- Joined
- Jan 14, 2023
No, it was modifying existing treaties in Pacific, Europe and NAFTA. Liberal did nothing to grow the economy.What were the three counties
I’m going to guess
1) India
2) Bangladesh
3) Kosovo
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No, it was modifying existing treaties in Pacific, Europe and NAFTA. Liberal did nothing to grow the economy.What were the three counties
I’m going to guess
1) India
2) Bangladesh
3) Kosovo
As the son of one of these: Oh no oh jeez god I guess if I have to become American I can be a martyr and take one for the team so they can survive. You know how much I love this country and especially the Liberal party, mom and dad. No, don't worry, I'm sure I'll be fine, you don't have to worry about me okaythanksbyenowgivemethefuckingvisaandgetmeoutofthisshitholepleasefortheloveofgodCanadians who insist on voting liberal, your children will be forced to move to America
Except that's what we're most likely getting. Get yourselves ready to emigrate kiwis, we can't afford to be the afrikaners of north americaI hope bernier and the ppc just bite the bullet and work with the conservatives this time around, canada cant afford another 4 years of liberals.
If you look in the India thread there is a practice of abandoning your own mother to a convent of sorts. The convent is where they toss widows who had the audacity to live when their husbands died.Canadians would rather drive their country into the dirt than admit they need to get along with the country that buys 75% of their products. Their pride is going to end Canada (and to the 65+ Canadians who insist on voting liberal, your children will be forced to move to America while a group of Indian immigrants refuse to take care of you in your old age because you're not the same race as them).
Question for those more knowledgeable than I.
Canada is attempting trade with Europe to bypass the US tariffs. However there is a major difference between trading with Europe and trading with the US. The Atlantic Ocean.
So when you take into account the added cost of transport (ships, employees, fuel, extra carbon tax because Canada is anal about its carbon footprint, etc), at what point will the added transportation costs equal or even surpass the tariffs?
Let's take Alberta for example. In order to supply the province, you would either need a ship to port on the east coast and then transport the goods three quarters of the way across Canada on land, or have the ship travel all the way through the Panama Canal to dock on the west coast, literally traveling halfway around the world, and then transport it on land from there. At some point the extra time and effort is not worth it.
Canadian boomer is enraged.
“Increasing trade with the EU” is a fantasy, we already have “free trade” with them, yet they are only 5% of trade volume. This is mostly due to the insane regulations the EU maintains that makes it difficult to get compliant good in.Question for those more knowledgeable than I.
Canada is attempting trade with Europe to bypass the US tariffs. However there is a major difference between trading with Europe and trading with the US. The Atlantic Ocean.
So when you take into account the added cost of transport (ships, employees, fuel, extra carbon tax because Canada is anal about its carbon footprint, etc), at what point will the added transportation costs equal or even surpass the tariffs?
Let's take Alberta for example. In order to supply the province, you would either need a ship to port on the east coast and then transport the goods three quarters of the way across Canada on land, or have the ship travel all the way through the Panama Canal to dock on the west coast, literally traveling halfway around the world, and then transport it on land from there. At some point the extra time and effort is not worth it.
Haven't you been paying attention? The whole reason Trump wants Greenland is because they know the ice is going to melt and there will be new waterways!Question for those more knowledgeable than I.
Canada is attempting trade with Europe to bypass the US tariffs. However there is a major difference between trading with Europe and trading with the US. The Atlantic Ocean.
So when you take into account the added cost of transport (ships, employees, fuel, extra carbon tax because Canada is anal about its carbon footprint, etc), at what point will the added transportation costs equal or even surpass the tariffs?
Let's take Alberta for example. In order to supply the province, you would either need a ship to port on the east coast and then transport the goods three quarters of the way across Canada on land, or have the ship travel all the way through the Panama Canal to dock on the west coast, literally traveling halfway around the world, and then transport it on land from there. At some point the extra time and effort is not worth it.
Question for those more knowledgeable than I.
Canada is attempting trade with Europe to bypass the US tariffs. However there is a major difference between trading with Europe and trading with the US. The Atlantic Ocean.
So when you take into account the added cost of transport (ships, employees, fuel, extra carbon tax because Canada is anal about its carbon footprint, etc), at what point will the added transportation costs equal or even surpass the tariffs?
Let's take Alberta for example. In order to supply the province, you would either need a ship to port on the east coast and then transport the goods three quarters of the way across Canada on land, or have the ship travel all the way through the Panama Canal to dock on the west coast, literally traveling halfway around the world, and then transport it on land from there. At some point the extra time and effort is not worth it.
Leftists are all Euroboos, the boomers are as well. So you mention Europe and they swoon. It's to claim there is a plan without there being a plan. Any deal with Europe is years away, and even then we are so separated from their economy that we will have to essentially muscle in and push out their current suppliers.Canada is attempting trade with Europe to bypass the US tariffs. However there is a major difference between trading with Europe and trading with the US. The Atlantic Ocean.
“Increasing trade with the EU” is a fantasy, we already have “free trade” with them, yet they are only 5% of trade volume. This is mostly due to the insane regulations the EU maintains that makes it difficult to get compliant good in.
The EU doesn’t want to trade outside of itself. It only wants our natural gas, basically. Which will never get to them from Alberta with climate zealot Carney at the helm.
The EU also has collapsing productivity, horrible aging demographics, and little private sector activity.
We have the most privileged trade opportunity on the planet by being perched on top of the largest, freest economy. In addition to the transport costs, there is no way trade with Europe will replace what we have with the US.
Looks like the snowbirds had to give up their Florida properties now that they were told to hate America now.Florida real estate market crashing with no survivors.
Biden paying defaulted mortgages.
Cheap housing is on it's way bros.
Plus Japan wants that American military assets and exports, as well as possibly lower tariff for automotive sector.Canada's only other viable export market is Japan, but the Japanese already got an LNG deal with America, and American oil is still cheaper to extract than Canadian oil. The Japanese are not interested in our products either, they make far superior ones.
I'm telling you the retardedness and smugness of Canadians knows no bounds. We are a privileged country all because we're sandwiched between Alaska and continental USA.
I've never wanted Little Mac to lose more than when he's played by Justo.
It won't.Question for those more knowledgeable than I.
Canada is attempting trade with Europe to bypass the US tariffs. However there is a major difference between trading with Europe and trading with the US. The Atlantic Ocean.
So when you take into account the added cost of transport (ships, employees, fuel, extra carbon tax because Canada is anal about its carbon footprint, etc), at what point will the added transportation costs equal or even surpass the tariffs?
Let's take Alberta for example. In order to supply the province, you would either need a ship to port on the east coast and then transport the goods three quarters of the way across Canada on land, or have the ship travel all the way through the Panama Canal to dock on the west coast, literally traveling halfway around the world, and then transport it on land from there. At some point the extra time and effort is not worth it.