At a distance from power — sovereignty and the list

On January 20, 2026, in Davos, the Prime Minister of Canada explains to world leaders that the old system is dead, that Canada will no longer be dependent on the United States, that middle powers must build their strategic autonomy, and that his country takes the world as it is, not as it would wish it to be.

The room applauds. The phrase circulates on the wire. Journalists pick it up. It makes the rounds.

Meanwhile, the list exists.

The border tightens, admissions of temporary residents drop from 673,650 to 385,000 in one year, and a budget of 1.3 billion dollars is allocated to border security — drones, helicopters, additional officers — all of it presented to the White House border czar, Tom Homan, a few weeks after the speech.

A pipeline comes back to the table, it is Carney himself who proposes its revival to Trump during their meeting at the White House in October, a memorandum of understanding is signed with Alberta in November, and the Minister of the Environment resigns the same day.

The list does not discuss. It executes.

Sovereignty speeches keep circulating. The list keeps going.

Both come from the same man. What is striking is not the contradiction — it is visible. What is striking is that it disturbs no one.

The speech reassures. The list decides.

That’s all.

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