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by FirmwareBurner
465 days ago
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>That sounds like the kind of decision that would take way more turnaround time to implement than the month or two of uncertainty we've had. Maybe, but the end result is still Canada loosing and US winning. >And it's not about nationalism, it's about certainty as was claimed above. Long term that's a necessity for profit. Good democracy and certainty don't go together very well most of the time. It's a feature of democracy, not a bug. The best regimes for certainty are autocratic ones like the CCP, Saudi Arabia, etc where citizens don't have a say. I for one value democracy more then the quarterly profits of soulless corporations who would gladly make the world burn for profit. |
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It is but when the discussion is about businesses racing a certain way to decisions made by a government that's only been in power for two months then it's misleading to focus on a decision made before that time.
> Good democracy and certainty don't go together very well most of the time. It's a feature of democracy, not a bug.
Good democracy? I'm not sure how loaded that phrase is but, regardless, doing business with the US has seemed a lot more certain for at least the past 20 election cycles than it does today. The current government, whether or not its behaviour is indicative (for you) of a "good democracy," is an outlier in terms of looking friendly to businesses or other investors looking to trade there.