From the fair housing crisis to the immigration debate

From the fair housing crisis to the immigration debate

From 2006 to 2008, Quebec experienced a fair accommodation crisis.

He then experienced the combined effects of mass immigration and Canadian multiculturalism, which was radicalized following the 1995 referendum—a multiculturalism for which many sovereigns rallied in 1995 who wanted to be pardoned at any cost for what Jacques Pariseau called the “racial vote.”

Religious demands linked to Islam, in particular, brought a new civilization to the heart of our society.

2006

This forced Quebec to find a concept in its history to counter this dynamic: that of secularism.

Today he enters a crisis of the same nature, but more serious: he realizes that mass immigration not only compromises his identity, but also disrupts society as a whole.

Housing, health system, education system, but also the support system for the underprivileged.

All those who stuck their heads in the sand are now forced to take it out.

I deserve: not all, but many. Because at the heart of our elites we see an irreducible colonialist bias. For them, it shouldn't cut it.

This is the case for a part of the economic environment that does not pass the productivity test and requires cheap labor.

This is the case with the extreme left who religiously adhere to the myth of a borderless world.

Intimidation

Such is the case with the PLQ, which is banking on immigration to gain new voters.

That's the case with Ottawa, which is counting on immigration to lock in Quebec's political future demographically.

In the face of this crisis, those with the common good at heart must resist intimidation campaigns aimed at making debate impossible. It takes a lot of courage.

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