Agreement, what agreement? |
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Victoria, BC, Thursday, May 4, 2006, by : Casper Davis | |||||
Negotiate is what you do before you reach an agreement - in this case, before NAFTA was signed. When you have an agreement - one that contains specific terms for settling differences under it - renegotiating the terms in the favour of one party because that party refuses to recognize the agreed upon terms, would properly be called "capitulation" not negotiation. An agreement is a contract, just like any other contract. Say I agreed to paint your house, and you paid me the stipulated fee, but I refused to paint. Instead, I started "negotiating," and eventually offered to paint 80% of the house, some day. That is the kind of "negotiating" that the great negotiators Harper, Wilson, and Emerson have been engaged in. The US National Home Builders' Association was sufficiently disgusted that they declared Canada to be an unreliable supplier, vowing to seek other sources for their wood:
If it weren't for NAFTA, Canada's exports would not have been so heavily skewed towards one extremely unreliable buyer in the first place. The way to survive living next to an elephant is to keep on improving your relations with all the other animals, not to become more dependent on the elephant. |
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