Here are the key points from the video:
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The host says there is a rapidly growing international movement to boycott Donald Trump’s regime and U.S. tourism and products, sparked first and most strongly in Canada and now spreading across Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America.[youtube]
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Canada is described as having led an effective boycott of U.S. tourism, whiskey, bourbon, and other goods, significantly harming those American industries and inspiring similar efforts abroad.[youtube]
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In Denmark, an app that lets shoppers scan items to avoid U.S.-linked products has become the country’s top download, reflecting strong public desire to shun American goods after Trump’s threats against Denmark and Greenland.[youtube]
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The video highlights Trump’s online attacks on Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, including a threat of 100% tariffs on Canadian goods if Canada deepens trade ties with China, despite Trump having recently praised such a deal as a good idea.[youtube]
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It notes rising calls, including from a senior German Football Association executive, to consider boycotting the 2026 World Cup in the U.S., with football fans questioning why they should travel to what they view as a “terrorist state.”[youtube]
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The host ties the boycott momentum to Trump’s rhetoric and actions: insults toward NATO allies’ war dead and veterans, attempts to “invade” or control parts of Greenland, threats of punitive tariffs, and the killing of Minneapolis ICU nurse Alex Jeffrey Pretti by federal agents.[youtube]
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Prime Minister Carney is portrayed as using Trump’s attacks to reinforce a message of Canadian values, multilateralism, and strategic diversification of trade away from the U.S., which the host says further encourages non‑U.S. partnerships.[youtube]
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The video predicts that “Boycott USA” campaigns and talk of World Cup and broader economic boycotts will intensify through 2026 unless foreign leaders forcefully push back against Trump’s policies and rhetoric.[youtube]

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