That is a very complicated question. That's why you would get more than one answer from different people. I won't give you some bottom-line judgment on that, but I'll try to explain it.
When we have a tariff—say, the United States puts on tariffs and then Canada puts on a countervailing tariff—what that does is raise the price on both sides of the border. One of the effects of that is that it creates a level playing field for an exporter. That's the reason it's put in place. The other part of it is that it raises the price for everyone. There are second-round effects that could be the most important ones for some of the people you speak to.
This is the most important and most unfortunate part of a trade action or trade war: that everybody ends up paying far more for everything. It is counterproductive. War of all types is counterproductive.