Canada didn’t get meaner. Canada got tested.

For decades the national brand was “nicer than America”—a low bar, mostly true, mostly cost-free, because nobody was actually watching closely enough to check. Host a World Cup and suddenly people are watching. Stadiums get graded. Hotel prices get screenshotted. TikTok runs the comparison against US host cities in real time, and the algorithm doesn’t care about feelings—it cares about volume, and the US has more matches, so it wins the discourse by default.

That’s not “Canada showing its true colors because of Trump.” That’s Canada discovering that politeness was never a personality trait—it was the absence of stakes. Nobody resents a houseguest who never asks anything of you. The moment Canada had to perform hospitality at scale, under scrutiny, with money on the line, the cracks that were always there—resentment of being America’s quieter, smaller, more self-congratulating sibling—showed up. Not because Trump flipped a switch. Because hosting flipped one.

And the actual data on the ground doesn’t even support the “Canada bad host” narrative—transit’s been fine, fan zones have been well-reviewed, Vancouver’s ranked the best host city in the tournament by most metrics. The friction that’s real isn’t tourists vs. Canadians. It’s Canadians vs. their own government, over a billion dollars spent on this instead of housing. That’s the actual story. The “polite Canadians are secretly resentful” thing is a TikTok narrative chasing engagement, not a behavioral shift.

So no—it’s not that Canada is becoming the thing it disavowed. It’s that “nice” was always conditional on nobody asking Canada to actually deliver anything under pressure. Now someone did.