Often overshadowed by its neighbor to the South, Canada is still viewed by many as the Great “White” North when compared to the United States, which is becoming a minority-majority nation at a breakneck pace. Unfortunately, Canada is undergoing one of the most rapid demographic transitions in the Western world, and this change is only occurring more swiftly with each passing year.
For those who are politically, culturally, or otherwise aware of the plight of the Canadians there is an eagerness to label Canadians as political cuckolds and ultra-liberals who are happy about the destruction of their nation. Both of these contrasting images, with Canada, painted as either much Whiter than the US or labeled as much more liberal and self-destructive than other countries, are incorrect.
The Canadian nation is not only aware of its replacement, and displeased with it, but could, given the right mix of policies, do something to reverse the tide of the Great Replacement in their country.
In our previous piece, we went into great detail about the feelings of Heritage Canadians regarding their demographic replacement. We know that 53% of working-class Canadians, and 40% of the nation overall, feel there are too many recent immigrants in their country, a substantial public sentiment that echoes that in the United States. Now we will delve into the demographic situation as it currently stands, and what, if anything could be done to reverse the tide of the Great Replacement in Canada.
Between 1981 and 2021 the share of White Canadians fell from 93.3% of the Canadian population to 69.8%. This decline of 23.5% has taken place over less than a generation and the Canadian population is on a trajectory that is taking it from super-majority to minority status at a rate much faster than most other Western countries. Much of this growth has been in Asian populations, though not exclusively as we shall see.
Between 1981 the share of “South Asians” in Canada (those people from India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, etc) has increased from 223,000 individuals to 2,571,400 individuals in 2021. A population increase of 1,053%. The Black population of Canada has rapidly increase from 239,455 in 1981 to 1,574,870 as of 2021, a jump of 557% in just 40 years. In this same period, the number of Filipinos in Canada increased by 1,168% and the Chinese population jumped by 472%.
All the while the size of the Historic Canadian population has only increased about 13%, from 22.46 million in 1981 to 25.36 million in 2021. Though this is made even less significant by the drastic aforementioned decline in the share of the overall Canadian population.
All through this period the Canadian state has continually reformed immigration legislation to make the admittance of massive numbers of people even simpler. The first major change came in 1962 when the Canadian government issued an order-in-council (similar to an executive order in the United States) which removed all racial qualifications for immigration to the country, thereby removing the primary form of protection for Canada’s founding stock.
Steps were later taken in the Immigration Act of 1976 and the Immigration and Refugees Protection Act of 2002 to loosen Canadian immigration requirements even further, massively expanding opportunities for racial foreigners to come to Canada with few qualifications.
Today, immigration into the country continues to increase at a record pace. In 2022 the Canadian state welcomed over 437,000 permanent immigrants to the country, and by 2025 the Canadian state plans to welcome some 500,000 immigrants annually.
The Great Replacement in Canada is a matter of indisputable fact, and the next logical step is to look into what could possibly be done to resolve this.
While the first logical step is to suspend immigration to the country, which the Canadian state could do through the simple proclamation and replacement of officials, the true goal, as stated above, remains to reverse the tide of the Great Replacement in the country.
The first step, and one which could be executed by simple visa cancellation and refusal to renew. This step would see visas removed from 3.2 million people, the vast bulk of whom come from India, China, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and other parts of Asia. Only a few hundred thousand individuals would be British, French, American, or from another Western country, and the Canadian immigration service could always selectively renew (or indefinitely extend) these visas.
The largest group by far, however, is that of immigrants who have obtained Canadian citizenship. This demographic represents some 6.1 million people, most of whom obtained their citizenship in the 1990s and 2010s. The first step is to weed out these people who have committed immigration fraud and to revoke their citizenship. In 2019 the Canadian Department of Citizenship and Immigration investigated some 11,000 people for potential immigration fraud and determined that 3,000 of them, or 27%, had committed fraud in obtaining their Canadian citizenship.
Investigations in 2011 and 2020 also uncovered widespread fraud, including large-scale cash-for-citizenship schemes being employed by “immigration firms” in the country. These investigations should become widespread and commonplace, seeing that any immigrant who forged their documents in order to get Canadian citizenship has that privilege revoked and is removed to their country of origin.
Assuming the percentage holds at roughly 27%, this could see as many as 1.7 million more non-Canadians leaving the country.
A further demographic to target would be those 3.7 million dual nationals who hold both Canadian and foreign nationalities. This could primarily be accomplished by stripping citizenship from those dual citizens who commit crimes in the country, as is allowed under Bill C-24.
The final demographic which would have to depart Canada is comprises the 2.2 million children of immigrants under the age of 15 in the country. These youngsters, in keeping with the spirit of the importance of family, would have to depart with their parents to be raised in the country of their ancestors.
While these fixes are not perfect, and many millions of minority Canadians would remain in Canada until laws could be substantively changed, Canadian policymakers could still make the choice to turn back the tide of the Great Replacement today.
And should they not, nationalists, who are coming to represent the only viable democratic alternative, will likely get around to it in due course.
I can't remember where, but I saw that Canada plans to increase its population from ~33 million today, to 100 million by 2100. That would mean that something like 30 million Canadians would be European and 70 million would be of other races and ethnicities. I will look for that source. If you can find it, I think doing projection demographic graphics would frighten Europe and the European diaspora into action.
Merry Christmas!