Annexing Canada to make it our 51st state, as President Trump has suggested, is never going to happen. Not because it’s a dumb idea. But because our Canadian friends like their lives the way they are, and won’t allow it.
That doesn’t make the proposal any less frightful, because exporting our particular brand of resource exploitation to Canada — which would be inevitable if our governments joined — would, in time, diminish one of the world’s few remaining countries where wild lands and wild critters are still plentiful.
From the wolves that prowl Ellesmere Island in Nunavut, to the snow geese that nest in the Northwest Territories, the polar bears that hunt on Hudson Bay ice, the grizzly bears that roam the Yukon and the millions of ducks and geese that nest each spring and summer on Saskatchewan and Alberta prairies, Canada still hosts many of the same creatures that existed on its lands and in its waters before it was founded.
Of particular benefit to intrepid U.S. anglers during the last century have been the walleyes, lake trout, grayling, muskies and northern pike that teem in the lakes and rivers of the Canadian provinces that border Minnesota.
Some of these fish are reached by canoe in Quetico Provincial Park, others by boat on Lake of the Woods and still others by float plane touching down on the English River or Reindeer Lake, among other far-flung waters.
The only comparable northern landscape is in Russia, and it’s incomparable. Some of Russia’s rivers are still wild, unpolluted and hold trout, salmon and other fish. But much of its big game is poached and suffers from mismanagement — or no management, according to the World Wildlife Fund and other organizations.
Canada, by comparison, whose abundant fish and game could support more generous harvests than it offers, regulates its resources conservatively to ensure sustainability.
As an example, consider how Manitoba manages its walleyes vs. Minnesota.