How Trump’s ‘51st State’ Canada Talk Came to Be Seen as Deadly Serious

After President Trump imposed tariffs on Canada on Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made an extraordinary statement that was largely lost in the fray of the moment.

“The excuse that he’s giving for these tariffs today of fentanyl is completely bogus, completely unjustified, completely false,” Mr. Trudeau told the news media in Ottawa.

“What he wants is to see a total collapse of the Canadian economy, because that’ll make it easier to annex us,” he added.

This is the story of how Mr. Trudeau went from thinking Mr. Trump was joking when he referred to him as “governor” and Canada as “the 51st state” in early December to publicly stating that Canada’s closest ally and neighbor was implementing a strategy of crushing the country in order to take it over.


As dictated by Katie Telford to the NYTimes. I suggest No Trudeau. No problem. And believe nothing the Liberal party says.

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This is why you never take a sip from Andrew Coyne’s drink

Canada’s frightening new reality: our next door neighbour has upended the world order

The spectacle of U.S. President Donald Trump and his toady acolyte, Vice-President JD Vance, berating Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office last week was many things: embarrassing, shameful, shocking, reckless. But to Canadians watching their performance, the astonishing scene should have evoked another reaction: fear.

“Security guarantee” means the US picks up the defense tab while Europe continues to buy Russian Oil and Gas. She’s been ratio’d and deservedly so.

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FBI offers $10m reward for ex-Olympic snowboarder turned drug kingpin

Authorities in the United States have offered a $10m reward for information that leads to the arrest of a Canadian former Olympic snowboarder-turned-international drug kingpin.

Police in Los Angeles said on Thursday that Ryan Wedding – also known as “El Jefe”, “Giant” and “Public Enemy” – is wanted for his role in a billion-dollar cross-border drug trafficking operation and for several homicides linked to his drug sprawling network.

Wedding, who the FBI said is one of the US’s top 10 most-wanted fugitives, is probably hiding in Mexico under the protection of the Sinaloa drug cartel, officials said.

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China, Russia and Iran will ‘very likely’ use AI to target Canada’s 2025 federal election, cyber agency warns

Canada’s cybersecurity protection agency is warning that China, Russia and Iran will “very likely” use artificial intelligence in an attempt to interfere with the 2025 federal election expected this spring.

The Communications Security Establishment released a report Thursday, the Cyber Threats to Canada’s Democratic Process: 2025 Update, that details the impact increasingly powerful and accessible artificial intelligence tools have had on efforts by foreign actors to spread disinformation, harass politicians and conduct espionage or interference.

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FLEMING: Reliance upon Canadian healthcare, may kill you

‘Government data collected since 2018 by SecondStreet.org, shows there have been nearly 75,000 waiting lists deaths.’

Since 2019, SecondStreet.org has been collecting data on patients dying while waiting for services in Canada’s health care system.

One of the stories that inspired this research was Laura Hillier, an 18-year-old girl from Ontario who was battling leukemia.

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Sweeping Tariffs Threaten to Undo a 30-Year Trade Alliance

When the United States signed a free-trade agreement with Canada and Mexico more than 30 years ago, the premise was that partnering with two other thriving economies would also benefit America.

This week, President Trump abruptly scrapped that idea. He imposed a sweeping 25 percent tariff on Tuesday on the roughly $1 trillion of imports that Mexico and Canada send into the United States each year as part of that North American trade pact — before quickly walking them back. On Thursday, the president signed executive orders that paused the tariffs on Canada and Mexico for a period of one month for goods that trade under the rules of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which is most trade in North America.

It’s not yet clear what will happen after that. But if the tariffs go into effect, they are expected to significantly raise costs for Canadian and Mexican exports, undermining their economies and likely tipping them into recession.

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Make Alberta America

For weeks, President Donald Trump has said that Canada should be America’s 51st state. He has mocked Canada’s economic dependence on the United States. He has condemned Canadian tariffs and trade restrictions. He has scolded Canada’s free riding on American defense. He has knocked Canada’s porous borders and drug dens. He has accused Canada of colluding with hostile foreign powers and global institutions. He has trolled our prime minister.

It’s delightful. Many Canadians are enjoying the show.

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Amy Hamm: It’s not CSIS’s job to worry about ‘Islamophobia’ accusations

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) should concern itself with identifying terrorist threats, including (and not limited to) threats from radical Islamists within our borders — and not with “Islamophobia.”

Last month, CSIS director Dan Rogers met with Canada’s special representative on combatting Islamophobia, Amira Elghawaby. The two apparently discussed how they might work together to “combat Islamophobia and all forms of hate.”

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Carson Jerema: Free trade is dead. Someone should tell the Liberals

Free trade in North America is dead. Even if the tariffs levied this week, before being put on pause Thursday, are never fully implemented, any new trade deal with the U.S. can never be trusted, at least while President Donald Trump is in the White House. Canada must operate as if it doesn’t share a border with the largest economic power in history. Much of the wealth generated in Canada comes from this simple geography, masking the true damage of this country’s anti-business delusions.

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Do not believe a word the Liberal gov’t or its media says about the scope of Canada’s role in the fentanyl trade

“Trade-Based Money Laundering is the Fentanyl Crisis”: Sources expose Chinese-Mexican-Canadian Crime Convergence

‘That famous picture of Trudeau at a Vancouver dinner with all those Chinese guys—They’re all in there’: Source on United Front money laundering suspects surveilled by US Agency

VANCOUVER and TORONTO — As debate rages over President Donald Trump’s disruptive tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China—whether they represent a genuine war on fentanyl deaths tied to each nation’s role in the deadly supply chain, or merely a pretext for U.S. trade dominance—multiple Canadian and U.S. government sources have stepped forward to highlight a factor they believe North American citizens aren’t grasping amid Trump’s political rhetoric.

They point to the staggering scale and sophistication of trade-based money laundering orchestrated by Chinese Triads in Canada and Mexican cartels. This is a predominant concern in Canada, alongside revelations of so-called fentanyl superlabs hidden in rural areas, yet easily supplied by Canadian transportation hubs—shipping, rail, and trucking networks saturated with organized crime. These sources insist this little-understood form of criminal money laundering not only fuels fentanyl trafficking—ultimately linked to a complicit Beijing—but directly finances drug shipments initiated by Chinese networks in Toronto and Vancouver, sending fentanyl, methamphetamine, and cocaine across the Mexican border into California, specifically to trucking hubs around Los Angeles.

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When it comes to energy, the U.S. has Ontario over a barrel

Donald Trump has rattled all Canadians with his threat of large tariffs on Canadian exports to the U.S. So much so, that on Dec. 16, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland resigned in part out of concern around the Trudeau government’s response to that threat. On that same day of the Freeland news tsunami, Canada’s premiers met to discuss the looming tariff threat. Coming out of that meeting Doug Ford promised the premiers will provide “steady and stable leadership” and advocated for a larger role for premiers in the tariff discussions.

h/t Mauser

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Ontario fears tariff reprieve for automakers is designed to move jobs to U.S.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he is unsure about a 30-day tariff reprieve for automakers, which he believes could be used to try and tempt companies to move their operations south of the border.

Speaking at Queen’s Park on the second day of Canada’s tariff battle with the United States, Ford said he and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau were aligned in their demand that tariffs be scrapped, not reduced or delayed.

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