Canada didn’t get meaner, Canada got tested. “Nicer than America” was never a personality—it was the absence of stakes. Host a World Cup under real scrutiny and the cracks show. Not Trump’s fault. The actual friction is Canadians vs. their own government over the bill, not tourists.


What's Up With Canada During This World Cup?

Canada didn’t get meaner. Canada got tested.

For decades the national brand was “nicer than America”—a low bar, mostly true, mostly cost-free, because nobody was actually watching closely enough to check. Host a World Cup and suddenly people are watching. Stadiums get graded. Hotel prices get screenshotted. TikTok runs the comparison against US host cities in real time, and the algorithm doesn’t care about feelings—it cares about volume, and the US has more matches, so it wins the discourse by default.

That’s not “Canada showing its true colors because of Trump.” That’s Canada discovering that politeness was never a personality trait—it was the absence of stakes. Nobody resents a houseguest who never asks anything of you. The moment Canada had to perform hospitality at scale, under scrutiny, with money on the line, the cracks that were always there—resentment of being America’s quieter, smaller, more self-congratulating sibling—showed up. Not because Trump flipped a switch. Because hosting flipped one.

And the actual data on the ground doesn’t even support the “Canada bad host” narrative—transit’s been fine, fan zones have been well-reviewed, Vancouver’s ranked the best host city in the tournament by most metrics. The friction that’s real isn’t tourists vs. Canadians. It’s Canadians vs. their own government, over a billion dollars spent on this instead of housing. That’s the actual story. The “polite Canadians are secretly resentful” thing is a TikTok narrative chasing engagement, not a behavioral shift.

So no—it’s not that Canada is becoming the thing it disavowed. It’s that “nice” was always conditional on nobody asking Canada to actually deliver anything under pressure. Now someone did.


Words Without Anchors: How “Democracy” and “Fascism” Both Became Smuggling Operations, and Why Antifa Will Tell You That to Your Face chrisabraham.substack.com/p/words-w…


Inconclusive If I were ever going to get a tramp stamp, I know what it would say. Inconclusive. chrisabraham.substack.com/p/inconcl…


Remember when being easily offended was a personality flaw, not a personality? youtube.com/watch


Primer is so good it’ll melt your brain-it melted mine.


Forget Disclosure Day—save your money—watch Close Encounters of the Third Kind


Hapa is Hawaiian for Wasian


Devastating. Hilarious. Brutal. Extremely Gen X. Worthwhile.


Nobody Thinks They’re the Chain Snitches Get Stitches, Race Traitors, Sic Semper Tyrannis, and the One Mechanism Running Underneath All of It substack.com/home/post…


Here come the Predictive Programming Vigilante movies right on time!


Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 7,1-5

1 Jesus said to his disciples: “Stop judging, that you may not be judged. 2 For as you judge, so will you be judged, and the measure with which you measure will be measured out to you. 3 Why do you notice the splinter in your brother’s eye, but do not perceive the wooden beam in your own eye? 4 How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me remove that splinter from your eye,’ while the wooden beam is in your eye? 5 You hypocrite, remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then you will see clearly to remove the splinter from your brother’s eye.”


So THIS is the “family secret”

People are discovering the truth about their biological parents with DNA—and learning that incest is far more common than many think. www.theatlantic.com/health/ar…


Center Mass, No Names: What Fifty Years of Video Games Already Trained Us For chrisabraham.substack.com/p/center-…


Nobody’s Trying to Capture AA: Why the most Christian room in America doesn’t know it’s church chrisabraham.substack.com/p/nobodys…


Do you know the logo? Can you guess?


Every beauty queen wants world peace. Pope Leo XIV stepped to the mic and delivered: “The world is thirsting for peace. Enough of war!” The crowd erupted. He told JD Vance he’d visit America “at some point.” Matthew 5:46 isn’t impressed. Even tax collectors love the people who are easy to love.


The blockbuster public offering of SpaceX created more than 4,400 employee millionaires, with nearly 400 individuals earning $100 million or more. Because SpaceX historically distributed equity across all tiers, the windfall uniquely extended to cafeteria workers, machinists, and welders.


Everybody now feels entitled to live like a socialite

Everybody now feels entitled to live like a socialite and honestly that’s part of the problem but only part. Socialites used to go to brunch, grab coffee, do long lunches, hit wine bars. Regular people drank beer at home. Even a glass of wine with dinner every night was solidly middle class. Now everyone lives like that without blinking and avocado toast, which by the way avocados are genuinely expensive and always were, has become just breakfast. That’s a real shift and it matters. But here’s the actual housing argument. Houses are more expensive because American wealth exploded. That’s it. The population doubled since the 70s and millionaires and institutional investors are now practically ubiquitous in a way they simply were not in 1975. The market charges what the market will bear, that’s just economics, and when wealthy buyers compete for the same modest homes as first time buyers the floor of the entire market rises to meet their purchasing power. The Sears kit homes and starter homes that housed normal working families are now teardowns because the land is worth more to a wealthy buyer than the house sitting on it. Nobody builds starter homes anymore because there is no profit in it when you can build luxury instead. Tokyo normalized small efficient apartments and nobody expects a McMansion. Americans expect the yard, the garage, the square footage, and the market is perfectly happy to charge accordingly because there are enough wealthy buyers to support those prices. You cannot outbid institutional money and generational wealth on a normal income and that is not a personal failure. That is the market doing exactly what markets do when wealth concentrates at the top.


Houses are more expensive because American wealth exploded. The population doubled and millionaires are now everywhere. When rich buyers and institutional investors compete for starter homes the floor of the entire market rises to meet their purchasing power.