Trump tears up relationship with America's best friend
The 1999 film “South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut” contains a rousing musical number called “Blame Canada,” in which parents of unruly children resolve to blame Canada for all their child-rearing problems.The humor in the song derived from the fact that blaming
Canada for anything seemed so absurd. They’re our kindly
northern neighbor, a more polite version of ourselves! They gave us Michael J.
Fox, and the Ryans Gosling and Reynolds, Bret “Hitman” Hart, and Shania Twain
and Celine Dion! How could we ever be mad at them?
Today, our president is blaming Canada, in an escalating
conflict driven by his most petty and vindictive impulses, doing nothing but
harm to the citizenry of both countries. It’s not a complete breakup with our
closest ally, but it’s drawing awfully close. And it isn’t hard to imagine it
getting progressively worse as we slog through the next three years.
On January 20 in Davos, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney
gave a
remarkable speech in which he all but declared the end of the post-war
order that the United States and its allies created.
The “middle powers,” he went on, have no choice but to band
together for their mutual interest, free of the delusion that they can rely on
the great powers — or, more specifically, one great power. And rather than just
lamenting what Donald Trump is destroying, he argued that it was always
something of a lie.
“Stop invoking rules-based international order as though it
still functions as advertised,” he said. “Call it what it is: a system of
intensifying great power rivalry where the most powerful pursue their interests
using economic integration as coercion.”
Not surprisingly, Trump didn’t take it well. The day after
Carney’s speech, he
said, “I watched your prime minister yesterday. He wasn’t so grateful —
they should be grateful to the US, Canada. Canada lives because of the United
States. Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.”
















