Claim the "No.1 Coin of 2025" Before March 24th

After spotting 44 different coins that have returned over 100%...Chris Rowe is now exposing the details behind the "Superpower Coin"... that's partnered with 19 of the largest companies from some of the world's largest superpower nations... A little-known 3-cent coin that is poised to outperform Bitcoin in 2025... starting on March 24th.

From Alaska to Maine, communities that border Canada worry US tariffs come at a personal cost

DEE-ANN DURBIN and SALLY HO
March 02, 2025

DETROIT (AP) -- At the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa, a quote from former President Ronald Reagan is engraved on one wall.

"Let the 5,000-mile border between Canada and the United States stand as a symbol for the future," Reagan said upon signing a 1988 free trade pact with America's northern neighbor. "Let it forever be not a point of division but a meeting place between our great and true friends."

But a point of division is here. On Tuesday, President Donald Trump plans to impose a 25% tariff on most imported Canadian goods and a 10% tariff on Canadian oil and gas. Canada has said it will retaliate with a 25% import tax on a multitude of American products, including wine, cigarettes and shotguns.

The tariffs have touched off a range of emotions along the world's longest international border, where residents and industries are closely intertwined. Ranchers in Canada rely on American companies for farm equipment, and export cattle and hogs to U.S. meat processors. U.S. consumers enjoy thousands of gallons of Canadian maple syrup each year. Canadian dogs and cats dine on U.S.-made pet food.

The trade dispute will have far-reaching spillover effects, from price increases and paperwork backlogs to longer wait times at the U.S.-Canada border for both people and products, said Laurie Trautman, director of the Border Policy Research Institute at Western Washington University.

"These industries on both sides are built up out of a cross-border relationship, and disruptions will play out on both sides," Trautman said.

Even the threat of tariffs may have already caused irreparable harm, she said. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has urged Canadians to buy Canadian products and vacation at home.

The Associated Press wanted to know what residents and businesses were thinking along the border that Reagan vowed would remain unburdened by an "invisible barrier of economic suspicion and fear." Here's what they said:

Skagway, Alaska-Whitehorse, Yukon

People flocked from the boomtown of Skagway, Alaska, to Canada's Yukon in search of riches during the Klondike gold rush of the late 1890s, following routes that Indigenous tribes long used for trade.

Today, Skagway trades on its past, drawing more than 1 million cruise ship passengers a year to a historic downtown that features Klondike-themed museums. But the municipality with a population of about 1,100 still holds deep ties to the Yukon.

Skagway residents frequently travel to Whitehorse, the territory's capital, for a wider selection of groceries and shopping, dental care, veterinary services and swimming lessons. The Alaskan city's port, meanwhile, still supports Yukon mining and is a critical hub for fuel and other essentials both communities need.

"It's a special connection," Orion Hanson, a contractor and Skagway Assembly member, said of Whitehorse, which sits 110 miles (177 kilometers) north and has 30,000 people. "It's really our most accessible neighbor."

Hanson is concerned about what tariffs might mean for the price of building supplies, such as lumber, concrete and steel. The cost of living in small, remote places already is high. People in Whitehorse and Skagway worry about the potential impact on community relations as well as prices.

Norman Holler, who lives in Whitehorse, said the months the tariffs have loomed created "an uncomfortable feeling and resentment." If the threat becomes reality, Holler said he would probably still visit Alaska border towns but not other parts of the United States.

""Is it rational? I don't know, but it satisfies an emotional need not to go," he said.

- Becky Bohrer in Juneau, Alaska

Point Roberts, Washington-Delta, British Columbia

At the border of Washington state and British Columbia, the tension over tariffs is evident in a waterfront community that is hoping for Canadian mercy.

Point Roberts is a 5-square-mile (13-square kilometer) U.S. exclave whose only land connection lies in Canada, which supplies the unincorporated nub of American soil its water and electricity. It's a geographic oddity that requires a 20-mile drive around Canada to reach mainland Washington state.

Local real estate agent Wayne Lyle, who like many of his neighbors has dual U.S.-Canadian citizenship, said some of Point Roberts' roughly 1,000 residents are signing a petition pleading with British Columbia's premier for an exemption to whatever retaliatory tariffs Canada may institute.

"We're basically connected to Canada. We're about as Canadian as an American city can be," Lyle said. "We're unique enough that maybe we can get a break."

Lyle, who serves as the president of the Point Roberts Chamber of Commerce, said it's too early to identify measurable effects, but he fears Canadians won't visit the popular summer getaway destination out of spite.

"We don't want Canada to think we're the bad guys," Lyle said. "Please don't take it out on us."

- Sally Ho in Seattle

Billings, Montana-Alberta

The 545-mile (877-kilometer) stretch of land that separates Montana from Canada includes some of the sleepiest checkpoints on the binational border. Several of the state's border posts had fewer than 50 crossings a day on average last year.

But unseen, in underground pipelines that cut through vast fields of barley, flows about $5 billion annually worth of Canadian crude oil and natural gas, most of it from Alberta. The lines traverse a continental pivot point -- Montana is the only state with rivers that drain into the Pacific Ocean, Gulf of Mexico and Canada's Hudson Bay - and deliver to refineries around Billings.

"Canada is one of our major supply sources for oil across the United States," said Dallas Scholes, the government affairs director of Houston-based refinery company Par Pacific, which runs a processing facility along the Yellowstone River. "If tariffs are imposed on the oil and gas industry, ... it's not going to be good for consumers."

People in Montana drive long distances given its sprawling size and burn lots of natural gas through harsh winters, making its residents the highest energy consumers per capita in the U.S., according to federal data.

That means a 10% tax on Canadian energy resources would be felt broadly. The state's farmers would be among those hit more severely, given the large volumes of gasoline needed to run tractors and other equipment, according to Jeffrey Michael, director of the University of Montana's Bureau of Business and Economic Research.

"It will be painful, but there are larger concerns if I were an agricultural producer in Montana," Michael said. "I'd be worried about the trade war escalating to where my products start to get hit with reciprocal tariffs."

- Matthew Brown in Billings, Mont.

Detroit-Windsor, Ontario

The Detroit River is all that separates Windsor, Ontario, from Detroit. The cities are so close that Detroiters can smell the drying grain at Windsor's Hiram Walker distillery and Windsor can hear the music drifting from Detroit's outdoor concert venues.

Manufacturing muscle makes the Ambassador Bridge, the 1.4-mile-long span connecting the two cities, the busiest international crossing in North America. According to the Michigan company that owns the bridge, $323 million worth of goods travel each day between Windsor and Detroit, the automotive capitals of their countries.

The U.S., Canada and Mexico have long operated as one nation when it comes to auto manufacturing, noted Pat D'Eramo, CEO of Vaughan, Ontario-based automotive suppler Martinrea. Tariffs will cause confusion and disruption, he said.

Right now, steel coils arrive at a plant in Michigan and get stamped into parts that are shipped to Martinrea in Canada. Martinrea uses the parts to build vehicle sub-assemblies that get shipped back to an automaker in Detroit.

It's unclear if parts would be taxed twice if they crossed the border multiple times, and if suppliers or their customers will have to pay for the tariffs. Also unclear is how a separate 25% levy on steel and aluminum that Trump said would take effect starting March 12 factors into the mix.

D'Eramo understands the impulse to strengthen U.S. manufacturing but says the U.S. doesn't have the capacity to make all the tooling Martinrea would need if it were to shift production there. At the end of the day, he thinks it's sad tariffs will take up so much time, energy and resources, and only make vehicles even more expensive.

"We need to be spending our time and money to get more efficient and reduce our costs so customers can reduce their costs," he said.

-Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit

Buffalo, New York-Ontario

Buffalo, New York is, decidedly, a beer town. It's also a border town.

That makes for a complementary relationship. Western New York's dozens of craft breweries rely on Canada for aluminum cans and much of the malted grain that goes into their brews. Canadians regularly cross one of the four international bridges into the region to shop, go to sporting events and sip Buffalo's beers.

Brewers and other businesses fear there may be less of that, though, if the tariffs on Canada and aluminum go into effect. Trump's repeated comments about making the neighboring nation the 51st U.S. state already offended its citizens - so much so that Buffalo's tourism agency paused a campaign running in Canada because of negative comments.

"Obviously, having a bad taste in their mouth and booing the national anthem at sporting events is not a great thing for them coming down here and drinking our beer and hanging out in our city," said Jeff Ware, president of Resurgence Brewing Co.

The historic factory building housing Ware's business in Buffalo is about 4 miles from the Peace Bridge border crossing, where 1.8 million cars and buses and 518,000 commercial trucks entered Buffalo from Ontario last year.

It's a terrible time to alienate customers, Canadian or American. The snowy first months of the year are hard enough for Buffalo's breweries, Ware said. Higher prices from 25% tariffs would be yet another obstacle. Ware gets about 80% of the base malt be uses to make his specialty beers from Canada.

"Labor is more expensive, energy is more expensive, all of our raw ingredients are more expensive," he said. "It's death by a thousand cuts."

- Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, N.Y.

Cutler, Maine-New Brunswick

Commercial lobsterman John Drouin has fished for Maine's signature seafood for more than 45 years, often in disputed waters known as the "grey zone" that straddle the U.S.-Canada border.

The relationship between American and Canadian fishermen can sometimes be fraught, but harvesters on both side of the border know they depend on each other, Drouin said. Maine fishermen catch millions of pounds of lobsters every year, but much of the processing capacity for the valuable crustaceans is in Canada.

If Trump follows through with the threatened tariffs next week, lobsters sent to Canada for processing would be subject to customs duties when they return to the U.S. to go to market. Drouin fears what will happen to the lobster industry if the trade dispute persists and Canada enacts a retaliatory tariff on lobsters.

"As the price goes up to the consumer, there comes a point where it just doesn't become palatable for them to purchase it," Drouin said.

Drouin, 60, fishes out of Cutler, Maine, and sees Grand Manan Island, an island in the Bay of Fundy that is part of the province of New Brunswick, when he takes his boat out. He described his business as "right smack on the Canadian border" in terms of both economics and geography.

He described himself as a fan of Trump's first term who is "not overly thrilled with what he's been doing here." And he said he's concerned his home state could ultimately be hurt by the tariffs if the president isn't mindful of border industries such as his.

"The rhetoric is a bit much, what's taking place," Drouin said.

- Patrick Whittle in Scarborough, Maine

Continue Reading...

Popular

Nvidia Shares up Over 3% After Key Signal, Reversing Early Decline

A significant trading signal occurred for Nvidia stock, as it demonstrated a Power Inflow at $115.07, after which NVDA rose up to 3.4%.

Warning: China Launches AI Attack on America - Ad

China just launched what can only be described as an AI attack on America. And according to Louis Navellier, the legendary investor who picked Nvidia before shares exploded as high as 3,423%... President Trump is already planning a counter attack. And it's creating an incredible opportunity for you in this small group of AI stocks.

Tesla Drops Nearly 5% As Mizuho Cuts Price Target To $430 — Peter Schiff Asks Why Is It 'Bad News'

Tesla Inc. shares plunged nearly 5% Monday after Mizuho analysts slashed their price target for the electric vehicle maker, prompting economist Peter Schiff to question the market's reaction.

Taiwan's president hails Arizona chips project in meeting with visiting governor

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan’s President William Lai Ching-te said that a Taiwanese semiconductor company's massive investment in Arizona is the “best model” for the island's effort to build computer chips supply lines that don't rely on Chinese producers, in remarks to the state’s visiting Governor Katie Hobbs.

13-Second Trump Video Could Trigger AI Shock - Ad

Louis Navellier, the legendary investor who picked Nvidia before shares exploded as high as 3,423%... Just released a video with this 13-second Trump clip about the current AI boom. Please, do NOT buy any AI stock before watching that clip. What President Trump said in that clip could have implications for this AI boom.

How To Earn $500 A Month From General Mills Stock Ahead Of Q3 Earnings

General Mills offers an annual dividend yield of 3.94%. So, how can investors exploit its dividend yield to pocket a regular $500 monthly?

Cathie Wood Believes Most Memecoins Will Face 'Fearsome Declines,' But They Could End Up Becoming Collector's Items

Cathie Wood, the founder of asset management firm Ark Invest, warned investors Tuesday that most meme coins won't have high worth in the future and "fearsome declines" could be expected.

Trump's Economic Plan Is Driving a "Golden Anomaly" in Tiny Gold Miners - Ad

Trump's plan to revalue gold and decrease the US debt burden is causing a major dislocation in four small gold miners. Some 30 million ounces of gold have left London for the US. If you want to know why - and why four little-known gold miners are up 136% in just the last 12 months while major gold ETFs have barely moved...

Samsung Apologizes Yet Again For AI Missteps, Promises Major Deals As Shareholders Fume Over Plunging Stock: 'Our Company Failed To...'

Samsung's CEO apologized for the second time in five months, admitting failures in AI strategy and vowing major deals to regain lost ground as investors grow increasingly frustrated over the company's lagging stock and weakened tech leadership.

Microsoft Pours $297 Million Into AI And Cloud Expansion In South Africa

Microsoft to invest $297 million to expand cloud and AI infrastructure in South Africa, enabling organizations to access solutions and certifications in digital skills.

Trump's Tariff Move Has Created a Massive Opportunity for 401(K)S - Ad

As President Trump slaps China with new tariffs, the Fed is boxed in--and gold is skyrocketing just like it did during Trump's first term. JPMorgan just grabbed $4 Billion in gold bars... should you? Discover a "Tariff Assistance Loophole" to move funds from your IRA & 401(k) into gold--tax-free!

Merck Plans Regulatory Submission For Two-Drug Regime For HIV Infection By Mid-2025

Merck's DOR/ISL met primary efficacy and safety goals in two Phase 3 HIV trials. Marketing applications are planned for mid-2025.

NBA Legend Shaq's Walmart Shopping Spree Ends In Credit Card Decline - Here's How Much He Tried To Spend

Basketball superstar Shaquille O'Neal's impact goes beyond basketball, with his larger-than-life personality and smart investments. Yet, one of his most unforgettable moments happened at Walmart.

Exposed: 3 Cent Crypto to Explode March 24th? - Ad

Chris Rowe, the man who spotted 44 different coins that have returned over 100%, is now making the biggest crypto call of his ENTIRE career.... Because a powerful crypto event will trigger on March 24th... Sending hundreds of tiny cryptos soaring 5X, 50X, even 100X -- in just days.

Salesforce Is Trading Below 200-DMA, But Goldman Sachs Sees Huge Stock Upside After Agentforce 2dx Unveil

Goldman Sachs analyst reiterates Buy on Salesforce with $400 PT. Positive on AI roadmap and growth potential, could yield early AI monetization.

Eventful Monday For AstraZeneca - What's Going On?

AstraZeneca's eneboparatide met its Phase 3 trial goal for chronic hypoparathyroidism, while the EU approved Imfinzi for small cell lung cancer treatment.

The DOGE Shock: Nine Stocks to Buy - Ad

They say that DOGE's real agenda could shock the entire stock market in the coming days - sending a handful of widely unknown stocks soaring. And they've compiled the definitive investment playbook for anyone who wants the opportunity to capitalize.

Japan's Seven & i sells retail business to Bain Capital for $5.4 billion, plans IPO

Japan’s Seven & i, the parent company of the Japanese 7-Eleven convenience store chain, said Thursday it is selling its supermarket store assets to Bain Capital for about $5.4 billion.

Melinda French Gates Reveals An IBM Manager Inspired Her To Join Bill Gates Co-Founded 'Little Company' Microsoft

Melinda French Gates credited a conversation with an IBM (NYSE: IBM) hiring manager for her decision to join Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), a choice that significantly impacted her career and personal life.

Three New Patents Reveal Elon and Trump's Secret "Project America" - Ad

Three patents could help President Trump and Elon Musk completely revolutionize a $23 Trillion market. This revolution is about so much more than just self-driving cars. Instead, what Elon's pivoting Tesla towards... Is a market that's 1,000X BIGGER. But a project THIS big can't stay under the radar for long...

What makes Greenland a strategic prize at a time of rising tensions? And why now?

NUUK, Greenland (AP) — When U.S. President Donald Trump first suggested in 2019, people thought it was just a joke. No one is laughing now.

New Study: 50 Stocks Will Crash While 7 MAGA Stocks Will Soar - Ad

If you own any of these stocks -- directly or through mutual funds -- I want to encourage you to sell them before April 30th. I've compiled all 50 companies in my "MAGA Blacklist" report. Your retirement could depend on seeing this list.

Which US companies are pulling back on diversity initiatives?

A growing number of prominent companies have scaled back or set aside the diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives that endorsed following the protests that accompanied the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd, a Black man, in 2020.

China's Viral AI Agent Manus Taps Alibaba's Qwen For Local Expansion: What You Need To Know

China's Manus AI, a viral autonomous agent developed by Tencent-backed startup The Butterfly Effect, is partnering with Alibaba's Qwen team to create a localized version as it gains global attention and draws comparisons to DeepSeek.

Warning: What They Haven't Told You (Yet) About the 2025 Selloffs - Ad

In light of massive recent selloffs... Stansberry Research has issued a new warning for the public. Their latest research shows the real truth about the 2025 tariff selloffs is much bigger -- and much worse -- than the public realizes. They say unless you take the right steps now... You could soon see your wealth cut in half.

COPT Defense Properties Faces Risks: Analyst Sees Uncertainty In Leasing Process Amid Budget Cut Risks

JP Morgan analyst lowers COPT Defense Properties' price target to $29, citing risks from budget cuts, Space Command HQ uncertainty, and slow data center growth.

Trump signs executive order to establish government bitcoin reserve

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday establishing a , a key marker in the cryptocurrency's journey towards possible mainstream acceptance.

Why Trump's Recent Moves Could Ignite a New Gold Standard - Ad

Donald Trump's bold policies are driving a hidden gold market boom. Garrett Goggin, a renowned precious metals expert with 20+ years of experience, reveals 5 explosive investment opportunities set to explode in this new era. Backed by triple-digit returns in 2024, Garrett's insights show you how to position yourself for wealth in 2025.

Albania shuts down TikTok for a year amid concerns over violence among children

TIRANA, Albania (AP) — The Albanian Cabinet decided on Thursday to shut down for 12 months, blaming the popular video-sharing platform for inciting violence and bullying, especially among children.

Hong Kong's leader swipes at Trump but avoids criticism of tycoon's deal to sell Panama Port assets

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong's leader has waded into a controversy over a to sell its Panama Canal port assets to a consortium including American investment bank BlackRock Inc., a deal that has angered Beijing and highlights how escalating tensions between Beijing and Washington can leave the Chinese financial center’s business leaders trapped in the middle.

The 2025 'Trump Shock' [401K Owners Stunned] - Ad

Trump's Gold Reset? A massive dollar overhaul could be coming! Insiders say Trump may return America to the gold standard--sending gold prices soaring. He's been stockpiling gold for decades... should you? Discover how to legally move funds from your IRA & 401(k) into gold tax-free!

Why should America worry about Trump? Try the price of eggs, say some Democrats

NEW YORK (AP) — As their party struggles to navigate the early days of Donald Trump's second presidency, some Democrats are convinced that their road to recovery lies in the price of eggs.

Massive Losses For Crypto Traders As MELANIA Memecoin Plummets

A crypto trader has reportedly suffered a staggering loss of $15.68 million after trading the official memecoin of First Lady Melania Trump.

Man Who Predicted 2008 Crash Issues Dire Warning: "Get Out of Stocks Now" - Ad

Tech stocks are tanking--Nvidia down 30%, Tesla 50%--and ex-Wall Street CEO Dylan Jovine says it's about to get worse. He predicted the 2008 crash & made 700% gains while the market collapsed. Now, he's moving millions into a billionaire safe haven--and revealing his 4-step strategy. Don't wait!

Elon Musk Says Ukraine Behind 'Massive Cyberattack' On X: 'We're Not Sure Exactly What Happened...'

Elon Musk stated that the reported "massive cyberattack" that his social media account X faced on Monday is suspected to have originated from Ukraine.

CompoSecure Beats EBITDA Estimates But Analyst Cuts Price Forecast Amid Resolute Spin-Off And Growth Outlook

Analyst maintains Buy rating & lowers price target for CompoSecure Inc after Q4 revenue & EBITDA miss, but gains comfort with Resolute spin & Arculus profitability.

The Fort Knox Cover-up? What It Means for Gold - Ad

Trump and Musk are demanding answers: Is Fort Knox empty? If the gold is gone, supply collapses, and prices could skyrocket instantly. Right now, I've uncovered 5 major gold predictions that could make this Fort Knox moment even bigger than people realize. One of them is already unfolding--and the window to act is closing fast.

Cathie Wood Stands By 'Deflationary Boom' Call As Gene Munster Compares Market Turmoil To Dot-Com Bubble

Ark Funds CEO Cathie Wood forecasts a "deflationary boom" as markets tumbled on Monday, with the Magnificent Seven tech stocks shedding approximately $780 billion in market capitalization.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright activatrade.ca
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service