Mark Carney has a bold new vision for Canada — one that would make it the “strongest economy in the G7.” The catch? To get there, he wants to pivot away from the United States, the largest economic powerhouse in the world, and cozy up to Europe, a crumbling, debt-ridden mess across the ocean.
It doesn’t take a genius to spot the insanity here. Europe is a fading giant — grappling with declining industries, an aging workforce, and a bureaucratic mess that strangles its own economic potential. Yet somehow, Carney has convinced a growing number of Canadians that this sinking ship is worth tethering ourselves to.
Why? Because we’ve stopped questioning the fairy tales. We’ve started accepting the dark whispers that tell us “progress” means severing ties with prosperity, that self-destruction can somehow lead to renewal. The math doesn’t add up, the evidence doesn’t justify it, and yet the faithful nod along, mistaking desperation for vision.
This isn’t just misguided economic theory. It’s a dangerous gamble — a move that threatens to drag Canada down with a continent that has lost its economic pulse. Will Canadians wake up before it’s too late, or will they march blindly towards an abyss?
The clock is ticking. The stakes have never been higher. The darkness that Carney invites is already at the door. Will we open it?