Canada strategically realigning

Germany and Norway Give Up Own Sub Slots for Canada - Shared Arctic Fleet


 
Hard to believe how much trump has achieved in his first year.

Someone should give that rapey, racist, misogynistic, imbecilic, corrupt orange traitor a "special" achievement award…

😑

🤬

We. Told. Them. So.

🌷
 
Well, there are unions within the EU as well, and some of those might be worth a closer look.

The NB8 group for instance.
That would be the Nordics and the Baltics.

We are going to work a lot closer together, buying defense equipment together, coordinating more, generally moving more like one unit.

Why?
Well.. our neighbour's name is Russia. We are the gatekeepers in more than one way, we think alike, we are efficient and wants things to happen at a much faster pace than most other countries.
And we get one another.

Could we, our group become an important factor in EU? Most certainly. It would give us so much more leverage and momentum moving as a group, than continuing like now; saying the same things, but as many small and individual countries.

Going together as a region, that would change things.

Oohh.. so, Denmark finally got our new government today.
And with that became Regeringsgrundlaget known.
A Regeringsgrundlag which the opposition has agreed upon as well!! This is a first.

Something interesting.. maybe?

USA is no longer trustworthy and we need to separate from them, also American tech is unsafe, and we need to move faster in our transition away from American based tech.

USA is only mentioned once. As someone that is untrustworthy and trying to undermine the EU.

Funny thing? Denmark is often the frontrunner politically.
This is not something a midterm election will be able to change.
 
China Comes for Canadian POTASH — Trump's Farm Belt Loses Its Fertilizer Lifeline

The United States imports more than 80% of its potash from one Canadian province. There are no strategic reserves. No domestic backup. And while Trump spent 18 months threatening to tariff the fertilizer keeping his own farm belt alive, Canada was quietly building billion-dollar export terminals pointed at China.

This video breaks down how Saskatchewan's potash became the most overlooked leverage point in the entire trade war — and why the country that feeds America has spent the last year finding better customers.

 
India Locks In Canadian POTASH — Trump's Farm Belt Just Lost Its Biggest Supplier

Canada supplies 87% of all potash imported into the United States. Now India — a nation of 1.4 billion people with zero domestic potash deposits — is locking in long-term supply agreements with Saskatchewan, backed by government-to-government deals, a 150-person trade delegation, and a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement both sides are racing to conclude by the end of 2026.
In January 2026, India's Fertilizers Minister met Canada's Natural Resources Minister in New Delhi to discuss long-term potash supply contracts. In March, Prime Minister Carney flew to India and signed eight agreements including a $2.6 billion uranium deal. In May, India sent its largest-ever commercial delegation to Canada — 150 business leaders — to accelerate a trade framework that covers critical minerals, energy, and agri-food supply chains.

While Washington was threatening tariffs on Canadian fertilizer and promising 90 trade deals in 90 days, Ottawa was building something more durable: a strategic relationship with the world's fastest-growing fertilizer market.

The corn, wheat, and soybean crops that power the American farm belt run on potassium. The United States produces almost none of its own. There is no synthetic substitute, no short-term domestic alternative, and no new mine that can be built in under a decade. The supply chain that feeds the farm belt didn't break overnight. It's being redirected — contract by contract, agreement by agreement — toward a customer with 1.4 billion mouths to feed and a government willing to match foreign investment dollar for dollar to secure it.

 
Canada Redirects $17 Billion to Europe—U.S. Aluminum Supply Faces a New Test

In this video, we explore how Canada’s decision to redirect a $17 billion aluminum partnership toward Europe is creating fresh questions for U.S. supply chains, manufacturing, and the automotive industry. Discover what this major trade shift could mean for aluminum prices, vehicle production, and America's industrial competitiveness.

*️⃣ 00:00 | Intro
5️⃣ 00:47 | Trade War Fallout: America's Backup Supply Collapses.
4️⃣ 02:03 | Aluminum Crunch: America's Supply Weakness Exposed.
3️⃣ 03:13 | Canada's Shift: Billions In Aluminum Leave America.
2️⃣ 04:37 | Europe Moves In: Canada Finds Powerful New Customers.
1️⃣ 05:48 | Auto Industry Warning: Aluminum Costs Could Explode.
🔎 07:00 | Final Verdict: Has America Already Lost Its Edge?

Canada's growing economic partnership with Europe could influence far more than aluminum exports. From automotive manufacturing and supply chains to trade relationships and industrial investment, this story may shape North America's future for years to come. Watch until the end to see why this development matters beyond today's headlines.

 
Canada Redirects $17 Billion to Europe—U.S. Aluminum Supply Faces a New Test

In this video, we explore how Canada’s decision to redirect a $17 billion aluminum partnership toward Europe is creating fresh questions for U.S. supply chains, manufacturing, and the automotive industry. Discover what this major trade shift could mean for aluminum prices, vehicle production, and America's industrial competitiveness.

*️⃣ 00:00 | Intro
5️⃣ 00:47 | Trade War Fallout: America's Backup Supply Collapses.
4️⃣ 02:03 | Aluminum Crunch: America's Supply Weakness Exposed.
3️⃣ 03:13 | Canada's Shift: Billions In Aluminum Leave America.
2️⃣ 04:37 | Europe Moves In: Canada Finds Powerful New Customers.
1️⃣ 05:48 | Auto Industry Warning: Aluminum Costs Could Explode.
🔎 07:00 | Final Verdict: Has America Already Lost Its Edge?

Canada's growing economic partnership with Europe could influence far more than aluminum exports. From automotive manufacturing and supply chains to trade relationships and industrial investment, this story may shape North America's future for years to come. Watch until the end to see why this development matters beyond today's headlines.

What you have posted here Chloe are more of the unintended consequences that will bite the US for the foreseeable future. The admin played hardball with bullying tactics and are finding out the disruption in supply chains due to ill conceived policies. Inflationary measures are here to stay for awhile. The admin can change inflation definitions but declining purchasing power will be evident.
 
Not just aluminum that’s an issue. Agricultural products we had depended upon from Canada have gone into this morass of senslessness brought on by taraffs that some lunatic fostered upon the whole world’s supply chains. Two more years cannot get here fast enough.
 
Mark Carney ----Bachelors degree economics Harvard magnum cum laude, Masters and Doctor of Philosophy in Economics Oxford University, 13 years at Goldman Sachs, Governor of the Bank of Canada, Governor of the Bank of England

Donald Trump --- looked directly into an eclipse twice, can recognize a squirrel

who woulda thunk starting a trade war with Canada would have blown up in their face
 
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