

He probably thought he was dealing with Colombia and Taiwan.


He probably thought he was dealing with Colombia and Taiwan.


Isn’t there also a “buy Canadian” movement in Canada?
I can be worried about more than one thing.
…it’s a much easier message for politicians to rationalize.
I get what you said in the unquoted part, but maybe it’s just me. Buy Canadian is less rational than pointing out from whom not to buy, on account of how nationalistic it sounds. At the risk of sounding all slippery-slope about it, I don’t want to go down the road of nationalism.


The article doesn’t mention it, but there’s a “Made in the EU” labeling phenomenon happening that makes me worried about Canadian and Mexican products getting thrown out with the American bathwater here. The point shouldn’t be to fight nationalism with more nationalism. It should be to fight nationalism with good globalism.
Political extremists aren’t always the best at differentiating between correlation and causation. Let’s see how this plays out.
It’s the obsession with replacing PCIe slots with M.2 sockets that gets me.