A Fictional STORM OF THE CENTURY
Worst‑Case Scenario
Pretend you live in a subarctic nation suddenly living under leaders who don't believe in winter
Canada imports 75% of its fruit and 50% of its vegetables, so it is patently reckless for Canada's own leadership to posture and provoke without concept of the consequences. We are not the United States which can feed itself.
We cannot feed ourselves. We cannot even come close. We fall 50 percent or more short of feeding ourselves all year long.
When Canada imports that much of its basic sustenance, the Famine Sword of Damocles doesn’t hang over the Prime Minister’s head — it hangs over every family that can’t buy its way out of the food scarcity that is looming.
This is what makes the Canadian Prime Minister's Davos grandstanding and world galivanting surreal. The people applauding the speech will never stand in an empty produce aisle in February in Canada.
Our shriveled currency and retrograde economy cannot sustain having it shipped in on time to replace existing demand, not in time to avert starvation.
This is a speculative fiction and worst‑case scenario, but the timing is real.
For Canada, the effect is immediate.
Day One: The Shelves Empty
By Day Three: Reality Sets In
With the U.S. agricultural belt either frozen or flooded, the supply chain Canada relies on simply stops. Not because anyone intends harm, but the disturbing freeze in political relations doesn't help in the slightest.Suddenly the system has no slack. The dependence which is invisible in good times has became painfully visible to Canadians in this crisis. If they can get across the border and do a shop, they face these extraordinary tariffs in the form of 'special' duty,
Families feel it instantly. Canada has always been suckling on the teat of American agriculture. Maybe not policymakers. Maybe not the blowhards who put us here from making stupid, myopic egomaniacal speeches in Davos. It's the real people who shop on Wednesday because payday is Thursday.
Day Five: The Limits of Optimism
Ottawa announces working groups, consultations, and long‑term strategies. None of them will produce a tomato in February. The country discovers, belatedly, that greenhouses require years of investment, not days of improvisation.Day Six — Quiet Dread Sets In, Famine too
Day Seven: Taking Stock of Human Costs
Maybe Canadian political masters can cut deals for bananas fitting the nature of Canada's governance. Food scarcity slams the nation with a famine, and food becomes luxury. Fresh anything turns into a distant memory, instantly, and it's only February. Parents make substitutions they don’t talk about. Seniors stretch meals in ways no Liberal speech in Davos ever explained.
This is where the asymmetry becomes impossible to ignore. People with means adjust. They stock up. They switch stores. They drive farther. They pay whatever the new price is.
Everyone else absorbs the ferocious impact directly. They feel it in the checkout line. But to be honest there has never been anything like this in the history of the nation, even Great Depression had a certain levity in the sharing of produce. No money changed hands. People had gardens, canned their winter supplies, shared the things and canned things and other shared things across fences. Not anymore. Food scarcity. They see it in the fridge. They feel it in their bodies.
And none of this lands on the people who made decisions to leave 43 million people of the edge of death in a heartbeat, because suddenly borders matter and hate controls the agenda. Make no mistake. The discomfort is not distributed upward. It never is. The burden settles on households that did nothing to create the risk, who despite their every effort have been left with no buffer to soften the blow.
Food insecurity doesn’t announce itself except with a thud in the stomach. First are the small humiliations of scarcity, Old Mother Hubbard Went to the Cupboard, the store, the food bank, and every place has an empty shelf, the missing ingredient, the generosity of neighbors, the meal that isn’t quite enough.
Carney has in the most realistic way and most intimate form created a huge national vulnerability, because it reaches into homes and asks families to make choices no government should ever force them to make.





