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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: A few frank words about immigration Of all the issues of concern to the future of Toronto, theres one thats off limits during this mayoral election. Its so taboo that nobody will even say the word. Its I-M-M-I-G-R-A-T-I-O-N. Immigration has helped make Toronto one of the most successful and diverse cities in the world. Thats the good news. The bad news is, a lot of immigrants arent doing well. Many of them live in what are known as priority neighbourhoods, where unemployment is high and incomes are low. The number of people receiving social assistance has gone up. Although the city has no say in immigration policy, it pays the bills. Meantime, another 100,000 immigrants are arriving in the city every year. This is not a rant. Its a plea for honest conversation. And thats sometimes hard to have. Just ask the people who launched the Centre for Immigration Policy Reform last week. They think our immigration policies could be better. The NDP immediately attacked them for being un-Canadian. One immigration lawyer called the group a bunch of grumpy old white men whod be hard to take seriously were it not for their ability to fan the flames of intolerance. Who are these intolerant un-Canadians? One is James Bissett, who used to head the Canadian Immigration Service. Another is Martin Collacott, a former ambassador to Sri Lanka, Syria, Lebanon and Cambodia. A third is Derek Burney, Canadas ambassador to the U.S. during the free-trade talks. I asked Mr. Burney why he got involved. I fully agree that the system is broken, he says. Theres too much abuse, too much fraud, and no rhyme or reason about what were doing. Its just a numbers game. Canada admits 250,000 immigrants a year, a higher rate than any other country. Why? No one can say. Its not to raise the birth rate or replace our aging workers the numbers dont work out that way. Is it to create wealth and improve our productivity? If so, it isnt working. Mr. Burney argues that current immigration policies are dragging down our productivity, not increasing it. The two fastest-growing groups in our population are aboriginals and new immigrants. Theyre also the ones with the fewest skills to perform in our economy, he says. Our system is supposed to select for success. But only 17 per cent of new arrivals are fully assessed on the basis of their employment and language skills. Half never meet a visa officer at all. Most of the people we bring in are family class immigrants, including parents and grandparents. The Centre for Immigration Policy Reform estimates that recent immigrants receive billions of dollars a year more in benefits than they pay in taxes. Were building a problem of enormous proportions, Mr. Burney says. The prevailing narrative is that if immigrants are doing badly, the fault must be ours. Theyre held back by subtle discrimination, we dont recognize their credentials and so on. No doubt theres some truth in this. But the greater truth is that making a go of it in a postindustrial knowledge-based economy isnt easy. Success depends on sophisticated language and communication skills along with knowledge of local networks that many newer immigrants never acquire. And their kids? Their success depends largely on ethnic capital, a culture that values education and expects kids to excel. Kids from cultures with lots of ethnic capital do vastly better than kids from cultures that have little. No political parties, not even the Conservatives, are in any hurry to debate how many, and who, we bring in. After all, they need the ethnic votes. So the debate has been largely ceded to the immigration industry an army of lawyers and consultants who try to shut it down by calling people nasty names. That doesnt bother me, Mr. Burney says with a laugh. During the free-trade debate, they called me a traitor. A number of people have also quietly thanked him for opening his mouth. Politicians may not welcome this debate. But plenty of Canadians think its long overdue.
Poster Comment: "...Canada admits 250,000 immigrants a year, a higher rate than any other country. Why? No one can say. Its not to raise the birth rate or replace our aging workers the numbers dont work out that way. Is it to create wealth and improve our productivity? If so, it isnt working...Our system is supposed to select for success. But only 17 per cent of new arrivals are fully assessed on the basis of their employment and language skills. Half never meet a visa officer at all. Most of the people we bring in are family class immigrants, including parents and grandparents. The Centre for Immigration Policy Reform estimates that recent immigrants receive billions of dollars a year more in benefits than they pay in taxes. Were building a problem of enormous proportions, Mr. Burney says. The prevailing narrative is that if immigrants are doing badly, the fault must be ours... This sounds eerily familiar though the Canucks are getting more hoodwinked by their gubment than us, because at least we know up front that as of 1965, thanks to Senator Water Wings, the US adopted a new (and demented) policy giving preference to family daisy chain Third World unskilled/uneducated immigrants. But Canada supposedly adopted a merit point system for immigration. Oopsie - all lies! The immigration "industry" gained the upper hand, it would appear. There are almost 500 responses to this article and the numbers are steadily climbing. The Globe & Mail will probably shut down comments soon because left media elites don't like it when the lowly grass eating public speaks its mind and sticky icky politically incorrect truths are stated. Wait until the North American Security Policy (?) whatever it's called is fully implemented, Canucks are going to have the pleasure of enjoying a massive influx of Mexico's have-nots, in addition to their legal Third World immigrant numbers. Ouch!
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#3. To: All, *North American Union* (#0)
The immigration issue is nothing more than the forced busing issue of the early 60s, brought to us at the national level. Forced busing destroyed the public school system in NYC and was the #1 cause of white flight. The PC Police have dressed up that term over the years, and it's now known as urban sprawl. It's a simple enough concept; when THEY move in, whites load up the wagon and move to greener pastures. Crime, grime, slime disguised as diversity is the end result. I think the words you're looking for are the North American Union. This will be the concept of forced busing on a continental scale, with one government as it's goal. Remember how cute that Disney song "It's a small world after all" was when you first heard it? It's repulsive to me know simply because I know the agenda of the people who first jammed it down our throats.
#4. To: Jethro Tull (#3)
Good way to look at it.
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