BREAKING: CANADA DECLARES U.S. ORDER DEAD — TRUMP ERUPTS AS BUFFETT ISSUES STARK WARNING
Canada’s prime minister stunned the world in Brussels by calmly declaring that the American-led global order is over, not fading, not weakening, but finished. Standing beside leaders from the European Union, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Australia, the statement landed like an earthquake. Diplomats from more than 60 countries rose in a standing ovation, signaling that this was not protest theater, but a coordinated turning point. The speech marked the public unveiling of months of quiet preparation that many allies had already concluded privately: they could no longer build their future on Washington’s unpredictability.

The declaration triggered an immediate and furious response from Donald Trump, who reportedly exploded behind closed doors at the White House. Within hours, Trump unleashed a barrage of threats online, floating NATO withdrawal, sweeping trade embargoes against Canada, and even intelligence-sharing retaliation. Yet every outburst only reinforced the message delivered in Brussels: the world had already moved on. The alliances were signed, the money repositioned, and the contingency plans activated long before Trump’s first post went live.
At the heart of the announcement was the creation of the Democratic Prosperity Compact, a sweeping multilateral framework linking Canada, the EU, the UK, Japan, Australia, South Korea, and New Zealand. Together, these economies represent more than $28 trillion in combined GDP, rivaling the United States itself. The compact coordinates trade rules, supply-chain security, technology standards, and dispute settlement mechanisms deliberately designed to function without American participation. Diplomats described it as a successor system, not a protest—an architecture built because waiting for Washington had become too costly.

Then came the moment that froze Wall Street. Warren Buffett called a rare press conference and delivered what he bluntly labeled an obituary for American global leadership. Buffett warned that U.S. power was never rooted solely in military might or wealth, but in predictability and trust—an infrastructure now “demolished.” He revealed that major capital had already been quietly repositioning overseas, not out of pessimism about American workers or innovation, but because policy volatility had made the United States a less reliable place to invest.
Perhaps the most consequential detail lay buried in the compact’s technical annexes: provisions allowing trade settlement in non-dollar currencies. Euro-denominated energy contracts, yen-based technology agreements, and a new multilateral clearing system bypassing U.S. financial rails signaled the first serious institutional challenge to dollar dominance since Bretton Woods. Economists warn that even a gradual shift away from the dollar could translate into higher borrowing costs, inflationary pressure, and diminished U.S. leverage at home and abroad.
This moment was not about one speech or one presidency—it was about the collapse of a belief. For decades, allies criticized Washington yet stayed, confident America would course-correct. That faith, leaders now admit, is gone. As Canada’s prime minister spoke in Brussels and the room applauded, it became clear the chair at the head of the table is no longer assumed to be America’s. The question facing the United States now is stark and historic: can it earn its way back into an order it no longer leads, or was this the moment the American century truly ended?