Trump's trade war should be a wake-up call for other nations
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- During an impromptu press conference at last weekend's G7 summit in 
rural Quebec, U.S. President Donald Trump described America as "the piggy bank 
that everybody's robbing." It was actually a perfect metaphor for taxpayers in 
G7 countries.
Our leaders meet at fancy resorts each year to reassure each other of a status 
quo with which citizens are fed up -- a status quo that leaders such as Trump 
have been elected to shake up. At the G7 summit, Trump was the wrecking ball 
slamming into the exclusive little confab, sending herb tuile and wildflower 
honey crumble flying everywhere.
This annual summit is supposed to be barely more than a photo op to show the 
world that Western nations are all on the same page -- which doesn't mean much 
to residents of these countries if the priority is accommodating the interests 
of the elites rather than those of the average person. The resulting summit 
communique is typically a snooze-inducer. If it isn't addressing "problems" that 
can't realistically be solved, like attempting to control the temperature of the 
earth's atmosphere, then it's railing about countries with competing political 
and economic interests, like Russia and Iran. Trump even mused that Russia 
should be readmitted to the group in the interests of pragmatism.
If there was a bigger bomb to throw into this party, Trump had thrown it a few 
days earlier when he imposed steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada, Mexico and 
European Union countries. Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia 
Freeland responded by announcing "dollar-for-dollar" tariffs on U.S. products. 
The list of products that will be subject to Canadian tariffs was drawn up 
carefully and targets U.S. congressional districts where a Republican is 
currently in power (and in many cases running for re-election in November).
Trump economic adviser Larry Kudrow literally had a heart attack this week after 
squabbling with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau via TV news channels.
Economic realities will ultimately resolve these trade issues, but Trump's 
upending of conventional wisdom has introduced a rare opportunity for Western 
allies.
European Commission President Donald Tusk said at the summit that the 
"rules-based international order is being challenged" by its main architect: 
America. Indeed it is, and Trump was elected by people who were sick of the 
status quo. Many American voters are unhappy with the current international 
order -- specifically with the way the U.S. and EU establishments effortlessly 
mobilize their counterparts in other nations in order to do the bidding of a 
small group of global elites.
We citizens don't want top-down global governance. We want our nations to make 
decisions independently, based on the interests of the citizenry. We don't want 
our governments to be dragged into things simply because they signed up to be 
members of some country club -- a literal club of countries.
We keep hearing about how much good this global collectivism has done for the 
average person. But where, for example, have endless conflicts in the Middle 
East gotten the average Western citizen? How about ongoing beefs with Russia? 
How have Western workers benefitted from free-trade agreements with nations that 
pay slave wages? What do Western citizens gain from open borders for low-wage 
workers under the pretext of humanitarianism? And how has the earth measurably 
benefited from governments squeezing taxpayers for more cash under flimsy 
environmental pretexts?
Trump's willingness to upend decades-old free trade with Canada, America's 
closest and most reliable ally, is an invitation to every other Western nation 
to rethink its own positions. This is a once-in-a-lifetime earthquake that 
likely won't be seen ever again -- certainly not in this generation. Perhaps 
it's not a good idea to have all of one's interests concentrated in a single 
basket. Diversification of trade is smart, and economic overreliance on a small 
number of trade partners tends to dictate a country's military commitments.
The countries that comprise the nuclei of both the G7 and the North Atlantic 
Treaty Organization are the same: America, Canada, Britain, France, Germany and 
Italy. If one acts, then they all do. And since NATO has never really been able 
to update its mandate from a Cold War anti-Russian mindset, it has continued to 
justify its existence by constantly ginning up conflict with Russia.
How many citizens of G7 countries actually view NATO's Russian bogeyman as a 
legitimate threat to their way of life? Enough to justify the exorbitant amounts 
of money that these countries contribute to NATO? Not likely.
Instead of whining about Trump threatening divorce, these countries would best 
serve their citizens by looking around to fill their dance cards more 
intelligently to better secure their needs in the long term.
COPYRIGHT 2018 RACHEL MARSDEN