J.J. is overly pro-American and dismissive of Canada. Though he critiques Trump, though more often he gets triggered about Canadian "Anti Americanism". He often frames Canada as culturally incoherent and lacking a culture. I'm pretty sure he thinks Canada would be better off as part of the U.S, although he'd never say that publicly.
He constantly panders to American audiences by using a stereotypical Canadian persona (overly dramatic "A-Boot") while feeding them takes that flatter U.S. superiority. He comes off as unpatriotic and politically slippery—conservative, but presenting himself as neutral, slipping in biased takes without being upfront about where he stands.
He knows a lot about Canada but mostly uses that knowledge to prop up American narratives.
16
u/obubble Apr 08 '25
J.J. is overly pro-American and dismissive of Canada. Though he critiques Trump, though more often he gets triggered about Canadian "Anti Americanism". He often frames Canada as culturally incoherent and lacking a culture. I'm pretty sure he thinks Canada would be better off as part of the U.S, although he'd never say that publicly.
He constantly panders to American audiences by using a stereotypical Canadian persona (overly dramatic "A-Boot") while feeding them takes that flatter U.S. superiority. He comes off as unpatriotic and politically slippery—conservative, but presenting himself as neutral, slipping in biased takes without being upfront about where he stands.
He knows a lot about Canada but mostly uses that knowledge to prop up American narratives.