Liberal Party Sends Out Call For More Non-contributing Elderly Foreign Invaders To Strain Our Already Overstretched Resources To The Breaking Point!

Thousands of Canadians to start receiving invitations to apply to sponsor parents and grandparents

Thousands of Canadians will soon receive invitations to apply to sponsor their parents and grandparents as permanent residents.

The 2025 intake will open for a few weeks starting July 28 for 17,860 potential sponsors who submitted an interest-to-sponsor form in 2020, according to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) in a notice published online Wednesday.

IRCC said its goal is to accept up to 10,000 complete applications under the federal Parents and Grandparents Program.

H/T Auntie Polly

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It’s A Brampton Thing, You Wouldn’t Understand: Kanwarjyot Singh Manoria Arrested For Death Threat Against Patrick Brown

Recognition due for contribution to diversity.

Peel police have arrested a man who allegedly made a death threat against Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown last month.

In a news release, police said 29-year-old Kanwarjyot Singh Manoria was taken into custody on Tuesday and charged with utter threats to cause death or bodily harm.

A source familiar with the investigation previously told CP24 that the threat was made via email to the mayor’s office two to three weeks ago, and that his wife and son were also mentioned.

He should be out on bail by 3pm.

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UK a ‘powder keg’ of social tensions a year on from summer riots, report warns

The UK is a “powder keg” of social tensions, with a third of people rarely meeting anyone from different backgrounds, research has found.

A report from the thinktank British Future and the social cohesion group Belong Network found that a year on from last summer’s riots, there was a risk of unrest being reignited unless urgent action was taken to address issues of polarisation and division.

The research found 31% of adults said they rarely or never had opportunities to meet people from different backgrounds, and a third say they did not frequently get a chance to meet other people at all in their local community.

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Poilievre calls for ‘very hard caps’ on immigration to better integrate newcomers

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling for a tougher stance on immigration, saying Monday he wants to see “very hard caps” on the number of newcomers allowed into the country.

Speaking to reporters at a news conference in Ottawa, Poilievre said the country has struggled to integrate newcomers and he wants to see more people leaving than coming in “while we catch up.”

“We have millions of people whose permits will expire over the next couple of years, and many of them will leave,” he said. “We need more people leaving than coming for the next couple years.”

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Howard Anglin: Canada is badly failing the ‘Tebbit Test’

The name Norman Tebbit won’t mean much to most Canadians but for those of a certain age who followed British politics in the 1980s, the news of his death last week was an occasion for rejoicing or regret, and not much in between. Tebbit, whom Labour leader Michael Foot famously branded “a semi-house-trained polecat,” was not a man for half measures and his demise will leave few people on the fence about his legacy.

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Singh a song of cocaine and easy bail

Almost $50 million in cocaine found hidden in trucks crossing into Canada from U.S., police say

A cross-border drug smuggling network using commercial truck drivers to haul large loads of cocaine across the border from the United States into Canada has been revealed by police in southern Ontario, leading to the arrest of nine men and the seizure of 479 kilograms of bulk cocaine bricks.

Of the nine arrested, six have since been released on bail while three are still awaiting bail hearings after what Peel Regional Police described Tuesday as the largest drug bust in the police service’s history.

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Ontario diploma mills for foreigners seeking to skirt immigration rules face massive layoffs after ‘alarming’ enrolment decline

Ontario colleges face massive layoffs after ‘alarming’ enrolment decline

A major union is again sounding the alarm for Ontario’s public colleges as international student enrolment drops to a trickle, programs are cut and major layoffs take place.

On Wednesday, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union released information that suggests the sector faces close to 10,000 job losses and the cancellation or suspension of some 600 programs.

h/t DS

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Public skeptical over Canada’s high immigration quotas: Government report

OTTAWA — Focus groups struck to gauge public sentiment on the federal government’s immigration policy reacted negatively to high immigration quotas.

The public opinion panels, commissioned by the Privy Council Office and facilitated by Toronto pollster The Strategic Council showed most respondents reacted negatively to Canada’s mass immigration policies, according to reports published in Blacklock’s Reporter.

Canada’s demographic is being so drastically altered that soon all polls will support open borders and 3rd world immigration.

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Immigration grew six times faster over past decade: Study

OTTAWA — Canada’s immigration levels grew six times faster over the past decade than it did from the turn of the century, says a new Fraser Institute study.

The numbers, which include temporary foreign workers and international students, are contained in a new report entitled Canada’s Changing Immigration Patterns, 2000–2024.

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Canadians will see wages pick up as immigration slows, Conference Board argues

OTTAWA – The Conference Board of Canada expects wage hikes will pick up speed in the coming years as the pace of population growth slows down.

The think tank said in a new economic forecast Monday that Canada’s labour market has been “resilient” this year despite tariff pressures from the United States.

The national unemployment rate ticked up to seven per cent in May, though the Conference Board noted overall employment is still 0.3 per cent higher than it was at the end of last year.

Except immigration numbers have not really decreased.

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Who keeps track of newcomers?

Two recent news reports bring into question how much surveillance there is over individuals coming to this country.

Postmedia journalist Bryan Passifiume reported last week on a warning from the Council for a Secure Canada that sloppy Immigration oversight makes Canada a target for infiltration by agents of the Iranian regime. In an online statement, the organization said Canada is ill-equipped to deal with such an influx.

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England Without the English: London School Has Zero Native Speakers

Ultimate diversity has finally been achieved. London is now home to a school where not one of the pupils’ first languages is English. Welcome to Kobi Nazrul Primary School—named after the national poet of Bangladesh, but which curiously you find situated in London’s East End, just a stone’s throw from the East London Mosque (one of Europe’s largest), which comfortably accommodates 7,000 Muslims.

Anyone familiar with the English Monopoly board might be shocked to learn that, according to the 2021 Census, Whitechapel (the school’s locale) is home to a 51.3% Asian population. Of the school’s 243 pupils, 92.5% are Bangladeshi who speak Bengali as their first language. Ofsted apparently gave the school a ‘glowing’ report, coupled with a ‘good’ rating. But then, at least the school wasn’t ‘too white’—something to which Ofsted has previously objected.

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