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Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Survey finds 25% of Canadians worried immigrants aren’t integrating

Citizenship Ceremony Toronto 2024 - Source: X

As Canada welcomes an unprecedented number of migrants, Canadians are becoming increasingly concerned about the lack of integration of newcomers. 

According to a national survey conducted by Leger for the Association for Canadian Studies, 25% of Canadians believe immigrants should give up their customs and traditions once they arrive. 

That sentiment is felt strongest among Canadians aged 55 and older and in the province of Quebec, where one-in-three respondents said that immigrants’ cultural practices should be left at the door.  

“Top of mind, Canadians will cite economic reasons when expressing concern about numbers of immigrants, but there is an underlying concern about newcomer integration and the exacerbation of inter-group tensions,” ACS chief executive Jack Jedwab told National Post.

While the majority of Canadians think it’s important to pass their customs and traditions down to future generations (76%), those aged between 18 and 34 were less likely to feel that way, at 65%.

According to Jedwab, there is an “ironic” notion that Canadians simultaneously support passing on culture and traditions in a country “where nearly half the population are immigrants and their children,” which he believes is tied to Canadians not wanting newcomers to prioritize their religious identity above all else. 

“But it’s likely a function of some discomfort with certain manifestations of religious identities,” said Jedwab.

One-third of respondents said they believed the fastest way for religious minorities to integrate would be to cease wearing overtly religious symbols, with those aged 55 and older holding this sentiment the strongest at 39%. 

Men were also more likely to hold this view, compared to women at 35% and 29%, respectively.

Only 22% of respondents aged 18 to 24 shared that belief. 

Provincially, 47% of Quebecers agreed with this sentiment, followed by 31% of Manitobans and Saskatchewans. 

That figure dropped to 28% in Atlantic Canada, Alberta and British Columbia, followed by another drop to 26% in Ontario. 

Jewwab called the survey’s findings “troubling,” saying that it’s a “view that risks promoting stigmatization of persons for whom their religious identity is important.”

Additionally, a Leger poll from October found that the majority of Canadians think that there are “too many” immigrants overall in Canada, a sentiment that has steadily been on the rise since 2019.

While just over a fifth of respondents said that they thought Canada’s immigration levels  were “about the right number,” and around 2% there were  “too few” immigrants, 65% said there are too many.

While the economy was cited as the primary concern in relation to there being “too many” immigrants, the latest data reveals that there are cultural implications to this sentiment as well. 

“It suggests that there is a link being made by an increasing number of Canadians between the numbers that are being admitted to the country and the effectiveness of newcomer integration, a view held widely in the U.S. and Europe and too often accompanied by toxic debates that stigmatize newcomers and that (we) want to avoid at all costs,” said Jedwab.

“We’ll see if the federal government’s recent reduction in immigration levels modifies the perception. That said, the reduction in levels does have some ramifications for our future demographic well-being.”

Of the cohort who believe there are too many immigrants, 51% say there are “too many” Muslims while 19% say there are “too many” Jews in Canada.

“The survey reveals that underlying negative sentiment towards immigrants in Canada is a disproportionate degree of negative sentiment towards Muslims,” said Jedwab. 

“It suggests an exacerbation of a persistent trend and rise of a worrisome backlash accompanied by more stereotyping of Muslims.”

Mississauga mayor won’t condemn Remembrance Day-style memorial for Hamas leader

Source: X

Mississauga’s mayor is avoiding requests from the Jewish community to condemn and prevent a Remembrance Day-style vigil for the recently eliminated Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, scheduled to take place in the city in two weeks.

A group called “Canadian Defenders 4 Human Rights” has taken ownership of the planned vigil set for Nov 26, 40 days after the elimination of the leader of the listed terrorist entity that rules Gaza, Hamas.

The group uses the language and symbolism Canada and its allies have used to commemorate fallen war heroes. 

“Lest we forget our heroes,” the flyer featuring Sinwar’s face and photos of poppies says. “Vigil for Resistance leaders.”

Mississauga Mayor Carolyn Parish has made multiple posts about the event, which she claimed wasn’t planned.

At first, on Nov. 9, she shared a statement by the city, which said it was aware of the vigil being planned in Celebration Square on city property, and that it hadn’t issued a permit for the event.

“It is not the City’s practice to issue permits for vigils as Celebration Square is a public space, usable by the community,” the statement said. “Under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, groups have the right of freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. The City will not interfere with a peaceful vigil, as long as all laws and City by-laws are adhered to.”

The city said police, security services, and the Royal Canadian Legion were made aware of the vigil.

“While the Charter does protect the right of peaceful assembly, there is no right to violence, damage to property, or threat to the safety of others,” the statement said.

Parish then posted a statement on Remembrance Day from the Muslim Council of Peel, which “strongly condemned” the “divisive actions” of “social media accounts seeking to sow division within Mississauga and undermine the Parrish’s leadership.”

After speaking with the group to “track down” the vigil’s hosts, she claimed that “no organization exists, and no vigil is planned.” The statement claimed that “this attack on the Mayor” and those spreading the flier “serves only to distract from the genocide” in Gaza.

Genocide is an international law term, and no international court has found Israel guilty of the claim.

The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, a Jewish advocacy group, said that the mayor was “missing the point” with her response to community uproar, and her posts only demonstrate her willingness to sanction a vigil that glorifies terrorists on public property.

CIJA noted that the mayor consulted only the MCP and did not speak to Jewish community members, and the letter she shared used “inflammatory language and falsehoods about Israel.”

“To amplify such divisive and untrue rhetoric is irresponsible and unacceptable,” the post said.

Once the vigil organizers came forward, CIJA renewed calls for the mayor to condemn and stop the vigil.

Rich Robertson, the research and advocacy director at B’nai Brith Canada, said the allowance of glorifying terrorists such as Sinwar is a Canadian issue, not just a Mississauga one.

“Yahya was a diabolical terrorist. He was a murderer and an evil man responsible for the deaths of hundreds, if not thousands, of innocent people,” Robertson told True North. 

The Canary Mission, an antisemitism watchdog, highlighted the director of the CD4HR, Firas Al Najim, who made a promotional video for the vigil and has gone on Iran State television to promote it, where he said Sinwar would eventually be recognized as a hero.

Najim was arrested and charged with dangerous driving and other charges in 2022 after almost running anti-IRGC protesters down. He had, on multiple occasions, expressed support for the Islamic Regime in Iran and called for the death of anyone who opposed it.

“It is incumbent that our society and all levels of government denounce individuals like this and that we do not give credence to anybody who wishes to attempt to glorify or to justify his actions or the actions of the terrorist entity that he led,” Robertson said.

Parish did not respond to True North’s requests to comment before the deadline provided.

The Faulkner Show | Indigenous activists want to RENAME cities and towns across Canada

C2C Article: https://c2cjournal.ca/2024/10/collaboration-no-more-how-the-powell-river-b-c-name-change-debate-turned-nasty/

Frances Widdowson, a former tenured professor at Mount Royal University who was fired for daring to question the truth and reconciliation narrative is speaking out about an ongoing battle in the small town of Powell River, B.C. A local indigenous band is trying to force the town to rename itself because apparently the name celebrates Canada’s colonial past. People are now losing their jobs and livelihoods over this.

What is truth and reconciliation really about? Why are activists trying to rename cities and towns across Canada? Frances Widdowson answers those questions and more on the latest episode of the Faulkner Show!

Morneau urges Canada to prioritize defence, energy, and tech over emissions cap

Source: Instagram

Former Liberal finance minister Bill Morneau is calling for Canada to reconsider core Liberal policies, such as the oil and gas emissions cap. 

The call follows U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s recent re-election, which Morneau said highlighted the Canada-U.S. trade relationship and the need for Canadian policies to align with Trump’s vision.

In an interview on CTV’s Question Period, Morneau underscored that Canada’s approach must shift to align with new American priorities, highlighting the need to focus on defence spending, technology, and energy security.

“We’re going to need to think about whether we focus on energy security in a way that makes us clearly an important part of the U.S. sector,” said Morneau. “And that means we have to ask ourselves: is it really the right time for caps on emissions? Is it that we need to be moving really fast on carbon capture and sequestration at the same time?”

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith shared the post on X.

“Even PM Justin Trudeau’s former Liberal finance minister knows how bad a production cap is for Canada and our economy!” said Smith.

Alberta Environment Minister Rebecca Schulz also shared the post.

“Bill, could you give @s_guilbeault a phone call and see if you can talk some sense into him?” she asked. 

Smith, who called the oil and gas cap “a deranged vendetta” against Alberta, thanked former interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose for standing up for Alberta when Ambrose also spoke on the show.

The former interim Conservative leader said that the Liberals have an economic update upcoming at the end of November.

“I would recommend that if they’ve written it, they rewrite it, and they look at it and make sure that it outlines the domestic economic policies that will make us competitive,” Ambrose said. 

Ambrose said that Trump plans to lower the business tax rate to 15%, while Canada’s combined federal and provincial rate is 38%. She added that Americans are reducing emissions without a carbon tax, and Canada should figure out how to do the same.

“We’ve just put a cap on production in our oil and gas sector, and we’re the only country in the world to do that, which makes energy more expensive,” she said. 

Morneau also said Canada should consider how it aligns with its Southern ally’s technology sector and questioned whether a digital services tax on technology is the right way forward.

The Business Council of Canada warned that retaliatory measures from the United States would hurt Canadian businesses, the economy, and families in general.

The tax would also impact Canada’s relationship with the U.S. when the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement comes up for review in 2026.

Morneau said that Canada needs to think about how it will hit defence spending more rapidly than the Liberals have planned.The Parliamentary Budget Officer warned that Canada must double its defence spending to meet its NATO commitment by 2032.

YorkU and UTM lecturer shouts “F&*$ you!” to veterans on Remembrance Day

Source: X/X

A York University PhD student and lecturer at York University and formerly at the University of Toronto Mississauga recorded herself shouting “F&$# you” to Canadian veterans during a Remembrance Day procession on Monday.

In a video shared online to her Instagram account, which has since been made private, Aaliya Khan is heard cursing at the procession of fallen Canadian troops. She said, “Oops, this is Nov. 11,” and another person in the vehicle was heard saying, “I know F&$& them.”

As documented by X user “Leviathan,” Khan’s additional posts include calling Canada an “occupation of Turtle Island” and for an end to the Canadian government.

“It’s Remembrance Day, so I urge you to think about the Canadian military’s historical and ongoing complicity in the genocide and occupation of Turtle Island as well as the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq,” Khan said on her now-deleted account on X. “All empires will fall, including this one inshallah #landback.”

Before Khan deleted her X account, True North’s Harrison Faulkner documented a response from Khan where she doubled down on her hate for Canada’s armed and police forces.

“This is so funny, bro. Who’s keeping tabs on me?” Khan said in the post. “F&$% the military and F$&# the police for real.”

Khan also shared posts saying “New York for Hezbollah,” a listed terrorist entity, and quoted the terror group’s recently eliminated leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.

Nasrallah famously called for Jews to be hunted and killed worldwide.

Khan also posted an image of a Toyota pickup truck that had been customized with a machine gun turret on the back with the caption “for regime changes.”

According to “Stop Antisemitism,” Khan also recently posted “Death to the police” on her now-deleted Instagram page, support for Hamas and Houthis in fighting Israel “by any means necessary.” 

Khan’s posts also used symbols associated with the terrorist group Hamas and expressed her love and gratitude for the listed terrorist entity multiple times.

Notably, the Israeli Defense Forces released a graphic video on Sunday, allegedly captured from Hamas, showing the terror group that rules Gaza torturing its own citizens.

Rich Robertson, the director of Research and Advocacy at B’nai Brith Canada, a Jewish rights group, said Khan’s “vitriolic comments” are just one of several instances of anti-Israel activists desecrating the solemnity and sanctity of Remembrance Day in Canada this year.

“The continued desecration of Remembrance Day in Canada by those who wish to conflate the remembering of Canada’s war dead with geopolitical events is unbecoming of anyone within our society,” he said. “The sanctity of Remembrance Day and the memorializing of the sacrifices of Canadian veterans should never fall victim to those who wish to advance their perverse ideologies.”

A spokesperson for UTM told True North that Khan’s comments were “shocking” and “news” to the university. She affirmed that Khan was not currently teaching at the university, though “due to employee confidentiality,” she could not say if she would work there in the future.

Robertson raised concerns about people such as Khan, who propagate pro-terrorist views online, being in positions of teaching authority in Canada.

“It’s immensely concerning that somebody who continues to glorify and justify the actions of terrorists and who harbours such a caustic opinion of Canadian veterans that they would swear at them on Remembrance Dayhas a position of authority within an institute of higher learning in our country,” he said.

He said it should concern all parents and students that Khan was allowed to teach at the school.

“It would be impossible to feel comfortable as a Jewish student, knowing that somebody who has called for the destruction of Israel and has glorified the actions of the terrorists currently inflicting harm upon Israel is their lecturer,” Robertson said.

When asked if Khan would be fired, a spokesperson for York University told True North that it was made aware of Khan’s social media posts.
“The views expressed are not reflective of the views of the university, the administration, or many thousands of York University students, faculty and staff,” the spokesperson said.

He said the school community has established procedures for reporting employees or students but that the matters are treated with confidentiality, and as a result, the university would not comment further.

EDITOR’S NOTE: This article has been updated to include comment from York University.

Municipalities face backlash after woke Remembrance Day ceremonies observed nationwide

Source: X

Canadians are up in arms following various municipalities implementing woke initiatives at Remembrance Day ceremonies that featured lengthy land acknowledgments, pro-Palestine activism and overlooked the true importance of the day — honouring fallen soldiers.

Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek faced backlash for a six-minute-long land acknowledgement during the city’s ceremony. 

“These are greetings in the traditional languages of the treaty seven people who stewarded these lands for generations before many of us came to settle here,” Gondek said after referencing various Indigenous languages.

“Land acknowledgment is like the leftist prayer that they have to say before any event,” said one user. 

“I was born here; this is my home and native land. She is a settler,” said another

Another X user claimed that Gondek was the worst mayor in Alberta’s history. 

The reaction was not limited to Calgary. In Toronto, similar sentiments emerged when Aretha Phillip, the city’s Chief of Protocol, began the city’s Remembrance Day ceremony by focusing on Toronto’s colonial history.

“The City of Toronto acknowledges all treaty peoples, including those who came here as settlers, as migrants, either in this generation or in generations past, and those of us who came here involuntarily, particularly those brought to these lands as a result of the transatlantic slave trade and slavery,” said Phillip. “We pay tribute to our ancestors of African origin and descent in keeping with this tribute during this Remembrance Week.” 

One user responded that veterans don’t need lectures about land claims, colonialism, racism, or other virtue signalling and pandering on Remembrance Day.

“This isn’t about you; not everything is about you,” wrote the user. “This day is about our military, past, present, and their families. If you aren’t getting up to the mic to speak about service and sacrifice, then just sit down. We don’t want to hear it. Save it for another day when people are willing to put up with your virtue signalling.”

Retired General Rick Hillier also offered his two cents on Phillip’s speech.

“We are nothing but ‘sheep’ to put up with this condescending lecture at any time, but especially today. A day devoted to those who served and sacrificed to build a country that doesn’t have that. Shame,” he said. 

“What an ignorant and insensitive thing to do. Move aside, let us mourn our fallen soldiers and thank them for their sacrifice,” responded another user.

A different X user said that these municipalities had not learned their lessons from the recent election in the United States.

“Vote all of them out; leave not one left,” wrote the user. 

The Remembrance Day ceremony in Saanich, a municipality on Vancouver Island, featured a reading from the Quran, the central religious text of Islam. Also, the poem that was originally scheduled to be read was allegedly replaced by a 14-minute land acknowledgment. 

Journalist Tristin Hopper, who shared the post, highlighted that the Quran’s addition follows “the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust by Islamists screaming ‘Allahu Akbar.” 

“So again? Why not? Not after 9/11, not after the Parliament Hill attacks, not after the Quebec City mosque massacre. 103 years and we start not for absolutely no reason?” he asked.

Saanich’s decision to recite the Quran comes as the Department of National Defence previously told True North that military chaplains would refrain from using any “faith-specific” or “exclusive” language at Remembrance Day ceremonies. 

The municipality of Saanich wasn’t the only one trying to appeal to Muslims on Remembrance Day. Sir Robert Borden High School in Ottawa decided to play a Palestinian protest song during their ceremony. 

The principal sent a letter to parents apologizing to “anyone who was hurt or offended” and promised to review the school’s procedure for music selection. 

“Even their apology is disrespectful and biased,” wrote one user. 

Pro-Hamas protestors invaded the Remembrance Day ceremony in Kingston. 

One X user deemed the protestors showing up as “disgraceful, disrespectful, and vile behaviour.” 

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre responded to the many instances of wokeism.

“What an absolute disgrace that so many woke activists & authorities used Remembrance Day to push their divisive and radical causes, denigrating our history and the brave military members who sacrificed for it,” he said. “We are a proud country with a proud history, and everyone who lives here should be grateful to call Canada home.” 

The Rachel Parker Show | Libs have NO plan to deal with IMPENDING migrant crisis

Source: X

Today on the Rachel Parker Show, Rachel explains how Canadians, provincial politicians, the RCMP, and basically everyone but the federal Liberals are concerned about an impending migrant crisis ahead of U.S. President-Elect Donald Trump’s promised deportations.

Rachel says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet should have been prepared to respond to these anxieties after the Presidential election, but they seem totally caught off guard.

Rachel also breaks down how much asylum claims are costing Canadian taxpayers and shares some initial reporting of migrants in the U.S. planning to leave for Canada.

Tune in now!

Former BC premier John Horgan dies at 65

Source: X

Former British Columbia premier John Horgan died at the age of 65 in Victoria, B.C., while at the Royal Jubilee Hospital on Tuesday, following his third diagnosis of cancer.

Horgan served as B.C.’s 36th premier, holding office from 2017 to 2022 at which point he decided to step down after being diagnosed with cancer for a second time.

“Thank you so much for giving me this opportunity, British Columbia, it has truly been the thrill of my life,” said Horgan at the time of his resignation. “I’ve done my best to not let you down.”

“There have been days when things have gone well and there have been days that things didn’t go well. That’s the nature of the human condition and I am honoured to have had the opportunity.”

He would later be selected to serve as Canada’s official ambassador to Germany last December, a position he maintained until June of this year when he was diagnosed with cancer again.

Born in Victoria, Horgan began his political career as the MLA for Malahat–Juan de Fuca in 2005, serving four consecutive terms. 

He became leader of the BC NDP in 2014 and would go on to become premier after forming a minority government with the Green Party through a coalition agreement. 

As premier, Horgan governed through the COVID-19 pandemic and the province’s severe flooding in 2021. 

On his final day in provincial politics last March, Horgan said that his career highlight was the opportunity to work with other politicians to improve the lives of British Columbians. 

“What I’d like to hope is that when people look back at my time, they will say I was fair-minded,” he said at the time. “Live long and prosper.”

His family was informed that Horgan’s cancer had spread throughout his body last week and they were present at the time of his passing.

“The well-being of British Columbia and everyone in it was everything to him,” reads a statement from Horgan’s family.

“He was surrounded by friends, family and live in his final days.”

He is survived by his wife, Ellie, and two sons.

63% of Canadian students fear expressing their opinions in class

Source: Facebook

A new survey on campus free expression has found that 63% of Canadian undergraduate students fear professional consequences for expressing their honest thoughts and opinions during class. 

Some of the formal sanctions students fear are being given lower grades by their instructor, having an instructor refuse to write them a letter of recommendation, or having a classmate file a complaint against them. But students also feared social consequences, such as being criticized by a peer on social media or being disliked by their professor.

Further, 40% of respondents claim to have experienced negative consequences after airing their thoughts on controversial topics, such as being reprimanded by university faculty or staff or denounced on social media by classmates or instructors.

The fall 2024 survey, commissioned by viewpoint diversity organization Heterodox Academy, also found that over half of respondents approve of some restrictions on campus free speech.

Canadian students show reluctance to bring up sensitive topics in class. The Israel-Hamas war is the subject with the highest level of reluctance.

Over 54% of surveyed students reported reluctance in discussing the Israel-Palestine conflict, 51% say they are uncomfortable bringing up transgenderism, and 45% don’t want to talk about politics on campus at all. 

In contrast, students felt very comfortable discussing climate change and diversity, equity, and inclusion in their lecture halls and seminars. Regardless of whether they consider themselves conservative or progressive, 70.4% are comfortable talking about climate change, and 72% feel free on the topic of DEI.

Students who lean “very left” or “very right” on the political spectrum are much more likely to report feeling comfortable discussing controversial issues compared to those who are politically moderate. However the survey authors point out, “when only the most ideologically extreme students engage in campus discussions on controversial topics, the quality of discourse may suffer.”

“Those on the political extremes are more likely to exhibit confirmation bias, closed-mindedness, and motivated reasoning, turning discussions into echo chambers rather than productive exchanges aimed at deeper understanding,” the authors continued.

The 1,548 respondents to the survey represented over 250 higher education institutions in Canada, ranging from large universities to small colleges.

Canada announces end to 10-year multiple-entry visas

Source: X

Canada’s automatic issuance for 10-year multiple-entry visas will end effective immediately.

According to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, which outlined new changes last week, “multiple-entry visas issued to maximum validity are no longer considered to be the standard document.”

Visitors to Canada have previously been granted multiple-entry visas for up to 10 years, allowing them to leave and re-enter Canada as they pleased during that period, however, this will no longer be the default option. 

The IRCC said that going forward, visa officers will now assess applicants individually regarding whether they will issue a single or multiple-entry visa for each applicant’s validity period.

Additionally, the applicant’s purpose of visit, funds, medical conditions, ties to their home country and other factors will all be considered when issuing visas.

Officers will determine the validity period for multiple-entry visas and may ultimately choose to grant applicants a timeframe under the maximum allowance of 10 years. 

According to the IRCC, officers will consider if there is a short-term purpose for the visit as well as the applicants’ status in their current country of residence, including the country’s economic status and its political conditions. 

News of the federal changes come on the heels of the Quebec government announcing a moratorium on two of its major immigration programs earlier this month, citing a need for the province to “better regulate” the arrival of newcomers.

Premier François Legault placed a temporary freeze on two key programs which offer a Quebec Selection Certificate, which allows immigrants to eventually apply for permanent residency in Canada.

Quebec Immigration Minister Jean-Francois Roberge said the province will no longer accept new applications for the Regular Skilled Workers Program.

The province also put a freeze on the Quebec Experience Program for recent graduates, effective Thursday.

Both programs will remain suspended until June 30, 2025. 

“A scenario for reducing permanent immigration will also be seriously studied by the government,” wrote Roberge in a post to X. “Our objective is clear: we want to equip ourselves with the necessary means to better regulate immigration in Quebec.”

The Legault government said the new measures will also affect “the volume of admissions” for next year.

“We’re taking action for 2025 but we are also making sure we have all the room for the maneuver for planning,” Roberge told reporters at the National Assembly on Nov 1.

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