In America’s ‘most Canadian town,’ Trump’s trade war wounds wallets and hearts
The tiny community of Point Roberts is a little bit of America, firmly fixed to British Columbia.
It’s the result of a cartographic quirk, occupying the southern tip of the otherwise-Canadian Tsawwassen peninsula that is surrounded by water, but dangles south of the 49th parallel.
The exclave gets water and electricity from Metro Vancouver and sometimes Canadian firefighters come to the rescue.
The strange situation of the tiny Washington state community — solely attached to Canada but part of the United States — has some residents feeling caught between forces beyond their control, amid the spiralling trade war and rhetoric between the two countries.
