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  • As an addition, there is a podcast on Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new trade deal with China:

    Canada’s trade gamble: Why the latest deal with China may do more harm than good -- (Podcast, 25 min)

    Host Cristina Howorun sits down with Flavio Volpe, President of the Automotive Parts Manufacturing Association and one of the architects of CUSMA, to discuss the implications this deal could have on the EV market, the 90,000 jobs in the auto sector and tariff and trade negotiations with the States.

    (Here is an Invidious link of the podcast if you prefer that.)

  • There are a lot of problems, but here the problem is RT. It's owned by a dictatorship that uses it to push the worst of the worst and to shape the worldviews of users in ways that are legitimately very threatening to both Greenland and Canada. (But, yes, Xitter and Xinhua and many others seek to sow division by fake news, insofar I agree).

  • I fully agree. There are a lot of media outlet with a very strong article selection bias, publishing always the same narratives. And there are still many admins and mods here on Lemmy with the same stance unfortunately.

  • I fully get your point and agree in principal, but I have also seen 'news' published by RT and Sputnik, one of Russia's other fake news channels, here on Lemmy, and I mean not only in the .ml communities.

  • It's a false claim, but RT's title in the video says something else.

  • that drives Russophobia warmongering

    You may have noticed that it is Russia that started a war and invaded Ukraine, and it is actively faring an hybrid war against Europe and its Western allies, including Canada, with disinformation campaigns, arsons, and a wide range of sabotage activities.

    So the aggressor is Russia in this context.

    [Edit typo.]

  • Escaping the trap of US tech dependence isn't enough. Canada must ensure it doesn't create new dependencies in tech and all other products and services, especially if they come from countries with a dictatorial regime. Mr. Carney's recent trip to Asia where he visited China but not Japan and South Korea isn't too promising in that respect (but he had bilateral meetings with both governments back in the fall when they agreed to increase bilateral cooperations on security, defence, cyber, space and hybrid threats, and other things; so maybe I am mistaken in this point).

    Canada must diversify its trade with democratic governments imo.

  • I don't understand why this is in 'Canada'?

  • The Saab deal is not comparable with China's EVs imo, one difference being that the latter won't bring jobs in Canada but rather more dependence from an authoritarian government that seeks to lay ground for future coercion. In the end, that'll cost Canadian consumers way more than what they save with cheap EVs (that are at risk of being made by forced labor as we know).

  • Not long long ago, Carney said that China is Canada's biggest security threat with respect to foreign interference in Canada and is an emerging threat in the Arctic, and he was saying that "we're taking action to address."

    So at least he as a very realistic picture, let's hope he is taking the right action.

  • @BC_viper@lemmy.world

    Do you treat every Chinese 'as an enemy' for their dictatorial leadership? Or every Russian for the invasion of Ukraine? (Just to be safe, the answer is, no, they aren't all enemies as there is no such thing as guilt by association.)

  • You are posting lists of countries and companies, make bold claims without providing any evidence.

    People can see through? Yeah, I have no interest in such a discussion with a bad faith-actor parroting narratives straight out of China's propaganda outlets.

  • It's a unsurprising given Canada's economic relationship with the US which counts for three quarters of Canada's exports and half of its imports.

    The report should also be a wake-up call in my opinion that Canada must not rely on any single country for future trade. This week, Carney visits China, and the same Eurasia Group report leaves no doubt about the Chinese economy and the government's policy. In brief, it says:

    Beijing won’t break out of its deflationary trap this year; instead, it will keep trying to export its way out, flooding global markets with cheap goods at everyone else’s expense.

    The whole report makes a worthwhile read. China has been pursuing coercive trade practices with literally all countries for a long time, showing that it's not a reliable trade partner. The country is highly dependent, however, on foreign markets to sell its overcapacity made by cheap -and often, forced - labour. (An important detail here is that exactly China's huge labour force will be tested soon as researchers such as those by the World Economic Forum project an labour force gap in the next decade due to population decline.)

    All these are reasons to diversify trade further away from countries with self-centered governments. To gain at least some degree of predictability in an increasingly uncertain geopolitical landscape, Canada should reach out to its European allies and some in the Indo-Pacific (Australia, New Zealand, Japan, ...) and put together a united front against any aggressive actions taken by the U.S. president as much as against autocracies like China and Russia.

  • Do yourself a favour and stay away from wherever you get these fantasies.

  • There is ample evidence for grave human rights violations and genocide committed by the Chinese Communist Party both on their own soil as well abroad.

    And Russia invaded Ukraine. The aggressor here is clear, and it is Moscow.

  • To put that in a broader global context:

    In the Age of the Absurd Casus Belli, no Country is Safe - (Archived link)

    In coming to the defence of Ukraine’s, Denmark’s Greenland’s and yes, Venezuela’s, sovereignty, we are defending our own. Imperial habits die hard. And Canada must be at the centre of these battles because our existence as a nation at stake.

    ...

    The decision by the Trump administration to launch an arrest operation in Caracas, Venezuela, capturing Nicolás Maduro and his spouse Cilia Flores, has profound consequences for all of us.

    ...

    The revelation that the United States would be “running Venezuela”, taking over the oil industry, replacing “free and fair elections” with a “judicious…very judicious transition”, ... outlined in the recent U.S. National Security Strategy was the most expansive expression of American hegemony in the Western Hemisphere and beyond in decades.

    ...

    The meetings in Paris this week of the Coalition of the Willing supporting Ukraine take on a whole new meaning and significance. The U.S. release of the National Security Strategy one month ago, the subsequent military buildup and invasion of Caracas, the collateral rhetoric about Cuba, Colombia, Mexico, Greenland, Canada — all point a revival of Great Power unilateralism at the expense of everyone else.

    ...

    In the time leading up to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, [Russian] President Putin released speeches and documents explaining the Russian grievance.

    The Putin Doctrine is fundamentally this: Greater Russia has included Ukraine for centuries ... Ukrainian nationalism is a fake concept promoted by Russia’s enemies ... The decision to grant Ukraine independence in 1991 was a betrayal, aggravated by NATO “aggression” ... Putin further claimed that Ukraine was committing a “genocide” against Russian speakers in Ukraine, and that therefore Russia’s invasion in February 2022 was fully justified as self-defence.

    It is worth noting that these arguments were all heard, considered, and dismissed as having no merit by the International Court of Justice.

    ...

    The third member of the P3, China, has its own narrative and explanation to justify its treatment of Tibetans and Uyghurs, among other minorities, its claim to Taiwan, and its status as a “Great Civilization”, giving it power and status above and beyond others.

    ...

    Ukraine’s fate is ours. If the Coalition of the Willing cannot find the means and the will to defend Ukraine’s interests, the message to Russia, China, the United States and others would be clear: your region is your playground, and any casus belli — no matter how ludicrous — will do.

    As Canadians, our interests, values, and nationhood are directly at stake. This is not an exaggeration. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s plan for greater national solidarity, aggressive search for new markets, and a sustained effort to reach a new CUSMA agreement all make good sense, but all of us need to recognize the costs and consequences of the lawless world we are now in.

    It can’t be business or politics as usual.

    ...

  • To put that in a broader global context:

    In the Age of the Absurd Casus Belli, no Country is Safe - (Archived link)

    In coming to the defence of Ukraine’s, Denmark’s Greenland’s and yes, Venezuela’s, sovereignty, we are defending our own. Imperial habits die hard. And Canada must be at the centre of these battles because our existence as a nation at stake.

    ...

    The decision by the Trump administration to launch an arrest operation in Caracas, Venezuela, capturing Nicolás Maduro and his spouse Cilia Flores, has profound consequences for all of us.

    ...

    The revelation that the United States would be “running Venezuela”, taking over the oil industry, replacing “free and fair elections” with a “judicious…very judicious transition”, ... outlined in the recent U.S. National Security Strategy was the most expansive expression of American hegemony in the Western Hemisphere and beyond in decades.

    ...

    The meetings in Paris this week of the Coalition of the Willing supporting Ukraine take on a whole new meaning and significance. The U.S. release of the National Security Strategy one month ago, the subsequent military buildup and invasion of Caracas, the collateral rhetoric about Cuba, Colombia, Mexico, Greenland, Canada — all point a revival of Great Power unilateralism at the expense of everyone else.

    ...

    In the time leading up to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, [Russian] President Putin released speeches and documents explaining the Russian grievance.

    The Putin Doctrine is fundamentally this: Greater Russia has included Ukraine for centuries ... Ukrainian nationalism is a fake concept promoted by Russia’s enemies ... The decision to grant Ukraine independence in 1991 was a betrayal, aggravated by NATO “aggression” ... Putin further claimed that Ukraine was committing a “genocide” against Russian speakers in Ukraine, and that therefore Russia’s invasion in February 2022 was fully justified as self-defence.

    It is worth noting that these arguments were all heard, considered, and dismissed as having no merit by the International Court of Justice.

    ...

    The third member of the P3, China, has its own narrative and explanation to justify its treatment of Tibetans and Uyghurs, among other minorities, its claim to Taiwan, and its status as a “Great Civilization”, giving it power and status above and beyond others.

    ...

    Ukraine’s fate is ours. If the Coalition of the Willing cannot find the means and the will to defend Ukraine’s interests, the message to Russia, China, the United States and others would be clear: your region is your playground, and any casus belli — no matter how ludicrous — will do.

    As Canadians, our interests, values, and nationhood are directly at stake. This is not an exaggeration. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s plan for greater national solidarity, aggressive search for new markets, and a sustained effort to reach a new CUSMA agreement all make good sense, but all of us need to recognize the costs and consequences of the lawless world we are now in.

    It can’t be business or politics as usual.

    ...

  • No, that's not a joke.

    But what you are doing is whataboutism. Human rights violations are wrong here and there, and Carney is visiting China. This is what the article is about.