The folly of Liberal immigration policy is now showing up in the job market

In late 2023, Immigration Minister Marc Miller revealed that his department was working on a “broad and comprehensive” plan to “regularize” the status of hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants who either came to Canada illegally or overstayed their visas.

The planned move to grant legal status to undocumented immigrants, many of whom had been working in Canada for years, drew praise from the New Democratic Party, on whose support the Liberal minority government has relied to stay in power.

Fortunately, Mr. Miller has now put that plan on ice. And none too soon, as the fallout from Ottawa’s short-sighted approach to immigration begins to show up in the labour market, with soaring unemployment among youth and newcomers.

Share

U.S. taking measures to deter benefit shoppers from Canada

U.S. speeding up asylum claim processing along the Canadian border

The U.S. government is moving to speed up asylum claim processing at its northern border in an attempt to deter migrants from illegally crossing over from Canada.

Washington is making two changes that fall under the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA), which calls for asylum seekers to apply for refugee status in the first of two countries they enter.

First, migrants looking to prove that they’re exempt from the STCA will have to provide their documents to U.S. border officials at the time of their screening. Migrants previously were allowed to postpone screenings to gather necessary documentation.

Share

‘We can’t control him’: Family of ‘Britain’s worst rioter’ – aged just TWELVE – fear he will never get back on straight and narrow

You’d be angry too if you were made of pixels

A desperate grandmother said today that she had reached the end of her tether with a boy branded by a judge as ‘Britain’s worst rioter’ – adding that she does not know how he can be helped back onto the straight and narrow.

The 12-year-old boy – whose father is in prison – was in court yesterday where he admitted joining two mob rampages through Manchester in three days.

His mother looked on tearfully as a judge said he was ‘more involved in the violence and disorder than any other defendant’.

Share

Meet Britain’s asylum hotel tycoon

Alex Langsam’s holiday empire is shrouded in secrecy

Scarborough’s Grand Hotel isn’t so grand these days. Built in the shape of a V to honour Queen Victoria, this sandy-brick behemoth was billed as “the largest and handsomest hotel in Europe” when its doors opened in 1867. Edward VIII stayed here before ascending the throne. Sir Winston Churchill, the poet Edith Sitwell and Labour’s first prime minister, Ramsay MacDonald, were among the A-listers of yesteryear to visit this 12-floor wonder overlooking the North Sea.

When I arrive for my night at the Grand, my first impression is of the screeching seagulls and weeds that have been allowed to colonise the elegant roof with its four domed towers. Broken eggshells and droppings now pepper the walkways surrounding this once opulent building. A sign on a railing commands passers-by to “stop attacks” by not feeding the birds. Nearby, a dozen refuse bins and a cluster of tradesmen’s vans obscure the still striking entrance.

Share

Random Acts of God? Understanding #EnoughIsEnough

In Britain, we have a borderline treacherous establishment class that is fatally out of touch with the concerns of its own people.

Perhaps there are no more words left to be said about the Southport attack. Three beautiful girls are dead. In hospital, more lie injured, and the strain placed upon witnesses is untold. And yet, protests and riots have been breaking out on the streets of Britain. The online public square is aflame. The hashtag #EnoughIsEnough has been trending on X, formerly known as Twitter, for five days and the rage seems only to intensify with each passing day.

Share

Britain is being pushed to the brink by official neglect of the white underclass

One of my earliest childhood memories is of walking through Lower Gornal, then a white working-class village in the Black Country, counting the “pretty” front gardens in between the “yucky” ones on the way to my grandparents’ house. This was back in the 1990s – long after the nearby steelworks had closed – and the defiant immaculacy of such neighbourhoods was starting to fray.

There were still enough homes with hanging baskets of shocking pink pansies, theatrical stagings of garden gnomes and hopefully high hedges to make the counting game worthwhile – though the number of houses with closed curtains, cordoned off with chicken wire, was considerable. At one point, I passed a teenage girl rocking the pram of a baby I assumed was her younger brother or sister. I nodded and was delighted when I got a half-smile back. My grandma – of poor but proud background – called them “wrong-uns”.

Share

Diane Francis: Trudeau dropped the ball on national security

The Trudeau government has neglected the country’s military, but its immigration policies, and student visa system, represent another serious security lapse.

“As we have all observed, our current government has not been heeding national security advice and has not been vigilant on these issues over the past nine years,” said former Conservative immigration minister Chris Alexander, in an interview with blogger Brad Salzberg.

Share

UN report concludes that Trudeau’s temporary foreign worker program is a ‘breeding ground’ for modern slavery.

A final report by UN investigator Tomoya Obokata concludes that Canada’s temporary foreign worker program is a breeding ground for contemporary forms of slavery.

Prof. Obokata is the United Nations’ special rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery and a professor of international human-rights law at the the University of York in Britain.

The recently released final report cements Prof. Obokata’s initial impressions, which he first expressed last year after visiting Ottawa, Moncton, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver on a fact-finding tour.


Trudeau and our so called Captains of Industry are garbage humans, hateful, greed driven pigs.

Together they plotted to import slaves and undermine the economic security of Canadians.

Now we understand why they were so quick to label us “racists” for speaking up in defense of our best interests: Trudeau and his corporate cronies conspired to exploit our poverty for personal gain.

Never have Canadians been faced with so evil a “ruling class.”

It will take years to recover from the economic and social devastation these monsters have caused if it is possible at all.

Share

Will There Always Be an England?

Turner London 1809

There will always be an England, but only if there are Englishmen. There will only be Englishmen if Englishmen are willing to struggle for their identity as a people.

Most Americans are Anglophiles. It’s in our blood. Yes, our ancestors fought a bloody revolution to free ourselves from the British crown, but outside of the United Kingdom itself, you will find no people more eager to swoon over British royalty than Americans. More substantively, our love and admiration for the British has to do with a heady mix of Churchill, Wilberforce, Tolkien, Lennon and McCartney, and other extraordinary examples of courage, wisdom, and creativity.

Share

Why did ‘anti-fascists’ go after football fans at a Wetherspoons?

So much ‘anti-racism’ today is just class hatred by another name.

Scratch a self-styled ‘anti-racist’ and behold the class hatred beneath. If you don’t believe me, then look at what happened during one of the many Stand Up To Racism protests at the weekend, organised in response to Britain’s recent spate of race riots.

Share

The Sun Sets on Britain

The government of one of world’s greatest countries has decided its citizens are not worth protecting.

Along time ago in Baltimore, I sat outside an Immigration office with my pal, Tom Welsh, ready to answer questions about my worthiness for American citizenship. Because of my mother’s international bank job, I’d spent 20 years since arriving from Cuba as a U.S. resident rather than a citizen. Now a young adult, I looked forward to my entry into the winner’s circle. Tom was there to testify ahead of me that I deserved the high honor. Being slightly less conservative than me, he and I got into a heated political argument. When the Immigration woman came out and called his name, Tom glanced at me and said, “I don’t know now … ”

Share

Dhimmi Britain Sinks into Authoritarianism, Death to Free Speech

Barely a month after the elections, and the new Labour Party government is dragging Britain into serious civil conflict, while destroying the preciously little that remains of British freedoms, especially freedom of speech.

The teenage son of a Rwandan migrant family stabbed three little girls to death at a Taylor Swift-themed dance workshop in Southport, a city near Liverpool, on July 29. The murders triggered protests and riots by Britons who have apparently had enough.

h/t Kiki9

Share

Trudeau Did This: Cheap foreign labour soars in Canada as young workers are left jobless

(Bloomberg) — It’s getting harder for young Canadians to find a job. A post-pandemic influx of cheap foreign workers in restaurants and retail stores may be making it tougher.

Michelle Eze started actively searching for work around Toronto in October, just as the youth unemployment rate in Canada began to surge. The 22-year-old public-policy graduate sought out teaching and restaurant service jobs to help pay the bills and support her parents, but struck out.

“I was struggling. I was searching on Indeed, looking everywhere, asking friends and like — nothing,” she said. “That was really demoralizing because I had the determination but I was seeing no results.”

Share

Canada on track to surpass 500K new permanent residents this year

Following two months of immigration growth, Canada saw its number of new permanent residents soften by 4.9% in June, according to data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

A total of 34,870 new permanent residents came to Canada in March and 42,595 foreign nationals were granted permanent residency in April.

Share