• Nik282000@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    👏 Turn 👏 off 👏 the 👏 power.

    Even just for an hour. Until all levels of US government understands that Canada is able to disrupt their country in a massive way they will keep playing these stupid games.

      • Dhar@lemmy.ca
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        9 hours ago

        “I know they’re killing children, but we have to remain polite!”

      • Nik282000@lemmy.ca
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        23 hours ago

        They are already doing just that to their own people AND we are in their sights. How much to Canadians have to suffer before it’s “ok” to push back.

  • IronKrill@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    This letter has to be one of the greatest rage-bait posts ever. Trump really know how to do it.

    the United States of America has agreed to continue working with Canada, despite Canada having financially retaliated against the United States

    Barely and only after he swung the first blow and started shit over nothing, yeah.

    the United States imposed Tariffs on Canada to deal with our National Fentanyl crisis, which is caused, in part, by Canada’s failure to stop the drugs from pouring into our Country.

    “In part” meaning less than a single percent. “Failure to stop” meaning a massive increase in border presence and fentanyl seizures.

    Source

    Instead of working with the United States

    See above, we implemented border security measures to appease the charade of Fentanyl being an issue.

    Source

    there will be no Tariff if Canada, or companies within your Country, decide to build or manufacture product within the United States

    Perfect! Let’s just make ourselves the States’ little bitch, completely reliant on them for everything and with no details on how much production we even have to move over so that he can just say we didn’t fulfill our part of the bargain whenever he wants. Why wouldn’t we do that? Jesus H Christ.

    Canada charges extraordinary Tariffs to our Dairy Farmers — up to 400%

    Two things, 1. tariffs to protect your local agriculture makes sense to not become reliant on other countries for food. 2. that “up to” is doing HEAVY lifting as those high rates are almost never in effect¹, so why do you even care. Oh right, you don’t care! This is all a sham.

    ¹ Source

    • C4551E@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      23 hours ago

      it’s only enraging if you take him at his word, which you should never do. It’s all lies and projection, and he’s going to do whatever he’s going to do regardless of the response.

  • CanadianCorhen@lemmy.ca
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    22 hours ago

    Just match the American tariffs. They will end up doing the same thing as they did with China: end up backing off.

    • Benedict_Espinosa@europe.pub
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      11 hours ago

      China has much more leverage than Canada, and they have 30% coming on them in August. So not too much hope of Trump backing off very far, unfortunately.

  • lemmy_outta_here@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Bring it, bitch.

    I will never visit the us again. i cancelled netflix, prime, apple music. i use crave, cbc gem, and qobuz now. i installed ubuntu on my old surface pro and it works beautifully. switched to libre office. my next phone will be a fairphone.

    when i go to the grocery store, if an item i want is a product of the usa, i eat something else.

    • wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      I also cancelled and use the same services! Qobuz is pretty good, it has a lot of room to improve but it’s keeping me more up to date with music than Apple was.

      I got Sync.com (Canadian) instead of iCloud (though iCloud is not fully replaceable). My backup server is in the EU because I use custom borg scripts, but there’s also eazyBackup in Canada.

      I own my own domain for email, and I bought my wife one too so she can get off of Gmail.

    • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      Legend. I had cancelled all that but then Telus came in and offered it for free. So technically I have it, but I’m not really paying for it.

  • aeppelcyning@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    Carney needs to grow a pair. I’ve had enough of him not saying anything. We voted for elbows up, not subservience. I’m still not clear what we got for the DST removal.

    • Canconda@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      I’m also an NDP voter that voted LPC over CPC. I knew we wouldn’t get Value(s) Carney, but I do believe that if anyone is going to shift capitalism in a better direction it would be him.

      As a former bouncer I completely disagree that silence is a sign of weakness or subservience. That’s just good tact. Never argue with an idiot, they’ll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.

      Elbows Up doesn’t mean you should draw a penalty. You’re supposed to hit them hard and get away with it.

      As far as the DST. I find it interesting that a tax we never collected is being framed as a loss we deserve compensation for.

      A month ago I thought bills C-2 & C-5 were overreach, and their lack of oversight definitely is… I wrote several letters to that effect. But given the continuation of Trumps annexation rhetoric, I now recognize those bills were designed for a political environment that is still burgeoning.

      Based on Trumps usage of ICE I believe it’s inevitable that the USA will use domestic crossings to affect some form of hybrid war against Canada. Russia & China will certainly occupy northern Canada if we don’t rapidly expand our national infrastructure.

      These threats, I believe, do justify deprioritizing environmental concerns, to a degree.

      I think the silver lining is that Carney’s energy expansion in to oil/gas is not mutually exclusive with expanding renewable energy.

      I also sold mortgages for a short time and saw the industry change more in 24 months than 24 years. I agree that the least harmful economic solution to housing is to freeze housing prices where they are until cost of living and supply normalize. The alternative of housing prices drop would have a net negative effect. The CMHC in 2014 & 15 made major changes to reduce Canadian borrowing power to avoid a post mortgage crisis of mass defaults like what we saw in the USA.

      I think the world is too volatile right now to expect concrete plans that aren’t heavily hedged. Carney is playing the game correctly by holding Canada’s cards close and not telling his bluffs.

      • Yaztromo@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        As far as the DST. I find it interesting that a tax we never collected is being framed as a loss we deserve compensation for.

        I can explain that. While on the one hand I don’t really have a problem with attempting to level the playing field between international tech companies that don’t pay any corporate taxes in Canada and local Canadian companies who do, the big problem is that ultimately the pocket that those taxes will come from is “all of us” (at least those of us who use American online services). The companies weren’t going to take a loss — they were just going to jack up the prices they charge to Canadians.

        And because the payment was intended to be retroactive to 2022, we’ve likely already been paying it. Again, big tech companies weren’t going to take a loss, and they’ve known about the payment date for years now, so they’ve been collecting it from us in the form of higher subscription fees and rates. And now that the DST is cancelled — they get to keep it. Oh, and as we’re now all used to paying the higher rates, they get to keep that too.

        So that’s where the loss is. IMO the DST wasn’t all that great an idea to start with (taxing those companies sounds great until you realize they’re just jacking their prices up on us to pay for it), but having told companies to plan for it all these years and then yank it back has just put a ton of Canadian dollars into their coffers they don’t have to give back. And they’ll keep charging us the jacked-up rates we’re now used to and keep that as well.

      • teppa@piefed.ca
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        1 day ago

        Housing prices rose because we brought in 1.4 million people in a single year and tripled immigration, blaming capitalism for that seems a bit silly. Trying to implement price controls is great but how do you decide who gets the cheaper house, you’ve done nothing to improve the supply while the demand continues to increase.

        • Yaztromo@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          You shouldn’t blame the immigrants or the Feds for that cockup. That is ENTIRELY on the Provinces.

          We need more people, especially young, working professionals who produce high-value products. We have an aging population that is barely having babies at replacement level, and we need younger taxpayers coming into the system to help keep it propped up. We’re currently top-heavy in terms of demographics (thanks to the Boomer generation being the largest generation in at least the last two centuries), so we need those people otherwise the shit is going to hit the fan WAY worse than a housing crisis.

          The Provinces knew the Feds were going to bring in more people. They knew we needed more housing. But many of them listened to the NIMBY’s of this world (or thought they could stick it to the Feds and make them look bad) and so did little to nothing to improve the housing situation.

          Housing is nearly 100% a Provincial affair in Canada. You should absolutely be angry about the situation — but the bad guys here aren’t the Federal Government, and it isn’t the immigrants themselves. It’s the Provinces (and through their jurisdiction the Municipalities) who have been ham-stringing housing development.

          Oddly enough, the situation will eventually work itself out as more of the Boomer generation die off (or downsize). Although I suspect it’s going to be a long, slow ramp-up with a smaller cliff at the end (unless immigration is raised again to match the death rate).

          • teppa@piefed.ca
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            14 hours ago

            I don’t disagree that they share blame however things were going fine prior to tripling immigration, was it not?

            It was the Feds that changed the status quo in a rather static ecosystem, and I have a propensity to blame the direct catalyst that lead to the shortage rather than those who failed to adapt at breakneck speeds. Surely building the homes first would be the rational order of operations.

      • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        holding Canada’s cards close and not telling his bluffs.

        That’s what the “just tell us what you’re doing in the negotiations” crowd seems to miss.

        It would be colossally stupid to put out a press release that tells the other players what cards you’re holding, and what your planned strategy is.

        • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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          10 hours ago

          It would be colossally stupid to put out a press release that tells the other players what cards you’re holding

          There are public commitments that indicate betrayal of Canadians, though:

          • Defense pact with Philippines is direct support for US war on China.
          • G7 statement on “Iran must not have nuclear weapons”, while a platitude, is direct support for all Israel hasbara (weeks/months away since 1980s) and war on Iran. By extention, support for US and their strikes.
          • Ukraine aid is simple continuation of US proxy war on Russia, even as US “forces” colonies to pay for it, including most recent proposal of NATO buying US patriot missiles to gift to Ukraine. Dividing EU from Russia is US policy. Gaslighting people that US is a better ally than Russia is US domination of NATO.
          • Fortress Can Am and banning Chinese investment is further tying/subjugating Ontario/Canada to US without alternatives, and resulting in punishments instead of enthusiasm for the subservience.

          When Trump negotiates publicly with lies and public punishment based on those lies, the private negotiations seem not just pointless, as something Trump won’t listen/abide with, but more than likely a US trick to pacify us, while we get destroyed with full complicity.

        • Canconda@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          Never interrupt your enemy when they are making a mistake.

          • Sun Tzu

          Those people also don’t appreciate that in the context of Trumps unpredictability no publicly made plans would remain unchanged.

    • Arkouda@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      I’m still not clear what we got for the DST removal.

      The U.S. temporarily ended trade talks in late June over Canada’s digital services tax, but the federal government moved to drop the tax just days later and negotiations resumed.

    • teppa@piefed.ca
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      2 days ago

      He wants housing prices to remain elevated, you dont get that by cutting off your supply of USD.

      • aeppelcyning@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        HAHAHA I hate the Cons and am an NDP voter who lent Carney my vote (first time voting Lib, actually) because I felt a Con government would handle Trump exactly the way Carney apparently is doing, apparently.
        That will likely be the first and last time, that is for sure.

  • skozzii@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    So are we gonna get a TACO pool going… everyone bet which day Trump caves and winner takes all.

  • fourish@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    We’re done with the US. let them Tax themselves into oblivion. We have closer friends now to trade with.

  • ikidd@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    “You will never be disappointed with the United States of America.”

    We’re fucking disappointed. Every fucking year of this relationshit. You are an utter disappointment in nearly every way.

  • Maple Engineer@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Trump is named in the Epstein files.

    Trump cut NOAA and FEMA funding before flash flooding killed over 200 people in Texas including two dozen Christian girls.

    • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      Cool, calm reciprocity. They Tarrif us, we Tarrif them where it hurts in equal measure.

      For everything else, there are better trade partners.