MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
A Canadian asked and Will Wilkinson responded with the most obvious follow up question: Why not Mexico, too?
Such a merger makes perfect sense. No two countries on Earth are as socially and economically integrated as the U.S. and Canada. They share geography, values and a gigantic border. Their populations study, travel and do business together and intermarry in great numbers. If they were corporations (or European states), they would have merged a long time ago. And each has what the other needs: The U.S. has capital, manpower, technology and the world's strongest military; Canada has vast reserves of undeveloped resources.
[...]
Canadians have traditionally bristled at the thought of falling under the sway of the U.S., but without a deeper cross-border partnership, we face some grim existential challenges. With its small, aging population and relatively small economy, Canada lacks the resources to develop and defend its gigantic piece of real estate. Through a series of aggressive buyout attempts and transactions, China has targeted Canada's resources and empty landmass. In 2007, Russia used a small submarine to symbolically plant its flag on the ocean floor beneath the North Pole and underscore its claim to a large swath of the resource-rich Arctic, and Russian President Vladimir Putin has been pushing the U.N. to affirm his claims to the region.
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Comments
Diane Francis, who wrote the WSJ article, is trying to sell her new book. Francis, a dual citizen born in Chicago, spent decades as a business columnist and editor at the Financial Post and its successor the conservative National Post. Her arguments are purely economic, and that's the problem: the reasons Canada won't join the United States aren't economic.
Francis claims we share basic values. True, but only to a certain extent. Despite a federal government that caters increasingly to its right-wing base, most Canadians embrace gun control, universal health care, linguistic diversity, employment insurance and old-age security. We also frown on lunatic politicians (and parties) driven by religious fanaticism, homophobia, misogyny, racism, xenophobia, and wiful ignorance.
Work on those a little bit, and we'll get back to you, OK?
by acanuck on Sun, 12/08/2013 - 6:34pm
Reminds me of how Novell, Lotus and WordPerfect tried to cobble themselves together to fend off Microsoft, while Apple simply tried to do their own thing better.
by Donal on Sun, 12/08/2013 - 6:46pm
So the EU are Novell-Lotus-WordPerfect and Canada is Apple?
Please tell me we're not BlackBerry.
by acanuck on Mon, 12/09/2013 - 2:08am
Oh take pride in by-gone days. Once upon a time the Canadiens were great as well.
(we'll see how long Apple holds up post-Jobs - in Europe, Nokia's Winphone is already 10% vs. Apple's 15%)
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 12/09/2013 - 3:45am
Well the US is fracking itself and Canada is doing much the same for tar sands, so maybe they are alike.
by Donal on Mon, 12/09/2013 - 6:57am