National Post

THE WORLD NEEDS MORE U.S.A.

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Canada recently attracted 24 scholars from abroad to its Canada Research Chair program. As would be expected, a couple of these professors turned up in news reports, claiming their motivation was escaping the U.S. political climate under Trump. “Many of my colleagues have told me that they will leave the United States if things get worse,” Alan Aspuru-Guzik, a chemistry professor recently told The Globe and Mail. “The difference is that I already think it’s worse.”

Every U.S. presidenti­al election back to at least Nixon has triggered threats of mass emigration to Canada, which never actually occurs but neverthele­ss reinforces our self-indulgent conceit that “the world needs more Canada.” While this burnishes our sense of moral superiorit­y to the U.S., one can just as easily argue the world — including Canada — needs more of the United States.

The only intelligen­t thought rock star Bono ever articulate­d was that “America is not just a country. It’s an idea. It’s a great idea. It’s the best idea the world has ever had.” Despite its flaws, there is much to admire. But those positive qualities are often ignored in Canada’s reflexive anti-Americanis­m, dating back to the influx of loyalists during the American Revolution and reaching full blood with the arrival of rabid leftwing draft-dodgers during the Vietnam War.

The U.S. sets the pace for the world when it comes to innovation in informatio­n technology, additive manufactur­ing, energy and life sciences. A list of the world’s leading technology companies shows they are almost exclusivel­y American. No wonder a recent report from the University of Toronto and Delvinia found a brain drain of Canada’s best young tech talent to Silicon Valley, the reverse of what was predicted in the aftermath of Trump’s election. Clearly there is something in the U.S. business model for innovation that the rest of the world tries in vain to emulate. Jean-Claude Trichet, former head of the European Central Bank, said “The American economy is nothing short of a miracle. Your people’s sense of daring, or a willingnes­s to explore innovation, to take on risks is nothing short of breath-taking.”

The U.S. has led the way in applying new technologi­es to fracking for oil and gas, revolution­izing the global energy industry. That has left Canada scrambling to adjust to the new reality that our sole customer for oil and gas suddenly became our greatest competitor.

While the U.S. develops its resource base, Canada’s long-standing ambivalenc­e towards natural resources is mutating into unthinking, overt hostility in provinces such as B.C. and Quebec, especially towards oil and gas. The disdain for fossil fuels in these provinces originates in their plentiful supplies of renewable hydro power, a reflection not of their innate moral superiorit­y but that geography blessed these provinces with the large differenti­als in topography hydro power requires. (Of course, Quebec and B.C. still depend on fossil fuels for a majority of their energy needs, especially for transporta­tion.)

Canadians assume their superiorit­y in supposedly being progressiv­ely post-fossil-fuel extends to their superiorit­y in providing government services. That doesn’t stand up to scrutiny, either. Canada’s pointsbase­d immigratio­n system is admired by many, but its functionin­g partly depends on its borders being far away from migrants from poorer countries, unlike the U.S. and in Europe. It is revealing how our immigratio­n system is now struggling to handle even a fraction of the inflow of illegal immigrants the U.S. has confronted for decades. Even the relatively small inflow of asylum seekers into Quebec and Manitoba over the past year has triggered alarm, outrage and a growing crisis.

It is easy for Americans to admire the Canadian health and education systems from a distance, especially since they don’t pay the taxes needed to support them. But do they provide good value? While Canada ranks high in spending on health and education, our outcomes are well below the OECD average since much of the spending is wasted on bloated bureaucrac­ies and lavish pay for our pampered public servants and professors.

The U.S. leads the world in generosity, regularly on display but rarely acknowledg­ed in a world that delights in demonizing it. The U.S. role as “The world’s policeman” reflects its military clout and global reach, without which Pacific nations such as Taiwan and South Korea would not even exist today. Most antiAmeric­anism is reflexive and lacks a self-awareness of the security the U.S. provides. For example, in 1966 when France’s Charles de Gaulle ordered American troops to be “removed from French soil,” then U.S. secretary of defence, Dean Rusk, sarcastica­lly asked “Even the ones buried in it?” American sacrifices are quickly forgotten, even by countries that owe their freedom to the U.S.

A recent poll found 60 per cent of Canadians held a negative view of the U.S., up sharply since Trump’s election. This is shocking. Apparently, we are letting our antipathy to the temporary occupant of the White House outweigh all the benefits from access to the world’s largest economy, supplier of investment and innovative ideas, and guarantor of our safety. The world hardly needs more of Canada, if it comes with our short-sighted small-mindedness about the U.S.

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