History, as Hegel famously observed, repeats itself twice: first as tragedy, then as farce. The latest trade melodrama unfolding between Canada, Mexico, and Britain is pure operetta. Canada's quixotic bid for a 16-year NAFTA extension—a desperate cling to the corpse of North American economic integration—smacks of a dying empire begging for a reprieve. Meanwhile, Britain, drunk on delusions of global Britain, parades its 'independent trade deals' like a bankrupt aristocrat flaunting a pawned tiara. Both acts are symptoms of a deeper rot: the death of the post-war liberal order and the rise of a tribal, zero-sum world.
Let us first dissect Canada's gambit. A 16-year extension? In trade negotiations, a decade and a half is geological time. It speaks less of confidence and more of existential dread. Ottawa knows that the United States, under any administration, is no longer a reliable partner. The Trumpian sledgehammer may have been replaced by Biden's velvet glove, but the trajectory remains: America First, Canada tolerated. By locking NAFTA for 16 years, Canada hopes to freeze history, to halt the tectonic shifts that are reshaping global supply chains. It is the equivalent of King Canute ordering the tide to stop. The USMCA, the reanimated corpse of NAFTA, was already a victory for protectionism. A longer renewal would only cement a fortress North America, with Canada as the grateful squire.
But the farce is British. The United Kingdom, having severed itself from the European Union's sclerotic corpse, now prances through a bazaar of trade deals with Australia, New Zealand, and soon, India. These are not the grand imperial preferences of yore; they are niche agreements, desperate grabs for relevance. The rhetoric is Victorian: 'Global Britain' as a trading superpower. The reality is Edwardian: a nation clinging to the wreckage of its former glory, mistaking rhetoric for reality. Britain's independent trade policy is like a man who divorces his wife for her nagging, only to realize he cannot cook, clean, or manage his own finances. The deals signed thus far are modest at best. No amount of free trade with Canberra will replace the seamless access to 450 million consumers that Brussels provided.
What unites these two narratives is the illusion of sovereignty. Canada seeks to preserve sovereignty by binding itself to a US-dominated bloc. Britain seeks to preserve sovereignty by fleeing to a phantom global marketplace. Both are wrong. The nation-state, as a meaningful economic unit, is dying. The forces of deglobalization, hinted at by the supply chain crises of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine, are accelerating. We are entering a world of blocs: the US sphere, the Chinese sphere, and a fragmented Europe. Canada and Britain are both delusional if they think they can stand alone or secure long-term stability. The 16-year NAFTA renewal is a suicide pact with an unreliable partner. Britain's independent deals are a game of musical chairs with no chairs.
The intellectual decadence here is staggering. We have forgotten that trade is not a zero-sum game but a complex dance of mutual dependence. Instead, we fetishize 'independence' and 'sovereignty' as if they were virtues in themselves, ignoring the lesson of the 1930s: that economic nationalism leads to conflict. Canada and Britain are both repeating the errors of the interwar period: chasing phantom advantages while the real threats—climate change, technological disruption, rising authoritarianism—lurk unaddressed.
If we are to salvage anything from this wreckage, we must abandon the pretence of nation-first economics. The only sensible path is supranational cooperation: a true North American community that shares not just trade but security, resources, and a common culture of democratic liberalism. For Britain, it means swallowing pride and seeking a new accommodation with Europe—not a return to the EU, but a pragmatic partnership. Instead, we get 16-year fantasies and deals with faraway lands. It is the politics of nostalgia, and nostalgia is the opiate of a declining civilisation.








