For most of Canada’s history there was an understood bargain at the heart of our social contract. If you worked hard, got an education, stayed out of trouble, and did your part, you would get a happy life in return. You could move out, find decent work, buy a home, raise a family if you wanted one, and feel that your life was progressing roughly according to plan. The promise was never that everything would be easy, or even equal. It was that effort would compound into stability, and stability into a future.
For many young Canadians today, that sequence of success has become delayed, distorted, and broken. The country still asks for all the same things it once did: discipline, education, thrift, patience, flexibility, and resilience. But now the rewards arrive later, at a higher price, and with far less certainty.
The Liberal Party gave it away to Time Horton’s
Canada’s immigration system is a dumpster fire led by an incompetent Minister. pic.twitter.com/zFNeFvIxBr
— Michelle Rempel Garner (@MichelleRempel) March 23, 2026
