
Abandoning the G7:Trumps Ego, and The World’s Crisis. While the G7 was taking place, Donald Trump walked out. I don’t believe his departure was primarily to manage the Middle East situation. I feel he left because, in his mind, it wasn’t all about him. The G7 didn’t feed his ego the way a rally does. And so, he left. He walked away because he needed to be somewhere his ego could be fed, and that sure as heck wasn’t happening for him in Kananaskis. Note Air Force One has the ability to act as a situation room.
But, maybe that was a blessing in disguise. Because what we saw in his absence was something remarkable: world leaders from the G7 and invited guests stepping up, not stepping back. They collaborated. They brought calm and clarity to a moment that demands it. Canada’s Prime Minister, Mark Carney, showed exactly what quiet, principled diplomacy looks like; strong, steady, and unshaken by spectacle. Carney doesn’t need a spotlight. And he knows how to bring substance.
And although it may seem small in the grand scheme, I had a private moment of delight watching Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy sitting in the chair Trump had abandoned. There was something poetic in that. And the leaders continued with the hard work. Some may have felt that the meetings would lose their effectiveness without Trump there but I personally feel the room likely got a lot smarter..
And that’s where this shifts from farce to fear. Because while those leaders were working together to steer the world off the edge of a cliff, Trump is inching us toward it. There is intel suggesting he’s warming to the idea of deeper U.S. involvement with Iran, despite concern from some Republicans. That terrifies me.
I know there’s a lot going on right here at home, in our province, in our country, and it’s easy to say, “Let’s just focus on our own backyard.” But sometimes, the world kicks down your front door whether you invited it in or not.
I can’t ignore what’s unfolding in the Middle East right now. This isn’t the same as a one-off drone strike. Maybe those are sometimes necessary, maybe. But this? The idea of American troops being deployed into Iran without a direct threat to the U.S.? That’s a whole other scale. And I don’t believe it’s justified.
So when people say, “Mind your business, Nancy. Stay out of it. This isn’t ours to worry about,” I call bull. Because it is ours. Because this is terrifying. Frickin’ terrifying. And we’d be naive, willfully naive, to pretend it doesn’t affect us.
Yes, the U.S. is a close friend of Israel, as is Canada, and yes, we stand by our allies. But at some point, we also have to ask: What does standing with an ally actually mean? Blind escalation? Endless retaliation? Or helping chart a path out of catastrophe?
Once again, we’re on the precipice. Once again, we’re waiting to see what the President of the United States will do. And maybe more importantly, what those around him, including his own party, will say if and when they disagree. Because they damn well better.
And as we wait, I sit here thinking of my own family members who could be called to serve if Canada aligns with the U.S. in a wider conflict. I think about our kids. Our future. Our shared humanity. And I ask, how the hell did we get here?
There was a time, not long ago, when all the talk was about Joe Biden’s fitness for office. And I get it. People questioned his cognitive strength. Maybe some of that concern was valid. But what I know for sure is this: whatever questions we had about Biden then are dwarfed by what we’re seeing from Donald Trump now. Because Trump’s not just struggling with cognition. He’s struggling with reality. With rationality. With restraint. And when you’re standing at the edge of war, those are the bare minimum requirements.
Already, there are 30 U.S. air-to-air refueling aircraft in the Iranian region. There’s an aircraft carrier on station. And if we start seeing the big bombers lifting off U.S. soil, that will tell us everything we need to know about the decision Trump has made, long before he announces it from a stage in Washington or on Truth Social.
And if you think the maga-supporters, the ones who were promised no new wars, are suddenly going to walk away? Think again. They still believe in him. They still think his decisions are rational, objective, and in the best interests of all. Dear God!!
This is a frightening moment. My gut aches. My heart hurts. And I suspect I’m not alone in feeling like the world is teetering.
And what’s most disturbing? That one of the loudest, most dangerous figures on the world stage, the one whose shadow still looms over this entire mess, is masquerading as the leader of the “greatest democracy on Earth.”
Yeah. Wrap your head around that oxymoron. But sure, let’s keep pretending the guy who walked out of the G7 to go feel important somewhere else is the one who’s going to bring world peace. What could possibly go wrong?
P.S. I chose the image to accompany this post, the “family photo” of G7 leaders, very deliberately. It’s the one without Trump. And honestly, it looks better that way.











