>“Small craft distilleries in the United States are feeling that pressure. Some of them are starting to shut down, where they looked at the Canadian market as a huge opportunity,” Chris Swonger told CTV News Channel on Thursday following the testimony.
>He called his industry an “innocent bystander” in the trade war.
Either they voted for the current administration and so are getting *precisely what they voted for*; or they didn’t, and should be organizing opposition to the administration. The solution to their woes aren’t going to be in begging us to *tolerate the abuse* and return as customers.
Asluckwouldnthaveit on
The liquor is a shame. Lots of great products down there that don’t have a Canadian equivalent. So that is too bad for me as a consumer.
ThatCanadianGuy88 on
The long term affects of this will be real for many Canadian oriented tourist things. People have broken their habit of going to the USA and developed new ones going elsewhere. They wont be quick to break after this shit storm is over.
CampPineCone on
The boycotts aren’t just because of the tariff thugocracy but there is legitimate concern the Americant’s are trying to export their societal misery. By referring to our PM as Governor and calling our sovereign nation the 51st state, it demeans our trade relationship. Why would you piss off your number one customer if tourism and liquor are so important to your economy? By the Americant’s electing the Mango Menace for the second time sealed the fact that our trade relationship is bowdlerized.
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I want better product labelling. We just launched [front of package nutrition labels](https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/food-nutrition/nutrition-labelling/front-package.html), and I would like to see the same for [Product of Canada and Made in Canada](https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/made-in-canada-product-of-canada-1.7451556); only allow it to indicate other countries of origin. Make it absolutely trivial for consumers to be informed as to the source of the product, so if I want to avoid anything made by a certain country then there’s no meaningful barriers to doing so.
>“Small craft distilleries in the United States are feeling that pressure. Some of them are starting to shut down, where they looked at the Canadian market as a huge opportunity,” Chris Swonger told CTV News Channel on Thursday following the testimony.
>He called his industry an “innocent bystander” in the trade war.
Either they voted for the current administration and so are getting *precisely what they voted for*; or they didn’t, and should be organizing opposition to the administration. The solution to their woes aren’t going to be in begging us to *tolerate the abuse* and return as customers.
The liquor is a shame. Lots of great products down there that don’t have a Canadian equivalent. So that is too bad for me as a consumer.
The long term affects of this will be real for many Canadian oriented tourist things. People have broken their habit of going to the USA and developed new ones going elsewhere. They wont be quick to break after this shit storm is over.
The boycotts aren’t just because of the tariff thugocracy but there is legitimate concern the Americant’s are trying to export their societal misery. By referring to our PM as Governor and calling our sovereign nation the 51st state, it demeans our trade relationship. Why would you piss off your number one customer if tourism and liquor are so important to your economy? By the Americant’s electing the Mango Menace for the second time sealed the fact that our trade relationship is bowdlerized.