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Not to put too fine a point on it but we really need to be careful with what we say on-line regardless of intent--esp with regards to the USA. Assume that every word we enter is on a server or in the cloud with AI searchers combing through it all, looking for comments like this. Just my 2 pennies.
For those who have Nexus/TSA Precheck or like to travel to the US, assume that increasingly online activity will be tied back to you personally. And don't trust that you have anonymity. Unless you are very, very careful it is trivial for intelligence agencies (and even companies) to uniquely identify anonymous accounts.
 
It’s impossible to grasp that they’d pick this imbecile to run their country again but here we are. The derangement of that society continues to cross new, and quite frankly, unimaginable thresholds.
It's not like their social rot hasn't infected us as well.
 
All of this back and forth on tariffs must be making a lot of money for Trump insiders trading stocks.
No doubt!

Trump Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is known for his expertise in global macro investing, which often involves strategies like shorting stocks or currencies. During his time at Soros Fund Management, he likely engaged in such strategies, as the fund is famous for its bold currency trades, including the legendary shorting of the British pound in 1992. Bessent has a net worth of over half a billion dollars. In an interview on Thursday Bessent said "Access to cheap goods’ is not the ‘American Dream". Easy for him to say.

Trump's Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick who has a net worth of $2 billion made his fortune in electronic trading (Cantor-Fitzgerald) and I would be surprised if he is not making a fortune on this turbulent market that changes from day to day and that he directly influences with his appearances in the media. Of course they are not the only ones. I'm sure Trump and his family are making a fortune by Trump's manipulation of the financial markets.
 
It’s impossible to grasp that they’d pick this imbecile to run their country again but here we are. The derangement of that society continues to cross new, and quite frankly, unimaginable thresholds.
Only 32% of eligible voters did. It’s the 36% who couldn’t GAF to vote at all that I mostly fault.
 
It’s impossible to grasp that they’d pick this imbecile to run their country again but here we are. The derangement of that society continues to cross new, and quite frankly, unimaginable thresholds.

Perhaps. But the warning signs have been there for a long time. And that we didn't reduce our dependency on them, is on us.
 
When I was doing my undergrad in political science in the '90s, everybody was all about how we needed to reduce our reliance on America. Since then we've grown steadily more reliant, despite many warning signs that it wasn't the wisest course. But it was the path of least resistance, and a lot of people were making a lot of money doing it.
 
When I was doing my undergrad in political science in the '90s, everybody was all about how we needed to reduce our reliance on America. Since then we've grown steadily more reliant, despite many warning signs that it wasn't the wisest course. But it was the path of least resistance, and a lot of people were making a lot of money doing it.
It's not just reliance on the US. It's absolutely gross and disgusting the way that most anglo-Canadians get absorbed into American political drama. That's exactly why their crazies think we can get absorbed. Cause so many Canadians already think, talk, act like Americans. And that's not just on the right either.

Just look at how little interest there was in the recent provincial election. But you can bet a ton of people who didn't vote were fixated on the drama to the south.
 
Warren Kinsella (on Facebook) posted the text of this piece in today's NY Times by Matina Stevis-Gridneff.

It describes how Trump and the current US admin want to annex Canada, and consider the treaties governing the border to be invalid. Scary read.

Edit to add Kinsella's post and the article text:
EVERY CANADIAN NEEDS TO READ THIS NEW YORK TIMES REPORT

I’m a longtime subscriber – that’s not going to change, either, because (a) they are the official opposition in the United States and (b) they are literally the only American media that pays serious attention to the Canadian perspective – so I will share with all of you, who are my friends, this story by the Times’ Matina Stevis-Gridneff. It contains truly shocking details which no Canadian media outlet has published to date.

We are under attack, friends. Trump’s America is the enemy. Read this.

"After President Trump imposed tariffs on Canada on Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made an extraordinary statement that was largely lost in the fray of the moment.

“The excuse that he’s giving for these tariffs today of fentanyl is completely bogus, completely unjustified, completely false,” Mr. Trudeau told the news media in Ottawa.

“What he wants is to see a total collapse of the Canadian economy, because that’ll make it easier to annex us,” he added.

This is the story of how Mr. Trudeau went from thinking Mr. Trump was joking when he referred to him as “governor” and Canada as “the 51st state” in early December to publicly stating that Canada’s closest ally and neighbor was implementing a strategy of crushing the country in order to take it over.

The February Calls
Mr. Trump and Mr. Trudeau spoke twice on Feb. 3, once in the morning and again in the afternoon, as part of discussions to stave off tariffs on Canadian exports.

But those early February calls were not just about tariffs.

The details of the conversations between the two leaders, and subsequent discussions among top U.S. and Canadian officials, have not been previously fully reported, and were shared with The New York Times on condition of anonymity by four people with firsthand knowledge of their content. They did not want to be publicly identified discussing a sensitive topic.

On those calls, President Trump laid out a long list of grievances he had with the trade relationship between the two countries, including Canada’s protected dairy sector, the difficulty American banks face in doing business in Canada and Canadian consumption taxes that Mr. Trump deems unfair because they make American goods more expensive.

He also brought up something much more fundamental.

He told Mr. Trudeau that he did not believe that the treaty that demarcates the border between the two countries was valid and that he wants to revise the boundary. He offered no further explanation.

The border treaty Mr. Trump referred to was established in 1908 and finalized the international boundary between Canada, then a British dominion, and the United States.

Mr. Trump also mentioned revisiting the sharing of lakes and rivers between the two nations, which is regulated by a number of treaties, a topic he’s expressed interest about in the past.

Canadian officials took Mr. Trump’s comments seriously, not least because he had already publicly said he wanted to bring Canada to its knees. In a news conference on Jan. 7, before being inaugurated, Mr. Trump, responding to a question by a New York Times reporter about whether he was planning to use military force to annex Canada, said he planned to use “economic force.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

During the second Feb. 3 call, Mr. Trudeau secured a one-month postponement of those tariffs.

This week, the U.S. tariffs came into effect without a fresh reprieve on Tuesday. Canada, in return, imposed its own tariffs on U.S. exports, plunging the two nations into a trade war. (On Thursday, Mr. Trump granted Canada a monthlong suspension on most of the tariffs.)

Glimpses of the rupture between Mr. Trump and Mr. Trudeau, and of Mr. Trump’s aggressive plans for Canada, have been becoming apparent over the past few months.

The Star, a Canadian newspaper, has reported that Mr. Trump mentioned the 1908 border treaty in the early February call and other details from the conversation. And the Financial Times has reported that there are discussions in the White House about removing Canada from a crucial intelligence alliance among five nations, attributing those to a senior Trump adviser.

Doubling Down
But it wasn’t just the president talking about the border and waters with Mr. Trudeau that disturbed the Canadian side.

The persistent social media references to Canada as the 51st state and Mr. Trudeau as its governor had begun to grate both inside the Canadian government and more broadly.

While Mr. Trump’s remarks could all be bluster or a negotiating tactic to pressure Canada into concessions on trade or border security, the Canadian side no longer believes that to be so.

And the realization that the Trump administration was taking a closer and more aggressive look at the relationship, one that tracked with those threats of annexation, sank in during subsequent calls between top Trump officials and Canadian counterparts.

One such call was between Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick — who at the time had not yet been confirmed by the Senate — and Canada’s finance minister, Dominic LeBlanc. The two men had been communicating regularly since they had met at Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s home and club in Florida, during Mr. Trudeau’s visit there in early December.

Mr. Lutnick called Mr. LeBlanc after the leaders had spoken on Feb. 3, and issued a devastating message, according to several people familiar with the call: Mr. Trump, he said, had come to realize that the relationship between the United States and Canada was governed by a slew of agreements and treaties that were easy to abandon.

Mr. Trump was interested in doing just that, Mr. Lutnick said.

He wanted to eject Canada out of an intelligence-sharing group known as the Five Eyes that also includes Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

He wanted to tear up the Great Lakes agreements and conventions between the two nations that lay out how they share and manage Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie and Ontario.

And he is also reviewing military cooperation between the two countries, particularly the North American Aerospace Defense Command.

A spokesperson for Mr. Lutnick did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for Mr. LeBlanc declined to comment.

In subsequent communications between senior Canadian officials and Trump advisers, this list of topics has come up again and again, making it hard for the Canadian government to dismiss them.

The only soothing of nerves has come from Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the four people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Rubio has refrained from delivering threats, and recently dismissed the idea that the United States was looking at scrapping military cooperation.

But Canada’s politicians across the spectrum, and Canadian society at large, are frayed and deeply concerned. Officials do not see the Trump administration’s threats as empty; they see a new normal when it comes to the United States.

On Thursday, at a news conference, a reporter asked Mr. Trudeau: “Your foreign affairs minister yesterday characterized all this as a psychodrama. How would you characterize it?”

“Thursday,” Mr. Trudeau quipped ruefully."
 
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Gotta love it:


Trump now threatening a 250% tariff on Canadian Dairy.

We only export ~350M to the U.S. mostly artisanal cheese.

On the other hand, while modest.....we import 1.1B in dairy from the U.S.

So reciprocal tariff will do far more damage to them.

Do it! And slap an export tax of 25% on potash, just so that their farmers find out how badly we can treat them. And while we are at it, let's look into Monsanto a bit more.

AoD
 

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