Posted on 04/06/2026 11:19:09 PM PDT by SmokingJoe
That's the YouTube video "How Alabama Became Richer Than Canada" by Caleb Hammer (Front Page channel), uploaded March 23, 2026. It's a ~20-30 minute documentary-style piece that went somewhat viral for highlighting a surprising economic flip.
Quick Summary
The core claim: By 2024, Alabama's GDP per capita (~$63,000, PPP-adjusted) surpassed Canada's (~$44,000). This reversed a 2014 situation where Canada was ahead by about $10k per person. The video uses data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis, Statistics Canada, and a viral February 2026 Globe and Mail article about Huntsville, Alabama, that sparked memes.
Alabama's success story (the "rise" part): Aggressive attraction of auto manufacturing starting in the 1990s: Mercedes-Benz (1993, with big incentives), then Honda, Hyundai, Toyota, and Mazda-Toyota. Alabama now produces ~1.3 million vehicles/year — matching Canada's total output (Canada peaked at 3M in 1999).
Huntsville boom: Redstone Arsenal (NASA, defense, 90k jobs, $36B annual impact). Recent additions like Airbus in Mobile and a massive $6B Eli Lilly plant (2025). Pro-business policies: "Right-to-work" state (low unionization), low taxes, cheap cost of living (16% below US average), fast permitting, and free workforce training (AIDT program). This created "agglomeration effects" where companies cluster and feed off each other.
Results: Median home ~$214k, unemployment 2.7%, steady growth in cities like Huntsville and Birmingham.
Canada's struggles (the "decline" part): Most GDP growth (2014–2023) came from population increases, not productivity. Labor productivity lagged badly (61% growth 1981–2024 vs. US 127%).
Business investment per worker is roughly half the US level. No homegrown tech giants; stock market tiny compared to America's. Policy critiques: High taxes/regulations, internal trade barriers, carbon tax (blamed for shrinking GDP), heavy immigration without matching productivity/housing supply (leading to affordability crisis
— Toronto homes ~$894k USD vs. Birmingham ~$160k). Housing debt at 174% of income, younger Canadians struggling with homeownership. Broader context: Federal debt doubled under Trudeau era, interest payments ballooning, brain drain in tech, over-reliance on real estate.
The video contrasts Alabama's competitive, incentive-driven, low-regulation approach with Canada's higher taxes, more social programs, and perceived stagnation. It notes caveats: Alabama has lower life expectancy, higher poverty rates, and no universal healthcare (Canada has things like cheap childcare).
Still, the narrative frames Alabama as a model of attracting global investment through pragmatism. It's narrated with charts, factory footage, and some dramatic music. There are sponsor reads (finance apps, etc.), and sources are linked in the description.
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You keep to core principles of building a society and you will build your society. That’s how simple it is. It doesn’t matter how far down you are, if you build it then it will build.
Huntsville, AL resident. Moved from N Atlanta in 2020, relocating closer to my hometown area.
Huntsville is indeed booming. Lots of fresh dirt cleared for structure and roadway construction. Huntsville surpassed Birmingham sometime last year for the largest AL metro area.
Sweet Home Ala-berta
Northern Alabama has got lots of tourists locations. Cathedral Caverns, Little River Canyon, The Shoals area with lots of boating and fishing. Lots of water falls. If you want to lure in the talent for 21st century industries you need to give them lots of fun scenery and places to play. Huntsville has all of that and more. In other words; it is a hidden gem. Oh yeah, Centre Alabama sells lots of cool fireworks. Roman Candles and more.
It’s insane how far Canada has fallen.
There was a recent YouTube video that depicts the causes (although it leaves out Leftism, of course). If the video included Leftism it would have been perfect.
https://youtu.be/Q0jqfKUnQQk?si=0BPt_2kmkvqA1rTi
I wonder how much worse that chart will look if their cash cow (Alberta) decides to leave the Dominion.
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