The
United States just isn’t going to put up with it any more. Tired of forever
being screwed over by beady-eyed Canadians and sleazy Mexican drug lords.
Bad,
very bad, deals with Canadians and Mexicans have seen factories close and
companies relocate out of the U.S. Hundreds of thousands of American jobs lost.
Canadians
in particular are slick and brutal, taking advantage of a country 10 times its
size. Take, take, take and give nothing in return.
It
has to stop, and it will stop with a better North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) which has been a disaster for the poor Americans.
All
that is the American bully whine we’ve been hearing since NAFTA renegotiations began
last summer.
What
really needs to stop is the American grandstanding, manipulating and bullying
calculated at getting a NAFTA deal favourable only to them. What also needs to
stop is the attitude that Canadians are northern nobodies living in snow holes,
fortunate to exist in the shadow of a really smart and generous southern
neighbour.
The
latest U.S. manipulation of the NAFTA talks are the tariffs on steel (25 per
cent) and aluminum (10 per cent). Canada will not be subject to those crushing
tariffs - if it signs a NAFTA agreement that the U.S. demands.
That’s
not negotiation; that’s gangster-style coercion.
This
NAFTA nonsense has been going on too long. It is obvious that the U.S. is not interested
in a balanced deal that is fair and that works for all three North American
partners. They want a deal totally in their favour.
It’s
time to end this waste time. Usher the American negotiators to the door and
boot them into the street.
There
have been predictions of disaster for Canada if the 25-year-old NAFTA is not
renewed. The sky will fall.
Perhaps
it will, perhaps it will not.
The
Conference Board of Canada predicts a 0.5 per cent economic decline if NAFTA is
ended and a loss of about 85,000 jobs. That is a modest impact that would be
followed by some recovery.
Whatever,
Canadians would survive. We always have and incidentally, while surviving we
have contributed enormously to U.S. success in many fields.
We
have had a large presence in their news and entertainment industry: Sudbury boy
Alex Trebek (Jeopardy), Donald Sutherland, Peter Jennings (ABC News), David
Frum, Justin Bieber. This list stretches beyond memory capabilities.
In
sport, we gave the Americans hockey, lacrosse, and yes, baseball and
basketball. And, not to forget the board game Trivial Pursuit.
In
technology and invention it was us who came up with the telephone, walkie-talkies,
snowmobiles, alkaline batteries, Canadarm and the Robertson screwdriver. A
female Canadian invented the Wonderbra.
Millions
of American children have been nourished on Pablum and peanut butter, both
invented by Canadians. In the field of medicine, we created insulin, child
resistance medicine bottles, the heart pacemaker, open heart surgery, T-cell
receptors and other major steps in cancer immunology.
A
country with those successes, though never bragged about, should be able to get
along nicely without a one-sided NAFTA deal. There are many other countries with
which to do fair trade deals. Also, other places to sell our oil, which has
been flowing to the U.S. at bargain basement prices.
Our
federal government should not cave in to the U.S. coercion on NAFTA.
Chrystia
Freeland, our foreign affairs minister, strikes me as someone who is not easily
pushed around. I don’t know much about
her except what I see, hear and read in the news. I do know she is a former
financial journalist once based in Moscow.
She also is the author of
the best seller Plutocrats: The Rise of the New Global Super-Rich and the Fall
of Everyone Else.
She
is banned from Russia because she wrote pieces sharply critical of Russian
president Vladimir Putin. (That alone puts her several heads taller than Humpty
Trumpty).
Hopefully
Freeland and her team will deliver the message that Canadians are not simpleton
drawers of water and hewers of wood. We’ve got good products and good brains
for doing business in the much bigger world outside the U.S.
We’re
all grown up now, and won’t tolerate being treated like someone’s little sister.
Email: shaman@vianet.ca
Profile: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B001K8FY3Y
Profile: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B001K8FY3Y
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