Yesterday we wrote that we feel horrifyingly bad mis-investment has become the norm on the part of the U.S. Federal Government. As awful as that mis-investment is, at the same time, it only seems reasonable to assume that such activities can only go on for just so long before they cannot continue. When that end comes is anyone's guess, but we feel certain that the end will come.
At that time, American Citizens will collectively realise they live in a blasted country, and they will probably decide that changes are in order. The nation will have to learn humility and discipline. However, we feel the United States will likely have no domestic vision left to rebuild upon more-realistic and sustainable lines. The only choice will be to turn to the greatest economic and social friend the U.S. presently has: Canada.
As the largest trading partner of the U.S., as well as a cultural ally, Canada has been in a very good position to study the American mindset; it isn't a stretch to say that Canada understands the U.S. better than it does itself. In the future, it will likely be Canada, as the impartial observer, which will both understand the problems in the U.S., and have the best solutions.
That is, of course, unless the United States distances itself sufficiently from its northern neighbour. Although we understand the high-level visit by President Barack Obama to Canada was a warm success, we've been noticing what we feel is a very cold undercurrent in the Obama Administration. Point and case are the recent comments by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. Here are some of the highlights:
"Yes, Canada is not Mexico... Nonetheless, to the extent that terrorists have come into our country or suspected or known terrorists have entered our country across a border, it's been across the Canadian border." "The fact of the matter is that Canada allows people into its country that we do not allow into ours."These are not the first blatantly untrue things the Secretary has stated (read our article here). It confuses us: Secretary Napolitano is supposed to be one of the most informed persons in the U.S. Federal Government. In her hands rest the administration of, well, homeland security. Nevertheless, her comments are hogwash. As the Canadian ambassador to the U.S., Michal Wilson, to comment:
As the 9/11 commission reported in 2004, all of the 9/11 terrorists arrived in the United States from outside North America. They flew to major U.S. airports. They entered the U.S. with documents issued by the United States government, and no 9/11 terrorists came from Canada.Since Secretary Napolitano should know this, we are forced to conclude she must, in fact, be an idiot. Her powerful position in the Obama Administration makes her a dangerous idiot. If she is successful in her attempts to strangle the U.S./Canadian border, in a manner akin to the U.S./Mexico border, we fear she will be negatively impacting the ability of the United States to pull itself together at the end of the 2007 Depression.
Such a clamping-down on the U,S./Canadian border is the worst possible thing to do during the Depression. There is no other time when international friendship and cooperation more important than a Depression, and Canada is the nearest functional neighbour of the U.S. What Secretary Napolitano proposes to do is, in a word, madness. She is voicing a destructive, out-of-control obsession with 'terrorists' and 'national security,' and she does not have the wits to see what she is doing.
There are many more examples of this stupidity in the Federal Government, but we feel that Secretary Napolitano's personal brand does not get the attention it deserves. We frankly consider her as destructive as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's incessant Goldman Sachs donations, or Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's voodoo monetary policies. All three persons are working hard to destroy what hopes the United States has: Geithner destroys the wealth; Bernanke destroys the money; Napolitano destroys relationships with those who can help save us from the previous two.
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