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Opinion | We need young Canadians willing to stand against Trump. It’s time to create a new national service

2 min read
16 soldiers injured in accident at Valcartier military base in Quebec

Members of the Canadian Armed Forces march in the Calgary Stampede parade, in Calgary, on July 8, 2016.


David Last is an associate professor of political science at Royal Military College; Thomas Homer-Dixon is the executive director of the Cascade Institute at Royal Roads University.

Waning superpowers are dangerous, and the United States is no exception. Amid Donald Trump’s continued assault on the rule of law and government expertise, the survival of American democracy is uncertain. And with the president’s expansionist sights set on Canada, the future of our country is under threat, too.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has stated that Canada is not for sale, yet Trump claims that the world’s longest undefended border would be easy to erase — and that more than 40 per cent of Canadians age 18 to 34 would vote to become American under certain conditions. Our flawed democracy serves the old better than the young. We have a minority government and a population divided by imported ethnonational conflicts, foreign interference and secessionist movements. If Canada fails to serve its citizens adequately and provide them with a cohesive identity, it won’t survive.

David Last is an associate professor of political science at Royal Military College; Thomas Homer-Dixon is the executive director of the Cascade Institute at Royal Roads University.

Opinion articles are based on the author’s interpretations and judgments of facts, data and events. More details

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