"Nobody knows what America is anymore -- not Americans, not their enemies, not their friends." [View all]
The Globalization of Canadian Rage
The defiance against America that has consumed Canadian life for over a year now has finally spread to the rest of the West. The message of Prime Minister Mark Carneys speech at Davos last month that of a rupture in the world order was not new for Canadians. Just after his election in April, Mr. Carney declared that our old relationship with the United States, a relationship based on steadily increasing integration, is over. At Davos, the moment caught up with him, and with Canada.
Throughout last year, the consensus among many European policymakers in the face of Donald Trumps bombast was to wait out the nonsense and appease when possible. Mr. Carneys speech arrived at the exact point at which that position proved untenable: Mr. Trumps intensifying threats to forcibly annex Greenland, not to mention his insults to NATO troops who fought and died alongside U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan. They stayed a little back, little off the front lines is a statement that will be remembered in Europe alongside Ich bin ein Berliner and Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall as a presidential remark that embodies the American spirit of its moment. Suddenly, Mr. Trumps mindless drive toward territorial expansion and his desire to humiliate and degrade were impossible to ignore. For Canada, though, Americas disrespect and intimidation are now standard issue. The U.S. ambassador to Canada, Pete Hoekstra, seems to have been installed primarily as an insult engine, tasked mainly with belittling his hosts wherever and wherever possible. (His advice to Canadians upset by Mr. Trumps remarks that Canada should be the 51st American state: Move on.) Recent revelations that U.S. officials have been meeting with Albertan separatists have indicated that the Trump administration may not have given up on the idea of Canadas dissolution. Threatening ones neighbors, as Canada has learned the hard way over the last year, is a hallmark of autocracy-minded leaders.
American aggression and American decline are of a piece. As Mr. Carney has announced a slew of measures aimed at boosting Canadas electric vehicle industry, nobody has argued for a moment that American equivalents could compete. By ending E.V. tax credits, Mr. Trump may have all but ensured that the American electric vehicle will one day be a thing of the past. America has decided not to compete. It would rather pose. If you are integrating yourself into the American sphere of influence, or whatever Mr. Trumps national security apparatus calls it, you are integrating yourself into antiquity or worse.
At the same time, America is becoming synonymous with dangerous randomness. The constitutional system is in collapse. The legislative branch, made up of both Democrats and Republicans, is missing in action. The Supreme Court debates the legal equivalent of how many angels can fit on the head of a pin, while the legal order that has held the country together for 250 years sputters toward an ignominious end. Nobody knows what America is anymore not Americans, not their enemies, not their friends
The West is feeling its betrayal turn into rage. The world is waking up to both its vulnerability and its value. But better late than never: Were all Canadian now.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/06/opinion/canada-america-anger-carney.html?unlocked_article_code=1.KFA.R4KP.rY_jJZQArPek&smid=nytcore-ios-share