Rising food bank visits show more Canadians are at risk of homelessness yet Corporate human traffickers demand more cheap foreign labour

For a long time, the food bank in Renfrew County, Ont., was only open during the day. But back in 2021, after staff began hearing from clients who were having trouble making it in, they extended their hours to 7 p.m.

“We’re seeing a huge number of working families, where mom and dad both have just about minimum wage jobs and they just can’t make things work,” said Mike Wright, who has volunteered with his wife at the food bank for more than 15 years, and has run it for the last five.


As always these despicable conmen wrap themselves in the flagCanada’s immigration reforms put nation-building projects at risk

No matter the question, no matter the issue the answer is always more 3rd World migrants.

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Douglas Todd: While migration battles flare in the U.S. and Europe, Canada reduces its numbers in an understated way

Canada’s tightening of borders is not nearly as draconian as in the U.S. and Europe, but Ottawa wants the public to recognize the number of new arrivals has been falling

While headlines blare about migration crackdowns in the U.S. and Europe, Canada is restricting newcomers more incrementally — and mostly away from the spotlight.

U.S. politics is growing ever more fiery after the shooting deaths of two U.S. citizens by federal agents during protests against ICE’s mass arrests of migrants in Minneapolis.

In Europe, many countries are using large-scale detention to deter asylum seekers.


Not nearly good enough. There are serious immigration issues that won’t be fixed by cosmetic reductions. Remigration is the only solution.

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Asylum rulings made without a hearing raise security and fraud concerns, C.D. Howe Institute report says

The federal refugee tribunal’s practice of assessing some asylum claims without first questioning applicants could heighten the risk of fraud and weaken security screening, a report by a former director of policy at the Immigration Department says.

The report, to be published on Thursday by the C.D. Howe Institute, expresses concern that the Immigration and Refugee Board’s assessment of asylum claims from certain countries without hearings removes an important layer of scrutiny.

An access to information request by the report’s author, James Yousif, found that between Jan. 1, 2019 and Feb. 28, 2023, the IRB accepted 24,599 asylum claims into Canada without personally questioning the applicants in hearings.

Our country is run by criminals.

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Ottawa spends $885M on health care for migrants and refugee claimants

Ottawa spent nearly $885 million last year providing a wide range of health services to illegal immigrants and refugee claimants, according to newly released figures tabled in Parliament that have triggered a Commons committee audit.

Blacklock’s Reporter says records disclosed through an inquiry of ministry show the Interim Federal Health Program cost taxpayers $884.6 million annually, including hundreds of millions for services not typically covered under provincial health plans.

(Incognito)

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Larry Maher: Weak leadership and lax immigration policy is tearing the fabric of Canadian society

Canada is undergoing a quiet but profound erosion of national cohesion, authority and cultural confidence. At every level of government, political leadership has increasingly substituted ideological appeasement for the basic responsibilities of maintaining social order, enforcing the law and protecting the integrity of Canadian citizenship.

For much of the 20th century, Canada’s immigration model was focused on bringing in the skilled workers and families who wanted to come to build a better life. Newcomers were expected to join a shared national project, not to import unresolved conflicts or establish parallel political identities. Yet over the last decade, that balance has shifted dramatically.

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Unaffordable housing is pushing more young people to give up. Why that’s dangerous

When people decide they’ll never own a home, they start spending more, working less, and taking bigger financial risks.

That is the central finding of a new U.S. working paper on housing affordability, and it helps explain why today’s housing crisis is not just about housing. Once homeownership feels permanently out of reach, the authors argue that people do not simply adjust their housing plans – they change how they live. For the worse.


Dangerous is when they burn the Globe down for penning pieces that never explain how we arrived at this terrible juncture: Exploitive Mass immigration.

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Canada can’t afford housing policy status quo any longer

According to a new report, it would take the average individual a jaw-dropping 44 years to save up enough money to afford a home in Toronto without financial help from family

Housing affordability is one of the most critical issues of our time. It is dividing generations, both economically and politically.

If you take a gander at new data from the Consumer Choice Center (CCC), it’s little wonder why housing is the top political issue for millions of young Canadians in poll after poll.

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Toronto real estate: 100,000 jobs at risk as new home sales drop to lowest level in 45 years

Toronto-area new home sales just tanked to their worst year on record.

The situation is ”absolutely dire,” said the Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD) in a Thursday report, noting the consequences are rippling through Ontario’s economy, which relies heavily on homebuilding for employment, future housing supply, and economic growth.


Just last year the Liberal Party created a pathway to citizenship for illegal aliens employed by law breaking construction companies.

The LPC literally rewarded these companies for hiring illegals.

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How Canada’s Housing Supply Is Falling Short of Immigration Targets, by the Numbers

Immigration policy in Canada is designed to make the rich richer.

Canada’s housing shortage is no longer a future concern—it’s already here. Despite Ottawa’s decision last October to scale back immigration targets from recent highs, population growth continues to outpace the number of homes being built.

There’s a widening gap between the number of people who need housing and the number of units actually coming online, particularly in the country’s largest cities. The data suggest affordability pressures are unlikely to ease without either a sharp rise in construction or a closer alignment between immigration levels and housing capacity.


Immigration policy in Canada is designed to make the rich richer.

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Poll shows Canadians lose faith in Ottawa’s housing plan

Canadians are increasingly pessimistic about housing, with most saying federal plans will not make homes more affordable or accessible, according to internal polling obtained by Housing Minister Gregor Robertson’s department.

Blacklock’s Reporter says the research found housing costs and shortages are now a dominant source of stress for households, with many believing home ownership is either unattainable or would require taking on crushing levels of debt.

Renters, the report said, are trapped in tight markets marked by low vacancy rates, rising prices and, in some cases, deteriorating living conditions.


Thank the Liberal Party.

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How Mass Migration Destroyed Sweden’s Scandinavian Utopia

Not so long ago, Sweden used to be leftists’ favorite example of effective government: It had a generous welfare system, boasted a highly educated population, and just seemed a little classier and cleaner than most parts of the United States. True, it then had a small, homogenous population of law-abiding, productive citizens, but most admirers conveniently ignored this key detail.

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Liberals Continue To Flood Canada With Migrants

Canada admitted 393,500 permanent residents last year

Canada admitted approximately 393,500 permanent residents in 2025.

That’s according to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, which said the number is in line with its admissions targets.

It’s actually slightly lower than projections announced in the fall of 2024. At the time, Ottawa released its permanent resident targets for 2025-27 as part of its Levels Plan – the government’s roadmap to pausing short-term population growth.

Thursday’s numbers are about 2,000 people shy of the 395,000-person target set for 2025.

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Indian immigrant workers protest after province returns PR files in Ontario

TORONTO — A group of immigrant workers is protesting in Ontario after provincial immigration officials returned their permanent residency applications following nearly two years of processing, leaving many without valid work permits and unable to apply through alternative pathways.

The workers say they applied under a provincial nominee stream that has since been closed.

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2.1M temporary residents will have expired or expiring permits this year. But will they leave Canada?

How immigration policy is made in Canada.

Abhishek Parmar has spent more than six years making Windsor-Essex his new home. But now he is one of the 2.1 million temporary residents who may have to leave Canada this year.

“I have never even thought of leaving this place,” he said. “And now, things are coming to an end. It is not a good feeling.”

The 25-year-old arrived in Windsor-Essex in 2019 from India to pursue mechanical engineering technology at St. Clair College. After having spent more than $80,000 on tuition and living expenses, Parmar said he landed a job at an automotive company in LaSalle. He filed for permanent residence (PR) in 2024 with an Ontario immigration pathway.


Of course not, Carney and his corporate pals love the profits to be had from cheap foreign labour.

The Liberals are following the same play book as the Democrats did in the US.  Weaponized open borders.

If the US were to invade Canada I would not heed a call to arms.

I will not “defend” a ruling class that has impoverished Canadian citizens through mass immigration and the “Green” destruction of our economy. 

A blight upon the land. h/t Mauser

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