Monday, May 12, 2025

Keeping Up The Pressure


Despite their president's avowals that Canada has nothing the U.S. needs,  many Americans are discovering (much to their shock, I'm sure) otherwise. As I have written before, Trump's threats to our sovereignty, his open contempt for our country, his extortionate, Mafia-like tariffs have all stiffened Canadians' resolve to assert their national pride and show their anger toward the U.S.

In addition to widespread boycotts of American products, perhaps the most obvious and stinging rebuke is Canadians' ongoing refusal to travel to that country.

Travel by Canadians coming back from trips to the U.S. dropped sharply in April, according to preliminary data from Statistics Canada.

Return trips by Canadians coming back from the U.S. by air dropped by 19.9 per cent, and return via land borders dropped by a whopping 35.2 per cent compared to April of last year.

Canadian return trips by air from the U.S. in March were down 13.5 per cent compared to March 2024, and return trips by car for that month were down 31.9 per cent.

That decline has led to airlines making big schedule changes.

WestJet is pausing nine routes between the U.S. and Canada as demand dampens for travel between the two countries.

A spokesperson for the airline confirmed the following suspensions in an email to CBC News:

  • Vancouver-Austin (May through October)
  • Calgary-Fort Lauderdale; Edmonton-Chicago; St. John's-Orlando; and Winnipeg-Orlando (June)
  • Kelowna-Seattle-Tacoma; and Winnipeg-Los Angeles (June through August)
  • Edmonton-Atlanta; and Winnipeg-Las Vegas (July through August)

Westjet is not the only airline making adjustments. 

Toronto-based Porter Airlines ...  told CTVNews.ca that 80 per cent of total network capacity during the summer peak period is now dedicated to domestic flights. The figure is up from a previously planned 75 per cent.

Westjet is also scheduling more domestic flights, as we opt to patronize our own country. 

Air Canada is a bit more circumspect in discussing its changes.

When asked whether it was changing its routes or flights, Air Canada told CTVNews.ca in an email Friday that it is “adjusting capacity” to U.S. sun destinations, using smaller aircraft and reducing routes in response to the changing market demand.

“We continue to monitor demand and will make adjustments accordingly,” wrote the country’s biggest air carrier. It also said it adjusted its non-stop Vancouver-Washington Dulles flights to connect in Toronto.

It said it has experienced “some softening in the transborder market,” with bookings on the cross-border market overall down about 10 per cent from April to September.

The Montreal-based airline reduced capacity for routes to U.S. leisure destinations such as Florida, Las Vegas and Arizona, Bloomberg reported March 28.

Our product and travel boycotts, by all reports, are having tangible effects. We should take satisfaction in inflicting economic pain on the giant to the south.  The bully may be much bigger than us, but our solid, principled ways of standing up to it should gladden the patriotic hearts of all Canadians.

 

  

 

 

 

Saturday, May 10, 2025

A Chill Comes To The Neigbourhood

That chill would be the one brought by ICE agents, who descended upon a Worcester Massachusetts neighbourhood to arrest an 'undesirable'.

Police say two people were arrested when a crowd of people tried to interfere with an ICE operation in Worcester on Thursday. The incident has generated a lot of anger in the city.

Crowds swarmed around federal agents on Eureka Street as they took a woman into custody. 

A witness describes what she saw. "The mom as she was being detained too, she was screaming, I don't know if she was being hurt as she was handcuffed, but she was truly screaming," Dali RaRocha said. "Those are the screams I have truly engrained in my ears right now." 

The scene was captured on video: 


Scenes like this are becoming commonplace in Amerika, and no one seems to be immune, as New Jersey's mayor found out recently, arrested for allegedly trespassing at an ICE facility:

Newark, New Jersey mayor Ras Baraka was arrested outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in Elizabeth on Friday as the mayor and members of Congress joined demonstrations demanding answers from Donald Trump’s administration about the conditions inside, marking a major escalation of immigration protests surrounding the facility.

Videos from outside the facility shows a chaotic scene with masked federal officers pushing against a crowd in the detention center’s parking lot as Baraka is shoved towards the building and then placed in handcuffs.

New Jersey’s interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba — Trump’s personal attorney — accused the mayor of trespassing and ignoring warnings from federal law enforcement agents to leave.

Alina Habba,  a former Trump attorney and devout loyalist who is doing very well for herself (currently the interim State Attorney for New Jersey), issued a statement dripping with both irony and hypocrisy. She sanctimoniously intoned,

“He has willingly chosen to disregard the law. That will not stand in this state. He has been taken into custody. NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW”

Except her boss, of course. I'll leave it at that, as words often fail me when I try to describe the rapid and seemingly irrevocable devolution of the 'United' States into fear, suspicion, and anarchy. 

 





Thursday, May 8, 2025

They Just Don't Get It

Maybe it's because they are the 'greatest' nation on earth, if not in the entire history of the world (he said sardonically). Perhaps  they are eternal optimists, or, more possibly, incredibly stupid (my pick). Whatever the explanation, the citizens of the United States of Amerika do not understand why the number of tourists visiting their country is plummeting.

Canadian travel to the U.S. has cratered after Trump took office. In March, trips made from Canada into the U.S. plummeted by nearly a million compared to the same time last year, comprising the second consecutive month of year-over-year decreases.

The real reason for that decline will be discussed a bit later, but the Americans are doing everything they can to reverse what for them is a disastrous economic trend. Despite Trump's recent and repeated declarations that the U.S. doesn't need anything from Canada, there are many who know otherwise.

For example, New York Congresswoman Elise Stephaniuk thinks that maybe Canadians are put off by the fact that they can't stay longer while visiting her land of milk and honey. She has a remedy, having introduced

the Canadian Snowbird Visa Act, a bipartisan bill to extend the duration Canadian citizens who own or lease a residence in the United States may stay—from 182 days to 240 days annually.

“Our neighbors to the north provide more visits to the United States than any other country, and they are critically important to North Country tourism and industry,” said Congresswoman Stefanik. “Providing Canadians who own homes and property in the United States with extra time to visit and boost our economy will help revive Canadian tourism to the United States.”
Under current U.S. immigration law, Canadian citizens can only stay in the United States for up to 182 days per year without a visa. The Canadian Snowbird Visa Act would allow eligible Canadians—aged 50 and over who either own or lease a U.S. residence—to extend their stay to up to 240 days annually.

Perhaps a little more grounded in reality is California Governor Gavin Newsom's appeal to Canadians: 


Speaking of California, Palm Springs is trying to entice Canadiana back:

Earlier this month, the city of Palm Springs, Calif., put up dozens of red banners that feature a heart with a Canadian flag nestled between the words “Palm Springs” and “Canada.”


“It was a way for us to say to the Canadians that are part of our community for so many months out of the year that we appreciate them, and in light of all the unrest and emotional up-and-down, that we’re standing by their side,” Palm Springs Mayor Ron deHarte told CTVNews.ca. “We will continue to support one another and welcome them back next season, or whenever the dust settles, and everybody feels comfortable to come back.”

All of these efforts miss a central point about a major factor, in addition to Canadian nationalistic fervour, inducing people to avoid travel to the U.S. THEY DON'T FEEL SAFE!

A Leger Marketing poll, conducted on behalf of the Association for Canadian Studies, made some interesting discoveries:

The survey of 1,626 Canadians found 52 per cent of people feel “it is no longer safe for all Canadians travelling to the United States.” Twenty-nine per cent disagreed with the sentiment and 19 per cent were unsure.

This belief was felt most strongly among respondents over 55 and in residents of Atlantic Canada, British Columbia and Ontario. People aged 18 to 54 and people in Alberta were less inclined to agree.

The dangers posed to Canadians by the U.S. has been well-known for many years, unless one has been living in a media vacuum. Finally, thanks to the hostile actions of our American 'neighbours', more and more of our people are recognizing the country for what it is: an incubator of anger, instability, violence  and death, the repercussions of which we can no longer turn a blind eye to.

UPDATE: This just in, apropos to everything.





 

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Carney's Promise

Mark Carney has raised people's expectations of what is possible when it comes to nation-building. One of his preeminent promises is the rapid building of much-needed housing. Possibilities abound, and the following brief video from Portland, Oregon, suggests densification and building duplexes, triplexes and quadplexes on land formerly zoned for single family dwellings can form part of the answer.


While there is no suggestion of nimbyism in the report, it can be a formidable challenge to rapidly increasing housing stock. Ontario premier Doug Ford refuses to force municipalities to allow fourplexes. Not using provincial power to change the housing dynamics has wide ranging implications, not the least of which is local opposition to anything that changes the landscape of residential neighbourhoods, opposition that feckless municipal politicians often succumb to.

Edward Keenan writes:

On Thursday, as the press and some assembled politicians looked on, construction cranes lifted a rectangular box into the Willowdale air and manoeuvred it into place on the ground at a lot on Cummer Avenue. It was among the first pieces of what will become, by early next year, a rent-geared-to-income housing development for formerly homeless senior citizens. Construction is underway.

The key here is modular construction, with the parts being made in a factory and then assembled Lego-like at the building site.

 It’s a method that allows for faster and cheaper mass production of homes — a success story in countries such as Sweden and Japan — and combined with using government-owned land and having the government oversee the project, it promises a way through part of the logjam that constricts our housing supply.

 

The problem, however, is that the above is a project much delayed by local opposition, delayed so long that the original costs rose dramatically.

It wasn’t any problem with the construction method that caused the problems. It was politics. Local luxury home developers and NIMBY neighbours banded together to oppose the projectCynically spineless local and provincial politicians joined them. Together they used the SNAFU of regulatory and appeals processes to keep pushing construction further and further down the line. 

And while they did that, the already-completed pieces of that project sat rotting, first on a holding lot and then in a warehouse, causing the cost to go from $14.6 million to $36.3 million.

One can see that the challenges Carney faces are formidable ones. And while I understand how hard it must be for some to see the nature and character of their neighbourhoods altered, there seems to be no alternative if we are truly intent on addressing one of our most pressing national crises.