
Originally Posted by
bae
Not a bad move, in theory. In practice, I'm wondering how the UK and Canada would work out one of them being EU and the other...foolishly not.
The Canadian stores I visited, in particular the grocery stores, had lots of signage up indicating proudly which goods on the shelves were Canadian-made, and which were from other friendly countries. US products were...generally lacking. The sense I got was that the Canadians have moved on from any cozy relationship with the US, and view us as unreliable and possibly hostile.
Canadian tourist areas were jam-packed with Canadian tourists. Talking to them, many indicated they would have gone to the US for vacation previously, but were motivated by the current situation to vacation within Canada - a good choice, the weather and beaches were amazing when I was there.
In conversations, they didn't seem to express any antipathy towards Americans in general, and seemed very welcoming. The areas I was in rely a lot on US-based tourism, which has dried up a bit - they seemed happy to have me there.
Well, I wouldn't remotely characterize Bellingham as "decimated"... There has been a decline in sales/tourism associated with Canadian visitors, but it's a few percent in most sectors, not decimation. A problem I have observed is in Blaine, by the Peace Arch -staffing and procedure games by the various border agencies have sometimes recently caused absurd backups and delays, to the point where my partner and I are hesitant to simply drive up to Vancouver for lunch or dinner, because things are unpredictable.