• Shadow
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    1033 months ago

    Can we please not call Tim Hortons Canadian?

      • jago
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        103 months ago

        Who did make it? What is its source?

    • @merc@sh.itjust.works
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      43 months ago

      Tim Hortons is a fully owned subsidiary of Restaurant Brands International. Restaurant Brands International is a public company traded on the NYSE and TSE with its headquarters in Toronto. A Brazilian investment company 3G Capital owns 32% of Restaurant Brands International via “3G Restaurant Brands Holdings LP”.

      Does that make it a Canadian company? Who the hell knows. It sure doesn’t feel like it, even if it does technically have a Canadian HQ. I guess theoretically it means they pay their corporate tax in Canada. But, realistically, they probably are using various tax dodges to avoid paying much of anything.

      • Shadow
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        53 months ago

        IMHO they stopped being Canadian when they switched to hiring the cheapest TFW’s they could, while championing how Canadian they are in all their advertising. Being Canadian is more than having your HQ in Toronto and sticking a maple leaf on everything.

        Plus their food sucks now.

  • @GiantChickDicks@lemmy.ml
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    363 months ago

    I work at a pet food manufacturer in Wisconsin, and we sell our products in Canada. We’ve been fielding lots of questions and feedback contacts from our Canadian customers saying they won’t feed our products anymore. I get it, and I’m in full support of anyone who boycotts us. In my department, both of the people I report to are right wing, Trump-voting idiots who didn’t think about how this affects us directly.

    This makes my job harder, but hit us where it hurts. I will sit back and laugh as the leopards eat their faces. I truly hope the company as a whole survives as is, but I am prepared if we don’t. Fuck around and find out.

  • masterofn001
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    363 months ago

    Loblaws will continue to receive none of my money.

    Fuck galen. Fuck Presidents choice anything.

    They will probably raise their prices AGAIN in times of hardship to make hundred of millions more.

    I will not eat their products.

    I will eat the rich.

    • setVeryLoud(true);
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      53 months ago

      There are more local options not from PC nor the US that OP didn’t list, the most obvious one to me is frozen pizzas.

      At least in Quebec, there are so many non-American frozen pizza brands I can’t possibly list them all, two of them would be ILIOS and Como’s.

  • @eezeebee@lemmy.ca
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    283 months ago

    Earth’s Own is Canadian and makes pretty good oat milk.

    I’ve already switched to them for a while since it’s more affordable than other coffee creamers.

  • setVeryLoud(true);
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    283 months ago

    Tim Hortons is about as uncanadian as Starbucks, they’re owned by RBI, which is owned by 3Com, a Brazilian food conglomerate.

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      03 months ago

      Okay I’m not Canadian (or USian for that matter), but it’s common for big companies to have many production facilities and many product lines, so similarly packaged and named products are made in different countries and nobody pays any attention. Common example in my country is that since like two decades ago, Põltsamaa Felix was acquired by the Norwegian company Orkla, they’ll make some things here in their Estonian facility (in Põltsamaa, the town the company was named after) and then they’ll make some in Latvia or Lithuania, some in Sweden, etc. Unless you look at the package AND it states the country, you’ll have no idea.

  • @sev@lemmy.ca
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    173 months ago

    I know it’s not a real option for many, but for those who can afford to I’d also recommend shopping local for groceries as much as possible. We need to stand together in the face of these tariffs, but I don’t love the idea of Loblaws and co. standing to gain so much from the struggles of the public yet again.

    Check out local grocery stores and smaller chains like Co-Op if they operate in your area for Canadian made goods. Look and see if there’s a local farmers market you can buy staples like eggs and produce from. It’s the little guys that are likely to face an existential threat from all this international non-diplomacy.

    • @Lauchs@lemmy.world
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      53 months ago

      Absolutely! This is the year where I finally sign up for a CSA. (I’m not a good cook and have always been a bit intimidated but apparently most come with recipes and honestly, all the AI has made me a lot more confident in my ability to “find” a few recipes with whatever random ingredients.)

    • @BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.worldOP
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      33 months ago

      I already shop almost exclusively at the local Polish grocery store. I have no idea what some of the products I’m buying are haha.

    • @fourish@lemmy.world
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      33 months ago

      Have to make sure it’s a real farmers market though and not one that just buys bulk and resells calling them farm produce, often at a considerable markup.

    • @garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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      13 months ago

      Honestly at least where I live the difference between farmers markets and grocery stores isn’t that big anymore. Given, I live on an island where non local stuff has to be shipped and the prices raised because of that, but I’ve been preferring the quality of local veggies way more. Though understandably if you’re struggling to make ends meet, I see why even a few dollars would make a difference.

  • FlareHeart
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    173 months ago

    Canada Dry isn’t Canadian anymore. It was bought by an American company in 2008.

    • yeehaw
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      73 months ago

      I hate how deceptive names can be. You just think by default “oh this must be Canadian then”. So much homework to figure out the truth with all these conglomerates

      • @merc@sh.itjust.works
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        23 months ago

        At the very least, this should provide an incentive for Canadian brands to prominently display flags on their packaging. And, the fairly dysfunctional government should at least be able to agree to pass a law forbidding non-Canadian brands from claiming to be Canadian.

        With billions at stake, there are bound to be companies that bend the rules and claim to be Canadian because 10% of the product comes from Canada, or something. But, at least it would be a step in the right direction. And hey, if those flags stay on for years after this spat, that’s a good thing too. We should be buying more locally, for environmental reasons if not economic ones.

  • @i_stole_ur_taco@lemmy.ca
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    163 months ago

    Coca Cola is bad because… It’s owned by an American corporation, despite being bottled in Canada?

    Why then are we suggested to buy Great Value? Is it because Walmart is an American corporation but it’s bottled in Canada?

    I’ve seen this suggestion a few times before this post. Someone help it make sense.

  • @Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    153 months ago

    I just came back from groceries, and I went in with every intention to not by anything from the USA. Much to my surprise, I’d say 90% of what I usually buy are products grown and made in Canada! The rest were from Spain, India, etc.

    A few were made in Canada using domestic and imported ingredients, so I’ll be looking for all Canadian alternatives.

    Orange juice was the only American product, and was a “one last time” purchase.

    FYI, oats, most legumes and beans, and tomato products are nearly all Canadian.

    • @adarza@lemmy.ca
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      63 months ago

      old dutch was always what we had when i was a kid. mom wouldn’t settle for anything less. it had to be old dutch chips in the box.

      it is a minnesota company but their canadian operations is huge, with manufacturing facilities across the country.

    • @Albbi@lemmy.ca
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      23 months ago

      Old Dutch All Dressed is really good too! I get the sour cream and cheddar every once in a while. It’s weirdly addictive. I also grew up on their ketchup chips.

  • Fantastic list! Where’d you find it?

    For anyone scrolling, add Rustica to the frozen pizza list. Siwin for excellent dumplings. Cheemo for perogies. I’ve just found them in the past few months and they’re all really well made.