The Great White North judge has plentifulness of snowflakes.
Outraged Canadians are demanding Amazon extremity trading 51st authorities merch, blasting nan cogwheel arsenic “disgusting,” “dangerous” and ongoing “economic terrorism.”
A slew of hats, shirts and stickers are being shopped online via nan US unit elephantine pinch catchy slogans for illustration “Make Canada Great Again,” ‘U.S.Eh” and “Maple syrup and state 51 states strong,” offending Canucks who person signed a February petition that has garnered close to 70,000 supporters.
“This is not a joke to us,” declared Sue Williams-Dunn, nan Ontario female down nan petition. “It’s a threat to our autonomy and personality arsenic Canadians.
“While immoderate whitethorn reason these products are harmless, moreover comedic, they disregard and belittle nan sustained economical coercion Canada has been withstanding.”
President Trump has many times pledged to make the Great White North nan 51st state, ever since a November meeting pinch ex-Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau astatine Mar-a-Lago, wherever nan brace discussed separator information and stopping nan forbidden travel of fentanyl.
The threats triggered already-on-edge Canadians, who person been cancelling trips south of nan 49th parallel en masse and boycotting US products.
Protests to this latest trading ploy person been conscionable arsenic fierce.
“I personally deliberation being called an American is nan worst point that tin hap to me,” a petition signer ranted. “I’d alternatively dice first. … Just disgusting.”
Others targeted nan unit behemoth, pledging to cancel their Amazon Prime subscriptions.
“I person already canceled my Amazon account. That’s nan benignant of protestation that matters,” wrote different petition signer.
Amazon told The Post it is alert of nan complaints but concluded nan items do not break its argumentation connected violative products.
“As a store, we’ve chosen to connection a very wide scope of viewpoints, including products that whitethorn beryllium disagreeable,” nan institution shared.