Canadians promised to boycott travel to US. They meant it

(usatoday.com)

90 points | by djkivi 6 hours ago ago

40 comments

  • screye 6 hours ago ago

    Surprised Canadians would pick the US as a tourist destination to begin with.

    Europe is cheaper and more fun. America's one advantage: nature, is matched and at times exceeded by Canada. Flights to warm places like Miami and SD take just as long as Mexico or the Caribbean.

    Other than NYC and Utah-area national parks, I can't think of unique reasons for Canadians to vacation in the US specifically.

    • mullingitover 3 hours ago ago

      Also, if you want the booming, futuristic metropolis experience that doesn't exist in any comparable way in the US, China now offers visa-free travel for Canadians[1].

      [1] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c875d3d3x34o

      • metalman 2 hours ago ago

        ok thats interesting, wonder how they take to overlanding? drive west the whole way accross Canada, ship the rig, fly over , keep driving west till the atlantic shows up, ship the rig , fly home.

    • elevaet 5 hours ago ago

      There were lots of places in the USA that (as a Canadian) my family and friends loved visiting - Kauai for hiking and beaches, Mt. Baker for skiing, bay area for all the weird stuff that goes on there, Nevada for that thing in the desert, Oregon coast for surfing, Utah-area parks like you said, hiking in Washington.

      Lots of amazing outdoor adventures to be had in the USA. Now days I don't know anyone that goes to the states.

    • null_deref 3 hours ago ago

      > Other than NYC and Utah-area national parks, I can't think of unique reasons for Canadians to vacation in the US specifically.

      While NYC and Utah Area national parks are iconic, the US has immense geographic and cultural diversity beyond them. Destinations like New Orleans, the California coast, or the unique high-desert landscapes of New Mexico offer experiences that are distinct from anything available in Canada.

    • saltcod 5 hours ago ago

      Shorter, cheaper flights. Toronto to Orlando is 2.5 hrs I think?

      • stockresearcher 4 hours ago ago

        All the major Canadian airports also have the US customs and immigration on-site. You go through it as part of the standard airport security process and then the airplane goes to a domestic terminal when it lands, as if the flight had originated within the US. You get off the plane, grab your luggage and leave, no additional lines, security, talking to officials, etc.

        The only European airport that does this is Dublin, last I checked.

        • jen20 3 hours ago ago

          Shannon also has pre-clearance. The list is small outside of Canada though - Dublin, Shannon, Abu Dhabi, Aruba, Bermuda and Nassau.

          • OJFord 2 hours ago ago

            You can use eGates in the UK, same as me as a British citizen (as long as your passport's new enough, probably all of them by now) - that covers it doesn't it? Otherwise I'm not clear what 'pre-clearance' is skipping? Painless for me into Canada too.

            • PygmySurfer 2 hours ago ago

              It saves you the hassle of going through customs when you land at your destination.

            • lukeinator42 2 hours ago ago

              No, they mean we actually clear US customs in Canada as non-US citizens.

    • baxtr 3 hours ago ago

      An 8 hour flight vs a 2 hour flight maybe?

    • j45 3 hours ago ago

      Europe is likely much more cheaper and fun for those in and around the EU both proximity and accessbility wise.

      Looking at the currencies, it might be a bigger difference.

      Also looking at flight distance, it might be further.

      Visa requirements coudl also vary too.

    • 8note 3 hours ago ago

      florida and california are drivable from canada

    • unethical_ban 3 hours ago ago

      I don't see how getting to Europe is cheaper or easier than getting to the US.

      Also the US speaks english which can be nice for an easy vacation. No need to learn phrases or customs before going somewhere.

    • pedalpete 5 hours ago ago

      As a Canadian, we don't think of travelling to the US as "international travel". It's more like going to a friends house.

      I remember flying Alaska Airlines out of SFO and when I went to check-in at the International Terminal, the gate agent said "Canada isn't International" and looked at me like I was the dumbest human on the planet.

      Either she was seeing Trump's future, or....

    • readthenotes1 5 hours ago ago

      At one point, the largest cohort of illegal immigrants in the US was Canadian visa overstays. They must have liked something about the place...

      • doomslayer999 4 hours ago ago

        That was Indians, mostly punjabis, hopping the border.

    • jmclnx 6 hours ago ago

      US is far easier to get to. Just go to a Maine or NH beach the the summer. People from Quebec are everywhere.

      FWIW, you have not lived until you see a way overweight man wearing only a tiny bikini bathing suit :)

  • FartinMowler 5 hours ago ago

    It's not really a promised or conscious boycott. It's after weighing the pros and cons, many of them intangible, the feeling is visiting the US right now could result in unpleasantness ... and if there is anything Canadians are adverse to it is unpleasantness. Anecdata: a friend of ours crossing the US border, despite being a VP at a bank, for her first time ever had to surrender her phone for examination by US border agents. Who needs that!

    • orwin 2 hours ago ago

      Yeah, it's the same for me, I'm in Europe but I have places to sleep in the US. I was supposed to go this summer with my family but the uncertainty on how we'll get treated at the border (last time wasn't great for those of us who struggled with English already, I can't imagine what would have happened under this admin).

      It's sad because WV might have like 15 European tourist every year and we're 5-9 of them depending on the year, but we'll take a year off, that's OK.

    • vkou 3 hours ago ago

      I assure you, there is also a conscious boycott from many people.

      You are right that it might not necessarily be a hard boycott, but it will take a hell of a lot to lure them into giving Trump and his supplicants a cent of leisure travel.

  • footy 4 hours ago ago

    I know it might be hard for a population who elected the current POTUS twice, but some of us mean what we say. I fail to see what's so surprising about this.

  • lgleason 6 hours ago ago

    If only that was to translate to cheaper hotel room prices in the US. Currently they are sky high.

    • klardotsh 4 hours ago ago

      Tell me about it. I remember being able to snag a nice room at a Courtyard/Hampton caliber of hotel for like $100 in 2016-18 timeframe. Based on https://www.in2013dollars.com/us/inflation/2016?amount=100 I would expect that to cost about $135 now if adjusting only for (hyper)inflation. It instead tends to cost something like $175-225/night. WTAF.

    • josefritzishere 4 hours ago ago

      Trump has been devaluing the dollar quite rapidly. Give it time. The US will become a like developing nation in no time.

      • abe_m 4 hours ago ago

        Canada's policy is to keep the CAD cheaper than USD. No matter how fast USA goes, Bank of Canada can keep up.

      • direwolf20 2 hours ago ago

        The US is, and always has been, a developing nation. What sets it apart from all other developing nations is that it controls the de facto world currency, making it a very wealthy developing nation. All of the cultural factors are closer to a third world country, but the wealth is first world, more like Russia than like western Europe.

  • vondur 4 hours ago ago

    I would imagine the economic situation in Canada isn't helping either.

  • bobomonkey 6 hours ago ago

    US prices are insane if you're paid in CAD. The good news is that Canada is great if you're paid in USD and are used to costal prices. It's like going to a third world country.

    • footy 4 hours ago ago

      US prices are no less insane for people paid in CAD than they were two years ago.

    • klardotsh 4 hours ago ago

      Not quite third world country, but yes, the 25-35% built-in discount when visiting Vancouver or Victoria from Seattle or Bellingham is quite nice :) Similar discounts to visiting the Midwest, with none of the Midwest part!

  • josefritzishere 5 hours ago ago

    It's almost like Trump is making a series of consistently terrible decisions that are economically and socially bad for America.

    • randomNumber7 3 hours ago ago

      Why didn't more people vote for the side that understands that illegal migration is needed for cheap labor in the agricultural sector?

      • upboundspiral 3 hours ago ago

        While our agricultural sector does use cheap labor, I specifically take issue with the word "needed". I may be nitpicking, but read a certain way it implies the "cheap" aspect of the labor is the essential part.

        Certain industries employing quasy-slave labor to this day and getting away with it is one thing only: a stain on our society.

        Long has been the fight for freedom from oppression and it is not over yet. Just like Martin Luther King was assassinated fighting for colored civil rights, Cesar Chavez was assassinated fighting for humane conditions for immigrant workers.

        If immigrants are what's "needed" for America to function then they should be naturalized and granted fair wages just like anyone else.

  • bartonfink 5 hours ago ago

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  • stronglikedan 6 hours ago ago

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