Canada has announced a comprehensive trade strategy aimed at reducing its economic dependence on the United States by 40% within two years, signaling a fundamental restructuring of North American economic relations. This strategic shift, led by Prime Minister Mark Carney (former Governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England), involves building new trade partnerships with Europe, Asia, and Latin America to create economic resilience and reduce vulnerability to American political instability. The strategy has already triggered significant disruptions in American industries, including a projected 17% increase in construction material costs due to Canadian lumber being redirected to Asian markets, pharmaceutical supply constraints affecting generic medications, and automotive supply chain disruptions. This economic realignment represents a broader geopolitical shift where Canada is positioning itself as a stable, reliable trading partner for other nations seeking alternatives to American unpredictability, potentially reshaping global trade dynamics and reducing US economic influence.
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This Changes Everything: Canada Moves Away From U.S. TradeAdded:
47 million dollars. That is the number that has every economist in Washington scrambling right now, that has Wall Street analysts completely rewriting their projections, and that has Donald Trump absolutely losing his mind behind closed doors at Mar-a-Lago. Because what Canada just did in the last 24 hours is nothing short of a complete economic declaration of independence from the United States.
Let me walk you through exactly what happened because this is developing so fast that even major networks are struggling to keep up with the implications. Canada has just unveiled a comprehensive new trade framework. Not a proposal, not a negotiation position, a done deal. Finalized agreements with markets across Europe, Asia, and Latin America that fundamentally restructure how Canada does business with the world.
And here is the part that should terrify every American business owner. The stated goal is to reduce Canadian economic reliance on the United States by 40% within 2 years. 40% in 2 years.
Think about what that means. For decades, the United States has operated under the assumption that Canada needs us more than we need them. That assumption just got obliterated.
Now, you might be thinking, "Okay, that sounds significant, but what does it actually mean for regular Americans?"
Let me give you three examples that are already, as of today, causing absolute chaos in American industries. Canadian lumber. If you know anything about American construction, you know that Canadian lumber is absolutely foundational to how we build homes, how we build commercial buildings, how our entire construction industry operates.
As of right now, that lumber is being diverted to Asian buyers who are offering premium prices.
Premium prices that American companies apparently are not willing to match because they have spent decades assuming they would always have access to Canadian resources at favorable rates.
The projection, and this is coming from industry analysts who have been tracking this for the last 12 hours, is a 17% increase in material costs for United States construction companies.
17%.
Do you understand what that does to housing prices that are already unaffordable for millions of Americans?
Do you understand what that does to commercial development projects that are operating on thin margins? But it gets worse. Canadian pharmaceutical production. Canada produces a substantial amount of generic medications that Americans rely on every single day. Those production lines are now shifting towards domestic Canadian needs and European export commitments.
The northern United States is already experiencing supply constraints for various generic medications.
We are talking about real medicine that real people need, and the supply is drying up because Canada has decided, correctly, that they are not going to let American instability dictate their economic priorities.
And then there is the automotive sector.
Canadian suppliers, the companies that make the parts that go into American cars, are redirecting their production capacity to European and Asian contracts that offer more favorable terms. More favorable terms because those countries are not run by someone who wakes up and decides to blow up trade relationships on a whim.
Now, to understand why this is happening right now, we need to talk about what happened on March 9th, 2026.
That is just days ago. The United States Supreme Court issued a ruling that has completely stripped Donald Trump of the economic weapon he has been wielding like a cudgel against Canada, against Mexico, against basically every trading partner the United States has. The court ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the IEEPA, does not authorize the president to impose broad tariffs. Read that again. Does not authorize the legal foundation that Trump used to threaten Canada, to actually implement devastating tariffs, to destabilize the entire North American economic relationship, the Supreme Court just said that was illegal. And the financial implications of this ruling are staggering. The United States Treasury is now exposed to an estimated 175 billion dollars in refund liability. 175 billion dollars that has to be paid back because those tariffs were illegally collected. Do you know what Trump did in response?
Because, of course, he could not just accept a Supreme Court ruling, he immediately attempted to implement a worldwide 10% tariff using Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, a different legal mechanism because the first one got slapped down by the highest court in the land. And right now, as we speak, 24 states are suing to block that tariff.
24 states have said this is illegal, this is destructive, and we are not going to let this happen. So, into this absolute chaos steps Mark Carney. And I need you to understand who Mark Carney is because American media has done a terrible job of explaining why this man is so dangerous to Trump's worldview.
Mark Carney is not a politician who stumbled into economic policy. He was the governor of the Bank of Canada. Then he became the governor of the Bank of England. This is someone who understands global financial systems at a level that frankly embarrasses most people in Washington. He knows how to build economic resilience, he knows how to diversify risk, and he has spent his time as prime minister doing exactly that.
While Trump was threatening Canada, while he was tweeting insults, while he was treating the Canadian relationship like it was some kind of reality television subplot, Carney was quietly building redundancy into Canada's trade relationships. He was on the phone with European leaders, he was finalizing agreements with Asian markets. He was systematically constructing an economic framework that does not require American cooperation to succeed. And now we are seeing the results.
The Canadian dollar has surged in the last 24 hours. Surged because global markets are looking at what Carney has built, and they are saying, "That is a stable economy. That is an economy with diversified partnerships. That is an economy that is not going to be held hostage by American political instability." Meanwhile, the S&P 500 material sector in the United States has seen a decline. American companies that rely on Canadian resources are watching their stock prices drop because investors understand that the easy access to Canadian materials is over.
And then, as if to put an exclamation point on all of this, there is the phone call that did not happen. Reports indicate that Donald Trump attempted to call Mark Carney directly, probably to yell, probably to threaten, probably to do whatever it is that Trump does when he realizes he has completely lost control of a situation. Carney's office released a statement, professional, diplomatic, devastating. The prime minister's schedule did not permit a direct phone call, though formal diplomatic channels remain open. Read between those lines.
Carney is saying, "I do not have time for your tantrums. If the United States wants to have an actual diplomatic conversation through proper channels, we are willing to do that.
But I am not going to get on the phone so you can scream at me." This is a complete inversion of the power dynamic that has defined United States-Canada relations for generations.
Canada is not asking for permission.
Canada is not begging for access to American markets.
Canada is moving forward with or without the United States, and they are making it very clear that American cooperation is optional. Now, I want to bring this back to what this actually means for people living in the United States because it is easy to talk about trade frameworks and diplomatic channels, but this has real consequences for real people.
If you are trying to buy a house, and millions of Americans are, those construction costs are going up. That 17% increase in material costs gets passed on to you. The already unaffordable housing market just got worse because of decisions made by an administration that thought threatening Canada was good policy. If you rely on generic medications, and tens of millions of Americans do, you might start noticing that your pharmacy cannot fill your prescription as easily as they used to. You might face delays.
You might face shortages.
Because Canada has decided that supplying their own population and their new European partners is a higher priority than supplying a country that has spent years treating them with contempt. If you work in manufacturing, particularly in the automotive sector, your company is probably already feeling the pressure of Canadian suppliers redirecting capacity elsewhere. That might mean production slowdowns, that might mean layoffs, that might mean your job becomes less secure because the stable supply chains we took for granted are falling apart. Let me come back to that number.
40% reduction in economic reliance on the United States within 2 years.
I want you to think about what that actually requires.
Canada is not just making minor adjustments. They are fundamentally restructuring their entire economic orientation. They are building new partnerships, they are investing in new infrastructure, they are making long-term commitments to markets that are not the United States.
And the reason they can do this, the reason this is even possible, is because the rest of the world is willing to work with Canada. Europe wants these partnerships. Asia wants these partnerships.
Latin America wants these partnerships.
Because Canada is seen as a stable, reliable partner.
Canada is not imposing illegal tariffs.
Canada is not threatening allies. Canada is not lurching from one crisis to another based on what their leader saw on television that morning. The United States under Trump has become the unreliable partner.
We have become the country that other nations need to protect themselves from.
And that is a complete reversal of the post-World War II order that made American prosperity possible.
I have been looking at the economic data that has come out in just the last few hours and it is stunning how quickly markets are responding to this.
Canadian export numbers to Asia are already showing increases. These are not projected increases. These are actual transactions that have already happened.
Canadian lumber that would have gone to the United States is on ships heading to China, to Japan, to South Korea.
Canadian pharmaceutical products are being rerouted to European distribution networks.
And on the American side, inventory levels are starting to show strain.
Companies that assumed they would always have access to Canadian supplies are realizing that assumption was wrong.
They are scrambling to find alternative sources. They are paying premium prices for materials they used to get at reasonable rates.
They are rewriting contracts and revising projections and trying to figure out how to operate in this new reality. The bond markets are starting to price in the risk of American economic isolation.
We are seeing shifts in currency valuations that reflect a loss of confidence in American economic management. This is not speculation.
This is money moving based on what sophisticated investors think is going to happen next. And where is Donald Trump in all of this?
According to sources, and these are sources who have been reliable throughout this period, he is absolutely enraged. He is furious that the Supreme Court stripped away his tariff authority.
He is furious that his attempt to use a different legal mechanism is being challenged by half the states in the country. And he is especially furious that Mark Carney will not get on the phone with him. Because in Trump's mind, he should be able to pick up the phone and bully foreign leaders into doing what he wants.
That is how he thinks diplomacy works.
That is how he thinks economic policy works.
You threaten, you insult, you leverage American power, and other countries fall in line. Except Canada is not falling in line. Canada is walking away.
And Trump has no idea what to do about it because bullying only works if the other side needs you more than you need them. And it is becoming very clear, very quickly, that the United States needs Canada more than Canada needs the United States.
The tactical incompetence here is breathtaking. Trump spent years antagonizing Canada.
He called Trudeau weak.
He imposed tariffs that the Supreme Court has now ruled were illegal. He treated the Canadian relationship like it was disposable.
And now, facing a prime minister who actually understands economics, Trump is discovering that actions have consequences. Let me explain why what Mark Carney is doing is so strategically brilliant. Because this is not just about retaliating against Trump. This is about fundamentally repositioning Canada for the next 50 years.
Carney understands that economic dependence is a vulnerability.
As long as Canada was heavily reliant on the United States, Canadian policy was constrained by what Washington might do.
Every decision had to account for potential American retaliation. Every negotiation started from a position of weakness because the United States could threaten access to American markets.
By diversifying Canada's trade relationships, Carney is eliminating that vulnerability.
If the United States wants to impose tariffs, fine.
Canada has other markets.
If the United States wants to make threats, fine. Canada is not dependent on American goodwill anymore.
And he is doing this at the exact right moment.
Global markets are looking for alternatives to American instability.
Europe is trying to reduce its own dependence on unpredictable American policy.
Asia is building new trade frameworks that do not center on the United States.
Canada is positioning itself as the stable North American partner that other countries can rely on.
This is the kind of long-term strategic thinking that is completely absent from American policy right now.
Trump thinks in terms of the next news cycle. Carney is thinking in terms of the next generation. I want to go deeper on the pharmaceutical issue because I do not think people understand how serious this is about to become.
Canada produces a significant portion of the generic medications that Americans rely on.
We are talking about everything from common antibiotics to blood pressure medications to treatments for chronic conditions. These are not luxury items.
These are medications that people need to survive.
And right now, those production lines are being redirected. Canadian pharmaceutical companies are prioritizing domestic needs, which makes sense. They're fulfilling contracts with European partners, which makes sense.
And what is left over for the United States is becoming less and less.
The northern United States is already seeing supply constraints.
Pharmacies are having trouble filling prescriptions.
Patients are being told to wait.
And this is just the beginning.
If Canada follows through on that 40% reduction in economic dependence, if pharmaceutical production continues to shift away from American markets, we are looking at a potential public health crisis. We are looking at millions of Americans who might not be able to access medications they need because Trump decided to blow up the Canadian relationship for political points.
And the truly infuriating part is that this was completely avoidable.
Canada was a willing partner.
Canada wanted good relations.
All the United States had to do was treat Canada with basic respect and maintain stable trade policies.
That is it.
That was the bar. And Trump could not clear it. The lumber situation is going to hit Americans even faster than the pharmaceutical issue. Construction projects that are starting right now are already facing that 17% cost increase.
Developers are revising budgets. Some projects are being delayed or canceled because the math no longer works. And think about the timing of this. The United States is already in a housing affordability crisis.
Millions of Americans cannot afford to buy homes. Rent is consuming a larger and larger percentage of household income.
And now construction costs are spiking because Canadian lumber is going to Asia instead of the United States.
This is going to make the housing crisis worse, significantly worse. New construction is going to slow down because it is less profitable. The houses that do get built are going to be more expensive.
And all of this is happening because of a trade policy that the Supreme Court has now ruled was illegal in the first place. Canadian lumber companies are not doing this to hurt Americans. They are doing this because Asian buyers are offering better prices and more stable long-term contracts. They are making rational business decisions.
And the reason those Asian contracts are more attractive is because Asian countries are not threatening to blow up trade relationships every few months.
The automotive sector situation might be the most economically devastating in the short term. Modern car manufacturing is built on incredibly complex supply chains. A single vehicle might have parts from dozens of different suppliers across multiple countries.
And a significant number of those suppliers are Canadian.
When those Canadian suppliers redirect capacity to European and Asian contracts, American automakers cannot just snap their fingers and find replacements.
These are specialized components. These are relationships that have been built over decades. These are production processes that are integrated across borders, and now those relationships are being severed.
Not because Canada wants to destroy American manufacturing, but because European and Asian automakers are offering more favorable terms.
They are offering stability.
They are offering long-term partnerships that are not subject to the whims of American political chaos. American automakers are going to face production delays. They are going to face increased costs. Some plants might have to slow down or temporarily shut down while they scramble to find alternative suppliers.
And all of that translates to job losses.
Real people losing real jobs because of decisions made in Washington that prioritize political posturing over economic stability. I mentioned earlier that the Canadian dollar has surged.
I want to explain what that means because currency movements are one of the most honest indicators of what global markets actually think is happening. When a currency surges, it means investors want to hold that currency. It means they think that economy is strong, that it is stable, that it is a good place to put money.
The Canadian dollar is surging because global investors are looking at Carney's strategy and saying, "That is smart.
That is an economy that is reducing risk.
That is an economy that is building sustainable partnerships."
Meanwhile, the United States dollar is facing pressure. Not collapse, the dollar is still the global reserve currency, but pressure because investors are starting to price in the risk of American economic isolation.
They are looking at illegal tariffs and Supreme Court battles and half the states suing the federal government, and they are thinking, "Maybe we need to reduce our exposure to American instability."
This is how empires decline, not with dramatic collapses, but with slow erosion. Other countries stop seeing you as essential. They build relationships that do not include you. They reduce their dependence on your markets and over time your influence diminishes.
That is what is happening right now.
Canada is actively reducing its dependence on the United States and the rest of the world is helping them do it because they also want alternatives to American unpredictability.
So, what happens next?
Because this is not over. This is actually just beginning. Canada is committed to that 40% reduction over 2 years. That means we are going to see continued diversification of Canadian trade relationships. More agreements with Europe, more agreements with Asia, more agreements with Latin America.
And each of those agreements represents economic activity that used to flow through the United States but does not anymore.
American industries are going to continue facing supply disruptions.
Construction costs are going to keep rising. Pharmaceutical shortages are going to get worse. Automotive production is going to face ongoing challenges and all of this is going to feed into inflation, into unemployment, into economic metrics that affect every single American.
Trump is going to keep trying to find ways to retaliate. He is going to keep looking for legal mechanisms to impose tariffs. He is going to keep threatening. He is going to keep insulting.
Because that is all he knows how to do.
But none of it is going to work because Canada has already made the strategic decision to move on. They're not negotiating. They're not asking for permission. They are executing a plan that has been months or maybe years in the making.
And the other countries that are partnering with Canada are going to continue supporting this because it serves their interests, too.
Europe wants a reliable North American partner that is not the United States.
Asia wants diversified supply chains that are not subject to American political chaos. Everyone benefits from Canada's independence except the United States. That phone call that did not happen, Carney refusing to take Trump's call, that is going to echo in diplomatic circles for a long time.
Because it signals something that other countries have been afraid to do.
It signals that you can say no to the United States.
For decades, the assumption has been that when the United States calls, you answer. When the president wants a conversation, you make time.
Not because of respect necessarily, but because of power. Because saying no to the United States came with consequences. Canada just said no and nothing catastrophic happened. Canada's economy did not collapse. Trade did not stop. The world kept turning.
Other countries are watching this very carefully.
They are watching Canada successfully reduce dependence on the United States.
They are watching Canada build alternative partnerships.
They are watching the United States struggle to respond effectively. And they are thinking maybe we can do this, too.
This is how alliances crumble.
This is how global influence erodes.
One country at a time realizes they do not need to accept American dominance anymore.
One country at a time builds the relationships and infrastructure to operate independently and suddenly the United States is not the indispensable nation anymore. Now, I want to address the narrative that you are going to hear from pro-Trump media and from Republican politicians who are desperately trying to defend this disaster. They are going to say that Canada is being unreasonable.
They are going to say that Carney is the aggressor.
They are going to try to frame this as Canada attacking the United States rather than Canada protecting itself from American instability.
Do not believe it. Look at the timeline.
Look at who imposed illegal tariffs.
Look at who threatened allies.
Look at who treated trade relationships like they were disposable.
Canada spent years trying to maintain good relations. Canada negotiated in good faith. Canada gave the United States every opportunity to be a reliable partner.
And in response, Trump imposed tariffs that the Supreme Court has now ruled were illegal, insulted Canadian leaders, and treated the entire relationship with contempt.
Carney's response is not aggression.
It is basic economic self-defense.
It is a country recognizing that they cannot build their prosperity on the foundation of American stability because American stability does not exist right now. I mentioned that 24 states are suing to block Trump's latest tariff attempt. I want to emphasize what that means.
Half the states in the country are taking legal action against the president's economic policy. These are not just blue states.
These are states across the political spectrum that have looked at what Trump is trying to do and said, "This is illegal and we will not allow it."
Because those states understand that their economies depend on stable trade relationships. Their businesses need access to Canadian resources. Their workers need supply chains that function.
When half your own country is suing you to stop your economic policy, that is a sign that the policy is catastrophically bad. That is a sign that you have lost the consent of the governed.
That is a sign that what you are doing is so destructive that even political allies cannot support it.
And yet Trump is going to keep pushing.
He's going to keep trying to find ways around the Supreme Court. He is going to keep trying to impose his will through executive authority.
Because admitting that he was wrong, admitting that his approach failed, is something Trump is psychologically incapable of doing.
Let me come back to that $175 billion refund liability that the Treasury is facing because that number is so large that it is hard to comprehend what it actually means.
$175 billion. That is money that was collected through tariffs that the Supreme Court has now ruled were illegal. That money has to be paid back to businesses, to importers, to everyone who paid those tariffs.
Where is that money going to come from?
It is going to come from taxpayers.
It is going to come from cuts to programs. It is going to come from increased deficits and debt. Because the federal government does not have a spare $175 billion sitting around. So, American taxpayers are going to pay for Trump's illegal tariffs twice. Once when the tariffs increase prices on goods and again when the Treasury has to issue refunds using taxpayer money.
This is the cost of incompetence.
This is the cost of pursuing economic policy that is so obviously illegal that even a conservative Supreme Court struck it down. And every single American is going to bear that cost.
I want to zoom out for a moment and talk about why this matters beyond just economics. Because what we are watching is a fundamental test of whether democratic institutions can constrain executive power.
Trump imposed tariffs using authority he did not have. The Supreme Court said those tariffs were illegal.
Trump immediately tried to find a different legal mechanism to do the same thing. Half the states are now suing to stop him. This is a constitutional crisis playing out in slow motion.
This is a president who believes he has unlimited authority to reshape the economy regardless of what the law says.
And the only thing standing between Trump and complete economic chaos is a combination of courts and state governments willing to say no.
If Trump succeeds in finding a way around the Supreme Court ruling, if he manages to impose these tariffs despite being told they are illegal, then we have established that the president can do whatever he wants as long as he keeps trying different legal justifications until something sticks.
That is not democracy. That is not rule of law.
That is authoritarianism with a thin legal veneer.
And Canada is watching this. The whole world is watching this.
They are watching American democratic institutions struggle to contain a president who does not respect legal constraints.
And they are making rational decisions to reduce their dependence on a country where the rule of law is becoming optional. I've not talked enough about the European component of Canada's strategy. This is crucial.
Canada is not just diversifying to Asia.
They are strengthening ties with Europe in ways that directly compete with American interests. European countries are eager for these partnerships.
They have spent the last several years dealing with their own Trump-related chaos. They remember Trump insulting NATO allies. They remember trade threats.
They remember being treated with the same contempt that Canada has endured.
So, when Canada comes to Europe and says, "We want to build stable, long-term trade relationships that are not subject to American political volatility." Europe says, "Yes."
immediately. Because Europe wants exactly the same thing.
Canadian resources that used to go to the United States are now going to Europe. Canadian manufacturing capacity is being redirected to serve European markets.
Canadian diplomatic energy is being invested in strengthening transatlantic partnerships that exclude the United States. This is a geopolitical realignment. This is not just about trade numbers.
This is about Canada choosing to orient itself toward partners who treat them with respect and offer stability. And the United States is not one of those partners right now.
The Asian component might be even more significant in the long term.
Asia is the fastest growing economic region in the world.
Asian countries are building sophisticated supply chains and trade networks. And Canada is positioning itself as a key partner in those networks.
Chinese buyers are paying premium prices for Canadian lumber.
Japanese companies are securing long-term contracts for Canadian resources. South Korean manufacturers are partnering with Canadian suppliers.
These are not temporary arrangements.
These are strategic partnerships that are designed to last for decades.
And once those partnerships are established, once those supply chains are built, they do not just disappear.
Even if the United States somehow manages to stabilize its trade policy, even if Trump is replaced by someone competent, Canada is not going to abandon profitable Asian partnerships to return to exclusive dependence on American markets. This is permanent economic restructuring.
This is Canada recognizing that the future of global trade is in Asia, not in a declining United States that cannot maintain stable relationships with its closest allies.
If you are watching this and you are American, I need you to understand something fundamental.
This is not Canada's fault. This is not Mark Carney being unreasonable.
This is the direct, predictable, inevitable consequence of Trump's approach to trade policy. You cannot threaten your closest allies and expect them to remain dependent on you.
You cannot impose illegal tariffs and expect there to be no consequences.
You cannot treat trade relationships with contempt and expect other countries to prioritize your economic needs.
Canada gave the United States every opportunity to be a reliable partner.
And the United States under Trump chose chaos instead, chose illegal tariffs instead, chose insults and threats instead. What Carney is doing is protecting Canada from American instability. That is his job. His job is to ensure Canadian economic prosperity and security.
And he has correctly determined that Canadian prosperity cannot be built on the foundation of American reliability because American reliability does not exist.
This should be a wake-up call for every American.
We are watching our closest ally, our largest trading partner, a country that shares the longest undefended border in the world with us, systematically reduce their dependence on our economy because they have concluded that we are not trustworthy.
That is devastating. That is a condemnation of American leadership that should shame everyone who supported these policies. Is there a way to fix this? Theoretically, yes.
The United States could acknowledge that the tariffs were illegal and destructive. We could commit to stable, predictable trade policies. We could treat Canada with the respect that our closest ally deserves.
We could invest in rebuilding the trust that has been destroyed, but none of that is going to happen under Trump. He is constitutionally incapable of admitting error.
He is going to keep threatening. He is going to keep trying to find legal mechanisms to impose his will. He is going to keep treating Canada with contempt.
And every day that continues, Canada is going to get further along in their diversification strategy. More European partnerships, more Asian contracts, more infrastructure built around trade relationships that do not include the United States. There might come a point where even a competent American administration cannot reverse this damage because Canada will have built an economy that does not need the United States.
And why would they voluntarily return to dependence on a partner that has proven to be unreliable?
I want to come back to that $47 billion figure from the title.
That is the estimated immediate economic impact of Canada's retaliation and diversification strategy. $47 billion in redirected trade, in supply chain disruptions, in increased costs for American businesses, $47 billion.
And that is just the beginning.
That is just the immediate impact. The long-term cost of losing Canada as a reliable trading partner is going to be measured in the hundreds of billions or trillions over time.
American construction companies are paying more for lumber. American pharmaceutical companies are facing supply constraints. American automakers are scrambling to replace Canadian suppliers.
American consumers are going to pay higher prices for everything from housing to medication to vehicles.
All of that economic pain is a direct result of Trump's trade policy, and it is going to get worse before it gets better because Canada is not backing down.
Carney is not going to take Trump's phone call and agree to return to the old relationship. That option is gone. So, here is where we are. Canada has declared economic independence from the United States. They have built the partnerships to make that independence sustainable.
They have a prime minister who understands economics at a level that completely outmatches anything happening in Washington.
And they have made the strategic calculation that their future prosperity does not require American cooperation.
The United States is facing supply disruptions across multiple industries.
We are facing $175 billion in refund liability for illegal tariffs. We are facing lawsuits from half the states in the country. We are watching our currency face pressure as global markets price in American instability.
And we have a president who has no idea how to respond except with more threats and more attempts to find legal mechanisms to do things the Supreme Court has already said are illegal.
This is what decline looks like.
Not a sudden collapse, but a steady erosion of relationships and influence.
Allies deciding they do not need us.
Markets deciding we are not reliable.
Other countries building the partnerships and infrastructure to operate without us. Canada just took a massive step in that direction.
And the rest of the world is watching and learning.
If Canada can successfully reduce dependence on the United States, if they can build prosperity without American partnership, then maybe everyone can.
That is the legacy Trump is building, not American greatness, American isolation. And we are all going to pay the price for it.
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