Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Americans Reach Across The Border, Urge Canadians To Ignore Trump

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2018 12:07 PM
    Usually, it's Canadians who are quick to say sorry.
     
     
    But United States President Donald Trump's recent bashing of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has prompted some Americans to reach over the border, apologize, and tell Canadians the two countries remain friends and allies.
     
     
    And it's not just celebrities such as actor Robert De Niro.
     
     
    A group of friends in California wrote letters this week to 20 daily newspapers across Canada — a sort of carpet-bombing of kindness.
     
     
    "Carpet-bombing with remorse and apology," Robert Pierce, a retired college teacher, said with a chuckle from his home in Portola Valley, Calif., on Thursday.
     
     
    "The vast majority of Americans do not hold any ill will towards Canada. We have no idea why we're supposedly in a trade war."
     
     
    Pierce, his wife Frances and four friends were prompted to write letters to the editor after Trump said Trudeau had made "false statements" at a G7 summit news conference last Saturday and went on to call the prime minister "very dishonest and weak."
     
     
    Trump threatened to go after Canada's auto industry, a mainstay of the Ontario economy, in the same way he has already targeted the country's steel and aluminum sectors.
     
    Two days later, De Niro told a crowd in Toronto he wanted to apologize for the "idiotic" behaviour of the president.
     
     
    The day after that, legendary singer-songwriter Paul Simon told the crowd at his concert in Toronto to not pay heed to Trump's remarks.
     
     
    "That does not speak from the heart and soul of Americans," Simon is seen telling the crowd in fan-shot video that has surfaced on social media.
     
     
    "The idea that anyone could possibly say that Canada stabbed us in the back over tariffs, over milk, is simply ludicrous."
     
     
    In recent days, letters from U.S. residents apologizing for Trump's behaviour have been appearing in Canadian newspapers.
     
     
    "Please know that we suffer with shame when these episodes happen, and are trying not to get used to them, as we are subjected to them every day. We love you," wrote Elizabeth Marshall McClure of Norfolk, Va., to the Edmonton Journal.
     
     
    "Please know that the boorish behaviour, bullying and ignorance of Donald Trump is appalling, not only to Canadians, but to many Americans," Jennifer Rihn of Mountain View, Calif., wrote to the Halifax Chronicle-Herald.
     
     
     
     
    The letter from Pierce and his friends urges Canadians to view the Trump administration as a temporary aberration in the relationship between the two countries.
     
     
    "In the meantime, we hold our collective breath and pray that our valued relationships with friends and neighbours will not be irreparably damaged," the letter states.
     
     
    Pierce, who has travelled in Canada and has friends here, said Thursday he and his friends felt the letters were the best way to reach out directly to Canadians.
     
     
    "What can we do? We write our Congress people and we try to get a hold of our senators and whatever."
     
     
    And his advice to Canadians?
     
     
    "Just try and be the wonderful people that you've always been as neighbours, and try and help us get through this by turning the other cheek."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Woman Sentenced To Life In Prison For 2nd-Degree Murder Of 78-Year-Old Mother

    Calgary Woman Sentenced To Life In Prison For 2nd-Degree Murder Of 78-Year-Old Mother
    A Calgary woman has admitted to stabbing her mother multiple times and throwing her down a flight of stairs in the 78-year-old's home.

    Calgary Woman Sentenced To Life In Prison For 2nd-Degree Murder Of 78-Year-Old Mother

    Don't Call 911 If Your Pizza Isn't Ready On Time, Provincial Police Say

    Don't Call 911 If Your Pizza Isn't Ready On Time, Provincial Police Say
    Starvation can be a life or death matter, but police in eastern Ontario say a woman's recent complaint about the wait time for her pizza order doesn't quite qualify.

    Don't Call 911 If Your Pizza Isn't Ready On Time, Provincial Police Say

    Mom Sparks Debate By Detailing Daughter's 'Extreme' Punishment On Social Media

    Mom Sparks Debate By Detailing Daughter's 'Extreme' Punishment On Social Media
    A Newfoundland mom is being both praised and panned for what some say are extreme measures to punish her daughter for apparent bullying behaviour — and then discussing it all on social media.

    Mom Sparks Debate By Detailing Daughter's 'Extreme' Punishment On Social Media

    B.C. Aims To Recycle Difficult Plastic: Six-pack Rings, Chip Bags, Crinkly Wraps

    B.C. Aims To Recycle Difficult Plastic: Six-pack Rings, Chip Bags, Crinkly Wraps
    A British Columbia non-profit group has launched a pilot project to start collecting some of the toughest plastics to recycle such as potato chip bags, zipper-lock sandwich bags and six-pack rings.

    B.C. Aims To Recycle Difficult Plastic: Six-pack Rings, Chip Bags, Crinkly Wraps

    Banff Town Council Bans Smoking And Vaping Cannabis In Public Places

    Banff Town Council Bans Smoking And Vaping Cannabis In Public Places
    Council has decided to limit the use of marijuana to private property in the small mountain town that attracts a large number of international tourists and has a reputation as a place to get a "Rocky Mountain high."

    Banff Town Council Bans Smoking And Vaping Cannabis In Public Places

    First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.

    First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.
    Officers were called to a rural residence near Cranbrook in May 2010, and found 43-year-old Leanne MacFarlane dead and 42-year-old Jeffrey Taylor in critical condition.

    First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.