Irish Lawyers Blame Mass Migration for Homelessness Crisis

An Irish lawyers’ group knows what the true root cause of the housing crisis in Ireland is: mass illegal migration.

While activists are riling up anger against Airbnb, Lawyers for Justice Ireland (LFJI) insists that there is a more sinister reason underlying the ongoing Irish housing crisis, one that the leftist government deliberately fueled: mass migration. In recent years, major demonstrations against illegal immigration and its deleterious effect on Ireland have highlighted the growing anger over the government’s insistence on moving in hordes of foreigners, many of them Muslims, who have no interest in assimilating.

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Experts seek fact based analysis to convince public that the destruction of their economic & social well being by mass immigration is a good thing

As premiers push for more immigration power, experts call for a fact-based debate

OTTAWA – Some premiers say they want to have more local control over the immigration system — but experts say what the system really needs is a national conversation on immigration reform that shores up public support.

“Most of the existing policies have been formulated on the fly without any evidence or serious impact evaluations of what the various classes of immigrants are, how they’re performing economically and otherwise,” said Michael Trebilcock, a retired academic and co-author of two books on immigration policy.

“So it’s basically research-free.

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Record number of over-60s are referred to anti-terrorism scheme amid overall explosion in ‘extreme right wing’ views

Record numbers of over-60s are being referred to the Government’s troubled anti-terrorism scheme, the Daily Mail can reveal today.

Home Office figures show 127 adults in their 60s or beyond were put on Prevent’s radar in 2023/24 – the most since records began in 2016.

Of them, 43 had sparked alarm for expressing ‘extreme right wing’ views.

h/t XC

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London: a city of strangers – A housing crisis, rampant crime and uncontrolled immigration are corroding our once vibrant capital.

Donald Trump attacked mayor of London Sadiq Khan this week for doing a ‘terrible job’ of running a formerly great city. It is hard not to think the US president has a point.

Yes, London has long been – and remains – a global powerhouse. Economically, it continues to be a key hub for the world’s commercial and financial activities. And in almost every cultural domain, it still stands out. It houses some of the greatest collections of art in the world. Its theatre scene is second to none. And with more than 50 universities and colleges, it has the highest concentration of higher-education institutions in Europe.

Sounds just like the GTA.

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Job Vacancies at Lowest Level Since 2017: Statistics Canada

In May, Canada had the lowest level of job vacancies in eight years as the number of jobs dropped in several industries, according to the latest numbers from Statistics Canada.

Job vacancies dropped by 4.1 percent (20,400), StatCan said in a July 31 release. It was the lowest rate since October 2017.

On a year-over-year basis, the number of available jobs dropped by 15.8 percent to 89,700, StatCan said.

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Canada Border Agency Opens Facility for ‘High-Risk’ Detainees

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) says it has opened a temporary immigration facility for “high-risk detainees” that will hold up to 25 men with criminal convictions.

CBSA said the detainees will be housed at the Correctional Service of Canada’s (CSC) regional reception centre in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines in Quebec.

It said the centre will be for those who “require a high degree of supervision and control.”

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Starmer’s Political Prisoner to Be ‘Released’—But Hold the Celebrations

Social media users are this week cheering on reports that a mother imprisoned for a post on X will soon be “freed.” Their celebrations seem premature.

Lucy Connolly was jailed for 31 months after authorities treated her post on the day of the horrific Southport knife attack—calling for “mass deportation now” and saying: “Set fire to all the f*****g [migrant] hotels full of the b******s for all I care”—as incitement. That’s despite the fact Connolly deleted the message less than four hours after pressing ‘send’ and stressed the next day that “violence is not the answer.”

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Anthony Koch: Just because I’m a child of immigrants doesn’t mean I support mass immigration

I am the grandchild of four immigrants. On one side, southern Italian peasants from small, scorched villages where life was bitter and short. They came to Canada with no English, no status and no illusions. They worked, they scraped, they built.

On the other side was a family that was expelled from Egypt — cast out, humiliated and dispossessed by the country they called home. They arrived here not to be celebrated but to be left alone, to rebuild in peace, far from the politics that ruined their lives. That is the blood that runs through me. And I will not let it be used as a cudgel against my reason.

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EISEN: Canada’s summer job market slump is bad news for young people in more ways than one

According to new data from Statistics Canada, young Canadians are facing a historically challenging job market. In June, the unemployment rate for young people (aged 15-24) was 14.2%, up from 13.5% in June 2024, which was already a bad year in historical terms. By comparison, in the pre-pandemic years from 2017 to 2019, the average youth unemployment rate in June averaged 10.9%.

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Harehills, Leicester and the other riots we don’t talk about

This week marks the first anniversary of the ferocious stabbing spree at a dance class in the Merseyside town of Southport, in which three little girls were murdered by teenager Axel Rudakubana. In the days that followed, riots rocked Southport and other towns across England, fuelled by false claims that the perpetrator was an illegal Muslim migrant. More than 1,500 arrests were made and hundreds were imprisoned.

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Shakedown: Toronto hit with $50M class action lawsuit over decision to deny refugees shelter beds

A proposed class action has been launched against the City of Toronto on behalf of refugees, refugee claimants, and asylum seekers who were denied access to shelter beds between November 2022 and October 2023.

The lawsuit was filed on May 30 by the Black Legal Action Centre, Lewis Litigation PC, and Stieber Berlach LLP, on behalf of 40-year-old Nigerian refugee claimant Wasiu Adekanmbi, who is a member of the Black and LGBTQ+ communities.

Adekanmbi arrived in Toronto on Sept. 11, 2023 and knew no one and did not have a place to stay, the lawsuit’s statement of claim said. He’s since found work and is now living in Niagara Falls, Ont.

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British PM: We Censor Anti-Migrant Protests ‘for the Children’

“For the children” — the last refuge of the censorious tyrant.

Asked at a joint press conference with President Trump on his European tour earlier this week, Keir Starmer, current occupant of the premiership of the once-great British state, about his regime’s draconian censorship of social media, the PM resorted to the tried-and-true justification that rulers of his ilk always do at the end of their rope: the “children.”

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CNE receives record-breaking 54K job applications amid high youth unemployment

As the summer job hunt intensifies, one of the city’s biggest hiring events is set to draw thousands of people.

With youth unemployment reaching some of the highest levels seen in decades, thousands of job seekers are expected to attend the Canadian National Exhibition’s annual job fair on Wednesday at the Enercare Centre at Exhibition Place.

In a statement released by the CNE, they say they’ve already received a record-breaking 54,000 online applications for more than 5,000 seasonal positions, marking the highest number in its history.

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Temporary Workers Amount to Nearly 19 Percent of Canada’s Private Sector Workforce

The number of foreign workers in Canada on temporary permits is equivalent to 18.5 percent of the country’s private sector workforce, according to newly released figures from Canada’s immigration department.

The department counted 3,049,277 non-permanent residents in Canada as of Jan. 1, including more than 129,000 with expired work permits, according to a briefing note first covered by Blacklock’s Reporter. The figure represents 18.5 percent of the private sector workforce, which totalled 16.4 million workers, including self-employed Canadians in January, according to the Labour Force Survey released by Statistics Canada.

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Almost 600 foreign nationals with criminal records due to be deported are missing, CBSA says

Canadian border agents are trying to track down almost 600 foreigners with criminal records who are due to be deported but have gone missing – 431 of whom have been found guilty of serious crimes such as sexual assault.

Figures from the Canada Border Services Agency show that 1,635 foreign nationals guilty of committing crimes in Canada are currently facing deportation, but 599 of them have failed to attend deportation proceedings and have been placed on the agency’s “wanted” list.

Of those 599, 315 have been evading deportation for more than three years. Another 46, according to CBSA figures obtained by The Globe and Mail, have been evading the authorities for more than two years.

Why weren’t they in Jail until deported? Polar Bear Alcatraz anyone?

h/t Auntie Pollie

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