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Tucker will make Liberal heads explode tomorrow !!
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<blockquote data-quote="Calvin45" data-source="post: 3031572" data-attributes="member: 109862"><p>Oh for sure, as a Canadian, the thought of the USA regarding us as a threat is hilarious but that's about it. </p><p></p><p>Perhaps no two countries have mutually benefitted from being neighbours with each other as have Canada and the United States, economically, culturally, militarily (that's the biggest single international border on earth, imagine if it were a tense or violent one or even one like what you deal with on your south side, what a pain in the neck that would be) </p><p></p><p>I actually had to do a paper on this a while ago, specifically on "the Americanization of Canada in the 1920s and onward". We weren't always so friendly with each other. But honestly, America coming out of World War One having fought on the same side as both Canada and Great Britain really did a lot to ease any anxieties about being next door to the industrial/milatary/population superpower to the south. I cited a report from the US Naval Institute written in the mid 50s that, from an American perspective, viewed history as testifying to the reality that while our nations may have had 101 petty grievances with each other over the years, at the end of the day we have common interests and it's mutually beneficial to us both when either prospers and hurts us both when disaster strikes. </p><p></p><p>And I'm afraid it's the case that our liberal leader up here and yours down there seem at this point to be a disaster indeed. What Canada has going for it is valuable natural resources, and a <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="💩" title="Pile of poo :poop:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f4a9.png" data-shortname=":poop:" /> load of them. Our prime minister is strangling our own economy and discouraging the development of these natural resource sectors in a case of climate hysteria, never mind that the population of Canada is less than 1 percent of the global energy demand….boy are we saving the earth with this nonsense! <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="🤣" title="Rolling on the floor laughing :rofl:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f923.png" data-shortname=":rofl:" />. And Biden axed the keystone xl pipeline project his very first day in office, a project that both Alberta and some states had invested billions into, a project far cleaner and safer than ocean tankers of crude oil, about as politically neutral as an international resource trade could be..,,</p><p></p><p>But sure let's keep both our countries more dependent on foreign overseas oil while it's literally under our own feet, I'm sure Saudi Arabia is very green, very enviro friendly, and a very "progressive approved" nation haha. Ugh. </p><p></p><p>Neither of these buffoons are good for either of our countries.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Calvin45, post: 3031572, member: 109862"] Oh for sure, as a Canadian, the thought of the USA regarding us as a threat is hilarious but that’s about it. Perhaps no two countries have mutually benefitted from being neighbours with each other as have Canada and the United States, economically, culturally, militarily (that’s the biggest single international border on earth, imagine if it were a tense or violent one or even one like what you deal with on your south side, what a pain in the neck that would be) I actually had to do a paper on this a while ago, specifically on “the Americanization of Canada in the 1920s and onward”. We weren’t always so friendly with each other. But honestly, America coming out of World War One having fought on the same side as both Canada and Great Britain really did a lot to ease any anxieties about being next door to the industrial/milatary/population superpower to the south. I cited a report from the US Naval Institute written in the mid 50s that, from an American perspective, viewed history as testifying to the reality that while our nations may have had 101 petty grievances with each other over the years, at the end of the day we have common interests and it’s mutually beneficial to us both when either prospers and hurts us both when disaster strikes. And I’m afraid it’s the case that our liberal leader up here and yours down there seem at this point to be a disaster indeed. What Canada has going for it is valuable natural resources, and a 💩 load of them. Our prime minister is strangling our own economy and discouraging the development of these natural resource sectors in a case of climate hysteria, never mind that the population of Canada is less than 1 percent of the global energy demand….boy are we saving the earth with this nonsense! 🤣. And Biden axed the keystone xl pipeline project his very first day in office, a project that both Alberta and some states had invested billions into, a project far cleaner and safer than ocean tankers of crude oil, about as politically neutral as an international resource trade could be..,, But sure let’s keep both our countries more dependent on foreign overseas oil while it’s literally under our own feet, I’m sure Saudi Arabia is very green, very enviro friendly, and a very “progressive approved” nation haha. Ugh. Neither of these buffoons are good for either of our countries. [/QUOTE]
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