Prime Minister Mark Carney has vowed Canada will never be a 51st American state and has known as on Canada to current a united entrance to defend in opposition to United States President Donald Trump’s escalating attacks on Canada’s economy and sovereignty.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Most Canadians are already on board. Provincial premiers have committed to defending against tariffs, and recent polling data shows 85 per cent of Canadians resolutely reject Trump’s threats of annexation.
But, regardless of this widespread patriotism, some Canadians could have a relative or good friend within the contrarian 10 per cent of residents who welcome annexation.
Why do these people assist Trump?
Psychology and safety
The reply has much less to do with politics or financial frustration than it does psychology. The rationale some Canadians are reacting positively to Trump’s threats is as a result of cognitive biases usually prevent human beings from accurately assessing shocks to their security environment.
Psychological biases are well-researched in international security scholarship, and I’ve witnessed their penalties first-hand in my work in battle zones.
From peacekeepers to politicians to bizarre civilians, I’ve seen how cognitive biases may cause rational, clever individuals to disregard invaluable proof, even at nice peril.
People usually react to unsettling proof by denying, minimizing or re-interpreting the data to revive their cognitive ease. Everybody in a conflict-prone a part of the world experiences cognitive distortions and denial sooner or later. Psychological safety usually overrides bodily safety.
However these biases are dangerous. They undermine decision-making, decelerate response instances and trigger individuals to consider harmful issues that make them unsafe.
The difficult half is that difficult an individual’s denial can provoke defensiveness, even rage. However allowing denial to persist leaves them dangerously unprepared to face real-world threats.
On stability, the safer selection is to tear off these psychological Band-aids.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
Denial by way of affirmation bias
Apart from a small share of extremists, the ten per cent who’re in favour of American annexation are bizarre Canadians. What makes them completely different are two interrelated cognitive biases: affirmation bias and perception perseverance.
For Canadians who maintain Trump in excessive esteem, acknowledging his threats creates cognitive dissonance. Some individuals discover dissonance so distressing that it feels simpler to reject or reinterpret the opposite data in a approach that protects prior-held concepts and restores cognitive ease.
These confirmation biases permit the ten per cent to redefine the phrase “annexation” to imply one thing else, corresponding to peaceable political unification. That imagined definition turns Trump’s risk right into a pleasant proposal resulting in higher prosperity and safety.
That reinterpretation could cut back psychological misery, nevertheless it’s delusional.
Political unification is a non-coercive and consent-based process, whereby events conform to incorporation through referendum, usually producing an all new government. Trump is proposing unilateral annexation, which is the hostile and illegal seizure of a sovereign state’s territory and the subjugation of its inhabitants.
Annexation just isn’t marriage. It’s rape.
Unilateral annexation is so inherently violent that its prohibition in Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter is taken into account the authorized cornerstone of the post-Second World Conflict worldwide order.
As Trump, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping every champion annexing close by sovereign nations within the identify of greatness, that worldwide order is now crumbling. If the laws, norms and institutions preventing annexation collapse, it opens the door to invasions, insurgencies and even global war.
Learn extra:
Why annexing Canada would destroy the United States
Most of the 10 per cent are merely unaware of what “annexation” actually means, and could rationally change their position as soon as they perceive the details. However a smaller subset of that group could reject the proof fully.
Belief perseverance causes some individuals to aggressively maintain their unique place, even when offered with disconfirming proof.
Whereas denial helps them really feel protected within the second, it additionally makes them dangerously unprepared to cope with actual threats.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette
Denial by way of normalcy bias
Patriotic “elbows up” Canadians should even be cautious of denial. For them, the problem just isn’t figuring out the threats, however comprehending their full implications.
Even amongst knowledgeable residents, NATO, NORAD and the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance usually are not simple to narrate to. Commerce wars present up on grocery payments, however these defence organizations hold peace within the background, which is tougher to note.
Canadians could intellectually perceive that North American safety is deteriorating, however that disaster could not appear as actual as tariffs.
That is known as “normalcy bias,” a psychological tendency to minimize the probability of threats or the dangers they pose, which delays protecting motion. Normalcy and optimism biases are why many individuals fail to evacuate shortly when they’re forewarned about wildfires, hurricanes, earthquakes and even wars.
Sluggish reactions usually are not brought on by stupidity or laziness. Analysis exhibits that the majority people respond inefficiently to warnings of forthcoming disasters. I’ve witnessed this bias in battle zones and even skilled its results myself. I can run 10 kilometres in about an hour, however when the Taliban attacked a bazaar lower than 10 kilometres from my flat, it nonetheless felt distant.
Why? As a result of safety threats don’t really feel shut till your home windows begin to shake.

(AP Picture/Mohammad Sajjad)
Whereas a military invasion is not imminent, Trump’s threats are so extreme that they warrant fast motion to improve Canadian defence. The time to take protecting motion is earlier than home windows begin shaking.
For almost all of Canadians who already take Trump’s threats critically, step one in countering the normalcy bias is to concentrate to new risks and fractures in existing security co-operation.
With that proof, they will provoke a nationwide dialog about the way to reduce vulnerabilities and enhance resilience and defence.
Acceptance and adaptation
There isn’t a time to argue with individuals who stay cognitively confused. Nearly all of Canadians are able to have a laser-focused dialogue about the actual safety challenges on the horizon.
The excellent news is that Canada can fortify its safety and deter threats on this perilous new world.
The range of options is probably not as snug because the bygone period of pleasant alliances and NATO supremacy. However by way of intelligent debate, Canadians can develop practical new approaches to nationwide defence, and shortly.
Acceptance and adaptation are the keys to survival.