- Reaction score
- 1,404
- Points
- 1,160
The Liberals want negotiations to fail. Then Capt Canada can run on standing up to the evil Trump.
Remius said:Once again, it does not matter one way or another. Who cares. it isn't stalling anything nor is it a point of contention nor is it a show stopper at this point.
There are some circles that want to see Trudeau fail and they want it to be because of some made up BS about it being about gender and indigenous rights because deep down those same circles hate the concept of those things to begin with so want the narrative to go there.
Sunset clause, dispute resolution, supply management and intellectual cultural protections. Those are the real problems.
Rifleman62 said:The Head: read reply 393. Bet you a beer I am correct.
Bird_Gunner45 said:So you'd prefer Canada cowtow Trump, who has proven that he doesn't feel agreements need to be adhered to?
GR66 said:At the very least it looks like our side seriously misread the situation.
Rifleman62 said:The Head: read reply 393. Bet you a beer I am correct.
Rifleman62 said:No. It isn't cow towing, which is really naive statement IMHO. It's like saying everything is Harper's fault, or you are raciest if you disagree with a point of view. The US is our largest by far trading partner. They hold the big stick, not us. For the last 13 months Canada sent the Z team to negotiate with the experienced AAA team.
The intellectual cultural protections I think, is something new Canada threw in. Possibly it was there for the last 13 months.
Too bad our MSN is in bed with Trudeau. Notice, it appears to me, that the headlines of something not positive for the Trudeau government is: "Ottawa"; not "Trudeau's government", or the "Liberal government"? Remember Harper? Everything was "Harper". Note the photos on e.g. CBC web page of the hundreds at Trudeau's Saskatoon townhall the other day. Actually there were dozens. There is proof of this on the net.
Personally, I find it very humorous when people say they boycotting products from the US. Impossible. They obviously don't even watch TV, or listen to music, drive a vehicle, drink a double double, eat fresh fruit/veg in the winter, etc, etc.
Say what you will re Trump, but he is getting things done, while Canada's economy is sliding downward, investment is leaving.
The Liberals do what's best for the Liberals: what's good for Canada maybe secondary (after the liberal bagmen are looked after )
Personally I am sick of Trudeau's shtick of loose tie, partially rolled up sleeves. His idea of a middle income man of the people. Something he never was, and will never be. His voice, his attempt at speech is aggravating.
When you elect a part time drama teacher, snowboarder, what you get is Canada going downhill, fast.
Rant.
Jarnhamar said:Like our prime minister's 40 some broken campaign promises? Or are those not agreements.
Trudeau's campaign played big on gender equality and indigenous rights.
Once again we see how important those truly are to our government when push comes to shove.
Personally I believe those along with our countries current foreign affairs and negeoiations team very much play into this threads theme. Including opening thrown away clauses. It adds insult to injury for people that actually believe in it.Bird_Gunner45 said:Trudeau's broken promises or abject failure aren't the subject of this particular thread.
Exactly. The government shouldn't be given a pass for that behavior, especially considering what's at stake.The gender equality and indigenous rights being built into NAFTA were clearly childish.
Agreed.Chapter 19 is important. Supply management could be taken away.
Canada, U.S. have reached a NAFTA deal, senior Canadian source says
tomahawk6 said:This is also being reported in the States.NAFTA IS ALIVE !!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/canada-us-reach-deal-to-save-nafta-as-trilateral-trade-pact/ar-BBNLRde?ocid=spartanntp
Remius said:Details are still emerging but it looks like:
Chapter 19 dispute resolution remains intact.
Cultural protections remain intact.
No sunset clause.
All wins for Canada.
In exchange for: more US access to the dairy industry similar to what was conceded with CETA.
But no protection against retaliatory tariffs although it seems that Canada has manage dans to get some degree against auto tariffs.
Overall it looks like Canada can claim a good win on this.
Remius said:Overall it looks like Canada can claim a good win on this.