Jon Parmenter
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think we always had different ways of relating to one another, and I think everybody was fine with that. It's like a big play to like really get Americans to understand us or vice versa. I think it was sort of like a quiet acceptance of like, OK, this is how you move. Got it. I think everything happening with the tariffs and with trade is a real education.
I think we always had different ways of relating to one another, and I think everybody was fine with that. It's like a big play to like really get Americans to understand us or vice versa. I think it was sort of like a quiet acceptance of like, OK, this is how you move. Got it. I think everything happening with the tariffs and with trade is a real education.
I would agree with that. And I think one thing that would characterize the relationship for me is Canadians for a long time sort of looked at the United States through a lens of like good fences make good neighbors. We will choose the ways in which we're going to interact with the United States. We will find things that are mutually beneficial to one another.
I would agree with that. And I think one thing that would characterize the relationship for me is Canadians for a long time sort of looked at the United States through a lens of like good fences make good neighbors. We will choose the ways in which we're going to interact with the United States. We will find things that are mutually beneficial to one another.
I would agree with that. And I think one thing that would characterize the relationship for me is Canadians for a long time sort of looked at the United States through a lens of like good fences make good neighbors. We will choose the ways in which we're going to interact with the United States. We will find things that are mutually beneficial to one another.
And that's how these economies got so integrated over so long a period of time. And I think people for a long time, you know, worked very hard to to optimize these particular economic relations and to just see them kind of rhetorically tossed aside and told that they don't matter and told that they're not needed, told they don't exist.
And that's how these economies got so integrated over so long a period of time. And I think people for a long time, you know, worked very hard to to optimize these particular economic relations and to just see them kind of rhetorically tossed aside and told that they don't matter and told that they're not needed, told they don't exist.
And that's how these economies got so integrated over so long a period of time. And I think people for a long time, you know, worked very hard to to optimize these particular economic relations and to just see them kind of rhetorically tossed aside and told that they don't matter and told that they're not needed, told they don't exist.
People are like, well, I think you're going to find out fairly differently.
People are like, well, I think you're going to find out fairly differently.
People are like, well, I think you're going to find out fairly differently.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
That means my dignity is on the line.
That means my dignity is on the line.
That means my dignity is on the line.
Sure.
Sure.
Sure.