• Rentlar
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    23 小时前

    Definitely doing it. Not travelling to the US until he’s dead. Hasn’t been perfect, but most food staples I check labels for USA origin, and pick anything else.

    I’m currently looking for a Canadian alternative for good quality playing cards that aren’t cheap plastic souvenir garbage, I want to give some to a relative that loves Bridge. Might post about it soon.

    • ZDL@lazysoci.al
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      17 小时前

      Why start up again after he dies?

      This is a serious question.

      People keep mistaking Trump as the source of the problem in the USA. He isn’t. He’s the symptom of a deep cultural rot that was decades in the making. If you had your eyes open very widely you could even spot today’s USA in the late '70s. By the '90s even someone with cataracts could have seen what was coming around the bend. (I pledged never to set foot on US soil myself in 1999 after what I saw in Houston.)

      Trump’s death will solve nothing; indeed it might make things worse: the Redcaps will have their conveniently dead saint, and smarter people will be where Trump is, using his effigy to effectively manipulate his Redcap following. Picture in your head President J.D. “Peter Thiel’s Puppet” Vance.

      I apologize for the nightmares I’ve just induced.

      • definitemaybe
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        10 小时前

        I’m with you. I started boycotting tourism (and shopping) travel to the US when they re-elected Bush.

        I drove through the US a few times to save hours of driving when Obama was president, but otherwise I haven’t been south of the border in over 2 decades.

        The Republican Apparatus is the problem, and Trump is one of many symptoms. As much as it will be painful in the short term, I have high hopes for the end of American hegemony. It’s been a long time coming.

      • Rentlar
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        16 小时前

        Absolutely agree with you on the fact that America’s problems don’t start nor end with Trump, and there’s a lot beyond that, that needs to be done for the world to lend its trust back to it. I’ve said my piece on that within this comment.

        I’m just being realistic and thinking ahead of time with what can temporarily suspend or fully call off my boycott. There’s a long list of things I need to see before I would even consider incorporating the USA back into my vacation plans. There’s a shorter list keeping me from stepping foot there whatsoever.

        Even if absolutely nothing else changes, Seattle will be out in the streets celebrating like crazy. It’s one of the few events I’m willing to break my boycott just for a night to share the joy, before I go back to boycotting again.

        ETA: I went to the USA last at the start of 2025 before Trump took office so I could get one last look of a pre-Trump2 baseline… going for a day can give me a another snapshot before things go from bad to worse, if what you’re predicting pans out, or better if Americans manage to clean house with a Reconstruction 2.

    • ArmchairAce1944
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      21 小时前

      I like to drink alcohol and I live in a city that is famous for beer. So I am not feeling any pain in choice of alcohol. If anything the replacement of American beer and Whiskey has made more room for Canadian brands I didn’t know existed.

      • Rentlar
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        20 小时前

        There is at least one craft microbrewery in almost every medium sized city in Canada, there’s so much to try.

          • ZDL@lazysoci.al
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            14 小时前

            I’ve never really found a rye I actively liked. For me it’s best as a mixer at best.

            I’m going to miss bourbon.

            But I will be missing it. There’s no going back to it ever again. The world is full of good hooch. I’ll make do.

            • ArmchairAce1944
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              5 小时前

              I was never a bourbon guy. As for rye, when I tried lot 40 rye I was impressed by just how good it tasted. Canadian club rye was good, but not as good. I got a different brand to try out this Friday.