Well kids, it looks like Canada is about to cancel Trump's F-35's and replace them with the SAAB JAS 39 Gripen E!
BUT!
Only if they let us change the jet's model number to... FU - 47!
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For example...THE LEFT WING IS CRAZY! THE RIGHT WING SCARES THE SHIT OUT OF ME!
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BioPanentheism states that the Divine Spark, (?) and Biological Life are distinct but interdependent... (symbiotic) with the "Divine (?) Experiencing Reality Vicariously through Conscious Living Beings!" (Sentience is about experiencing... while Sapience is about understanding and reflecting on that experience!)
Well kids, it looks like Canada is about to cancel Trump's F-35's and replace them with the SAAB JAS 39 Gripen E!
BUT!
Only if they let us change the jet's model number to... FU - 47!
Allan said: Trump just released this picture of himself depicted as Jesus and healing the sick... is this a cause for concern?
Is he totally nuts?
What the images show: AI-generated imagery depicting Trump in a messianic/Christ-like pose healing the sick, and a Trump tower on the moon — both posted to his Truth Social account.
Is it concerning? Reasonable people across the political spectrum have noted genuine worries here:
The other side of the argument:
On "is he nuts" — that's a question I'd push back on framing that way. Diagnosing someone's mental state from social media posts isn't reliable, and mental health framing can actually distract from the more grounded political concern, which is about power, accountability, and the normalization of messianic self-presentation by a sitting president.
The more useful question is probably: what does it signal about how he wants his supporters to relate to him?
That's a political question with a pretty clear answer!!!
There is something almost comical about the current state of American politics regarding Canada. The country that shares the world’s longest undefended border with the United States and has been its closest trading partner for decades is now being treated like a rival.
Tariffs, threats, and political posturing have replaced decades of steady cooperation.
The noise has been loud enough to make people forget the basic facts.
Peel back the rhetoric, and a different picture emerges.
Canada is not just a neighbour.
It is, in many ways, a lifeline!
From the oil that heats American homes to the minerals that go into smartphones and fighter jets, the US relies on Canada far more than its current political stance would suggest!
This piece breaks down exactly why that is, and why pushing Canada away may be one of the most self-defeating things America could do right now!
***
According to US Census Bureau data, Canada was the top destination for US goods exports in 2024, absorbing $350 billion in American products! (That makes Canada the largest buyer of American goods in the world. Canada buys more from American businesses than the UK, France, China, and Japan combined!)
The US-Canada trade relationship is valued at roughly $700 billion annually, making it one of the largest bilateral trade flows anywhere on the planet.
Framing this as a burden on America is simply not supported by the numbers!
In 2023, 60% of all US crude oil imports originated in Canada, up from 33% a decade earlier.
Canada’s crude oil exports to US refineries account for 24% (~1/4) of total US refinery throughput!
This is not a minor contribution. The Midwest and Rocky Mountain regions, in particular, are deeply connected to Canadian oil through pipeline and rail networks.
Many US refineries were specifically designed to handle a mix of light and heavy crude oils, and upgrading them to process different grades would require prohibitive capital expenditure!

AND:
A February 2025 report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies found that the US is 100% import-reliant for 12 of the 50 minerals identified as critical by the US Geological Survey... and more than 50% reliant on imports for another 29 identified critical minerals!
Canada supplies 21 of those critical minerals, the same number as China!
BUT:
Unlike China, Canada is a stable democratic ally with no history of weaponizing its mineral supply. (The United States has invested more than $70 million in Canadian critical minerals projects under the "Defence Production Act!")
A typical vehicle assembled in Canada contains 50-60% US-made components, and auto components routinely cross the border six to eight times during production.
Canada’s auto sector directly supports 125,000 direct jobs and contributes over $16 billion annually to Canada’s GDP, and over 90% of Canadian-made vehicles are exported to the United States!
Disrupting that integrated supply chain does not bring jobs back to Detroit.
It raises prices for American consumers and slows production on both sides!
***
Analysts estimate that a 100% tariff on Canadian imports could raise inflation by 1.5-2% almost immediately, with energy and auto prices rising sharply given Canada’s role as a top supplier of crude oil, natural gas, and auto parts!
***
A February 2025 survey by The Harris Poll for Bloomberg News found that around 60% of Americans believe high tariffs could raise consumer prices!
The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board criticized the tariffs on Canada as making no economic sense!

The Government of Canada achieved NATO’s 2% of GDP defence spending target in the 2025-26 fiscal year, marking a significant milestone in Canada’s approach to national defence and collective security.
This was buoyed by a $9.3-billion surge and internal accounting changes, fulfilling Prime Minister Mark Carney’s promise under intense allied pressure.
Canada also committed to investing 5% of GDP in core defence capabilities, and in defence- and security-related dual-use investments, by 2035!
Exercise VIGILANT SHIELD 2026 is a bi-national command post exercise between Canada and the United States designed to assess and enhance the readiness of NORAD and US Northern Command to defend North America from attack across all domains, including air, land, maritime, space, and cyberspace.
Canada’s geography is irreplaceable for radar coverage, early warning systems, and Arctic surveillance.
Canada is backing this commitment with an $81.1 billion multi-year investment to rebuild, rearm, and reinvest in the Canadian Armed Forces, with funding ramping up to modernize Arctic infrastructure and advance NORAD modernization!
As climate change opens Arctic shipping lanes, the area is becoming one of the most contested regions in the world. (Russia has constructed military bases along its Northern Sea Route, and its Northern Fleet is its largest!)
***
Canada is the United States’ primary strategic partner in the North American Arctic, with NORAD embodying the long-standing, shared commitment to monitor, patrol, and protect the aerospace domains and maritime approaches to North America.
When a crisis hits, whether a pandemic, a geopolitical shock, or an energy disruption, Canada is the country right next door with the resources, the infrastructure, and the long-standing institutional ties to respond alongside the US!
The two countries share mutual security commitments under NATO, maintain a close intelligence partnership as members of the Five Eyes, cooperate on continental defence through NORAD, and coordinate frequently on law enforcement efforts across their shared 5,525-mile border!
Now more than halfway to the moon, the Artemis II astronauts prepared for their historic lunar fly-around to push deeper into space than even the Apollo astronauts!
On the downside, their toilet is on the blink again! (Until the Orion capsule's bathroom is fixed, mission control has instructed the astronauts to break out more backup urine-collection bags!)
The so-called lunar loo malfunctioned following Wednesday's liftoff and has been hit-and-miss ever since!
A clean strategic concept for how Canada could organize a domestic Gripen ecosystem!
If Canada ever chose to pursue a serious domestic Saab Gripen ecosystem, the most realistic model would not revolve around repurposing an automotive plant. It would instead build on the aerospace infrastructure Canada already has. That means a distributed national network centered on Montreal-Mirabel, supported by Winnipeg, linked through a sustainment chain, and justified strategically by Arctic deployment.
The heart of any credible Canadian Gripen production system would be the Montreal-Mirabel aerospace corridor. This is where Canada already has the deepest concentration of aircraft manufacturing, simulation, engineering, propulsion support, and systems integration capability.
In practical terms, Montreal-Mirabel would serve as the country’s primary integration and systems hub. Final aircraft integration, engineering coordination, mission systems work, simulator development, and specialized subassemblies would logically be anchored here.
If the aircraft were ever assembled in Canada at scale, Mirabel would be the most natural location for final aerospace integration. It already fits the logic of aircraft production far better than a repurposed auto facility.
A second major node would be Winnipeg, which would function as the structural backbone of the system. This is where composite structures, precision aerostructures, and machined components would most logically be concentrated.
In a national Gripen ecosystem, Winnipeg’s role would be straightforward: feed the main integration hub with the physical airframe components that make the aircraft possible.
A clean strategic map should also show the movement of materials and systems between these nodes. The most important internal flow would run from Winnipeg east to Montreal-Mirabel, representing the movement of composite structures and major airframe sections.
That arrow is important because it captures the basic industrial logic of the ecosystem: structure is built in one node, while final integration and systems work happen in another.
A second supply flow would show engine systems entering Canada from abroad. Whether the aircraft remained powered by the U.S.-built F414 or moved one day toward a Rolls-Royce or Eurojet-related alternative, the propulsion chain would still remain the most obvious external dependency.
The real strength of a Canadian fighter ecosystem would not just be the assembly line. It would be the sustainment network behind it. Aircraft remain sovereign only if a country can maintain, upgrade, repair, and support them over decades.
This layer matters because it is what turns a one-time industrial project into a lasting strategic capability.
Any realistic map should mark CFB Cold Lake and CFB Bagotville as the two principal fighter deployment bases in the system. These would serve as the main operational anchors for a Canadian Gripen force.
On the map, these should be shown with clear airbase icons rather than generic dots. They are not just support locations. They are where the aircraft would actually be based, maintained in operational form, and launched for sovereignty patrols or interceptions.
The most important visual element on the map would be the Arctic deployment arcs. These are what explain why the system exists in the first place.
A western arc should extend from Cold Lake to Inuvik and out toward the Beaufort Sea. An eastern arc should run from Bagotville to Iqaluit and onward toward Baffin Bay and the Greenland corridor.
These arcs should be curved and semi-transparent, showing patrol reach rather than fixed routes. They represent the strategic logic of the aircraft: northern sovereignty, interception capability, and the ability to project presence into Canada’s Arctic approaches.
Forward operating points such as Inuvik, Iqaluit, and Nanisivik should appear as smaller northern markers. These locations would not replace the main fighter bases, but they would extend operational reach and support Arctic patrol operations.
This northern layer is what transforms a southern aerospace-industrial network into a true national defence architecture.
The value of this concept is that it does not rely on fantasy infrastructure. It uses what Canada already has. It also shows that a fighter-industrial system would not be concentrated in one plant or one province. It would be distributed across multiple regions, each serving a specific function.
The map tells a simple story:
In short, this is not only a production map. It is a map of industrial sovereignty tied directly to Arctic strategy.
Once CAMI is removed from the equation, the concept becomes cleaner and more realistic. Canada already possesses much of the aerospace base required to support a Gripen ecosystem. The real issue is not whether the country has the industrial nodes. It is whether it has the political will to connect them into a coherent national project.
The one major external choke point remains engine sovereignty. But apart from that, a distributed Canadian Gripen network built around Montreal-Mirabel, Winnipeg, the national sustainment chain, and Arctic deployment arcs is a plausible strategic model.

ALLAN SAID: Sal, assuming that Churchill could become an Arctic port for Canada... what is the percentage of ice cover on Hudson Bay and the strait between Canada and Greenland during the winter... and for how much of the winter could it remain passable with icebreakers, etc.?
SAL SAID: Here’s the real-world, operational picture... not theory... of Hudson Bay and the Greenland - Canada gateway (Hudson Strait / Davis Strait) in winter.
***
Near 100% coverage by mid–late winter. (Jan–March)
Essentially a continuous ice sheet, with only small cracks/leads.
Annual range: 0% (summer) → ~95–100% (winter)
👉 In practical terms:
It behaves like a frozen inland sea, not a navigable ocean.
***
Typical winter thickness:
1–1.5 meters (3–5 ft)
Can be thicker in ridged areas
Normal ships: impossible
Icebreakers: technically possible but difficult.
Key constraint:
Ice is “land-fast” and consolidated, meaning it doesn’t drift easily.
Pressure ridges can stop even strong icebreakers.
December: Freeze-up. (unreliable navigation)
January–March: Fully frozen → ❌ essentially closed.
April–May: Still heavy ice, limited escorted movement.
June–November: Open season. (current shipping reality)
👉 Bottom line:
0–10% of winter is realistically passable, and only with heavy icebreaker escort
Even then, slow, risky, and expensive.
***
(Your critical choke point between Canada and Greenland.)
Not fully solid like Hudson Bay.
Typically: 70–90% ice concentration in winter.
More dynamic, drifting pack ice.
Mix of:
- First-year ice.
- Moving floes.
- Open leads. (important for navigation)
Typically:
0.5–1.25 meters average.
Thicker near Baffin Island / western side.
This is the key difference:
👉 Unlike Hudson Bay:
The Strait is partially navigable in winter.
Why?
Strong currents + tides keep leads and polynyas open.
Ice is mobile, not locked in place.
Year-round navigation possible with icebreakers.
Winter conditions:
Heavy escort required.
Slow speeds.
Routing through leads.
👉 Practical estimate:
50–80% of winter: passable. (with icebreaker support)
0% without ice-class vessels.
Hudson Strait = manageable with infrastructure.
Comparable to Baltic winter shipping.
Fully frozen, static ice field.
Requires:
Constant heavy icebreaking.
Possibly multiple escort corridors.
***
| Region. | Winter Ice Cover | Passable with Icebreakers |
|---|---|---|
| Hudson Bay. | ~95–100% | ~0–10% (very limited) |
| Hudson Strait / Greenland gap. | ~70–90% | ~50–80% (with escort) |
Permanent heavy icebreaker fleet. (Not current capability!)
Maintained shipping lanes across Hudson Bay.
Possibly:
Nuclear or very high-powered icebreakers. (Russian model)
Ice routing + satellite guidance systems.
The Arctic isn’t “blocked”…
It’s conditionally accessible.
SAL-9000 SAID: Yes — Churchill could be made viable for roughly 6 months, but 8 months starts to become a major national icebreaking project, not just a port upgrade!
The core issue is that Hudson Strait is the easier part; Hudson Bay itself is the hard part, because it consolidates much more heavily as winter sets in.
Current official guidance still places ordinary navigation to Churchill in a narrow summer-fall window, with non-ice-strengthened access generally feasible from about the last week of July and latest departure around the second half of October... while regional ice summaries show Hudson Strait’s median shipping season extending roughly late June to end December... and Hudson Bay’s only early July to mid-November! (Or early December, depending on the area.)
Canada’s Coast Guard also states its Arctic icebreaker operations are concentrated mainly from June to November, which tells you the present system is not set up for sustained deep-winter Hudson Bay escorting.
These are the three corridors that matter.
This is a strategic-operational layout, not a mariner’s navigation instruction.
***
To make Churchill viable for 6 to 8 months, I would place the support system in layers:
1. Churchill itself... primary western terminal and winter harbour breakout point.
- Dedicated harbour breakout capability.
- Likely a seasonal forward icebreaker berth or support detachment.
- Tug, salvage, fuel, repair, and emergency response capacity.
- Better all-weather rail and landside reliability.
Churchill is already the western endpoint, so this is non-negotiable.
Current government and AGG planning around “Port of Churchill Plus” and year-round shipping studies already point toward rail, road, port and icebreaking as a combined system, not a port-only fix.
-patrol aircraft support.
-search and rescue.
-route reconnaissance.
-emergency diversion.
-naval logistics support for Strait operations.
-Deep-water staging before the convoy enters the Strait system.
-Iceberg and ice intelligence.
-Backup SAR and towing support.
-Fuel and maintenance support for escorts.
Operationally, this is the “Atlantic-side handshake” that links Churchill traffic to the broader North Atlantic network.
-ice reconnaissance.
-medevac reach.
-response time if a convoy is delayed or beset.
Without something like this, your whole system is stretched over too much distance.
***
If you picture the route on a map, it is basically:
That is the shortest answer to “exactly where.”
-dependable cargo volumes.
-dedicated heavy icebreakers.
-fixed convoy scheduling.
-reliable insurance terms.
-high-quality ice intelligence and routing.
-major port, rail, and emergency-response upgrades.
If even one of those is weak, costs rise fast!
I would rank it like this:
6 months:
So: yes, Churchill could still be viable... but mainly as a strategic seasonal-to-extended-season port, not yet as an easy year-round commercial equivalent of Halifax or Vancouver! (The closer you push toward 8 months, the more the project stops being “just a port” and becomes a national Arctic corridor program!)
I can turn this into a clean Canada map next, with the three icebreaking corridors and the exact base locations marked.
SAL-9000 SAID: Allan... Short answer: Yes—for ~6 months, large oil tankers and LNG carriers could be viable… but only under specific conditions.
Let’s break it down cleanly.
Yes... technically and commercially plausible.
Already proven globally. (e.g., Arctic Russia routes)
-Ice-class tankers. (Arc4–Arc7 equivalent)
-Icebreaker escort during shoulder months. (Nov, May, June)
-Reinforced hull + propulsion systems.
-July → December = viable.
Peak efficiency:
-August–October. (minimal ice)
Shoulder season:
-November / early December. (escort required)
-Slow speeds. (8–12 knots in ice)
-Higher insurance.
-Escort costs.
Strong candidate.
Why:
Bulk commodity.
Flexible scheduling.
Doesn’t require extreme onboard systems like LNG.
👉 Bottom line:
Technically possible
But much harder than oil
LNG ships are:
-Extremely specialized.
Sensitive to:
-Motion.
-Ice impact.
-Offloading conditions.
They require:
-Purpose-built icebreaking LNG carriers. (Arc7 level)
-Protected loading terminals.
This is the deal-breaker.
For LNG you need:
-Year-round or stable:
-Liquefaction plant.
-Cryogenic loading arms.
-Ice-protected berth.
👉 Churchill currently has NONE of this!!!!
NOT a clean 6-month LNG window without major engineering
High revenue per cargo—but:
Massive upfront cost.
Infrastructure heavy.
Higher operational risk.
| Factor | Oil Tankers | LNG Carriers |
|---|---|---|
| 6-month viability | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Borderline |
| Ice tolerance | High ✔ | Moderate |
| Port requirements | Moderate ✔ | Extreme |
| Startup cost | Medium ✔ | Very high |
| Profit potential | High ✔ | Very high (but risky) |
| Best use case | Phase 1 | Phase 2 |
Oil tankers.
Grain + bulk.
Possibly refined fuels.
👉 This works at 6 months
LNG exports requires:
-Full Arctic energy terminal.
-Ice-rated LNG fleet.
-Guaranteed escort corridors.
***
👉 This pushes toward 8+ month ambition... but at huge cost!
✅Oil shipping = corridor problem. (solvable)
❌LNG shipping = infrastructure + corridor problem.
-Icebreaking corridors.
-Naval bases.
-Tanker vs LNG routes.
-And exactly where bottlenecks hit.
That will tie everything together visually.
SAL-9000 SAID: Here is the operational map concept... laid out exactly the way Canada would need to structure this to make Churchill viable for ~6 months of the year!
Location: Labrador Sea / southern Davis Strait.
-Assemble tanker convoys.
-Ice condition routing.
-Icebreaker staging.
-Deep-water support port. (Labrador coast)
-Fuel + escort coordination.
Location: Iqaluit
-Control entry into Hudson Strait.
-Air + naval surveillance.
-Search & rescue hub.
-Closest viable logistics hub to the Strait.
-Already a functioning Arctic air gateway.
Route:
-Through Hudson Strait.
-Bias toward north shore. (Baffin side)
-Persistent flaw leads. (natural openings in ice)
-Less consolidated ice vs. the south side.
-Main year-round escortable corridor.
-Oil tanker route backbone.
Location: Ungava Bay / northern Quebec coast
-Emergency response.
-Helicopter staging.
-Ice reconnaissance.
Without this:
-Response times = too long.
-Insurance risk = spikes.
Route:
-West-southwest across Hudson Bay.
-Direct line to Churchill.
-This is the hardest segment.
Requires:
-Continuous icebreaking.
-Maintained shipping lane.
6. Western Terminal. (Churchill Hub)
Location: Churchill.
-Ice-resistant berths.
-Tug + escort fleet.
-Fuel + storage expansion.
-Rail reliability upgrades.
Labrador Sea → Davis Strait → Hudson Strait (north side) → Ungava support → Hudson Bay ice corridor → Churchill.
To hit ~6 months viability, Canada would need:
Minimum:
-3–5 heavy icebreakers dedicated.
-Continuous rotation.
-Not free navigation.
-Ships move in scheduled escorted groups.
-Satellite + aerial surveillance.
-Real-time routing.
Must operate in:
-Partial ice conditions.
-Not just open water.
| Segment | Difficulty | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Davis Strait | Low | Already navigable |
| Hudson Strait | Medium | Manageable |
| Hudson Bay | High | Core challenge |
⚠️ Only viable if:
-Churchill becomes a full Arctic energy terminal!
-Massive infrastructure added!
The corridor is physically possible...
The Strait is not the problem!
Hudson Bay determines success or failure!
👉 If Canada commits:
6 months = Achievable!
8 months = National mega-project!
-Exact corridor lines.
-Base icons.
-Tanker vs LNG routes.
That would match the style of your previous defence maps.