this post was submitted on 03 Apr 2026
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I've been thinking about this for a while. If you looks at our major industries that aren't controlled by Canadian oligopolies, we let the US take over and continue to support them. For example, streaming services (Netflix, Spotify, Paramount, HBO, Disney, YouTube, etc...), fast food (McDonald's, Starbucks, Wendy's, Five Guys, Timmies, etc..), home improvement (Home Depot, Lowe's, Rona), retail (Wal-Mart, Amazon, Costco), tech (Google, Apple, Microsoft), credit payments (Visa, Mastercard), food brands (Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, print media (Postmedia Network, which controls over 130 newspapers across the country), social media (Insta, Snap, TikTok, Facebook, WhatsApp), retail gas (Esso, Ultramar, Chevron, Pioneer) are all US companies. I can keep going on (pharmaceuticals, oil and gas operations in Alberta, and entertainment).

It's ironic when I see Canadians hating on immigrants for not being "Canadian", yet those Canadians copy Americans like no tomorrow. And now we have separatists in Alberta simping for the US and politicians that vocally support Trump (Doug Ford, Danielle Smith, and PP). Wtf is going on?

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[–] Reannlegge@lemmy.ca 1 points 39 minutes ago

For streaming services I have moved to my *arr stack (apps like sonarr and radarr) and CBC gem, I am not going to pay to watch US content. Even if I used the global, ctv, and citytv apps I would not be watching the ads because I use a pihole setup to block most ads. I use Unwatched to view YouTube videos as it blocks the YouTube ads. I have moved to self hosting my stuff (file storage through Nextcloud, my VPN through wireguard so that I can access most of my things away from my LAN, my images via Immich, my notes through Joplin, my web search through searXNG, and my password manager is vaultwarden so I can use bitwarden on my devices) if I had the money I would replace my iPhone and iPad with something I could easily load a new OS on. My desktop has been broken for years even if it wasn’t I would have installed Debian orsome fork of it. I have moved my blog to a Canadian host for my domain name and email host (I use a different email for everything to make me worthless to advertisers) my host is hosthero. If I had the money I would replace my HomePods with a DIY thing as I have moved all my automations (minus my good night one, I may figure out how to move it over once my place is repaired) to home assistant.

The only reason I use AWS is because duckdns.org is hosted on it, and I use duckdns for my ddns for all my VPN things.

I only really shop at the coop.

[–] brianpeiris@lemmy.ca 18 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Here are my (hot?) takes:

  • America's greatest export is culture
  • People love capitalism and they love consumption. People love celebrity, fashion, and wealth. People want to be seen holding a Starbucks cup while face-timing on their iPhones, talking about the latest Marvel movie. Truth is, most Canadians want to be at least a little American, and some Canadians want to be very American.
  • A lot of people aren't political
  • "Canadian" has always been a fuzzy concept
  • Americanisms became entrenched before America became a dirty word
  • Companies (especially tech companies) are designed to lock people in through various mechanisms
  • Inertia is very difficult to overcome
[–] ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca 16 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

Americans were hated by Canadians long before Trump.

[–] Rentlar@lemmy.ca 11 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (1 children)

TL:DR; It's 'cuz we're close, but Trump is helping us Canadians rediscover a healthy nationalism.

We were pretty well integrated with the USA over the last 30-odd years, to our mutual benefit and detriment. For the last 10 we've seen the vocal minority of Maple MAGA say with Maxime Bernier's People Party, but also the Conservative moment aligning itself (if not merging with) MAGA.

Under the Trudeau government, his government's foreign affairs philosophy was internationalism. Which generally made Canadians not really attached to their national identity, and our national symbols started to represent some of the colonial skeletons we were in the process of digging up. What made things worse is that the Ottawa Trucker Convoy was awash with Canadian symbols but they were a MAGA-coup-turned-nuisance-occupation. Most Canadians were either disappointed or disgusted at what national pride had come to represent the worst of us.

Though since Trump has been threatening Canada a lot, I think things have turned for the better, and non-MAGA people at-large have taken back the mantle of nationalism to decouple it from racism and bigotry. The !buyCanadian@lemmy.ca and !boycottUS@lemmy.ca movements are still active. I've not completely gotten rid of every American thing yet but like for 90% of stuff I have, and I actively look for alternatives every time before I buy, and discovered Canadian small to medium businesses I never would have come across otherwise.

[–] brianpeiris@lemmy.ca 5 points 11 hours ago

Good points. I agree the Buy Canadian movement is still pretty strong, and it's not just on Lemmy. You can see it in the maple symbols on grocery shelf price tags (even if that system is flawed), and in the news reports of American cities complaining about fewer Canadian visitors.

I still think the majority of people still use American products and services within Canada (Netflix, Instagram, Starbucks, Amazon), but the boycott is significant and sustained.

[–] masterspace@lemmy.ca 8 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Wtf are you even talking about?

  1. the companies you listed are not the only companies in their markets,

  2. at least one of the companies you listed is Canadian

  3. how is this different from literally any other country around the world?

  4. how are you listing Costco when they're literally the only store with a maximum markup %

The exact same thing that has been going on for the past ~60 years of American corporate expansionism.

They don't regulate their companies, allowing them to basically abuse their destitute class to let their corporate class amass a vast amount of capital, and then they use that capital to expand globally, buy overseas companies, create capitalists there and use them to spread their shitty exploitative and harmful practices.

The key it this process is that their companies look economically successful, because they make more money then their competitors, but in reality they're not more efficient or produce better goods (quite the opposite in fact), it's just that they're better at externalizing costs and exploiting others.

[–] MacroCyclo@lemmy.ca 3 points 7 hours ago

They listed Spotify too...

[–] captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works 6 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Because Canada is more of a suburb of the United States than you'd like to admit. While Canada claims more square footage, the US has the better slice of the continent. The US is the richest nation on earth, home to 340 million people to Canada's 40 million, most of whom live within 100 miles of our border. To all those American businesses you listed, Canada is a sidequest. We might as well also sell shit to you while we're at it. We do the same to most of the rest of the world, compared to them you're small potatoes but you're a closer drive. Hell, more than half of you live south of Seattle.

[–] FireRetardant@lemmy.world 12 points 6 hours ago

It got that way because our politicians let it. We could have kept certain companies nationalized and made restrictions on corporations selling out to other Countries, or at least tax the hell out of it. But instead we got "free market" solutions. And its not just the US. Any country that wants a slice can have some. Tim Hortons and some other chain brands are owned by a Brazilian conglomerate, some major mining companies are owned by brazil as well.

[–] thericofactor@sh.itjust.works 4 points 12 hours ago

Countries like the united states, but also China for example, model their laws and regulations in such a way that companies can do business at the expense of individuals. This results in very wealthy, powerful companies that can be very competitive globally, especially in countries where laws tend to favour people over businesses.

[–] ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca 3 points 11 hours ago

US money bribes politicians to let them exploit us.