Max Genest on X - "Nate, your mass immigration policies have ethnically cleansed your own riding, which allowed a Bangladeshi migrant who posts incest videos on Facebook to steal your job. I would tell you to go fuck yourself, but you already did."
Tablesalt π¨π¦πΊπΈ on X - "NEW: Nate Erskine-Smith, white Canadian politician who cosplayed as a Muslim, voted for 10 years to bring in millions of immigrants from Islamic republics ....loses to "cheating" Muslims, complains about it. "they used amazon receipts and travel visas as voter ID""
Peter Brimelow on X - "This would be funny except I remember Canada in the 1970. So it’s tragic"
Mario Zelaya on X - "π¨ MAJOR BREAKING NEWS Nate was the favourite to be the leader of the Liberal Party of Ontario. HE LOST THE NOMINATION. He’s saying there was voter FRAUD! People with no ID. Nothing. His team said “THEY’VE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE IT” When Conservatives said this during the election, it was misinformation & conspiracy theories. So which is it? Were Conservatives right in calling out the same irregularities during the election? Or is Nate, the Liberal MP & former cabinet Minister, a conspiracy theorist & engaging in misinformation?"
Mario Zelaya on X - "The Liberal Party spent 10 years importing voters. Today those voters showed up. And voted against the Liberal they were supposed to support. Federal MP Nate Erskine-Smith, endorsed by Mark Carney himself, just lost a provincial nomination race in Scarborough. He lost to Ahsanul Hafiz. A Bangladeshi-born business owner who owns 30 Domino’s Pizza franchises. Today in Scarborough Southwest: Sample ballots were handed out entirely in Bengali. The Ontario Liberal Party allows temporary residents to vote in nominations. Nate knocked on doors of his own “members” people who had no idea they’d signed up. The Globe and Mail reported it themselves. Nate cried irregularities. Hafiz said: “The hallways were full of people wearing my badges. That’s the clear evidence of who won.” The Liberals flooded ridings with new Canadians. Those new Canadians just picked their own guy. The man who built the machine is now complaining about the machine. Welcome to the Canada you created. π¨π¦"
Ezra Levant ππ on X - "I think this is the first time a Liberal MP who brought in 5 million migrants has ever had those migrants affect his life. Normally the victims are just young Canadians who can’t find work or afford housing. Not a member of the elite."
Meme - Harrison Faulkner @Harry_Faulkner: "This photo is incredible. A rain-soaked defeated Liberal MP walking along trash filled streets with the pride flag flying in the distance as he grapples with the consequences of his own party's decisions."
Chris Brunet on X - "Nate was Canada's previous minister of housing. he spent the past decade advocating for unlimited immigration. immediately after taking this picture, they all voted against him for a man named Ahsanul Hafiz who owns Domino's Pizza franchises solely because he was born Bangladesh. Nate is now complaining about voter fraud"
Maky Abugu | Facebook - "Nate Erskine-Smith is now openly escalating his allegations about the Ontario Liberal nomination battle in Scarborough Southwest, and this story is getting more serious by the day. Remember, this is not some random outsider making claims online. This is a sitting Liberal MP who already announced he plans to resign after losing the nomination by just 19 votes. Now he’s publicly questioning what happened during the process. In his own words: “Why would dozens and dozens and dozens of people who are temporary residents showing up not understanding the process, when they're asked for their address, they're not certain about what their address is, and then they're taking pictures of their ballot.” That is a major allegation. Especially inside a party nomination race where the margin was razor thin. Erskine-Smith has already filed an appeal with the Ontario Liberal Party alleging “serious irregularities” in the contest that was won by Ahsanul Hafiz. According to reports, he claims there were concerns involving voter eligibility, confusion around addresses, and people allegedly photographing ballots during the voting process. And this is where the conversation becomes uncomfortable politically. Because Canada is already dealing with rising tensions around immigration, temporary residents, international students, housing pressure and trust in institutions. So when a Liberal MP himself raises concerns involving temporary residents and internal voting integrity, people are obviously going to pay attention. Now to be fair, allegations are not proof. The Ontario Liberal Party has not publicly concluded there was fraud or wrongdoing. And temporary residents can legally participate in some party nomination contests if they meet party membership requirements. That part is important context. But the bigger issue here is trust. If party members believe nomination races are not transparent or properly controlled, confidence in the democratic process starts breaking down very quickly. And honestly, this entire situation is becoming politically damaging for the Liberals because it is happening at the exact moment Canadians are already frustrated with institutions, political elites and internal party operations. What makes this story even bigger is that Erskine-Smith was not some fringe candidate. He was one of the more recognizable Liberal MPs in the GTA, often seen as more independent minded than many others in caucus. Now he is leaving politics after this loss while publicly questioning how the process unfolded. That alone tells you how serious he believes this is."
Randy Parent | Facebook - "Excuse me while I ROTFLMAO. SOOOO poetic. This is exactly what happened in New York and many cities in the UK This is just the beginning my friends. Doug Ford couldn’t plan the last 96 hours any better in Ontario politics:
1. The Ontario Liberal Party asked for proof of fraud & mismanagement during Saturday’s nomination process.
2. Given what I’ve read today, & two lengthy phone chats I’ve had - I’m buying the “We’ve never seen anything like it” thesis. Holy holy if they go public w/ what they told me.
3. The best possible person with a shot to challenge Doug Ford didn’t win the nomination.
4. A person of questionable character & current associations DID win the nomination.
5. #4 makes it REAL easy to campaign against the nominee & state facts about his past, including his incest porn social media from only a decade ago.
6. The OLP would have had a mildly tough time winning the seat WITH Erskine-Smith AND no controversy. Now they have NO Erskine-Smith & TONS of controversy. Quite bad.
7. There are some real good people in the Party. There are some very impressive MPPs. It’s all for nothing if the OLP stacked the deck against Erskine-Smith, or the Hafiz camp did, & they waved their hand & dismissed it.
8. Democratic integrity in a nomination contest is far more important than whether you adore the person who won or not. A system that can’t be trusted means the Party can’t be trusted means good people won’t run for seats, & it certainly means far fewer people will volunteer & give money to help.
Nice mess they have - a little oversight Saturday prevents all eight of the above points from being the reality they face now."
Alexander Brown on X - "Provincial gov’t immigration source in Ontario: "We’re not seeing the exits we are hoping for. The data from the feds is non existent. Temps are converting to varying degrees of visitor statuses and claiming benefits to not work, or goal-hanging while expired hoping for amnesty. The amount of bad-faith and scamming continues to be overwhelming.""
Meme - Maxime Bernier: "Canada may need a Bill 101 to protect the English language and Canadian culture."
Riley Donovan @valdombre: "Calgary Police are putting up signs in Punjabi urging people to report criminal activity. The problem is deeper than the sign. Mass immigration is turning Canada into a Tower of Babel."
Meme - "Singh Hortons *Tim Hortons logo with Sikh*"
DonaldBest.CA * DO NOT COMPLY on X - "The disastrous decline in health and hygiene standards at Tim Hortons and many other Canadian fast food chains is directly attributable to the Temporary Foreign Workers (TFW) program. Inside 18 months, Hepatitis A — a fecal-oral disease, by Public Health Canada's own definition — has been confirmed in Tim Hortons food handlers in Ottawa, Amherst NS, and Barrie. A Montreal location was fined $4,200 for premises containing rodent excrement. India is now Canada's largest source of foreign workers. India's own government has spent 11 years and billions on its Swachh Bharat (Clean India) campaign trying to end open defecation. The current phase is literally branded "Swabhav Swachhata, Sanskar Swachhata" — behavioural and cultural cleanliness — because their own surveys find roughly half of rural households continue to defecate in the open even when they own a toilet. They say they prefer it. The Indian government calls it a cultural problem. Their words, not mine. You cannot import food-service workers from this environment, hand them a hairnet and a 90-minute orientation, and call it a food safety system. There is no training program that closes a 25-year cultural gap in 12 weeks."
Meme - "r/Torontology
Modern-day Toronto is proof that this multiculturalism shit isn't working
We got people in the city protesting and literally fighting over conflicts and shit that has nothing to do with Canada. (Russia-Ukraine, the Eritrean brawl, Hindus-Sikhs, lsrael-Palestine, etc) Different groups segregate themselves so much that entire regions in the GTA are now dominated a single ethnic group. (Markham = East Asian, Brampton = South Asians, Vaughn = Europeans, etc) People are struggling to find jobs and/or places to rent simply because they don't belong to the preferred ethnic group. All these different groups don't actually like one another. They tolerate each other at best, and only interact when absolutely necessary. Even in this sub, mans will say the most foul shit in order to disrespect an entire group just because someone made a joke, or said something that offended the other person. People don't come to Canada to be Canadian. They come to Canada to be whatever they were before while living in Canada. There's little to no actual loyalty to this country."
Naturally, this got deleted
Canada immigration scams: New consultant regulations announced (aka "Canada announces reforms to combat immigration, citizenship scams")
Canada gave citizenship to a terrorist. Revoking it has been ‘ridiculously’ slow - "On May 31, 2001, a former Pakistan army captain named Tahawwur Hussain Rana swore the oath of citizenship in front of an Ottawa judge, who anointed him a Canadian. But he is a fraudulent Canadian, according to hundreds of pages of government documents obtained by Global News that allege he obtained his citizenship through “deception.” The documents show that an RCMP investigation uncovered considerable evidence that Rana lied on his citizen application form by claiming he resided in Canada, when he did not. Nonetheless, immigration officials gave him not just citizenship but also a passport — which he used to fly to Mumbai, India to allegedly mastermind a terrorist attack that killed 166 people. Twenty-five years after Rana swore at his citizenship ceremony to “fulfill my duties as a Canadian,” the federal government is still trying to undo the supposed mistake... A Global News review of cases that have come before the court over the past two years reveals that it routinely takes more than a decade to rescind citizenship from those who obtained it through fraud. Even when immigration officials appear to have substantial evidence that foreign nationals obtained citizenship by submitting false information, the process is plodding... The United Kingdom says it has annulled the citizenship of more than 1,500 Britons since 2010,mostly for terrorism and fraud. The U.S. filed de-naturalization cases against 12 people on Friday they accused of hiding their involvement in terrorism and other crimes when they acquired American citizenship. In Canada, revocation cases are “very rare,” Hayer said... he was identified as a suspect in the attack in Mumbai, India, the previous year by the Pakistani terror group Lashkar-e-Tayyiba. Two Canadians died in the assault: Elizabeth Russell, a former Montreal nurse, and her travelling companion, Michael Moss, a Montreal physician. At least two other Canadians were wounded, including Michael Rudder, a Montreal actor who was dining at the Oberoi Hotel when gunmen stormed in... Revoking his citizenship has taken so long that he has raised the time lag as a defence, claiming he can no longer recall events from so many years ago."
Tristin Hopper on X - "This story is quite radicalizing. CBC sent out reporters to find refugee sob stories, and the best they could do was a woman who entered Canada on a visitor visa, magically decided she was now a refugee, and has been living exclusively off benefits ever since."
Tristin Hopper on X - "It wasn't too long ago that Canada was the world's most pro-immigration country, bar none. It wasn't because we were nice and it wasn't because we were welcoming. It was because this kind of brazen exploitation was kept to a minimum, instead of celebrated."
The Locked-Out Generation: 437,000 and Counting - "in 2025, 437,000 young Canadians were unemployed. That’s a 57% increase in just three years – and it doesn’t count the likely tens of thousands more who were looking for work but gave up and left the labour force. And the bleeding hasn’t stopped, according to recent Stats Canada data, as the youth unemployment rate continues to rise and now stands at a staggering 14.3%... Canada is not in a technical recession. Employment among other demographic groups sits at somewhat normal levels. And in the United States, youth unemployment remains near a historic low of 10 percent. Canada’s divergence from the U.S. is now the widest on record outside the late-1990s tech boom and the pandemic. The evidence points not to economic fate, but to something else. The current job market for early-career Canadians is worse than it was during the recessions of 1981, 1990, and 2008. We are producing recession-level youth unemployment in what those very same economists would call stable economy (even though for so many it doesn’t feel like that). That does not happen by accident. And if the problem’s not happening to different countries around the world, and if it’s not happening to people of all ages, then it must be happening because of a specific set of policy levers being pulled right here in Canada. Policies designed to erode young people’s competitiveness in our labour market and undermine their success at the start of their professional journeys. And when we dig into the details, that’s exactly what’s going on. This year alone, Ottawa will be bringing in 215,000 new temporary foreign workers (TFWs) and foreign students, adding to the estimated population of nearly 1.5 million people who are here already... these workers disproportionately occupy low-skill, entry-level jobs in the service or retail industry that would normally be the perfect starter job for a high school or university student. And that’s because big businesses want it that way. On top of that, the system has been proven to exploit permit holders, pushing people into dark, underground economies and driving down wages – adding an incentive for seedy employers to take advantage of vulnerable immigrant workers. Why hire a teenager for $20 an hour when you can get it much cheaper, with practically zero responsibilities to them, for the equivalent of $10 an hour? To make matters worse, the Liberal immigration minister still has no plan to ensure the departure from Canada of the millions of people holding expired visas, further saturating a labour market that’s already at its breaking point. Every time we bring this issue up in Question Period, members of the Liberal cabinet point to the billions of dollars of ‘support’ (read: spending) they pump into the economy. But they just don’t get it. You simply can’t claim to be stimulating growth while actively suppressing the wages and opportunities of a huge share of your own workforce. It’s like stepping on the gas pedal of your car while also holding down the brakes. Sure, you can put on a big show by doing that, but it won’t actually get you anywhere and it certainly isn’t good for the car. Of course, all this spending has deeper effects on the Canadian economy, too, that work against the long-term stabilization of our labour market. Bigger deficits mean higher interest rates, making it more difficult for new businesses to open and existing ones to expand. Higher proportions of our federal budget going to interest payments – we already spend more on debt than we do on healthcare transfers – leave less in the bank account for when we really need it down the road. And underlying this all is a housing market where you need to make a six-figure salary just to afford the average home in a big city like Toronto or Vancouver, and an affordability crisis that sees one in four Canadians classified as ‘food insecure’... There’s a real price to pay for this. It’s not just about a missed summer job at a camp or a part-time shift at a retail store. It’s about keeping kids from ever getting a foot onto Canada’s economic ladder. For a young person, that first paycheck represents more than just money in the bank. It’s the training ground for the various soft skills they’ll use in their careers for the next forty years, things like time management, teamwork and accountability. Without early employment, we see a skills gap widen because without entry-level experience, how can anyoneleave school and reach career-level employment? And with consumer debt already at record levels (and the worst in the G7), it also contributes to an already-spiralling debt trap: with tuition and the cost-of-living skyrocketing, the inability to work while studying forces more students into a cycle of lifelong government debt. This, in consequence,delays their independence, because moving out and starting a life requires a deposit and a steady income. For nearly half a million young Canadians, that independence is currently in a bit of a holding pattern. Indefinitely. What makes this crisis even more concerning is that its effects do not disappear once the economy improves. Economists have long warned about so-called “scarring effects” where young people who enter the workforce during weak labour markets often earn less for years afterward compared to previous generations. Delayed careers mean delayed savings, delayed home ownership, delayed family formation, and lower lifetime earnings overall. In other words: this isn’t simply a bad year for young Canadians; it’s a structural setback that could shape the financial future of an entire generation long after today’s unemployment numbers leave the headlines. What gets me so mad about all this is that this crisis is entirely self-inflicted. Homegrown. We’ve known it’s been a problem for years, but we just keep going down the same path and hoping that something will change by itself. 11 years of record deficits and record immigration, and this is what we have to show for it. 11 years of failed targets, empty words, and broken promises."
Time to blame Donald Trump and the US for all of Canada's problems
Tablesalt π¨π¦πΊπΈ on X - "So let me get this straight. Canada lost 110,000 full-time jobs in 2026 so far. we have record youth unemployment. and Carney is letting 33,000 temporary foreign workers stay in Canada to work forever? They HATE us. It the only explanation."
Tablesalt π¨π¦πΊπΈ on X - "> be Nate Erskine-Smith, Mark Carney's Liberal MP
>vote yes for every mass immigration initiative for over 10 years
>flood your own city with muslims
>dress up as a Muslim and attend their events
>lose your riding contest to an unknown Muslim man, and suggest voter fraud"
Damn PP! Damn Maple Maga! Damn conservatives!
Canada Ramps Up Temporary Visa Approvals Despite Fading Demand - "While policymakers still have enough applications to hit their targets, it potentially signals a bigger problem. The focus on immigration-driven growth pushed aggregate GDP higher, but job creation trailed the population surge and wasn’t offset with matching growth in service capacity. Canada’s fading application volumes suggest a tarnished reputation—one that’s resulted in its global rank plunging to one of the unhappiest places on earth for young adults."
EXCLUSIVE: CAF training platoon with 83% non-citizens devolved into ethnic infighting - "A confidential Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School report has revealed a complete breakdown in basic officer training following a surge in permanent resident enrolment. One French-language platoon, which had over 80 per cent non-citizens, was reportedly wracked by an inability to communicate fluently, a lack of respect towards female CAF members and infighting between Cameroonian and CΓ΄te d’Ivoire candidates. The Quebec platoon saw fewer than one in two recruits graduate, while allegations of racial discrimination were made in multiple directions, from candidates against staff and between candidates of opposing ethnic blocs themselves. Additionally, command saw “challenges” in training permanent residents as they lacked “respect towards women” peers and superiors. “For many candidates it is the first time they have lived with members of a different sex, and for some it is also the first time they have been expected to treat women as their peers,” explained the confidential report. “Platoons are also reporting inter-candidate cultural frustrations, with lack of respect towards women being the most common concern.” Juno News obtained the document, authored by school Commandant and Lieutenant Colonel M.R. Kieley, from an anonymous source. The confidential report is titled “Initial Observations — Impact of Changes to Canadian Armed Forces Recruiting Policies at Basic Training Over 2025.” It paints a picture of declining standards and cultural friction as the Canadian Armed Forces rushed to reconstitute its ranks by relaxing recruiting rules. The most dramatic example unfolded in a French-language Basic Military Officer Qualification (BMOQ) platoon that was 83% permanent residents, many of whom had been in Canada for as little as three months. This comes at a time when the CAF is boasting of record-setting recruitment levels. “The initial platoons that arrived at the (school) in January 2025 were heavily loaded with permanent residents,” reads the confidential report."
Diversity is our strength
Even the CBC confirms this, so left wingers need to look for a new cope
Non-citizens in Canadian Forces struggling to 'treat women as their peers' - "Department of National Defence spokesperson Commodore Pascal Belhumeur did not confirm that the Post’s copy was the same as his own version, but the contents of his copy were consistent with what was before the Post... The report, authored by Lieutenant-Colonel Marc Kieley, describes the effects of new changes to the Canadian Armed Forces recruitment process: restrictions on candidates with certain health and mental health issues were lifted, more permanent residents were permitted to join, security screening was reduced, and the old aptitude test was dropped. “As a result of these changes, CFLRS is experiencing significant changes in candidates’ basic capabilities and increasing pressures on staff and instructors,” it reads... “Older candidates from certain cultural backgrounds are also more likely to experience friction when responding to younger CFLRS instructors due to cultural hierarchies based on age.”... The overall rate of completion for basic training dropped from around 85 per cent to 77 per cent in the first three quarters of 2025, said the report. More candidates are also being ordered to repeat a course: between the fiscal years of 2018 and 2024, this was always in the single digits, ranging between four and eight per cent. In 2025, it was 15 per cent, nearly double the year prior. The dominant reason for re-taking courses also changed. In 2023, according to the report, 62 per cent of candidates re-taking a course did so for medical reasons; another 15 per cent had to re-take for failing practical evaluations (drills, weapons and fitness, for example), and another two per cent had to re-take for failing academic evaluations (on topics from sexual misconduct to navigation theory). In the 2025 fiscal year, per the report, only 45 per cent of candidates retaking courses did so for medical reasons, with 27 per cent doing so for failing practical evaluations, and seven per cent re-taking courses for academic failures. Some candidates “have been unable to learn basic practical skills such as drill and weapons, as well as several candidates who have been unable to read without assistance,” said the report... Some of these candidates had only been in Canada for three months, according to the report. This was corrected in February, said Belhumeur, with the imposition of a three-year residency requirement for all candidates... It’s not just the French basic training instructors who should be asking this — it’s all of Canada. Keep in mind that lawful civilian gun owners are currently experiencing the largest firearms confiscation the country’s ever seen; at the same time, we’re handing military authority over to people who aren’t even citizens of Canada. It’s as if the institution whose job is to carry out the primary duty of the state — the protection of the nation — has completely forgotten a core part of its being."
Riley Donovan on X - "Economics professor schools Liberal MP who says employers need immigrants:
MP: "So that's the answer to this, just increase wages and everything will magically fall in place?"
Professor: "That is the answer. That's what we did in Canada for the first 100 years.""
Eric Jackson on X - "71% of Waterloo software engineering grads leave for the US. The brain drain damage threshold is 20%. Canada is at 3x the red line. Think about that. Canada taxes its people at 60% in part to fund a university system to train its best and brightest to flee the country and make the US GDP spike. Who is spiking US GDP at the moment? All the Canadians working for Anthropic and OpenAI in AI. How crazy is that? What do the Canadian tax payers get for their generosity out of this?"
John Carter on X - "Our GDP per capita is lower than Alabama's, which is a direct consequence of a lost decade of economic growth. The only reason we rate a sub-Alabama is that Alberta pushes the average up; Ontario has fallen below West fucking Virginia. You argue that immigration reduces GDPpc because it increases the denominator but it takes migrants a while to catch up and contribute to the numerator. They've had decades. How long do they need? When my ancestors arrived from England, they hit the ground running by the way. They were cultivating farms and building businesses the moment they stepped off the boat. By the way, how exactly are they supposed to raise GDPpc when they send a substantial fraction of their earnings back to India as remittances? What country has successfully used the mass third world migration model to achieve real improvements in living standards? It hasn't worked in the Yookay, which has all the same problems as Canada and then some. It hasn't worked in Australia. It hasn't worked in France, in Sweden, or in Germany. Denmark ran the numbers and found that immigrants from anywhere but white or East Asian countries were net lifetime drains on the treasury, and by such a huge margin that they could have paid for their own space program. Where are our immigrants coming from again? Oh right, India, a paradise famed for its hard-working, honest peoples, who have built one of the economic jewels of the world. The only things that immigration have done for the Canadian economy are to inflate real estate to an absurd degree and to depress wages. Now we're also seeing the highest rate of food inflation in the G7. GDPpc has flatlined, but living standards have gotten wrecked. We are worse off in every way. You call those of us pointing out the obvious facts of this obvious disaster propagandists, while you yourself repeat CBC propaganda like the timid mindraped traitorous capon that you are, so terrified of being called a racist that you cheer on the erasure of our people by an unending flood of third world migration while you twist the tortured remnants of your fragmented psyche into an oblivious pretzel in a desperate ploy to explain away the innumerable calamitous consequences of the insane treachery that you celebrate."
There was a lot of interesting cope, including looking at nominal GDP rank, nominal GDP (rather than GDP per capita) and federal-debt-to-GDP (ignoring provincial)
Time to hate on Alberta again, since left wingers hate economic growth
