MASS IMMIGRATION

Canada’s unique culture was forged from three foundational pillars: the British tradition of parliamentary democracy, common law, and individual liberty; the French legacy of civil law, language, and Catholic-influenced community in Quebec and beyond; and the diverse Indigenous nations whose treaties, knowledge, and sovereignty helped shaped the land’s early framework.



 This bicultural-plus-Indigenous mosaic enshrined in the British North America Act of 1867, the Constitution, and official bilingualism produced one of the world’s most stable, prosperous, and free societies.
That heritage is now being deliberately diluted and erased by relentless mass immigration from societies that share none of these roots or traditions.

 

 

The numbers prove replacement, not enrichment. Statistics Canada confirms Canada’s total fertility rate hit a record-low 1.25 children per woman in 2024, placing us in “ultra-low fertility” alongside nations heading for population collapse. More than 51% of Canadian women aged 20–49 had no children as of recent data, including nearly 1 in 4 women in their 40s. Indigenous birth rates, while higher in some communities, cannot offset the national decline.

 


The Liberal 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan locks in minimum 
380,000 permanent residents annually plus hundreds of thousands of temporary residents. Combined inflows have driven population growth almost entirely through immigration, pushing Canada past 41+ million while native-born Canadians fail to reproduce themselves due to economic and societal issues.

 

 

The sources of this influx are not from places of similar cultures, in most cases. In 2024–2025 data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, the top permanent resident source countries were India (hundreds of thousands annually, dominating economic streams), followed by China, Nigeria, and heavy inflows from Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan.

 

 

 Simultaneously, European immigration has collapsed to a fraction of historical levels. This is not the balanced settlement of earlier eras that reinforced British and French institutions; it is a demographic tidal wave from regions with vastly different values on secular governance, gender equality, free speech, and individual rights.



  The transformation is already measurable. The 2021 Census showed foreign born "Canadians"
 at 26.5% of the population, projected to reach 38–43% by 2041.




The Result?

 

Christians, the faith woven into British and French founding, fell to 53.3% (from 67% in 2011 and 77% in 2001), with non-religious at 35% and Radical Islam surging.

 

Languages other than English or French continue rising in major cities, creating parallel linguistic enclaves. In Toronto and Vancouver, “no religion” and Islamist affiliations now rival or exceed traditional ones in younger cohorts.


   We can see it happening
. Multiple 2025 polls, including Innovative Research Group and Environics, reveal
54% of Canadians believe immigration threatens traditional Canadian customs and values. A majority say levels are far too high, with extreme  concerns over cultural erosion, integration failure, and the loss of shared identity.

 

This is not “racism”; it is recognition that multiculturalism, as practiced since the 1971 policy shift away from biculturalism, has produced silos rather than a cohesive nation. Parallel societies emerge in neighborhoods where Sharia attitudes, honour-based practices, or rejection of Western secularism persist, documented in integration studies and crime patterns tied to specific origin groups.

 


Our education system accelerates the forgetting. Curricula have pivoted from teaching Confederation, the British parliamentary inheritance, French civil law foundations, Loyalist history, and Indigenous treaty realities to fragmented “diversity” narratives that frame founding peoples as oppressors and every new arrival as equal co-founder.

 

British and French achievements—the institutions that enabled prosperity and freedom—are downplayed or reduced to “settler colonialism,” while Indigenous history is selectively highlighted for grievance rather than integrated as part of the national story. The result: generations of Canadian children disconnected from the heritage that defines why Canada works and what makes it distinct.

 

This is not organic evolution. It is engineered demographic and cultural replacement. We abort or forgo our own children at rates that doom the founding lineages, then import volumes from incompatible source cultures without demanding full assimilation to British-French-Indigenous-derived values: rule of law, equality of sexes, freedom of conscience, and loyalty to Canadian institutions first. The unique Canadian culture—neither purely European import nor Indigenous isolation, but a hard-won synthesis—is being flooded out of existence.

 

 

The facts are brutal and unforgiving: continued policy means the British parliamentary system, French linguistic and legal distinctiveness, and Indigenous treaty-based place in Confederation will survive only as museum pieces in a country unrecognizable to its founders. Canada does not belong equally to everyone who arrives; it belongs to the people who built it and their descendants. Mass immigration on this scale, from these sources, is destroying that inheritance. Canadians who value their heritage must demand an immediate end to it—slash numbers to sustainable levels, prioritize integration to founding values, and restore education that honours our actual history—or watch our culture die by deliberate dilution.