“81 per cent of Canadians feel that in Canada more emphasis is currently being placed on things that divide us as a society”

The wheels are falling off Canada’s diversity bus

Ethnocultural diversity is a prominent concern for businesses, educational institutions and governments nationwide. Canada chose the path to be a multicultural nation in 1971 when prime minister Pierre Trudeau introduced policies that promoted the inclusion of diverse perspectives and contributions while honouring Canadians’ unique differences. This commitment to diversity was enshrined within the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982, and in 1987 Canada took a groundbreaking step by passing the Multicultural Act.

Fast forward to 2023, and the message from the federal government remains consistent, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently affirmed, “We’re a place that does diversity better than just about anywhere else.”

… Perhaps as a society, we haven’t fully embraced this vision. In our survey, we shared a list of nine values and asked Canadians to tell us how strongly they associated each one as a core value of being Canadian. Four values — democracy, freedom of speech, Canada’s social safety net, and equality of genders — were strongly associated with by a small majority of respondents. Is it concerning that multiculturalism and tolerance for different religious faiths took the bottom two spots on the list?


Canadians are rebelling at being force fed the slow poisons of multiculturalism and diversity but for some reason the article fails to mention the negative impact mass immigration is having on Canadian society.

This piece is written by the Leger people so perhaps that explains it, gotta keep those government contracts comin so don’t mention immigration.

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67% of Canadians say immigration target is too high, poll says

Two-thirds of Canadians say this country’s immigration target is too high, suggests a new poll that points to how opinions on the issue are taking shape along political lines — a shift that could turn immigration into a wedge issue in the next federal election.

A poll by Abacus Data has found the percentage of people who say they oppose the country’s current immigration level has increased six points since July, with 67 per cent of Canadians now saying that taking in 500,000 permanent residents a year is too much.

“The public opinion has shifted in Canada to a point where if a political leader wanted to make this an issue, they could,” said Abacus chair and CEO David Coletto.


The public displays of hostility and contempt for Canada by multiple ethnic groups illustrates the toxic lies of Multiculturalism and Diversity.

Mass immigration is used as a weapon in Canada to appease tribal strongmen in return for votes.

Our politicians are full time identity politics panderers.

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John Robson: Canada Should Take a Lesson From Dublin Riots and End Massive Immigration

Riots are dangerous, undemocratic, and corrosive of trust and order. So when they become a significant form of political action, they warn that your system is falling apart. If you’re willing to listen.

Consider recent riots in Ireland. They seem surprising despite Ireland’s long troubled history because, outside Ulster, the Emerald Isle has over the last century been more dormant than explosive. But what isn’t surprising is the complacency of the political elite.

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This is the “Why” of Mass Immigration: How some of Ontario’s most recognizable companies have become embroiled in alleged labour exploitation scheme

Even in the Holland Marsh, a verdant stretch of land known as Canada’s “salad bowl,” Gwillimdale Farms stands out.

It’s a sprawling 2,000-acre operation, able to pack 350,000 pounds of potatoes, carrots and other root vegetables in a single day. The farm has served as the backdrop for political announcements by Premier Doug Ford, and last spring benefitted from a provincial grant to create “safer workplaces” and “address labour shortages.”

Around the same time, the farm was sourcing workers through middlemen now accused of labour trafficking, according to search warrant materials and court documents obtained by the Star.

This is 3rd World Shit made possible by the UNIPARTY at the behest of their corporate masters.

This is the “Why” of Mass Immigration.

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Trudeau Government Doled Out $444m In Welfare To Notorius Home Hoarding Corporate Landlord That Doesn’t Need The Funds & Says Millennials Don’t Want A Home

Canada Invests $444m With Company That Says Millennials Don’t Want A Home

Canada keeps repeating it’s spending billions on new housing, but with who, and how does it help? Earlier this week, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland announced $1.2 billion worth of investments to build rentals in Toronto. It turns out over a third of those funds are going into one project—373 Front St East, which are rentals planned years ago. Toronto-based Tricon Capital is one of the owners of the 855 unit project. They are best-known for buying and owning tens of thousands of single-family homes in a short time.


Tricon is a successful firm well positioned to profit from Trudeau’s mass immigration driven perpetual housing shortage.

I wonder if Liberal Party connections exist.

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Justin Trudeau is in a lot of trouble right now — just not with Jagmeet Singh

New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh doesn’t sound like someone who is ready to walk away from his deal with Justin Trudeau’s Liberals — at least not yet.

The government has just 20 days to introduce and pass pharmacare legislation by the end of the year, as it promised in its 2022 supply and confidence agreement with the NDP. It also has a fall economic statement coming out next week, which could show how much the Liberals are willing to spend to keep that deal alive.

But Singh told reporters flatly on Wednesday that next week wouldn’t be a make-or-break week for pharmacare.

Singh wants his pension. That alone is enough to prop up Junior.

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Canada’s richest 1% saw largest leap in annual income in years, while lower earners’ wages declined

The annual incomes of Canada’s wealthiest people jumped by nearly 10 per cent on average, a year into the COVID-19 pandemic — at a time when the bottom half of the nation’s wealth distribution saw their incomes slump for the first time in decades, according to a recent report from Statistics Canada.

In 2021, the latest data Statistics Canada has made available, Canada’s top one per cent earned an average $579,100 — a 9.4 per cent increase from 2020, and one of the largest gains seen in recent years, the report found. The data is based on the tax filings of individuals prior to paying their taxes, an analyst from Statistics Canada noted.

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No prime minister ever gives up political power unless confronted with an ‘inevitable defeat,’ says top Liberal player David Herle

With poll after poll suggesting the Liberals are trailing the Conservatives by double-digit margins, pressure is ratcheting up on Justin Trudeau to reconsider his plans to lead the party in the next election, say some former senior Liberals, but others say time is on Trudeau’s side and there’s a pathway for the prime minister to get out of this slump in the coming months.

I don’t see how anyone can believe the economy will be back on track when Trudeau’s immigration plan will exasperate the affordability issue and further the decline in Canada’s standard of living. Not to mention his Net Zero madness.

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Michael Taube: Leave it to Trudeau to destroy his party’s reputation on immigration

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s immigration plan is broken. His Liberal government may not have admitted it in so many words, but their recent actions speak quite clearly.

After steadily increasing the number of newcomers over the years, Ottawa has announced it will cap the number of permanent residents it accepts at 500,000 in both 2025 and 2026. It’s finally dawned on the Trudeau Liberals that there needs to be an economic reset. Canada’s housing market is too expensive and our health care system is overloaded — and the impact of costly temporary resident programs is too often overlooked .

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Ottawa’s latest immigration plans fail to move the needle, on housing and in Quebec

Marc Miller – Got the job because he’ll say anything he’s told.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government this week took a baby step toward recognizing its immigration policy needs some fixing by halting future increases in the number of permanent newcomers the country intends to accept.

Still, Immigration Minister Marc Miller seemed to suggest that ”stabilizing” the number of new permanent residents at 500,000 constitutes a concession on his government’s part. Yet, under Mr. Miller’s plan, Canada is still on track to accept more new permanent residents next year (485,000) than it will absorb this year (465,000), or than it did last year (more than 437,000) before the number tops out at 500,000 in both 2025 and 2026.

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The Liberals broke the immigration system. But better is always possible

This week, when it releases its new immigration targets, the Trudeau government has an opportunity to begin rethinking immigration policy.

For the past eight years, the Liberal plan has been about sharply and steadily increasing permanent immigration, while enabling even sharper increases in temporary immigration – with the two interconnected streams powered by huge jumps in the number of foreign students.

Why? The government’s reasons are a combination of faith and politics.

Immigration is going to mean more extremists marching in our streets.

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Canada’s immigration planning will now take into account housing, health care and infrastructure, minister says

In response to growing concern over Canada’s capacity to welcome more newcomers, the federal government says it will incorporate housing, health care and infrastructure planning with provinces and municipalities when setting the country’s annual immigration targets.

On Tuesday, Immigration Minister Marc Miller unveiled a report on the current state of Canadian immigration — along with a road map for tackling those challenges.

“We aim to build a system that is easier to navigate, with an inclusive and co-ordinated plan that aligns our immigration programs and policies with the needs of the country,” Miller said in a statement released the day before he will table his 2024-26 immigration levels plan.

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Temporary foreign workers in Canada have skyrocketed over the past decade, according to StatsCan. Here’s a breakdown

The overall number of temporary residents reporting income in Canada has increased close to 150 per cent between 2010 and 2020, a new Statistics Canada study found.

That growth is being driven by postgraduate work permit holders and international students with study permits.

The federal government runs two programs for temporary foreign workers and residents: the Temporary Foreign Worker program and the International Mobility program.

Another scam run by corporate interests to flood the country with cheap labour and benefit their bottom line.

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Secret files show CSIS worried Canada has ‘no consequences’ for foreign state interference

OTTAWA—Newly-released secret documents show the country’s top intelligence agency was concerned there are “no consequences” for foreign interference in Canadian democracy, as a parliamentary committee calls on the federal government to strengthen criminal laws to crack down on the threat that is the focus of an upcoming public inquiry.

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