his computer playing Civilization.
This is not a nice neat acedemic economics problem pulled off a shelf in an ivory tower and placed in some frictionless vacuum. This is Canada facing four years of a very belligerent president to the south, and we have to stand up for ourselves. We need to set an example for other counties to do the same because we REALLY need other friendly nations and trading blocs to have our backs on this.
Trump thinks he can economically coerce us to join his country. He thinks he can do that by killing Canadian jobs, by reducing Canadian incomes, by collapsing Canadian businesses. He cares about his image and his legacy. He cares about what people think of him and he ties that to inflation and the cost of gas and eggs.
Well fuck that and fuck him. Hit back in ways that cause the most harm to American business for the least harm to Canadian consumers, and let constituencies he’s politically dependent on feel pain from it. Let his pet congressmen and senators hear from constituents who lost their job and no longer have healthcare or prescription coverage for their sick wife or kid. Let them hear from the guy living paycheck to paycheck whose car just broke and now it’s gonna cost him a lot more for replacement parts so he can drive to work and feed his family. Let them hear from people who’be scraped to pay for a house but now the cost for a new build has gone up. Let him hear from assemblers, distillers, and manufacturers who have to cancel shifts or close planes because their export customers are drying up. Some of this he’s going to do to them himself, and some of it we can give a good hard nudge to with proportionate and reasonable trade measures. Show them that it won’t work so that the pressure from within forces a policy change. Remember that we’re less than two years from the midterms.
Yeah, we’ll have to take some of it on the chin. I’d rather our chin be bruised by an economic punch than moistened from Donald Trump’s ball sweat. We make a lot of noise on this website about needing to assert our sovereignty. Well let’s assert our sovereignty. It will hurt, but appeasing him and letting him think he can absorb Canada this way would hurt a lot more.
Wiki's summary of the Scotch Whisky Regulations:if Glenora were distilled on Islay it would be called Scotch, or so I have heard