CELEBRITY
It wasn’t a protest. It wasn’t a boycott announcement. Canadians simply stopped coming — and the damage was immediate. Billions in U.S. tourism revenue vanished almost overnight as border towns emptied out, hotels went dark, restaurants closed, and layoffs spread fast. Donald Trump is reportedly furious, demanding to know why Canada “turned its back.” Ottawa’s response cut deeper than any tariff: “Canadians travel where they feel welcomed and respected.” No threats. No drama. Just consequences — and they’re hitting week after week. More details in the comments below.⤵️
It wasn’t a protest. It wasn’t a boycott announcement. Canadians simply stopped coming — and the damage was immediate. Billions in U.S. tourism revenue vanished almost overnight as border towns emptied out, hotels went dark, restaurants closed, and layoffs spread fast.
Donald Trump is reportedly furious, demanding to know why Canada “turned its back.” Ottawa’s response cut deeper than any tariff: “Canadians travel where they feel welcomed and respected.” No threats. No drama. Just consequences — and they’re hitting week after week.
More details in the comments below.⤵️
It didn’t come with chants. No official statements. No organized campaign.
Canadians just… stopped showing up.
And the impact was immediate.
Border towns that once depended on steady Canadian traffic are now feeling the strain. Hotels sit half-empty. Restaurants that thrived on cross-border visitors are cutting hours—or closing altogether. Retail shops are seeing foot traffic drop to a trickle. Within weeks, the ripple effects turned into layoffs and lost revenue, adding up to billions across the U.S. tourism sector.
Behind the scenes, frustration is reportedly building. Donald Trump is said to be pressing aides for answers, questioning how such a major economic shift could happen so quickly.
But from Canada, the message has been calm—and pointed:
“Canadians travel where they feel welcomed and respected.”
No escalation. No retaliation. Just a quiet change in behavior.
And that’s what makes this different.
There’s no single policy to reverse, no negotiation table to reset the flow. This isn’t about tariffs or official restrictions—it’s about perception, sentiment, and choice. The kind of shift that doesn’t make headlines at first, but compounds week after week.
Tourism analysts say this kind of consumer-driven pullback can be harder to fix than formal disputes. Once travelers build new habits—choosing different destinations, different experiences—they don’t always come back quickly.
For many U.S. border communities, the question isn’t just how this started.
It’s how long it lasts.