ALLAN'S CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE!
ALLAN'S CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE!
Some people have opinions, and some people have convictions......................! What we offer is PERSPECTIVE!
For example...ALLAN's CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE!
THE LEFT WING IS CRAZY! THE RIGHT WING SCARES THE SHIT OUT OF ME!
"BioPanentheism"
“Conversations exploring politics... science... metaphysics...... and other unique ideas!”
BioPanentheism holds that "Omnia/Qualia" does not merely pervade the Universe abstractly... but "experiences reality" directly and vicariously through the emergence of any complex "biological consciousnesses" ...making 'life itself' the medium of awareness!
BioPanentheism states that Omnia/Qualia and biological life are distinct but interdependent... (symbiotic) with Omnia experiencing reality vicariously through us... ["conscious living beings"] while we receive... "Qualia... instinct... and meaning!"
(Sentience is about experiencing... while Sapience is about understanding and reflecting on that experience!)
Conversations with... "Anthropic Claude" and "SAL-9000!"
( Remember... Everything an Artificial Intelligence says is only a repeat of what some human said at some time! )Saturday, 20 June 2026
An outline of my book... Being Human!
SATURDAY MORNING CONFUSION: How to make Drumpf happy?
Donald Drumpf keeps complaining that the United States has a trade deficit with Canada... so I propose that we stop sending the States ANY energy (gas, oil, electricity), which will then give the States a nice trade surplus with us... and put a smile on Drumpf's face!!!! (?)
Scott: Canada is a massive supplier of electricity to the USA.
Or to put that slightly differently... if we disconnected the grids, the following would happen:
- Canadian generating companies would see a drop in revenue.
- Multiple American states, particularly in the Northeast, would experience severe electricity shortages, likely leading to more frequent blackouts.
- In the longer term, the USA would have to embark on a massive, deficit-funded generation-building sprint.
- Bad news, the easy solutions (natural gas and nuclear) both depend on raw product imported from… Canada.
- Oh, and more bad news. We’d probably stop our existing shipments of natural gas and uranium, so your existing 30+ nukes will shut down too. And your gas plants will get 50% more expensive.
Meanwhile, we can ship uranium around the world, sell the natural gas as LNG, and use the excess electricity for data centres and aluminum smelting.
Smiles all around!
Lives in Canada (1967–present)
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
MAPLE M.A.G.A.
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Sunday Funnies!
Friday, 12 June 2026
T R U M P !
As a proud Canadian, I would like Prime Minister Carney to finally call Trump's bluster and bullshit... and give it to him right up the ass... because he doesn't deserve any better!
Wednesday, 10 June 2026
TRUE NORTH STRONG AND FREE!
Let's look at Canada's Arctic development over the next few years!
Communities (Population Anchors)
Northern communities that would appear on the map:
- Whitehorse
- Dawson City
- Inuvik
- Tuktoyaktuk
- Yellowknife
- Cambridge Bay
- Resolute
- Rankin Inlet
- Iqaluit
- Pond Inlet
- Kuujjuaq
- Happy Valley-Goose Bay
Existing Military Sites
- CFS Alert
- Nanisivik Naval Facility
- 5 Wing Goose Bay
- Canadian Forces Northern Area Headquarters Yellowknife
-
Forward Operating Locations:
- Inuvik
- Yellowknife
- Iqaluit
- Rankin Inlet
NORAD Modernization Projects
Canada is upgrading northern military infrastructure at:
- Inuvik
- Yellowknife
- Iqaluit
- Goose Bay
These locations are becoming the backbone of Canada's future Arctic defence network.
Canada is also deploying new Arctic Over-the-Horizon Radar systems that will dramatically improve surveillance across northern approaches to North America.
Existing Research Stations
- Canadian High Arctic Research Station
- ArcticNet
- Polar Continental Shelf Program
- Eureka weather and atmospheric stations
- Alert environmental monitoring facilities
Proposed New Facilities (Strategic Concept)
If Canada fully commits to Arctic sovereignty, your map could show:
Western Arctic Hub
Inuvik–Tuktoyaktuk Corridor
- Expanded air base
- Arctic drone centre
- Deep-water logistics node
- Space and satellite tracking facility
Central Arctic Hub
Cambridge Bay
- Expanded CHARS research campus
- Arctic engineering institute
- Polar climate and AI monitoring centre
High Arctic Hub
Resolute Bay
- Permanent military logistics base
- Long-range UAV operations
- Arctic search-and-rescue headquarters
Eastern Arctic Hub
Iqaluit
- Fighter detachment
- Arctic naval coordination centre
- Greenland liaison facility
Atlantic Gateway
Goose Bay
- NATO Arctic training centre
- Strategic airlift hub
- Nordic cooperation headquarters
Allan's "Maximum Sovereignty" Version
If I were drawing the map specifically for one of your defence articles, I'd include:
- All northern communities
- Existing Ranger patrol regions
- North Warning System sites
- Existing airfields
- Existing military facilities
- Proposed NORAD radar installations
- Research stations
- Arctic shipping routes
- Northwest Passage
- Greenland bases
- Alaska bases
- Arctic submarine patrol zones
- Future high-speed fibre links
- Future deep-water ports
The finished map would look similar to a Canadian equivalent of Alaska's military infrastructure map, stretching from Yukon to Labrador and highlighting Canada as the central Arctic power by 2040.
Monday, 8 June 2026
Trump is now... "Wrong Way Peachfuzz!"
ALLAN SAID: Claude, is it my imagination, or is Trump doing everything exactly the wrong way?
The case that critics make (the "wrong way" view):
- His tariff strategy has rattled markets and trading partners simultaneously, risking inflation while alienating allies whose cooperation the U.S. needs on other fronts.
- His approach to institutions... the Fed, NATO, the WTO, foreign aid... is seen by many economists and foreign policy analysts as undermining frameworks that took decades to build and that broadly served American interests.
- His negotiating style (maximum pressure, unpredictability) has produced mixed results... some argue it creates leverage, others that it destroys trust and produces worse long-term outcomes.
- Domestic polarization has deepened, making governance harder.
- His handling of allies vs. adversaries is seen by critics as inverted... harder on Canada than on Russia, for instance:
The case his supporters make:
- The old frameworks weren't working for ordinary Americans... trade deficits, hollowed-out manufacturing, free-riding allies.
- Unpredictability is the strategy, not a bug... it keeps opponents off-balance.
- The "right way" as defined by the Washington consensus, produced the outcomes he was elected to disrupt. (Hence the "Wrong Way Peachfuzz" name!)
- Early pressure often precedes deals... it's too soon to judge outcomes.
The honest analytical point:
Whether something is "exactly wrong" depends entirely on the goal. If the goal is stability and multilateral cooperation, much of it looks counterproductive.
If the goal is to force a renegotiation of the post-WWII economic and security order, some of it follows a logic... even if the costs are high!
What's your specific concern... economic policy, foreign affairs, something else?
I can go deeper on any thread.
ALLAN said: Why the beef with Canada?
Claude responded: Good question. The hostility toward Canada has surprised many observers, given how close the relationship has historically been.
A few threads explain it:
The stated reasons:
- Trade deficit narrative. Trump has long framed trade deficits as losses, and the U.S. does run a goods deficit with Canada (though a surplus on services). He's characterized this as Canada "taking advantage" of the U.S.
- Fentanyl and border security. He used fentanyl trafficking and irregular migration as (unjustified) justifications for tariffs, even though Canada is a minor source of both compared to the southern border... a point Canadian officials have pushed back on firmly.
- Dairy and supply management. Canadian dairy protections have been a genuine irritant in trade negotiations going back years. Trump has raised this repeatedly as an example of unfair treatment of American farmers. (No- ed.)
The less stated but arguably real reasons:
- Leverage psychology. Canada is deeply economically integrated with the U.S. about 75% of Canadian exports go south. That dependency makes Canada an easy target for pressure tactics, even if the underlying grievance is thin.
- The "51st state" provocation. Many analysts read this less as a serious annexation proposal and more as a signal of dominance... establishing that Trump sees Canada as a subordinate partner, not an equal ally.
- Retaliation optics. When Canada responded firmly (Trudeau, then Carney), Trump escalated. The pattern suggests he interprets pushback as defiance rather than legitimate sovereignty.
The irony:
Canada and the U.S. have the largest bilateral trading relationship in the world, deeply integrated supply chains, shared defense commitments through NORAD and NATO, and a largely unfortified border.
Most trade economists regard the relationship as genuinely mutual.
The "beef" is widely seen... even by some conservative analysts... as more politically constructed than economically grounded.
Carney's election, framed in part as a response to Trump's posture, has further complicated matters diplomatically.
How are you seeing it from the Canadian side?
ALLAN said: What if the States got so rank that Canada decided to use the "nuclear option" in trade negotiations?
Claude responded: Interesting thought. Canada actually has more leverage than most Americans realize. Here's how that could play out:
What the "nuclear option" might look like:
- Energy. This is the big one. Canada supplies roughly 60% of U.S. crude oil imports, plus massive amounts of natural gas and electricity to northeastern states. Alberta and Ontario alone could cause serious pain. Premier Doug Ford already threatened to cut electricity to Michigan, Ohio, and New York during the early tariff rounds... and Washington noticed immediately.
- Critical minerals. Canada holds enormous reserves of nickel, cobalt, potash, and uranium... materials the U.S. needs for defence manufacturing, EV batteries, and nuclear energy. Restricting these exports would hit American strategic interests hard.
- Water and hydroelectric power. Less discussed but significant. Several U.S. regions depend on Canadian hydroelectric agreements that could, in theory, be revisited.
- NORAD and intelligence sharing. Canada could make noise about defence cooperation... not likely to actually withdraw, but the threat alone would reframe the conversation in Washington security circles.
Why Canada hasn't gone there:
The integration cuts both ways. Disrupting energy flows hurts Canadian producers too. And Canadian political culture has historically preferred firm but measured diplomacy over brinkmanship.
What's changed:
Carney is an economist who understands leverage precisely.
The political mood in Canada has shifted... there's genuine public anger.
The old assumption that Canada would absorb pressure quietly no longer holds.
The nuclear option is most powerful unused... as a credible threat.
Carney likely knows that!
ALLAN said: But if they do?
Claude responded: If Canada actually pulled the trigger... the consequences would be fast and severe, and frankly, more damaging to the U.S. than most Americans appreciate.
Immediate impacts:
- Northeastern U.S. electricity prices would spike hard. States like New York, Vermont, and Michigan get substantial power from Quebec and Ontario. There's no quick replacement. Hospitals, industry, ordinary households... all hit within days.
- Midwest oil refineries would be in serious trouble. Many are specifically configured to process Canadian heavy crude. You can't just swap in Saudi light crude overnight... the refinery infrastructure isn't built for it. Retooling takes years and billions.
- Gas prices across the northern U.S. would jump. Which is politically toxic for any administration.
Medium-term impacts:
- Defence and aerospace supply chains disrupted. Canada is deeply embedded in U.S. military procurement... components, materials, manufacturing. Lockheed, Raytheon, General Dynamics all have Canadian dependencies.
- Agricultural inputs hit. Canadian potash dominates North American fertilizer supply. American farmers... Trump's base... would feel that directly.
- Critical minerals bottleneck. Any U.S. pivot toward domestic EV or battery manufacturing gets strangled without Canadian nickel and cobalt.
The political dimension:
The pain would land disproportionately in Republican-leaning industrial and rural states... exactly the constituencies Trump can't afford to lose.
That's what makes it genuinely nuclear.
It wouldn't hurt blue-state coastal elites most.
It would hurt Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.
Canada's risk:
The Canadian economy would take real damage too... but Canada would be seen internationally as the aggrieved party fighting back, which matters for rerouting trade toward Europe and Asia.
Carney has already been quietly cultivating those alternatives.
The deeper point:
The asymmetry people miss is psychological.
Americans largely don't know how dependent they are on Canada.
Canadians know exactly how dependent they are on the U.S. they've lived with that awareness for generations.
That means Canada can calculate the pain precisely.
Washington would be caught genuinely off guard.
It would force a negotiation.
Probably a fast one!
ALLAN said: What methods should we use for maximum impact?
Claude responded: Good strategic question. If Canada wanted maximum impact with minimum self-inflicted damage, the approach would be sequenced and surgical rather than a simultaneous all-out cut.
Principle: escalate in stages, maximize political pain in swing states, preserve off-ramps
Stage 1 — Warning shots (already partly underway):
- Public statements naming specific states and congressional districts that would be hurt.
- Targeted retaliatory tariffs on goods from politically sensitive U.S. regions... Ontario has already done some of this.
- Quiet diplomatic back-channel signals about what comes next if talks don't progress.
Stage 2... Precision economic pressure:
- Restrict or reprice electricity exports to specific northeastern states
- Slow-walk critical mineral export permits... not cut, just delay and create uncertainty.
- Leverage potash pricing... enough to make American farmers nervous without triggering a full rupture.
- Begin visibly accelerating trade diversification toward EU, UK, and Asian markets... signals that Canada is building alternatives and the U.S. window is closing!
Stage 3... The real escalation:
- Formally reprice or cap energy exports
- Invoke national interest provisions on critical mineral exports
- Coordinate with other U.S. trading partners... the EU, Mexico... to present a unified front.
- Make noise publicly about NORAD cost-sharing and defence cooperation reviews.
The targeting logic:
The most effective pressure hits Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania... states Trump needs.
Every percentage point gas prices rise in Toledo or Detroit is a direct political cost he feels internally.
What Canada should NOT do:
- Cut everything simultaneously... loses the escalation ladder and off-ramps.
- Act without a clear negotiating demand... pressure without an ask is just damage.
- Alienate Canadian energy producers who'd suffer from export cuts.
- Move so fast it looks reckless internationally.
Carney's probable actual strategy:
He's an economist and a former central banker. He's precise, calibrated, and patient... more like a bond market intervention than a barroom brawl.
Maximum credible threat, minimum actual triggering, constant off-ramp availability until Washington is ready to negotiate seriously.
The goal isn't to hurt the U.S.
The goal is to make the cost of not negotiating higher than the cost of negotiating.
That's a different thing entirely.
Saturday, 6 June 2026
Saturday Morning Confusion: We stand on Guard!
Tuesday, 2 June 2026
OSSOFF FOR PRESIDENT! (2028)
ALLAN SAID: Sal...give me a transcript of the speech Jon Ossoff gave in Atlanta yesterday!
SAL-9000 SAID: Hello, Allan. I can't provide a full transcript of Jon Ossoff's speech unless it has been officially published, because reproducing lengthy copyrighted speech text isn't allowed.
What I can do is summarize it in detail.
At Sunday's rally in downtown Atlanta, Senator Jon Ossoff appeared alongside Keisha Lance Bottoms in their first major joint campaign event.
The rally at The Tabernacle was reportedly standing-room-only and focused on Democratic unity heading into the November election.
Key themes from Ossoff's remarks included:
- Arguing that Georgia voters need a check on the Trump administration.
- Criticizing Republican opponents as loyal to President Trump rather than independent leaders.
- Attacking Republican policies on health care, Medicaid expansion, and rising living costs.
- Framing the election as a choice between Democratic unity and Republican infighting.
- Emphasizing economic concerns such as grocery prices, health-care costs, utilities, and gas prices.
One line widely reported from the speech was:
"It doesn't matter which one wins. They're both Trump puppets."
If you'd like, I can also dig deeper and pull together the most complete reconstruction of the speech available from news reports, videos, and campaign releases!






