Spyke
lemmy.ca

I'm gonna take a wild stab in the dark judging by the rust around the badge that this car was made before this person made the choice to boycott the US.

59
Upperhandreply
lemmy.world

Stand by your choice and sell, but it has nothing to do with that. It's identity politics. Also, there are plenty of toyotas made in Canada if that person was actually that true to it and not looking for clout.

0

Yup. all Highlanders in NA are made in Princeton, IN from 2009-now.

21

Built: Maybe
Designed: Maybe. Maybe somewhere else in the world
Corporate: Not US.

6
lemmy.ml

I'm American. I rarely buy American. Almost everything is Chinese, Japanese, European, or something else.

38
MotoAshreply
piefed.social

Why buy from the US anyways? Anything quality is expensive as hell, and the rest is either trash consumer grade (read: shitty) products designed by a capitalist more than an engineer, or imported.

17

Lots of things. They're just 3-20x as expensive as something 80% as good.

2

We do have exports that people wanted prior. Bourbon, corn, guitars, etc. We have major brands, agricultural products, and other categories that are purchased abroad.

Take a look at the export list. Stuff is there.

2
MotoAshreply
piefed.social

Oh, I didn't say we had no exports. I said other places make better stuff. (at least for anything that's not ridiculously expensive in order to pay proper American craftsmen a skilled job's wage)

0

So the corn exports are... Worse?

Where else can you get Bourbon whisky?

I was trying to demonstrate that your point is sort of juvenile. American products being expensive? Sure. Are there things you can't get elsewhere? Yes. Is everything produced domestically probably worse? That one is just remarkably stupid.

2
MotoAshreply
piefed.social

Like I said, shitty OR expensive. Learn to read before you take the asshole's position.

2
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Currently trying to get my friends to leave messenger, text message groups do pretty much anything messenger does without putting money in that assholes pocket.

Fuck if it isn't an uphill battle though

My other alternative is discord just because they all have accounts there.

But they still won't let go of messenger.

9
lemy.lol

You know you can just stop using it. I'm stuck with having a fb because of my job but I never answer messenger more quickly than a week later and I always include that I don't use messenger in my response. You don't have to control your friends' actions.

3

Oh I plan on not using it, just trying to get the best alternatives before I jump off the ship

1
regdogreply
lemmy.world

I don't want to rain on your parade, but Discord is just another closed system that you will not be able to escape when (not "if") it turns into shit.

2

I know, but at least the transition is easier, given a lot of my contacts have accounts already. I already gave up on trying to get people on decentralized platforms.

Just the lesser of the evils right now

2
lemmy.world

Surprised no one has commented on the juxtaposition with the Alberta license plate yet

8
fireweedreply
lemmy.world

I'm not Canadian, but my understanding is Alberta is basically the Texas of Canada. Maybe even worse, more like the Wyoming or Idaho of Canada.

8
lemmy.world

The rural areas sure. Edmonton and Calgary are not. They’re the stronghold for the provincial NDP. Wasn’t too long ago that Alberta had an NDP government on the strength of their support in those two cities.

12

Not even in the rural areas really. We have our idiots true, but even bull riders around these parts are not all super out of touch.

2

Shhhh...last federal election 92% of Alberta seats were PC.

Two university ridings won't balance out Berta boneheads.

1
lemmy.ca

Many things already are, but it's not an environmental choice but a boycott so it's not about being overseas or not anyways. Why support a country that's actively hostile to you, ya know?

In practical terms it tends to be buying the strawberries from Mexico instead of California for example. The grocery stores literally have little maple leaf symbols on the prices to help, and little tariff symbols as well. Plus people aren't traveling to the US as that's a way of not "buying" from there too, often opting to travel within that country or overseas.

22

I get your point and I find it annoying that US Americans have ended up taking what should have been a more generic demonym for the Americas too but it is generally the accepted term for those living to our immediate south (at least in English-speaking Canada)

14
Cptn_Slowreply
lemmy.world

Right? Like "Screw America!" And then promptly pull your pants down and bend over for China.

-31

Are you serious? Even ignoring the fact that doing deals with China is not "pulling our pants down and bending over", the fact is we, as a non-superpower, need to sometimes choose the lesser of two evils and only one of the two countries is repeatedly insulting and threatening our sovereignty. Your reduction of our work on diversifying our economy in the face of (active) economic and (potential) military invasion by the USA is so maddening

edit: I assume you're American?

24
mander.xyz

One of these countries isn't arresting indigenous people for the crime of being insufficiently white.

7
mander.xyz

I literally just came from Xinjiang. Yeah no I'll trust my own eyes and the Uhigurs I'm still in contact with over some article sourcing people who literally have never been there.

This is some "Portland is a warzone"-level shit.

-7
tidderuufreply
lemmy.world

Yeah no I'll trust some rando on social media over actually seeing multiple news threads from several trusted sources and has been widely known globally for the last few decades.

15

That link doesn’t talk about them investigating more like investing.

9

Regarding your first link, lmao.

I am in China right now, I spent a couple months in Xinjiang and left earlier this week

Literally anyone can go there, there's no travel restrictions. Theres also a significant Uhigur population in Kazakhstan, whom anybody can talk to.

-7
Cptn_Slowreply
lemmy.world

Yeah, go ahead and do a Google search of Canada's treatment of indigenous people. I'll wait.

7
tidderuufreply
lemmy.world

I like how everyone in this thread is pretending that there are good guys somewhere when in the entire history of humanity there have never been good guys.

15

Of course there have been good guys.

Has everyone in a given nation always done only good things for its entire history? Of course not.

1

Did you mean to respond to someone else? I'm vaguely aware of the schools, starlight tours, and Trudou letting oil companies poison first nations water supplies, but I don't see where Canada comes into opposing support for America.

3

LOL. We let in 49,000 cars on annual sales of 1.9M.

Maybe we should bend over for pedophiles?

2

For many of us an accurate line would be "I don't buy American products anymore." Yes we used to spend money on American products and still have them. But many of us are now going without if we can't find a Canadian version (or any other country) that makes the product we want. After Trump's repulsive tantrum at Davos, it will be a long time until I willingly spend money that benefits the US.

7

I've come to accept that US Americans do this, that America can be a synonym for USA, but in this context they really should have sprung for two more letters... 🤣

(I'll forgive them fo the car though, looks old enough to not include in the statement)

-1