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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gg cox who wrote (216214)8/29/2025 10:08:09 AM
From: Maple MAGA 3 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
maceng2
Pogeu Mahone

  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 217613
 
Canadian Corruption




To: gg cox who wrote (216214)9/4/2025 1:00:45 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 217613
 
Canada will thank U.S. President Donald Trump in 20 years, former Quebec premier says

By The Canadian Press

September 03, 2025 at 12:03PM EDT



Former Quebec premier Jean Charest speaks to reporters at a business luncheon on relations with the United States, in Quebec City, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot

QUÉBEC — Jean Charest says Canada will eventually thank U.S. President Donald Trump for providing the country with a much-needed economic shakeup.

The Quebec premier between 2003 and 2012 told business leaders in Quebec City on Tuesday that Trump is pulling Canada out of its “lethargy” and forcing its leaders to rethink the economy.

Charest is now a member of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s council on Canada-U.S. relations.He says Trump and his tariff war are forcing Canada to review its tax system, economy and the way it carries out major projects.

The ex-premier adds that Canada needs to reduce its dependence on the United States and expand into new markets.

Charest suggested the country under Carney’s leadership will accelerate big projects, rethink federalism, and redefine the country’s role in the world.

“I’m from the school of thought that we’ll thank Donald Trump in 20 years for shaking us up in Canada and bringing us out of our lethargy,” he said Tuesday in a speech at a Quebec City hotel. “It’s high time we rethink our economy.”

---

Thomas Laberge, The Canadian Press

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 3, 2025.



To: gg cox who wrote (216214)10/20/2025 10:03:36 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

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longz

  Respond to of 217613
 
Carney is finishing the job Trudeau started. R.I.P. CANADA

Canada tells pension funds to invest at home in age of ‘economic nationalism’ Industry minister wants financial institutions to help cut country’s economic dependence on the US



By Ilya Gridneff in Toronto and Mary McDougall in London

Published 22 hours ago

Canada is calling on its C$3tn (US$2.1tn) pension system to boost domestic investment as it seeks C$500bn in new finance to reboot the economy and lower its dependence on the US.

Industry minister Mélanie Joly told the Financial Times the new wave of “economic nationalism” means Canada’s financial institutions must foster homegrown investments and major infrastructure projects to kick-start the country’s sluggish economy.

“I’ve had lots of conversations with our banks, and our pension funds. There’s a sentiment that we need to think about Canada first and that we need to put capital where our mouth is,” she said.

This month Joly launched an industrial strategy aimed at creating jobs and attracting foreign investment in response to US President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canada.

“For a long time pension funds have said that they need to provide yields to their beneficiaries?.?.?.?but they can have a discussion with their beneficiaries about their impact in their own country, their own environment, where beneficiaries live,” she said.

Like the UK, Canada has been examining how to channel more pension assets to domestic targets to combat weak productivity and poor business investment.

Last year more than 90 Canadian corporate executives signed an open letter calling on the government to amend rules which would allow them to increase domestic investments, saying the amount they allocated to Canadian equities had dwindled from 28 per cent in 2000 to 4 per cent by 2023.

Ottawa in December lifted its 30 per cent cap for investments in Canadian entities at a time when Trump was threatening tariffs and trade wars against its major trading partner.

“This will make it easier for Canadian pension funds to make significant investments in Canadian entities,” said the finance ministry’s Fall Economic Statement.

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, the country’s largest fund with C$714bn of assets, revealed its total allocation to Canadian assets dropped to 12 per cent of the fund in March from 14 per cent two years earlier, although the total value of Canadian assets still increased.

But Paul Beaudry, a former Bank of Canada deputy governor, warned forcing funds to invest locally was “very dangerous” as it risked creating “a type of crony capitalism”.

Beaudry said the government could identify either socially beneficial projects or mid-level companies that big funds overlooked for investment.

“I’m not against pushing it but I like it to be more on the incentive part than on the idea of kind of forcing it,” he said. Prime Minister Mark Carney launched a “Buy Canada” campaign last month that prioritises local products for procurement as a way to make Canada “the strongest economy in the G7”.

It is an ambitious goal considering the country’s economy shrunk more than expected in the second quarter while exports fell 7.5 per cent compared with the first three months of the year because of the tariffs, according to Statistics Canada.

Canada has also set up its Major Projects Office to fast track national infrastructure proposals and to create a positive investment environment for financial institutions such as its pension funds.

The government is also potentially lowering the 90 per cent threshold that limits municipal-owned utilities from attracting more than 10 per cent private sector ownership, in particular from Canadian pension funds.

CPP Investments has nearly 50 per cent of all its assets invested in the US, despite pressure from Ottawa to invest more in its home market.

Similarly Omers, the pension fund for Ontarian municipal workers with C$141bn of assets, had 16 per cent invested in Canada and 55 per cent invested in the US at the end of June.

“Dozens of policymakers have frequently commented in recent years about welcoming more investments into Canada and our approach remains unwavering and steadfast,” CPP Investments said.

“We act in the best interests of contributors and beneficiaries in line with the pension promise.” CPP Investments in July announced a C$225mn investment in a new data centre in Cambridge, Ontario.

It also has a $1.7bn investment in Canadian Natural Resources, the country’s largest energy producer.

Other Canadian funds have a higher domestic allocation, such as the C$123bn Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan, which has more than 55 per cent of assets invested in Canada, and the C$270bn Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan which has 36 per cent.



To: gg cox who wrote (216214)10/21/2025 3:34:13 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217613
 
Reposted by Clarice Feldman on Facebook. Much truth here.

"Something strange is happening in America’s most affluent zip codes. In suburban living rooms once filled with optimism and The West Wing reruns, a certain demographic—well-heeled, college-educated white boomer women—is staging what they seem to think is the final battle for the Republic.

These women, dubbed Resistance Grandmas, aren’t fringe radicals. They’re PTA presidents emeritus, NPR tote-bag collectors, and retired therapists. But now, in the twilight of their years, they’ve taken up the cause of Saving Democracy™ with the same zeal they once reserved for banning plastic straws and praising Obama’s tan suit.

Their political worldview is a curious patchwork—part To Kill a Mockingbird, part The Handmaid’s Tale, with a dash of MSNBC-induced paranoia. Their grievances are abundant, though loosely connected: Trump is a fascist, climate change is an extinction-level event, bathroom policy is civil rights 2.0, and Elon Musk is probably the Antichrist.

None of this is deeply thought through, of course. It doesn’t need to be. The slogans are enough. Democracy is at stake. Nazis are back. Orange Man bad.

But what’s actually driving this hysteria is more psychological than political. Deep down, many of these women sense something slipping away—not just political control, but the very narrative of their lives.

They were promised progress, justice, utopia. The Great Society. Roe forever. A society where everyone listens to NPR and agrees on the science. Instead, they see the country rejecting their values, their party flailing, and their own children rolling their eyes at their activism.

And so, without the flexibility to adapt or accept that the world has changed, they cling to pre-fabricated evils—fascism, racism, Christian nationalism—as explanations. Not because those terms mean anything coherent, but because they provide moral clarity in a moment that no longer makes sense to them.

It’s a reaction not unlike that of the old Party diehards at the end of the Soviet Union: the project has clearly failed, but the faithful still believe, still chant, still blame external enemies. If only but for capitalism… becomes If only but for Trump.

So they take to the streets with signs and slogans and fury. They join book clubs that double as war councils. They tattle on their old friends to the FBI, convinced they are doing their part to fight the Fourth Reich.

One 74-year-old proudly told a focus group that she reported a lifelong friend to the authorities after she learned she'd entered the Capitol on Jan. 6. Not to vandalize, not to riot—just to look around. “It wasn’t an open house!” she snapped, drawing cheers from the other Chardonnay Jacobins.

This is not politics. This is late-life existential panic dressed up as moral crusade.

Their children are voting Trump. Their grandsons are quoting Joe Rogan. The country is drifting, in their view, toward madness—not because it is, but because it's no longer revolving around them.

And so they rage. Loudly. Self-importantly. With bumper stickers, protest signs, and a self-satisfaction that only comes from knowing you are on the right side of history, even as history packs up and moves on.

There’s something tragic about it, really. These Resistance Grandmas arrived in the 1960s marching for peace and love. They’ll leave this world in the 2020s muttering about white supremacy, hunting down Trump voters like Cold War informants, and trying to find a moral compass in the op-ed section of The Atlantic.

The truth is, the postwar liberal consensus is dying. Slowly. Loudly. Sometimes with a hand-knitted pink hat on. And deep down, these women know it.

Their protests aren’t signs of power—they're eulogies.
Their moral absolutism isn’t strength—it’s fear.
Their obsession with Trump isn’t resistance—it’s grief.

And while their determination is, in a way, admirable, their political derangement is increasingly unhealthy and, yes, undignified.

All things pass. Even boomers with graduate degrees and Facebook accounts."



To: gg cox who wrote (216214)10/21/2025 3:43:30 AM
From: Maple MAGA   Respond to of 217613
 
According to The Globe and Mail:

Can Carney do the hard things needed to save Canada?

By John Turley-Ewart Special to The Globe and Mail

Published Yesterday Updated 2 hours ago



It’s not going well.

The depth of despair in Ottawa over tariffs and trade talks with the U.S. has inspired a sudden conviction that “competition” is the new “sustainability.”

Canada’s climate-change strategy is now a “climate-competitiveness strategy” according to Prime Minister Mark Carney.

On top of that, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne is apparently convinced “Competition drives better outcomes for consumers,” a sentiment echoed by Bank of Canada officials to give it greater effect.

And Mélanie Joly, the country’s Innovation Minister, is promising “This government will be hawkish on competition.”

What Mr. Carney’s government is promising is competition, but not necessarily competition if it comes with a political price.

Canadians expected Mr. Carney to elbow his way into the Oval Office after his party won the April federal election and in short order score a winning trade deal with President Donald Trump.

Mr. Carney anticipated a deal by July 21, then Aug. 1, then, well, nobody is sure any more.

As Canadians linger in trade-talk darkness, Canada continues to take a barrage of targeted tariffs on softwood lumber, steel and aluminum.

We apparently have so little leverage with the U.S. that Mr. Trump’s Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick, is at liberty to deliver pointed and public insults, recently saying to a meeting of Canadian leaders that second is good enough for Canada, the free-trade era is dead and that the U.S. does not want Canadian-made cars.

If Canadians thought Mr. Lutnick was blowing smoke, Stellantis put that to rest last week when it closed the door on producing the Jeep Compass at its Brampton, Ont., plant that employs 3,000 while simultaneously throwing a public-relations party celebrating its US$13-billion investment in America and the 5,000 jobs it will create there.

Lest it be forgotten, cultivating oligopolies rather than competition is more Canada’s economic forte.

We have a banking oligopoly, an insurance oligopoly, a telecom oligopoly, an airline oligopoly, a retail-grocery oligopoly, big oil, big rail and a beer oligopoly too.

The polite Laurentian Elite term for this is “national champions” and they are very good at holding new entrants at bay.

The 20 largest companies in Canada are on average about 110 years old and have long been seen by governments of various stripes as critical to Canadian national sovereignty, especially in times of trade wars with the U.S.

#Canada #ClimateScam #Inflation #US #WorldEconomicForum

(edited)