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Renesansa slobode govora

“It’s clear the US is no longer a reliable partner. It is possible that with comprehensive negotiations, we could reestablish an element of confidence but there will be no going backwards,” the Canadian leader said, adding that future governments would have to grapple with the same changed dynamic.

“There’s even more to do, and that’s why I chose to go to France and the United Kingdom, two long standing and reliable partners, friends and allies of Canada,” Carney said, referring to his first international trip as prime minister.

Carney said that tariffs imposed by the US, if permanent, would require “a broad renegotiation of our security and trade relationship with the United States.”

“We will need to dramatically reduce our reliance on the United States,” Carney continued. “We will need to pivot our trade relationships elsewhere, and we will need to do things previously thought impossible at speeds we haven’t seen in generations.”

https://edition.cnn.com/2025/03/27/americas/canada-trump-tariffs-response-latam-intl/index.html

Bila je neka prica ovde u medijima da Karni ispipava puls Kine za uklanjanje svih medjusobnih carina i tarifa i da su ovi odgovorili da su zainteresovani ali zauzvrat traze da im se da baza na Arktiku. To bi bio poprilican no-go jer Ameri tu vec imaju prisustvo u sklopu NORAD a Kanada je u zadnjih par meseci drasticno krenula u prosirenje vojnog prisustva na krajnjem severu, grade se neve baze, aerodromi, regrutuje...

and that's okay."

Jutros sam oficijelno priznala majci da je ona bila u pravu kad je Trampa uporedila sa Vucicem, a da sam ja bila u krivu kad sam kolutala ocima po sistemu ma kakvi.

1 hour ago, Mel said:

Jutros sam oficijelno priznala majci da je ona bila u pravu kad je Trampa uporedila sa Vucicem, a da sam ja bila u krivu kad sam kolutala ocima po sistemu ma kakvi.

Napokon mogu da te skinem sa IL.

7 minutes ago, dragance said:

Napokon mogu da te skinem sa IL.

Ne moras se truditi. Nikad ja nisam ni mislila da je Tramp bilo sta pozitivno, samo sam mislila da je iznad Vucica, ono neki visi level pa makar sto mu nije prvi posao sa 20 bio ministar. Kad ono medjutim.

Ok, vraćam te onda nazad na listu.

Vens iznenađen hladnoćom na Grenlandu, kaže niko mu nije rekao je tamo hladno.

Edited by vememah

Mozda su mu posle blamaze sa Signalom zabranili da koristi mobilni, pa nije mogao da pogleda weather app

A mozda lik mislio ostrvo a jedina ostrva za koja je cuo i video su Havaji i ona u Karibima pa poneo kupace gace...


In other news, Karni i Tramp prvi put razgovarali:

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/livestory/canada-election-trump-says-things-will-work-out-very-well-with-canada-u-s-relations-after-carney-call-9.6702313?webview=true&appname=news-android-app&didomiConfig.notice.enable=false&udid=79f7aa23-d27a-4bd5-ad6a-bcb6a3999c3b

U.S. President Donald Trump stopped in front of a microphone at the White House, where he praised his “very, very good” phone call with the Canadian prime minister.

Trump referred to Mark Carney by his first name while chatting with reporters.

"I think things will work out very well between Canada and the United States,” he said.

“We have liberation day, as you know, on April 2 and, I'm not referring to Canada, but many countries have taken advantage of us.”

Trump has previously said Canada was taking advantage of the U.S., claiming his country subsidizes Canada with hundreds of billions of dollars every year. That’s been disputed.

It’s another twist in the relationship, although with the evergreen caveat that what Trump says and what he does can be very different.

We saw Trump’s take on his call with Carney. Now we have the Canadian side via an official readout.

The prime minister called it “a very constructive conversation about the relationship between our two countries,” echoing Trump’s review.

Carney told the president he will move ahead with retaliatory tariffs if the U.S. imposes auto tariffs next week, says the readout.

It goes on to say that the two leaders agreed to begin “comprehensive negotiations about a new economic and security relationship immediately following the election.”

“The prime minister told the president that he would be working hard for the next month to earn the right to represent Canada in those discussions,” the readout said.

Yesterday Carney said the “old relationship" with the U.S. is over — remarks that have garnered international coverage.

The readout also said International Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick will “intensify talks to address immediate concerns.”


NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he will criticize Carney on domestic issues, but he’s part of “Team Canada.”

To that end, Singh said he hoped the call between Trump and Carney would go well.

The NDP leader said he hoped Carney would stress that Canada will never be the 51st state.

(Singh spoke to reporters before Carney and Trump hopped on the horn, but there were issues feeding the tape back so it’s only just now available for us to watch. Tech issues, sigh.)

Echoing some of the Team Canada spirit Singh shared earlier, Poilievre said he’s glad Carney and Trump spoke this morning.

“Like all Canadians, I hope they had a successful talk,” he said, adding he’s looking forward to “hearing about the results.”

Poilievre then switched to attacking the Liberals as part of his tough-on-crime announcement.

Why the change in Trump’s tone?

For starters, Trump appears aware that he’s become a factor in the Canadian election, and that he may have contributed to the Liberal Party’s extraordinary rebound. He, and people close to him, have made statements showing some awareness of those dynamics.

Another reason? Carney is not Trudeau. Trump spoke with unique disdain for the former PM, something his former aide John Bolton said Trump also did in private.

Carney also surprised some Americans with his comments yesterday about the rupture in Canada-U.S. relations, getting lots of attention in Washington.

Washington-based Canada-U.S. trade consultant Eric Miller said it has begun to dawn on people here that there could be long-term damage to a close relationship, one that benefits the U.S.

“They [realize the] need to moderate their rhetoric and keep the relationship going in a historically positive direction,” Miller said.

And finally, Americans don’t want a fight with Canada. Poll after poll shows that tariffs on Canada are unpopular, as is the 51st-state talk.

Consumer sentiment is plunging and inflation fears are at a decades-long high, so Trump has some incentives to patch things up.

“Of course, it’s one statement, one call,” Miller added. “[Trump] changes just like the weather.”

Edited by Radoye

Edited by vememah

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